Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Clinical Trial Launched To Test If HIV-Positive Organ Donation Is Safe And Can Save Lives

Morning Briefing

Researchers will assess the risks of transplanting kidneys from HIV-positive donors into patients with the virus. “We have an organ shortage crisis in this country and individuals living with HIV are disproportionately affected,” says Dr. Christine Durand, assistant professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University.

If Doctors Use Your Data To Develop Treatments, Do They Need To Tell You?

Morning Briefing

Ethicists, patients, doctors and courts are wrestling with that question as efforts grow to expand care through better data and technology. Also, Stat offers a guide to CRISPR, and Madrigal Pharmaceuticals says one of its drugs has shown progress treating fatty liver disease.

Cuts To Medicare Part B Payments At Center Of Oncologists’ Lawsuit Against HHS

Morning Briefing

The cancer doctors are suing over ongoing sequestration budget cuts that cut Medicare Part B drug reimbursements by 2 percent. In other medical practice news from the day: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ Merit-based Incentive Payment System hits reporting goals; the NBA names its first director for mental health; and statin tolerance is examined.

Va. GOP: Work Requirements Put Conservative Stamp On Medicaid Expansion

Morning Briefing

House Speaker M. Kirkland Cox says the expansion approved this week “includes what I consider the most conservative set of reforms to Medicaid in the nation as part of a plan to expand healthcare coverage to working Virginians.” Also, in Michigan, expansion supporters protest one candidate’s efforts to switch gears.

Doctors Are Prescribing Fewer Opioids, Says AMA

Morning Briefing

The number of opioid prescriptions dropped 22 percent between 2013 and 2017, leading to an estimated 55 million fewer scripts, according to the doctors’ group. These numbers are part of the American Medical Association’s argument against proposed federal clinical practice legislation. Also in the news, an expose on the marketing techniques used by some corners of big pharma regarding these medicines. Meanwhile, updates on legal action in Utah, Kansas and Michigan; efforts in Philadelphia to clear opioid “tent camps;” California’s experiment in distributing fentanyl tests; and other hot topics.

Facebook Live: Vaping Unveiled

KFF Health News Original

Nicotine-loaded e-cig juices that spoof popular treats — marketed to help adults kick the smoking habit— instead may be luring youths into addiction. California Healthline’s Facebook Live peeled back the curtains on this wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Podcast: KHN’s ‘What The Health?’ Virginia, The VA, And Military Medicine

KFF Health News Original

In this episode of KHN’s “What the Health?” Julie Rovner of Kaiser Health News, Joanne Kenen of Politico, Paige Winfield Cunningham of The Washington Post and Rebecca Adams of CQ Roll Call discuss the Virginia legislature’s about-face with a vote to expand the Medicaid program under the Affordable Care Act and the new bill to expand health programs for veterans. Plus, Rovner interviews Dr. Arthur Kellerman, dean of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.

Texas Gov. Requests $100M To Shield Schools From Gun Violence, Hints At Potential Red Flag Law

Morning Briefing

Also, in the wake of the high school shooting outside Houston, Gov. Greg Abbott vows to protect the Second Amendment, asks gun owners to be responsible and devises a plan to increase mental health practices in schools.

Judge Urged To Lift Stay On Smokable Marijuana In Florida By Pro-Medical Pot Plaintiffs

Morning Briefing

Circuit Judge Karen Gievers delayed her ruling that smokable medical marijuana is allowed under a 2016 state constitutional amendment while the state appeals. In other state news: drugged driving deaths are up; a Georgia couple loses custody of their 15-year-old son after allowing him medical marijuana; a pot surplus in Oregon drives down growers’ profits; and cannabis-based autism treatments touted in Illinois.

Minnesota Sues Insys Therapeutics Over Its Opioid Marketing Practices

Morning Briefing

Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson says the Arizona-based pharmaceutical company “encouraged physicians to prescribe this highly-potent fentanyl product to patients who didn’t have cancer, even though it was only approved for severe breakthrough pain in cancer patients.” Meanwhile, as legal cases related to the opioid epidemic pile up, Native American tribes fight to not get lost in the mix.