Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

High-Deductible Health Plans Fall From Grace In Employer-Based Coverage

KFF Health News Original

Once viewed as a promising cost-control tool, such insurance faces new competition on benefits menus from more traditional insurance. But, according to new research, none of those choices is getting less expensive.

Australia’s On Track To Be The First Country To Eliminate Cervical Cancer. Here’s How They Did It.

Morning Briefing

Australia’s national health care system first introduced its HPV vaccination program in 2007 as a cost-free three-dose course for teenage girls. In 2013, the program was expanded to school-age boys, who can carry and transmit the virus, and develop other forms of cancer. Now, the country has one of the lowest cervical cancer incidence and mortality rates in the world. In other news: radiation, antibiotics, fast food, heart health, urinary tract infections and more.

Preparing Schools For Mass Shootings Was An Industry That Had Stalled. Then Parkland Happened.

Morning Briefing

An Associated Press investigation shows that security companies have been pushing lawmakers toward elevating the solution of “hardening schools” with high-tech hardware and gadgets over other safety measures.

With Retirement Of NEJM’s Editor, Doctors See A Chance For Prestigious Journal To Adjust Course

Morning Briefing

As Dr. Jeffrey Drazen steps down from the post he held for 18 years, doctors weigh in on changes they’d like to see rather than having it be a place to publish the “most important” studies. “The main job of journals will not be to disseminate science but to ‘speak truth to power,’ encourage debate, campaign, investigate and agenda-set — the same job as the mass media,” Dr. Richard Smith told Stat.

Sloan Kettering’s Widening Institutional Reckoning Over Ethics Crisis Snags Center’s Top Executive

Morning Briefing

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center President, Dr. Craig Thompson, announced that he will resign from the boards of Merck and Charles River Laboratories. Merck is the maker of the blockbuster cancer treatment Keytruda. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center has been thrust under the microscope recently over controversy involving top officials’ financial conflicts of interest.

Administration Emphasizes Need To Focus On Keeping Opioids From Entering Country Illegally

Morning Briefing

DEA officials spoke of the importance of cracking down on the international pipeline into the country at a Senate caucus forum created as part of lawmakers’ efforts to pass a sweeping opioid package. Other news on the crisis comes out of California, Wisconsin, Massachusetts and Missouri.

Pharma Holds Breath, Bracing For A Possible Blue Wave To Take The House

Morning Briefing

Democrats have not been shy about their intent to focus on high drug prices if they regain control of the House, which the pharmaceutical industry doesn’t foresee going in its favor. Meanwhile, although lawmakers blocked pharma’s last attempt to attach the “doughnut hole” change to the massive opioid package, experts think lobbyists might be successful in the lame-duck months after the elections.

‘Significant Health And Safety Risks’ Rampant At Immigration Detention Center, Including Nooses In Cells And Rotting Teeth

Morning Briefing

A scathing Homeland Security inspector general report found startling health and safety issues at a private, for-profit immigration jail in Adelanto, California. Among other problems, detainees reported waiting “weeks and months” to see a doctor, and inspectors met with a dentist who dismissed the necessity of fillings, and suggested that detainees use string from their socks to floss, the report said.

FDA Carts Away Thousands Of Documents After Surprise Inspection Of Juul Headquarters

Morning Briefing

Juul has come under fire recently as more and more young people turn to e-cigarettes as an alternative to traditional smoking. FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb went so far as to say the problem has reached “epidemic proportions.” The documents seized were related to the company’s sales and marketing practices.

In Sign Of The Times, Republican In Tight House Race Releases Resolution On Protecting Preexisting Conditions

Morning Briefing

The issue is a favored talking point for Democrats going after Republican opponents in the midterm elections. The resolution from Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas) is nonbinding, but gives him, and the other Republicans who backed the statement, an opportunity to address the issue. Meanwhile, insurance rates in Minnesota will drop for second straight year.

More Than Half Of Emergency Room Physicians Have Been Assaulted, Many In The Past Year Alone, Survey Finds

Morning Briefing

The report comes as debate has intensified over whether hospital administrators are doing enough to prevent violence against employees. Meanwhile, another nurse suffered an attack by a patient at Washington state’s largest psychiatric hospital, which has a troubled history of such incidents.