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Latest KFF Health News Stories

American ‘Stem Cell Tourists’ Don’t Have To Travel Abroad, Study Says

KFF Health News Original

Treatments marketed as everything from anti-aging applications to therapies for degenerative diseases are increasingly available at commercial clinics in the U.S., but their growing numbers raise ethical and regulatory concerns in the scientific community.

Health Effects Of Egg Donation Not Well Studied

KFF Health News Original

Fertility specialists say that egg donation is safe and involves the same process as in vitro fertilization, but there are sporadic reports of cancers, some fatal, and subsequent fertility problems among egg donors. Because of a lack of research, it isn’t known whether these problems are linked to the process or are the result of chance.

Screen Flashes And Pop-Up Reminders: ‘Alert Fatigue’ Spreads Through Medicine

KFF Health News Original

Electronic health records increasingly include automated alert systems pegged to patients’ health information. In some cases, though, the sheer volume of these messages has become unmanageable.

Medicare Releases Draft Proposal For Patient Observation Notice

KFF Health News Original

Although there is widespread agreement on the need to let people know if they haven’t been admitted, the language proposed by federal officials hasn’t satisfied everyone.

Study Suggests Federal Standard May Be Thwarting Some Transplant Patients

KFF Health News Original

Researchers report that performance standards set by federal health officials may have led to many patients being dropped from transplant lists without improving survival rates.

Lights Out: Some Children’s Hospitals Take Steps To Ensure A Good Night’s Sleep

KFF Health News Original

Because of the important role sleep plays in healing, a trend is emerging in which children’s hospitals are reorganizing their workflow to help their young patients sleep through the night.

Missouri Hospitals Seek To Focus Readmission Penalties On Patient Poverty

KFF Health News Original

The Missouri Hospital Association objects to the formula for setting the federal penalties because it does not factor in the number of patients who are poor or in bad health. It is seeking to generate consumer interest in the penalties.

Medicare’s Drug-Pricing Experiment Stirs Opposition

KFF Health News Original

A proposal to change the way Medicare pays for some drugs has set off intense reaction and lobbying — all tied to a common theme: How far should the government go in setting prices for prescription drugs?

A Doctor Yearns For A Return To The Time When Physicians Were ‘Artisans’

KFF Health News Original

Dr. Abraham Nussbaum, author of a new book examining the drive toward quality metrics such as checklists, says he fears medicine could become just another job and not a “calling.”

Critics Of Medicare’s Overall Hospital Star Rating Push For Changes

KFF Health News Original

Federal officials delayed the release of the ratings after the hospital industry and members of Congress objected to the formula, saying it worked against hospitals that take the patients that are the toughest to treat.

Final EEOC Rule Sets Limits For Financial Incentives On Wellness Programs

KFF Health News Original

The federal agency says the wellness programs can get health details about workers and their spouses as long as the financial rewards or penalties do not exceed 30 percent of the cost for an individual in the company’s group health plan.

Women Aren’t Taking First Place In Top Medical Journals

KFF Health News Original

Women scientists get first author credit on medical studies much less often than their male coauthors. That has career implications and could even be skewing the study of women’s health.