Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

States Prepare For CHIP Funding To Run Out: ‘You Can’t Say Probably Everything Is Going To Be All Right’

Morning Briefing

Some states have enough funding for a few months if Congress fails to soon renew the funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program, but others are going to run out imminently. “Everybody is still waiting and thinking Congress is going to act, and they probably will, but you can’t run a health-care program that way,” says Linda Nablo, chief deputy director at Virginia’s Department of Medical Assistance Services.

Individual Mandate Repeal May Cause Already-Struggling Rural Markets In Red States To Collapse

Morning Briefing

Republican states with one insurer offering coverage through the exchanges are particularly vulnerable to the GOP’s plan to scrap the individual mandate. In other health law news, industry groups push for repeal or delay of some ACA taxes.

Taken For A Ride? Ambulances Stick Patients With Surprise Bills

KFF Health News Original

Public outrage over surprise medical bills prompted 21 states to pass consumer protection laws. But these laws largely ignore ambulance rides, which can leave patients stuck with hundreds or even thousands of dollars in bills.

Nursing Home Staff Did Everything Possible To Help Patients After Hurricane, Facility Tells Congress

Morning Briefing

The letter from Florida’s Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills, which is tied to several deaths following Hurricane Irma, says that staff followed proper procedure in handling the crisis, but that they couldn’t overcome the lack of power.

Top Doctor At D.C. Public Hospital Is Fired After Alleging Mismanagement

Morning Briefing

Dr. Julian Craig, an internal medicine physician, appeared before the City Council’s health committee and criticized the Veritas management company, saying it disregarded hospital programs designed to ensure patient safety. In other industry news, Medicare officials announce an expansion of a program to help rural hospitals, and a historic hospital in Massachusetts is hoping to merge with a larger system.

Brexit Strains England’s Already-Hurting Health System As Doctors, Nurses Flee Back To Europe

Morning Briefing

Long before Brexit, the N.H.S. suffered from chronic staffing shortages, but recruiting nurses from the European Union had helped plug the gap. Now though, England faces a potential mass exodus of a good percentage of its health care workers.

New Drug-Resistant Strain Of Malaria Threatens To Upend Years Of Eradication Efforts

Morning Briefing

“It has a big potential to spread,” says Dr. Arjen M. Dondorp, deputy director of the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit in Bangkok. “We should be very worried that other countries in Southeast Asia can be affected by this, and, of course, that it will reach Africa at some point.” In other public health news: stem cell treatments, breast cancer, transgender patients, Legionnaires’ disease, allergies, and more.

Simply Asking Patients If They Use Opioids Isn’t Enough. This Hospital Goes Further.

Morning Briefing

Screening alone doesn’t do much for patients, experts say, but Christiana Care Health System in Delaware pairs patients with addiction counselors and gets them enrolled in community-based drug treatment program before they’ve even left the hospital.