Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

‘Gray Death’ Is A Particularly Lethal Opioid Mixture That’s Infiltrating Street Drug Market

Morning Briefing

“Gray death is one of the scariest combinations that I have ever seen in nearly 20 years of forensic chemistry drug analysis,” says Deneen Kilcrease, manager of the chemistry section at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. In other news, a sales representative for an opioid maker talks about his secret addition. And highway safety officials say that drug-impaired driving is a growing problem.

Trump Administration Will Reevaluate Contraception Mandate

Morning Briefing

The directive for the Department of Health and Human Services to reexamine that part of the Affordable Care Act came after the president signed an executive order that he says protects religious liberty.

States Try To Anticipate What Washington’s Plan May Mean For Their Residents

Morning Briefing

Governors and state health officials in Massachusetts, Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Ohio, California, Georgia and Kansas voice concerns about the coverage and cost implications of the House Republican legislation.

No Preexisting Condition? Insured At Work? You’d Still Feel Impact Of New GOP Health Plan.

Morning Briefing

The legislation passed by the House allows states to determine what essential health benefits insurers must cover, such as maternity care. People with employee-sponsored health care will also lose protections that limit out-of-pocket costs for catastrophic illnesses

The House Just Voted To Relax Protections For Preexisting Conditions. What Does That Mean?

Morning Briefing

An amendment to add an additional $8 billion to help pay for high-risk pools for any state looking for exemptions to preexisting condition coverage swayed enough lawmakers to secure passage of the legislation, but experts say that not nearly enough money is allocated to fund health care for the sickest Americans.

As ‘Hot Potato’ Lands In The Senate, Republicans Plan To Write More Palatable Version

Morning Briefing

“We want to get it right,” Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) said on the Senate floor. “There will be no artificial deadlines.” But the GOP’s narrow control of the chamber will complicate efforts to draft a bill.

‘This Is A Scar They Carry’: Health Vote May Haunt Republicans Come Midterms

Morning Briefing

Democrats started signing “Na na na na, hey, hey, hey, goodbye…” as the legislation passed the House, predicting that it could spell electoral doom for some Republicans who voted to pass the American Health Care Act.

With Speakership On The Line, Bruised And Battered Ryan Shoulders Plan Through House

Morning Briefing

Since the March failure to pass the Republican health plan, House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) “was able to weather an extraordinary painful two months, extraordinary painful,” says Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.).

From ‘Coming Up Short’ To Victory: How Republican Leaders Gained The Final Votes

Morning Briefing

Six weeks ago, House Republicans could not muster enough votes to pass their health bill and pulled it from the floor. What happened to turn that failure around? Behind-the-scenes negotiations focused on amendments that could persuade the right-wing Freedom Caucus to back the legislation. In the end, Republicans wanted to deliver a win for President Donald Trump and on their pledge to repeal Obamacare.

Even Backers Call Bill ‘Highly Imperfect’ But See It As A Jumping Off Point

Morning Briefing

At least one admits to not knowing what’s in the legislation. And most say the plan is flawed. But House Republicans view their vote as a starting position to get Congress going on replacing the Affordable Care Act.