Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

NC Republicans Propose Recognizing Just Two Sexes, Spurn Gender Identity

Morning Briefing

Senate Republicans added language defining biological sex to a bill regulating online pornography that won unanimous support in the House. The Senate has not yet voted on the bill. More news comes from Florida, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, Ohio, California, and Washington, D.C.

Senate Bill Calls For Deeper Medicaid Cuts Than House-Passed Bill

Morning Briefing

The Senate bill would expand Medicaid work requirements to include the parents of older children, not just childless adults. Other Medicaid news covers a poll indicating Americans’ support for federal health programs, the effects of cuts in rural America, and more.

NIH Cuts To Minority Groups’ Grants Are Illegal, Discriminatory, Judge Rules

Morning Briefing

On Monday, Judge William G. Young of the Federal District Court for the District of Massachusetts ordered much of the funding to be restored, pending an appeal. “I’ve never seen a record where racial discrimination was so palpable,” he said. Plus: VA hospital rules, asbestos, and more.

Bills In House, Senate Would Create Medicare ‘Part E’ For ‘All Americans’

Morning Briefing

The legislation introduced Monday in both chambers would essentially allow Medicare to compete with private insurance, Fierce Healthcare reported. Part E would sustain itself through premiums, and enrollees could sign up through their employers or any state or federal marketplace.

CDC Official Who Tracked Hospital Trends From Infectious Diseases Quits

Morning Briefing

“I no longer have confidence that these data will be used objectively or evaluated with appropriate scientific rigor to make evidence-based vaccine policy decisions,” Dr. Fiona Havers told colleagues. And in MAHA news: Kraft Heinz says it will stop using certain artificial dyes by the end of 2027.

States Agree To New $7.4 Billion Purdue Pharma Opioid Settlement

Morning Briefing

If finalized, the deal, which was also signed on to by the District of Columbia and U.S. territories, would pay out over the next 15 years. Also: Eli Lilly’s experimental weight loss drug, a new Lupus drug, milli-spinner thrombectomy for stroke treatment, and more.

23andMe Co-Founder’s Nonprofit Wins Bidding War To Buy Most Of Its Assets

Morning Briefing

TTAM Research Institute, the nonprofit led by 23andMe’s former CEO Anne Wojcicki, has won back 23andMe’s core assets: its Personal Genome Service, Research Services, and telehealth subsidiary Lemonaid Health. Other industry news includes gene therapy, layoffs, nurse shortages, and more.

As Doctors Suss Out Ovarian Cancer Cause, More Advise Salpingectomy

Morning Briefing

Since the 1990s, pathologists have been zeroing in on the fallopian tubes as the potential place where some female cancers start. Now, tube removal is on the rise. Other health and wellness news is about dementia risk in men, loneliness, joy, and more.

Trump Administration Gives Personal Data Of Medicaid Enrollees To DHS

Morning Briefing

The AP, which obtained an internal memo and emails, reports that the information provided to deportation officials on Medicaid enrollees included immigration status. The effect on Medicaid in the GOP’s megabill is also in the news.

Research Groups Propose Alternatives To Ensure NIH Funding Still Flows

Morning Briefing

Stat reports that the Joint Associations Group offered two options: award payments that would vary depending on the type of institution and the type of research funded in a particular grant; or provide a detailed accounting of administrative and facility costs as line items in each grant proposal. Lawmakers and NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya appear open to the policy proposals.

CDC To Summer Camps: Check For Documentation Of Measles Immunity

Morning Briefing

The directive comes as measles cases so far this year have hit 1,197 infections, which is fewer than 100 cases from surpassing the record 1,274 cases that were confirmed for all of 2019. Related news is on measles exposures in Boston, Washington, D.C., and Boulder, Colorado.

Slain Minnesota Lawmaker Played Key Role In Safeguarding Health Care

Morning Briefing

Democratic state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband were shot and killed Saturday morning at their home. Democratic state Sen. John Hoffman, who was also shot at his home Saturday, is in stable condition after “many surgeries,” his wife said. The suspect in the slayings has been captured.

Trump Team Pressures Pharma Companies To Voluntarily Lower Prices

Morning Briefing

The administration issued an order in May directing companies to begin negotiating drug pricing to bring them in line with other economically comparable nations, but pharmaceutical executives note that the order was light on details. Plus: RFK Jr.’s threat to yank medical school funding.

Ousted ACIP Adviser Says Physicians Should Now Seek Guidance Elsewhere

Morning Briefing

Helen Chu, MD, urged doctors to find “science-based recommendations” from the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the American Academy of Family Physicians. Chu noted, “It puts us in a very dangerous place if we can’t trust the national recommendations made by ACIP.”