Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Despite Its Modest Goals, Promising Alzheimer’s Drug Is Latest In Long String Of Failures To Combat Disease

Morning Briefing

The failure may mark the unraveling of an approach to Alzheimer’s treatment that has held hope: increasing the supply of the brain chemical serotonin in patients. Scientists and investors, however, still remain optimistic that eventually a drug will be developed that can fight Alzheimer’s.

Senate Disaster Bill May Give Puerto Rico Full Medicaid Funding For 2 Years

Morning Briefing

The funding could be a critical boon for the U.S. territory’s struggling hospitals. In other Medicaid news, South Dakota’s governor announces that he will seek federal approval to set a work requirement for able-bodied adults enrolling in the program, West Virginia lawmakers question spending on abortions and ask for names of doctors performing them, and Illinois may change how it allots money from the program to hospitals.

‘It Keeps Us Up At Night’: Parents Racked With Stress As CHIP Funding Languishes In Congress

Morning Briefing

“If Bobby doesn’t have this medication, he will die. It’s as simple as that,” said Tracy Belt, a mother who has a son with Type 1 diabetes. Congress has passed a short-term funding fix for the Children’s Health Insurance Program, but lawmakers are stills squabbling over how to pay for a longer-term solution.

Trump Supports Bipartisan Bill To Stabilize Marketplaces, Sen. Alexander Says

Morning Briefing

Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.) have been working on legislation that would fund insurer subsidies for the next two years. The bill has only made progress in fits and starts, as Republicans chipped away at the health law last year. Also in the news: the Affordable Care Act in court again.

Presidential Physicals: There’s No Template For What Information Is Released

Morning Briefing

What results President Donald Trump divulges from his Jan. 12 medical exam will be up to him. Meanwhile, despite increased talk about the president’s mental well-being, it’s unlikely this physical will reveal any information about the state of his cognitive health.

HHS Nominee Sticks To Conservative Talking Points On Drug Prices: ‘There’s No Silver Bullet Here’

Morning Briefing

At his second Senate hearing, Alex Azar was grilled by Democrats on the Finance Committee questioning his commitment to bringing down high drug costs because of his ties to the pharmaceutical industry. Azar shied away from endorsing the idea of the government to negotiating prices, a concept touted by President Donald Trump.

A Poor Neighborhood In Chicago Looks To Cuba To Fight Infant Mortality

KFF Health News Original

Infant mortality in some of the poorest ZIP codes in the United States rivals that of countries like war-torn Syria. Cuba, meanwhile, does a good job of keeping babies healthy on a tight budget. A team of Cuban health professionals recently spent time in Chicago helping peers there tackle the daunting problem.

Conn. Lawmakers Restore Medicaid Program For Seniors, Disabled

Morning Briefing

The special session vote adds back $54 million for a program that uses Medicaid funding to help low-income residents pay their Medicare premiums and other expenses. However, the governor is threatening to veto the bill. Also, Iowa’s governor says savings from the Medicaid managed care program there are still substantial, even though they don’t come close to what was promised, and South Dakota’s program was able to shift some costs to the federal government.