Latest News On Disparities

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Health Gap Widens Between Appalachia And Rest Of The U.S.

KFF Health News Original

In the early 1990s, people in this economically depressed region lagged only slightly behind other parts of the country. Today, rates of infant mortality in Appalachia are significantly higher than elsewhere, and the difference in life expectancy has grown noticeably.

EMS Delays In Rural Areas Leave First-Aid Gap For Bystanders To Fill

KFF Health News Original

Response times for emergency medical service units are about twice as long in rural areas as in urban areas, researchers say, underscoring the need for trained lay people to provide first aid until professional help arrives.

Latinos Left Out Of Clinical Trials … And Possible Cures

KFF Health News Original

Fewer than 8 percent of enrollees in medical studies are Hispanic. Those who don’t participate have less access to cutting-edge treatments, and researchers have less data on how a drug works within the Hispanic population.

Latinos quedan fuera de estudios médicos… y posibles curas

KFF Health News Original

Menos del 8% de los que pacientes en estudios médicos son hispanos. Esto significa que tienen menos acceso a tratamientos de avanzada, y los investigadores tienen menos información sobre cómo funciona una droga o terapia en esa población.

Transgender Health Care Targeted In Crusade To Undo ACA

KFF Health News Original

HHS Secretary Tom Price and President Donald Trump have vowed to use administrative powers to mitigate the health law rules that created “burdens” or that don’t match up with their agenda.

California Sued For Allegedly Substandard Medi-Cal Care

KFF Health News Original

The lawsuit is a civil rights case on behalf of Latinos, who comprise nearly half of the program’s enrollees. But the advocates who filed it also hope to get class action certification for all Medi-Cal enrollees.

Senators Grill Top Indian Health Officials About Trump Budget

KFF Health News Original

The administration officials could not answer some basic questions from senators, including how much money the agency has gained from the health law’s Medicaid expansion and whether President Donald Trump’s proposed 2018 budget would help the agency hire more staff.

A Community Seeks Answers, Assurances About Health Care — In 10 Languages

KFF Health News Original

A forum for Asian immigrants in Oakland draws a crowd so large some attendees had to be seated in an overflow room. Many immigrants are eager for information relevant to them as changes to the health care system are debated in Washington.

Lead Poisoning’s Lifelong Toll Includes Lowering Social Mobility, Researchers Find

KFF Health News Original

Research published today suggests childhood lead exposure, which affects half a million children and which the CDC has been deemed a major public concern, doesn’t just impact cognitive development but also undermines class mobility.

State Fires Contractor After Problems Put California HIV Patients At Risk

KFF Health News Original

The company tasked with enrolling eligible patients in an HIV assistance program failed to keep an online enrollment portal working effectively and violated other contract terms, the public health agency said.

Cuando los padres y el pediatra no hablan el mismo idioma

KFF Health News Original

Un nuevo estudio en California revela que los padres latinos que sólo hablan español son menos propensos a reportar buenas experiencias con los médicos de sus hijos que los que hablan inglés.

Threat Of Obamacare Repeal Leaves Community Health Centers In Limbo

KFF Health News Original

These clinics have long provided health care to low-income patients and enjoyed expansion under the Affordable Care Act. With repeal looming, the centers’ doctors worry about what’s next.