Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Governor’s ‘Mental Health Czar’ Seeks New Blueprint For Care In California

KFF Health News Original

Thomas Insel, who ran the National Institute of Mental Health for 13 years before casting his lot with Silicon Valley, is taking a temporary break from his senior position at a health care startup to advise Gov. Gavin Newsom on how to remake mental health care in the Golden State.

In India’s Slums, ‘Painkillers Are Part Of The Daily Routine’

KFF Health News Original

As the Indian government reluctantly loosens its prescription opioid laws after decades of lobbying by palliative care advocates desperate to ease their patients’ pain, the nation’s sprawling, cash-fed health care system is ripe for misuse.

Disaster Aid Money Earmarked To Help Hurricane-Stricken Areas Diverted Toward Funding Border Detentions

Morning Briefing

Diverting funds appropriated by Congress is permitted only in extraordinary circumstances, and Democrats disagree that the crisis at the border warrants such a decision. The move comes as Puerto Rico, which still hasn’t recovered from past disasters, braces for Tropical Storm Dorian.

Rhode Island’s Plan To Create Reinsurance Fund For Its Individual Market Approved By Trump Administration

Morning Briefing

Rhode Island will receive additional funds from HHS because the expected lower premiums created by the reinsurance fund will save the federal government money by reducing the amount it spends on tax credits in the state. Other health insurance and coverage news focuses on: innovation funds, states’ Medicaid programs, and transgender care.

Obesity Crisis The Likely Culprit Of Slow-Down In Progress Against Cardiovascular Disease

Morning Briefing

The decline in mortality rates from heart disease has slowed, and have plateaued for stroke and diabetes. In other public health news: artificial intelligence, the benefits of exercise, DNA information, school lunch, testosterone, air pollution and more.

Missouri’s Strict 8-Week Abortion Ban Blocked By Judge, But Other Restrictions On Sex, Race Left In Place

Morning Briefing

Republican Gov. Mike Parson praised the court decision to uphold sections of the law preventing abortions based on sex, race or Down syndrome, which are separate from the eight-week ban struck down by U.S. District Judge Howard Sachs. The temporary stay against Missouri’s 8-week ban is similar to the fate similar legislation in other states has faced.

As Cases Of Mysterious Lung Illness Related To Vaping Climb, There Seems To Be Just Crickets From Federal Agencies

Morning Briefing

There haven’t been any product recalls or warnings from the government despite the number of cases climbing to nearly 200 across more than a dozen states. But federal officials say they are investigating leads on the cause of the illnesses.

Philip Morris, Altria’s Possible Merger Could Allow The Tobacco Giants To Dominate International E-Cigarette Market

Morning Briefing

Philip Morris and Altria Group may reunite after more than 10 years. The merger has the potential to super-charge efforts by Juul — which Atria has a stake in —
to expand overseas, bolstered by the global marketing power of Philip Morris.

Biden Talks About Personal Tragedies In Ad Touting His Plan To Expand Affordable Care Act

Morning Briefing

Former Vice President Joe Biden’s new ad highlights both the 1972 car crash that put his sons in the hospital and Beau Biden’s battle with brain cancer. “I couldn’t imagine what it would have been like if we didn’t have the health care they needed immediately,” Biden says in the spot. Health care has become a dividing line between the Democratic 2020 presidential candidates, with moderates like Biden pushing for an expanded version of the health law while progressives argue for more sweeping changes.

How Johnson & Johnson, Best Known For Baby Powder And Band-Aids, Became A Leading Supplier Of Opioid Ingredients

Morning Briefing

The Oklahoma opioids case exposed cracks in Johnson & Johnson’s reputation, some say. The New York Times looks at the company’s history and where it got involved in the epidemic. In other news on the national drug crisis: questions about where to spend opioid settlement money bubble up; analysts try to guess how the Oklahoma settlement will effect others; and more.

In Potential Opioids Lawsuits Settlement, Purdue Pharma Offers $10B-$12B And For Sackler Family To Cede Control Of Company

Morning Briefing

According to reports on settlement talks, the bulk of the funds would come from restructuring Purdue Pharma under a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing that would transform it from a private company into a “public beneficiary trust.” That would allow the profits from all drug sales, including the opioid painkiller OxyContin, to go to the plaintiffs of a nationwide consolidated lawsuit over the alleged role drugmakers played in the epidemic. The company would also give its addiction treatment drugs to the public without cost.

Beset By Lawsuits And Criticism In U.S., Opioid Makers Eye New Market In India

KFF Health News Original

What began in India as a populist movement to bring inexpensive morphine to the diseased and dying poor has paved the way for a booming pain management industry. Now, new customers are being funneled to U.S. drugmakers bedeviled by a government crackdown back home.