Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Aetna Reportedly May Sell Medicare Advantage Assets To Ease Concerns About Humana Merger

Morning Briefing

The insurance company reportedly hopes the move will help ease antitrust concerns as it seeks an acquisition of another insurer, Humana. Also, federal Medicare officials announce a new rule that will allow some companies access to claims data.

UnitedHealthcare Claims Dialysis Chain Engaged In Fraudulent, Illegal Billing Scheme

Morning Briefing

The lawsuit, filed by UnitedHealthcare, alleges the for-profit dialysis chain American Renal Associates Holdings Inc. illegally pushed poor people in Florida and Ohio to leave inexpensive government programs and sign up for private plans sold by UnitedHealthcare so the dialysis chain could get higher reimbursements from the insurer.

Abortion Providers Sue Over La. Laws Following Supreme Court Ruling

Morning Briefing

The clinics say seven abortion-related laws enacted in the state this year are unconstitutional. Elsewhere, Mississippi’s only abortion clinic breathes a sigh of relief after the ruling, and even though a judge blocked an Indiana abortion law, other regulations in the state have led to a nearly 20 percent drop in the number of procedures being performed.

Shake-Up In S.D. Legislative Races May Dim Governor’s Efforts To Expand Medicaid

Morning Briefing

The success of several conservatives in the South Dakota Senate primary races over more moderate candidates could make it difficult for Gov. Dennis Daugaard’s efforts to provide Medicaid coverage to more state residents. Meanwhile in Tennessee, the house speaker has unveiled a plan to broaden Medicaid, and Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin’s plan to revamp that state’s expansion efforts is hitting opposition.

Tenn. Exchange Shoppers Should Brace For Sticker Shock; The Effects Of Blue Cross’ Withdrawal From Minn. Individual Market

Morning Briefing

Meanwhile, in other news related to the health law and the insurance market, despite efforts to enroll young adults in health plans, they still face challenges. In addition, graduate students’ health insurance subsidies may be in jeopardy.

Critics: Letting Generic Drugmaker Join PhRMA Akin To Allowing A Spy Into The Fold

Morning Briefing

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries’ request to join the powerful trade association has caused alarm in the industry. Teva and some of PhRMA’s longtime members, like Eli Lilly, are on opposite sides of court cases involving patents and other important issues for the future of brand-name drug companies. In other news, a California initiative to curb high drug prices concerns patient advocacy groups, and states are lifting Medicaid restrictions on an expensive hepatitis C treatment.

For This Man, Reducing Gun Violence Is A Life’s Mission

KFF Health News Original

Garen Wintemute, an ER doctor, gun violence researcher and advocate of tighter firearms restrictions, finds opportunity in the wake of mass shootings like the one that struck an Orlando night club last month.

Medicaid, Private Insurers Begin To Lift Curbs On Pricey Hepatitis C Drugs

KFF Health News Original

Over the past few months, Massachusetts, Florida, New York, Delaware and Washington have lifted restrictions on the expensive medications, and private insurers around the country are also making the changes.

Young Adults Can Face Challenges To Health Enrollment

KFF Health News Original

Even as the administration focuses on getting more young adults into marketplace coverage, many enrollment specialists say that this group has some difficulty transitioning from family plans or Medicaid.

New Mexico Supreme Court Overturns Law Allowing Doctors To Help End Patients’ Lives

Morning Briefing

The justices rule 5-0 against a law that says doctors cannot be prosecuted for helping terminally ill patients end their lives. Elsewhere, an Iowa woman with two terminal conditions becomes too sick to continue her fight to obtain a doctor’s aid in dying.

Even With Hundreds More Cases In U.S., Zika Scares Americans Less Than Ebola

Morning Briefing

Two-thirds of Americans say they are “not too” or “not at all” worried about Zika. Meanwhile, Senate Democrats say Congress shouldn’t take August recess without reaching a Zika funding deal, three more babies in the U.S. are born with Zika-linked birth defects, a look at where the mosquitoes are in California and an expert talks Zika and the Olympics.