Latest KFF Health News Stories
Abortions have been mostly on the decline since the 1980s when they reached their peak. Meanwhile, anti-abortion groups find themselves in a rare feud with the Trump administration over fetal tissue research. News on abortion comes out of Mississippi and Idaho, as well.
Congress Lacks Authority To Enforce Decades-Old Genital Mutilation Law, Judge Rules
Judge Bernard Friedman of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan said the regulation of female genital mutilation should be left to the states. The ruling shocked women’s rights advocates, who say the decision “sends the message that the authorities are not serious about protecting girls, especially those in immigrant communities, from this form of abuse.”
Experts there point to multiple factors in the city’s success at turning around their overdose rates. Those include Medicaid expansion, the dwindling presence on the streets of the powerful carfentanil, the availability of naloxone, and support for a treatment-based approach for those who are addicted. Meanwhile, nationally, private equity firms see the lucrative potential of addiction treatment centers.
With Eye On Skyrocketing Diabetes Numbers, Senators Hunt For Answers On High Cost Of Insulin
Insulin is increasingly becoming a flashpoint in the national discussion of high drug costs, in part because many insulin products are older, but have experienced huge price hikes in recent years. In other pharmaceutical news: a Supreme Court case on supplements; Mylan’s manufacturing gaffes; and a buzzy new gene-silencing technique.
In the same election that will put Democrat Laura Kelly in the governor’s office, Kansas voters also elected a more conservative state Legislature. While before, the governor stood in the way of expansion, this time it might be lawmakers who block the way. Medicaid news comes out of Maine, Kentucky and Minnesota, as well.
The existing rules are aimed at preventing improper influence over choices of doctors, hospitals and prescription drugs for Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. While health care executives and lobbyists are eager to see them stripped away, saying it would enable better coordination of care, others are concerned about the risks involved. “The administration is inviting companies in the health care industry to write a ‘get out of jail free card’ for themselves, which they can use if they are investigated or prosecuted,” said lawyer James J. Pepper.
Republicans still maintain control of the Senate and the White House, so Democrats’ election-season promises to shore up the health law may not be quite as easy to fulfill as promised. Meanwhile, sign-ups on the exchanges continues to drag from last year’s numbers, but the CMS numbers don’t include enrollment in states that operate their own exchanges, nor do they include those who will be automatically enrolled in plans during the last week of open enrollment.
First Edition: November 26, 2018
Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
Editorial pages focus on these health care topics and others.
Editorial pages focus on these health issues and others.
Media outlets report on news from California, Maryland, Illinois, North Carolina, Michigan, Florida, Tennessee, New Hampshire, Iowa, Georgia, Connecticut, Louisiana and Texas.
The chemical, HaloSan, is typically used to treat pools or spas but is not approved by the EPA to disinfect drinking water. Other environmental health news comes out of North Carolina, Louisiana and California.
Planning To Take Part In A Turkey Trot? How Running Became A Healthy Tradition Before The Big Meal
“It’s become the thing to do on Thanksgiving,” says Anne Reif, organizer of the event in Buffalo, where Turkey Trots got their start in 1896. Thanksgiving is the most popular day of the year to run with more than 1,000 races scheduled, but experts say the calories you burn won’t come close to matching what you consume. Other public health news focuses on older exercisers’ younger muscles, banks keeping a watch on seniors, the best way to breathe, and more.
Officials Warn That Chickenpox Outbreak In North Carolina Could Spread To Neighboring Communities
The school where more than three dozen children have been struck with the chickenpox virus has one of the state’s highest rates of religious exemptions for the vaccination. During the 2017-2018 school year, about two-thirds of the 28 kindergartners at Asheville Waldorf School received a religious exemption from the required vaccinations.
In the past week, physicians flooded social media with stories about their first-hand experiences with gun violence after an NRA tweet directed them to stay out of the debate. The shooting at Mercy Hospital & Medical Center in Chicago made it even more personal because a doctor was among the victims killed. Meanwhile, the hospital’s leaders are citing the active-shooter training done in the months prior to the incident as the reason there wasn’t more loss of life.
Insurers Are Deploying Host Of Tactics That Can Price Already-Expensive Sleep Apnea Aid Out Of Reach
Patients have been required to rent CPAPs at rates that total much more than the retail price of the devices, or they’ve discovered that the supplies would be substantially cheaper if they didn’t have insurance at all.
The companies already have a partnership, but the wide-ranging talks may lead to expanded ventures. It’s the latest move in a flurry of health care mergers, as drugstores and other health providers look for ways to diversify, bulk up and insulate themselves against external threats, including from Amazon.
Internal VA Watchdog Finds Widespread Errors In Benefits Claims From Veterans Who Have ALS
Of 960 claims that were examined, 430 contained errors. Of those, 230 claimants were awarded the wrong benefits, and most received no money or were underpaid. In other news, Apple is in talks with the VA to create software allowing veterans to transfer health records to iPhones.
Mississippi’s 15-Week Abortion Ban ‘Unequivocally’ Unconstitutional, Judge Rules
The Mississippi law and the responding lawsuit set up a confrontation sought by abortion opponents, who are hoping federal courts will ultimately prohibit abortions even before a fetus is viable outside the womb, which has been the dividing line the U.S. Supreme Court set.
Doctors Should Be Urged To Offer PrEP To All Patients At High Risk Of HIV, Task Force Recommends
If new guidelines from the United States Preventive Services Task Force are approved, it would expand access to the medication that’s effective against preventing HIV since most private health plans are required under the Affordable Care Act to cover the full cost of services recommended by the panel. “This is definitely fantastic news and validates everything science has been saying all along,” said Dr. Aaron Lord, a physician at New York University School of Medicine. “When taken daily, there’s very good evidence that the chance of acquiring H.I.V. is essentially zero.”