Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Health Insurance Mandate Haunts Romney

Morning Briefing

The parallels between the federal health law and the Massachusetts health overhaul that GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney signed into law when governor continue to cause some Republicans to doubt him as a their primary pick.

Issues That Can Drive Physicians To Quit

Morning Briefing

One news article details the reasons that drove a primary care physician to quit. Meanwhile, the American Medical Association is launching a media campaign to permanently fix the formula that is used to calculate Medicare payments to doctors.

First Edition: October 10, 2011

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports about the ‘super committee’s’ moving parts and how the fate of the health law may be determined by what happens in 2012.

Budgeting Makes It Hard To Revamp Health Law’s Long-Term-Care Act

Morning Briefing

AP calls the CLASS Act “zombie” because though the program hasn’t begun, “premiums the government may never collect count” as reducing the deficit. And, the Philadelphia Inquirer looks at a program to train health care professionals to deliver better care.

IOM: Cost Key To Formulating Essential Benefits Package

Morning Briefing

In its 297-page report, the Institute of Medicine recommended that cost should be a factor in deciding what benefits will be included in plans sold on the health law’s new insurance exchanges.

Task Force Panel Will Urge Men To Skip Prostate Screening, Reports Say

Morning Briefing

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is scheduled to issue this recommendation on Tuesday, but advance press reports indicate the expert panel will urge the federal government to change its current position to recommend that men under age 75 forgo this widely used test.

AlertNet Footage Shows Scenes Of Food Shortages In North Korea, Says Appeals For Aid Go Unanswered

Morning Briefing

“Footage of malnourished North Korean orphans and official warnings over failed harvests have given a rare glimpse at the scale of devastating food shortages in the country following a harsh winter and widespread flooding,” the Guardian reports. “The World Food Programme (WFP) … estimated in March that a quarter of the country’s 24 million inhabitants needed food aid and that a third of children were chronically malnourished” and “has warned it has only 30 percent of the funding it needs for its relief operation, which targets 3.5 million of North Korea’s most vulnerable citizens,” the newspaper writes.