Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Kentucky’s Medicaid Work Mandate Has Green Light, But Actually Implementing Is A Lot Trickier

Morning Briefing

Monitoring and enforcing the work requirements is a complex problem that officials are trying to wrap their arms around. The state will build a mobile-friendly website to help beneficiaries log their hours. Media outlets report on Medicaid news out of Iowa, Missouri, Michigan, Connecticut and Maryland, as well.

Despite Big Talk On Bringing Down Drug Prices, Critics Find Trump’s Plan Modest, Underwhelming

Morning Briefing

The White House Council of Economic Advisers has released a 30-page strategy for reducing drug costs. But the White House strategy largely sidesteps the question of whether drugmakers set their prices too high to start with.

Deputy White House Chief Of Staff Tapped To Lead Office In Charge Of Tackling Opioid Crisis

Morning Briefing

Jim Carroll has no background in working in public health policy, but the White House said that after law school, Carroll spent five years as the assistant commonwealth attorney for Fairfax, Virginia, where the majority of the cases were drug-related.

FDA Chief Winning Over Skeptics As He Juggles Public Health, Industry Concerns And Wary Staff

Morning Briefing

In a presidential administration that’s been roiled by scandal and confusion, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb is standing out as a “thoughtful” and “deliberate” leader who doesn’t want to blow up his agency as some had previously feared.

Podcast: KHN’s ‘What The Health?’ There’s A Really Big Health Bill In That Budget Deal

KFF Health News Original

In this episode of KHN’s “What the Health?” Julie Rovner of Kaiser Health News, Alice Ollstein of Talking Points Memo, Joanne Kenen of Politico and Margot Sanger-Katz of The New York Times discuss the health policy changes included in the just-concluded bipartisan budget deal on Capitol Hill. The panelists also talk about the final enrollment numbers for individual insurance purchased under the Affordable Care Act, and possible drug price proposals in President Donald Trump’s upcoming budget. Plus, Rovner interviews Andy Slavitt, who this week launched a health care advocacy group called “The United States of Care.”

Kansas’ Abortion Laws Could Be In Jeopardy Depending On How High Court Rules In Pending Case

Morning Briefing

The state’s supreme court will rule whether the Kansas Constitution includes a right to abortion. Ahead of the ruling, Gov. Jeff Colyer wants lawmakers to consider amending the constitution to guarantee protection of laws restricting the procedure. Outlets report on news from Iowa and Florida, as well.

Researchers Discover Common Patterns In Brain Activity Between Five Major Psychiatric Diseases

Morning Briefing

Researchers find links between the brain activity of people with autism, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression and alcoholism. In other public health news: sexual harassment, pain management, prostate cancer, modified mosquitoes and hysterectomies.

How Close Should Anti-Addiction Experts Be To An Industry That Many Blame For Opioid Crisis?

Morning Briefing

Specialist Jessica Hulsey Nickel through her advocacy group, the Addiction Policy Forum, has accepted funding from the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America. The decision to take the money is roiling the anti-addiction world. Meanwhile, Attorney General Jeff Sessions talks tough on fighting the opioid crisis and investors want more information on wholesaler AmerisourceBergen’s roll in the epidemic.

Beyond Tamiflu: After Decades With Just One Main Drug To Fight Virus, More May Be On The Horizon

Morning Briefing

“For several decades now, we have not sought to develop the tools we need to fight the flu,” said Olga Jonas, a senior fellow at the Harvard Global Health Institute. “The tax we pay for this folly is as inexorable as it is enormous.” Pharmaceutical companies stand to make quite a fortune off of any medicine they develop to treat the flu.