Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Harms Of Thyroid Cancer Screenings Outweigh Benefits, Task Force Says

Morning Briefing

Despite an industry-backed push for more people to be screened for thyroid cancer, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has added the option to its don’t-do-it category. In other public health news: pain relievers and heart risks, statins, syphilis, mental health care for children, and smoking.

House Panel To Investigate Role DEA And Drug Distributors Have Played In Opioid Flood

Morning Briefing

The House Energy and Commerce Committee wants answers from the Drug Enforcement Administration about its efforts to combat the epidemic and from the nation’s three largest drug distribution companies about shipping practices. Other news stories focus on steps the Trump administration is taking to tackle the drug crisis.

For Some Areas, Medicaid Expansion Propelled A Radical Transformation — But At A Cost

Morning Briefing

The Wall Street Journal examines the impact in Klamath Falls, Ore., of the health law’s expansion of coverage for low-income people. Meanwhile, in Iowa, state officials release reports about consumer complaints with the new Medicaid managed care system.

BlueCross BlueShield Of Tennessee Steps In To Fill Knoxville Market Gap

Morning Briefing

In related news, early signals indicate that Affordable Care Act premiums will jump in the coming year and the Trump administration is stepping back from penalizing exchange plans that did not do risk-adjustment program audits.

Grassley And Chaffetz Skewer HHS Memo Limiting Employees’ Comments To Congress

Morning Briefing

In a letter, the chairmen of key committees in the Senate and House say the guidance to workers at the Department of Health and Human Services “is potentially illegal and unconstitutional, and will likely chill protected disclosures of waste, fraud, and abuse.”

As Push Grows For Ever-Faster Approvals, Report Finds One-Third Of FDA-Cleared Drugs Posed Safety Risks

Morning Briefing

Problems with 71 of the 222 drugs approved in the first decade of this millennium were discovered after the drugs were approved, according to a new study. Those “safety events” warranted a “black box” warning on side effects or a safety announcement about the dangers.

In Senate, GOP Is Walking A Razor-Thin Margin And These Deal-Breakers Could Nudge Them Over Edge

Morning Briefing

Politico looks at four hot-button topics that could cost Republican votes needed to pass health care legislation. Other media outlets offer explanations on taxes, the Byrd Rule and what will happen if the senators can’t pass a repeal-and-replace law.

Parents Of Sick Children Fear Trap If States Have Say On ‘Preexisting Conditions’

KFF Health News Original

“I’m not going to risk my son’s health on the political whims of Jefferson City,” says one Missouri father, whose son requires about $20,000 to $30,000 in medical care expenses a year. The new GOP health bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act lets states decide whether or not insurers must cover people with preexisting conditions, such as birth defects.

Grassley, Chaffetz Send Fiery Response To HHS Memo They Say Chills Whistleblowing

KFF Health News Original

The two Republican lawmakers sent a letter to HHS Secretary Tom Price warning him that whistleblowers in HHS could be intimidated into silence by a department memo instructing employees to get clearance before talking with members of Congress and their staffs.