Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Half Of Enrollees In Indiana’s New Medicaid Program Didn’t Make Required Payments

Morning Briefing

The program, which was set up by former governor Mike Pence, who is now vice president, and consultant Seema Verma, who now heads the agency that runs Medicaid and Medicare, requires people getting benefits to contribute to their premiums if they want the top level of care. State officials said, however, that only a small share of those who missed a payment ended up losing their health care for the state’s required six-month lockout period. News outlets also reported on Medicaid news from Alabama, Kansas and Nevada.

Biotech Leaders, NIH Officials Tout Benefits Of Research Spending During White House Meeting

Morning Briefing

But President Donald Trump’s proposal to cut nearly $6 billion from the National Institutes of Health budget was one of “several elephants in the room” that did not come up during the meeting, according to NIH Director Francis Collins.

In Early Filings, Insurers Seeking Hefty Premium Increases For Obamacare Plans

Morning Briefing

Filings have been made public in only three states so far, but an analysis by Bloomberg finds prices there rising 20 percent on average. Helping drive the increases are insurers’ concerns about the Trump administration’s plans to enforce the health law’s requirement that people get insurance or pay a penalty.

Beyond Preexisting Conditions: GOP’s Change To Essential Benefits Would Affect Nearly Everyone

Morning Briefing

The Affordable Care Act requires health plans sold to individuals to include 10 essential health benefits. Some plans offered by employers also include those benefits and cannot impose annual or lifetime limits on reimbursements for those expenses. The Republican plan allows states to scrap those protections. Media outlets also examine other ways the Republicans’ health care legislation would affect Americans, even if they’re not buying coverage through Obamacare.

Energized Democrats Hope Republicans Sealed Their Own 2018 Fate With Health Votes

Morning Briefing

Just as the Democrats faced the political ramifications of voting for the Affordable Care Act in 2010, Republicans could encounter their own backlash in the upcoming midterms. Meanwhile, members are facing angry constituents as they go home to hold town halls.

Strategy To Exclude Moderates, Women From 13-Man Working Group May Come Back To Bite McConnell

Morning Briefing

The more moderate senators now have no obligation to fall in line behind the group’s final health law draft and will almost surely continue to work on their own ideas. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump plans to take a hands-off approach to the upper chamber’s negotiations and let Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) wrangle the votes he needs.

Public Health Roundup: Inactive Kids Pose Future Health Risks; ‘Food Pharmacies’ Help Patients Craft Healthy Diets

Morning Briefing

Also making public health news: loneliness in seniors; Zika testing guidelines for women; school officials’ concerns over “suicide tapes”; baby monitor dangers; one-two punch of substance abuse and mental health issues; and more.