Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

America’s Health Insurance Plans’ Leader Karen Ignagni To Be EmblemHealth CEO

Morning Briefing

News reports describe EmblemHealth as a financially challenged, not-for-profit health plan based in New York. The insurer has an estimated 3.2 million members and offers Medicare and Medicaid managed care plans as well as coverage on New York’s health-plan marketplace.

CVS To Buy Omnicare In Bid To Expand Senior Care Business

Morning Briefing

Omnicare supplies prescription drugs to nursing homes and assisted living as well as other health care facilities. If the deal goes through, CVS will beef-up its fast-growing specialty drug business and tap into a growing sector of the market — the elderly.

In Effort To Restart Mental Health Reform Bill, Conn. Senator Eyes Controversial Provision

Morning Briefing

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., is seeking changes in the bill’s section regarding the expansion of involuntary outpatient treatment. Meanwhile, a Senate panel votes to end the Veterans Affairs ban on medical marijuana and Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., introduced a bill related to over-the-counter contraceptives.

House Panel Gives ’21st Century Cures’ Bill Unanimous Approval

Morning Briefing

The House Energy and Commerce Committee approved the measure, which is designed to speed new drugs to market and encourage medical innovation, after reaching a last-minute agreement about how to pay for the legislation. It is expected to reach the House floor for a vote next month.

Feds Offer To Authorize $1B For Fla. Hospital Funding Tied To Medicaid Stalemate

Morning Briefing

The funding has been at the heart of the legislature’s bitter debate on Medicaid expansion. The offer is $1.6 billion lower than the state received this year, but it may provide enough that lawmakers can come to terms on a budget in a special session next month.

Insurers Proposing ‘Hefty’ Rate Increases For Some Obamacare Plans

Morning Briefing

The Wall Street Journal reports that these proposed rate boosts will set the stage for debate regarding the health law’s impact. Wellmark’s South Dakota members are among those likely to see such rate hikes, according to The Associated Press.

The Gray Areas Of Assisted Suicide

KFF Health News Original

In bizarre, veiled conversations, some doctors vaguely hint to dying patients and their families how to hasten death. But overwhelmed families are left with profound questions and the feeling that there is no one who can answer them.

Gaps In State Data Adds Difficulty To Determining Scope Of National Heroin Problem

Morning Briefing

Pennsylvania and a number of other states only broadly note in official databases information about drug overdoses, but the most recent statistics date to 2012 and generally don’t include specific information about the drugs in use. Meanwhile, in related news, a Maine legislator advances a bill to make abuse-deterrent painkillers more affordable and a crackdown on prescription drug abuse in the South leads to charges against two physicians.

California Medical Association Reverses Position On ‘Aid-In-Dying’ Legislation

Morning Briefing

In what might be a national precedent, the doctors’ group changed its decades-long opposition to a proposal that allows physicians to help seriously ill patients end their lives.

Gov. Scott’s Hospital Panel Faces Off With Florida Health Officials

Morning Briefing

The first meeting of the commission created by Florida Gov. Rick Scott to examine government hospital spending ended with a sense that the group won’t come up with solutions before the legislature’s June 30 deadline to pass a budget that will set health care funding levels.

Hedge Fund Manager Challenges Drug Patents Using New Dispute Process

Morning Briefing

Meanwhile, Johnson & Johnson estimates that 10 new drugs the company wants to bring to market could reap $1 billion in annual sales. In other research news, a group of virus hunters aims to change the ways insurers and countries handle Ebola and other epidemics.

Grassley Urges Tighter Scrutiny Of Medicare Advantage Plans; House ‘Cures’ Bill Mark Up Delayed

Morning Briefing

In other Capitol Hill happenings, supporters of the 340B Drug Discount program urge lawmakers not to make changes in it as part of the “Cures” bill that would overhaul the FDA’s drug approval process. Meanwhile, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, gives a bleak VA progress report.

Senate Panel Asks Medicare To Revamp Programs To Cut Number Of Observation Stays

Morning Briefing

At a meeting of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, pointed out that observation care status can cost Medicare beneficiaries thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs.