Rachel Bluth

Rachel Bluth was a correspondent for KFF Health News until February 2023.

@RachelHBluth

Discharged, Dismissed: ERs Often Miss Chance To Set Overdose Survivors On ‘Better Path’

KFF Health News Original

Only a small percentage of people who survived an opioid overdose received in the next year some form of drug abuse treatment, according to an analysis of West Virginia Medicaid claims data. Experts say the findings underscore a national disconnect.

GoFundMe CEO: ‘Gigantic Gaps’ In Health System Showing Up In Crowdfunding

KFF Health News Original

Fundraising for medical expenses leads this crowdfunding website and, according to its chief executive, highlights a deep national need to address the high costs of health care.

In Grandma’s Stocking: An Apple Watch To Monitor Falls, Track Heart Rhythms

KFF Health News Original

The new-generation gadget is designed to alert and protect wearers from falls and heart problems, expanding Apple’s target audience beyond the usual, tech-savvy, early adopters to those with older tickers.

Hidden Drugs And Danger Lurk In Over-The-Counter Supplements, Study Finds

KFF Health News Original

Dieters and gym rats, beware. Some dietary supplements promising weight loss or more muscle may contain active ingredients not listed on the label that fly under the radar of the Food and Drug Administration. The California Department of Public Health analyzed public data maintained by the FDA to suss out trends among tainted products, raising red flags.

En las últimas dos décadas casi se duplicó el número de niños con trastorno de atención

KFF Health News Original

Los Estados Unidos contabilizan significativamente más casos de TDAH que otros países desarrollados, lo que, según los investigadores, ha hecho pensar que hay un sobre diagnóstico.

Suicide By Opioid: New Research Suggests Overdoses Should Be Classified As Self-Harm

KFF Health News Original

Researchers combined the number of suicide deaths with those associated with drug overdoses in an effort to better grasp the overlap between these two public health epidemics.

Financial Ties That Bind: Studies Often Fall Short On Conflict-Of-Interest Disclosures

KFF Health News Original

A new study in JAMA Surgery finds that a large sample of published medical research failed to disclose details on the financial relationships between medical device makers and physicians. Changes in the disclosure process could close this loop.