Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Vets Who Are Denied Benefits Face Antiquated Appeals System That Can Take Decades

Morning Briefing

The Department of Veterans Affairs pays benefits to about 5 million people, but more than 470,000 veterans have been denied and are appealing. Those appeals can be mired in bureacracy for years. Also in the news, an Arizona-based company that oversees care for some veterans is hoping to extend its contract — even as it’s a target of a federal grand jury investigation.

Decades-Old Law Lets Insurer Skirt Health Law Regulations, Providing Tempting Model For GOP

Morning Briefing

Tennessee Farm Bureau Health Plans is still allowed to use patients’ health status to determine their rates and eligibility, which is illegal elsewhere under the Affordable Care Act. In other news, The New York Times looks at how red states have been subsidizing blue states’ health insurance for years.

Supreme Court To Hear Free Speech Case Involving Calif. Pregnancy Centers

Morning Briefing

A California state law requires pregnancy centers to provide information about abortion options to its patients. The centers say the law violates their right to free speech by forcing them to convey messages at odds with their beliefs.

Some States Roll Back ‘Retroactive Medicaid,’ A Buffer For The Poor — And For Hospitals

KFF Health News Original

The retroactive payments provide protection for poor patients who can be enrolled in Medicaid after becoming seriously ill. That enrollment process takes time, and the look-back provision helps guarantee coverage they would have been entitled to if they had enrolled earlier.

Taking A Page From Pharma’s Playbook To Fight The Opioid Crisis

KFF Health News Original

Doctors and pharmacists in Northern California are emulating drug company sales reps with a fresh purpose in mind: They visit medical offices in the hardest-hit counties to change their peers’ prescribing habits and curtail the use of painkillers.

Vaccine Shortage Complicates Efforts To Quell Hepatitis A Outbreaks

KFF Health News Original

The two FDA-approved manufacturers of the vaccine, hit by an unexpected spike in demand, have had difficulty keeping pace. In San Diego County, home to the deadliest outbreak in the nation, officials are postponing a campaign to give at-risk residents the second of two doses.

Profit-Mining The Opioid Crisis: Treatment Facilities Target Union Workers For Their Generous Benefits

Morning Briefing

A Stat and Boston Globe investigation found that these workers are bused into these facilities and can be cut off from their family and friends. “I felt like a prisoner,” said Michael Barone, a special education aide in a New Jersey public school. In other news: scientists try to find ways to combat chronic pain without opioids; experts are trying to figure out how people with chronic pain can be treated with opioids but avoid addiction; and more.