Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Drug Makers Spotlight ‘Superbug’ Threat In Call For Government To Act

Morning Briefing

More than 80 companies will release a declaration at the World Economic Forum on Thursday calling for new economic models and help from countries’ governments to cut down on the unnecessary antibiotic use and encourage the development of new medicines.

Minnesota, Ohio Make Last-Minute Enrollment Pushes

Morning Briefing

In Minnesota, MNSure will offer special weekend hours for in-person enrollment assistance and federal officials visited Ohio to urge state residents to sign up for Obamacare before Jan. 31. Also, Mississippi officials provide an enrollment tally with 11 days left in the open enrollment period.

Wyo. Legislative Panel Rebuffs Governor’s Plan To Expand Medicaid

Morning Briefing

The Joint Appropriations Committee opted not to include funding for the Medicaid expansion in its recommendations to the legislature. However, lawmakers could still bring the issue up during the session. Meanwhile, Louisiana’s Department of Health and Hospitals adjusts its Medicaid enrollment projections.

Shkreli Subpoenaed For Congressional Price-Gouging Hearing

Morning Briefing

A House committee has called former Turing Pharmaceuticals CEO Martin Shkreli and Valeant’s interim CEO, Howard Schiller, to testify over sharp increases in drug costs at a hearing on Tuesday. And Treasury Secretary Jack Lew received a subpoena from Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, and Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., over documents involving payments to insurance companies.

Sanders’ Plan: Medicare On Steroids

Morning Briefing

The benefits included in Sen. Bernie Sanders’ health care plan are actually considerably more generous than what is offered through Medicare. Meanwhile, Bill Clinton is in New Hampshire calling the proposal a liberal fairy tale that would lead to “gridlock.”

A Lifesaving Flight, With A Price Tag Of $56,000

KFF Health News Original

Big, sparsely populated states such as Montana are dependent on air ambulances to get people to specialized medical care. But those lifesaving flights can be hugely expensive and not covered by insurance.

States Navigate Ethical, Legal Minefield To Create ‘Crisis Standards Of Care’

Morning Briefing

Health departments across the country are developing guidelines for medical care during a public health crisis. In other news, patients are receiving CT scans even when their injuries do not warrant them, fewer than 1 in 4 high school students are getting tested for HIV despite CDC recommendations and a violence prevention program aims to address problematic issues in its patients’ lives.

McCaskill Calls For Treatment Centers, Monitoring Program To Fight Opioid Abuse

Morning Briefing

Sen. Claire McCaskill, at a field hearing in Jefferson City on Tuesday, called on lawmakers to rectify the lack of a drug monitoring program in Missouri. Elsewhere, Ohio announces new guidelines for prescribing painkillers, and New York extends its rebate for naloxone, an antidote for heroin and other opioid overdoses.

Relatives More Likely To Rank End-Of-Life Care Excellent When Patient Was In Hospice, At Home

Morning Briefing

A new study in JAMA surveys family members of terminally ill cancer patients, and found that they were more likely to rate the care as excellent when the patient was not in an intensive care unit. Another study in the same journal examines how treatment of terminal patients in the United States compares to other countries.

Dreary Biotech Landscape Could Lead To Cheap Deals For Big Pharma

Morning Briefing

Buying smaller companies with promising drug candidates is a way for larger biopharma companies to generate growth. In other pharmaceutical news, columnist Emily Bazar explains clinical trials, and in Indiana, a state Senate committee clears a bill allowing pharmacists to diagnose customers seeking cold medicine, and deem the treatment unnecessary.

Survey Finds That Most Americans Support Restrictions On Legalized Abortion

Morning Briefing

Eight in 10 Americans would restrict abortion to the first trimester, according to a new Marist poll commissioned by the Knights of Columbus. In other reproductive health developments, a new abortion battlefront takes shape over the custody of frozen embryos.

Election Exposes Health Care Divisions Among Democratic Candidates

Morning Briefing

As Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders debate their respective plans to fix weaknesses of the 2010 health law, Obamacare foes look to exploit that rift. In regional news, Clinton urges Georgia to expand Medicaid.