Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Smaller Hospitals Form Groups To Expand Participation In Profitable Drug Trials

Morning Briefing

By working as a single unit, these hospitals hope to improve chances of competing with urban medical centers for clinical trials. Drugmakers are constantly searching for patients for clinical trials and pay hospitals as much as $10,000 per patient. Hospital news also comes out of Georgia, Massachusetts, Florida and Missouri.

Trying To Change Laws To Prevent SNAP Participants From Buying Soda Is Daunting, Researchers Say

Morning Briefing

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) households spend about 10 percent of food dollars on sugary drinks, which is about three times more than the amount they spend on milk, and is a dietary habit that leads to obesity and other health problems. Yet trying to nudge people toward making healthier changes is complex. Public health news also focuses on health attacks in Cuba and China; older moms; allergy labels for sesame; football injuries; malaria-detecting dogs; and the popularity of cannabis derivative, also known as CBDs.

Pittsburgh Trauma Center Met Shooting Chaos With Practiced Calm

Morning Briefing

UPMC Presbyterian is one of many Level 1 trauma centers that have stepped up training for events like the shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue. Those preparations helped keep panic away when patients began coming in Saturday morning. Also in the news, a new study looks at the number of children shot each year.

Calls For Medical Paper Retractions Prompt NIH To Pause Experimental Stem Cell Treatment Trial

Morning Briefing

Fallout from questions raised about the research and journal publications from the lab of Dr. Piero Anversa, a controversial stem cell researcher, leads a federal agency to temporarily halt a clinical trial studying a stem cell therapy for heart failure patients. And The New York Times reports more on Anversa’s troubles.

Determining The Costs Of A High Deductible Plan

Morning Briefing

These plans plans generally have lower premiums, but members can find that paying for the deductibles and other expenses is daunting. Experts say consumers need to understand those costs. In other insurance news, Walmart is offering its employees a newer type of insurance plan.

Changes To ACA Marketplaces Likely To Tamp Down Enrollment

Morning Briefing

Health experts foresee no increase in insurance enrollment in 2019 following Republicans’ decision to repeal the penalty for not having insurance and their support for cheaper, slimmed-down plans that don’t meet ObamaCare’s requirements. As the marketplaces prepare to open on Thursday, outlets in Minnesota, Texas and Tennessee offer previews.

Off To The Midterm Races … Health Care Playing Big In State-Wide And Congressional Contests

Morning Briefing

Medicaid expansion and other aspects of the Affordable Care Act are taking up a lot of oxygen on the campaign trail in Arizona, New Hampshire and a number of other states. Massachusetts voters will consider a ballot question on nurse-staffing levels.

Health Industry Invests Big In Campaign While Pharma Braces For Possible Change In House Leadership

Morning Briefing

The health sector has given more than $46 million to candidates on the November ballot and drug makers are anxious about how they might fare if the Democrats retake the House. Meanwhile, the campaign trail messaging is not 100 percent accurate when it comes to Democrats’ talk about the number of people who have preexisting conditions, according to a Washington Post fact check, and Republicans are trying to control the debate over health issues by focusing attention on Medicare-for-all.

Trump Green Card Proposal Triggers Troubling Health Care Trend Among Some California Immigrants

Morning Briefing

The San Francisco Chronicle reports on how immigrants at one local clinic are worried that being enrolled in Medicaid will stall their efforts to gain citizenship. Also, the Texas Tribune reports on how one woman, who had been detained at the border, received substandard care.

High Demand But Low Wages: How Workers Who Care For Aging Patients Struggle

Morning Briefing

Work as a caregiver can be physically demanding and complex, but people in the field often have to take two jobs to make ends meet. “We’re limited in what we pay because of reimbursements,” Paul Randolph, intake supervisor at Excel Home Care, tells The Wall Street Journal.

‘Options Are Dwindling For Many Rural Families’: The Imbalance In Hospitals Closures

Morning Briefing

Nearly 70 rural hospitals have shuttered since 2013, in a trend that studies associate with states that did not expand Medicaid. In other state hospital news: a three-day strike at five University of California teaching hospitals and a Missouri center reviews its postpartum mental health services.

California Governor Expands Attack Against Administration’s Plan To Freeze Auto Emissions, Saying It’s ‘Riddled With Errors’

Morning Briefing

Gov. Jerry Brown said if President Trump’s proposal goes through, the U.S. will fall behind in the development of electric cars and the health of millions will be jeopardized. Environmental health news comes out of Wisconsin and New Mexico, also.

Best Ways To Avoid The Flu, Beyond The Vaccine

Morning Briefing

From washing hands to wearing masks, scientists study the most effective strategies for keeping flu infection rates down. In other public health news stories: conflicting nutrition research; Alzheimer’s; and childhood cancer.

Safe Stations, ERs And Other Responses To The Nation’s Opioid Epidemic

Morning Briefing

Other states are watching how New Hampshire’s “safe stations” approach, which involves setting up access points at which people can seek addiction treatment, is doing. Meanwhile, Maryland hospitals are becoming trailblazers in offering addition treatment in their ERs. And, recognizing that the plague of heroin is not just a big-city problem, NPR reports on how one rural community is reacting.