Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

World Should Provide Funding For Peacekeeping Troops To Ensure Humanitarian Aid Routes In Somalia

Morning Briefing

With the retreat of the Islamist extremist group al-Shabab out of the Somali capital of Mogadishu, where famine is threatening the lives of hundreds of thousands of people, “the U.N.-backed peacekeeping force can and should be quickly expanded,” according to Somalia’s prime minister and the U.N. envoy to the nation, in order to “allow the force to move out from the capital to secure routes for aid,” a Washington Post editorial states.

Bioethicists Up The Ante In Bachmann’s HPV Brouhaha

Morning Briefing

Since Monday’s GOP presidential primary debate, Michele Bachmann, a Republican candidate, has been under the microscope for criticizing fellow GOP hopeful Rick Perry for his policy in Texas requiring girls to get the Gardisil vaccine against HPV. Now, a bioethicist in Pennsylvania has offered Bachmann $10,000 if she can prove her claim about the vaccine’s link to mental retardation and another has offered $1,000 if the mother Bachmann referred to will release her child’s medical records.

Perry Attacks Romney On Mass. Health Plan, Similarities To Obama

Morning Briefing

In a campaign swing through Iowa, GOP presidential hopeful Rick Perry drew distinctions between himself and Mitt Romney, another Republican presidential candidate, by highlighting the similarities between the federal health law and the Massachusetts health plan that became law while Romney was the state’s governor.

New York Times Examines International Response To Somali Famine

Morning Briefing

“Twenty years after the central government collapsed,” Somalia is facing drought, food insecurity and conflict larger in scale than when famine conditions hit the nation in the 1990s, “[a]nd given the world’s limited interest in a major intervention, that is not likely to change anytime soon,” the New York Times reports in a news analysis on the situation.

MedPAC Prepares ‘Doc Fix’ Proposal With Full Cost Offset

Morning Briefing

The plan takes the commission into an area it generally tries to avoid: how to pay for such a major change to the Medicare system. Its suggestion is to pay for the SGR fix by reducing payments to specialists and imposing cuts on other parts of the health care sector.

Research Roundup: Personalized Info Helps Consumer Decision-Making

Morning Briefing

This week’s studies come from the National Bureau of Economic Research, Health Affairs, Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, The Archives of Internal Medicine, The Kaiser Family Foundation, Health Management Associates, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Urban Institute.

Increase In Hospital Births Helps Lower Neonatal Mortality Rate In China, Study Says

Morning Briefing

A campaign that began in 2000 encouraging women in China to give birth in hospitals instead of at home helped cut the nation’s neonatal mortality rate by 62 percent between 1996 and 2008, according to a study by researchers from Peking University and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, BBC News reports. For the study, published Friday in the Lancet, researchers analyzed “data from China’s Maternal and Mortality Surveillance System to examine trends in neonatal mortality by cause and socioeconomic region,” the news service writes (9/15).

Afghanistan Facing Challenges In Effort To Eradicate Polio By End Of 2012

Morning Briefing

“Afghanistan is intensifying efforts to eradicate polio by the end of next year, but security remains a major challenge especially in the southern provinces where the virus is localized, says” Arshad Quddus, head of the WHO polio program in Afghanistan, IRIN reports. Polio remains endemic in Afghanistan, according to the WHO, IRIN notes, adding that Afghan “[g]overnment data show that 85 percent of the population now live in polio-free areas, but the virus is still circulating in 13 districts, including the seven where [13] recent cases have been detected.” In addition to security issues, “low literacy rates, poor hygiene practices and low awareness of the benefits of vaccination” are hindering campaigns, according to IRIN (9/15).

Chad Faces Food Security And Health Challenges, But Opportunity Exists For Improvement, U.N. Official Says

Morning Briefing

U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator for Chad Thomas Gurtner “says Chad faces daunting food security and health challenges” but that “peace and growing stability in Chad bodes well for the country’s future,” VOA News reports. He cited high rates of food insecurity and malnutrition among children, “insufficient rainfall” that likely will “limit agricultural production,” rising food prices, the “worst cholera epidemic in years,” and the return home of more than 80,000 Chadian migrants who were working in Libya and sending money home to their families, the news service notes.

First Edition: September 16, 2011

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports that, despite dire predictions by health law opponents about the Medicare Advantage program, its premiums are falling and its enrollment is rising.

New Report Finds Improvements In Hospital Performance

Morning Briefing

Meanwhile, Reuters reports on the quality of weekend care at stroke centers, and nursing homes are trying to reduce their use of powerful antipsychotic drugs for patients with dementia.