Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

The Way People Touch, Use Smartphones Could Predict And Preempt Mental Health Issues

Morning Briefing

A study has found a strong correlation between patients suffering from depression and anxiety and certain patterns in keyboard and other touchscreen actions on their smartphones. In other public health news: Alzheimer’s tests, tobacco, sleep apnea, sexual assault and paralysis, kids with inexplicable pain, and more.

FDA Ramps Up Efforts To Stop Flood Of Synthetic Opioids Coming Into U.S. Through Postal Service

Morning Briefing

Members of Congress also are trying to address the mail issue. Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) is pushing a bipartisan bill called the STOP Act, which would require foreign postal services to provide electronic security data on all packages shipped to the United States. Meanwhile, officials are worried that the surge in opioid-related deaths in Maryland signal a worsening of the crisis.

Republican Lawmakers In Pa. Weigh Changes To Medicaid, Adding Work Requirement

Morning Briefing

The state Senate has passed the plan and it goes back to the House for a vote. Meanwhile, officials and Medicaid enrollees in Nevada are concerned about the future of the Medicaid expansion program there.

Hospitals Nervous As Medicare Considers Paying For Joint Replacements At Surgical Centers

Morning Briefing

If the federal government begins covering hip and knee surgeries in outpatient facilities, hospitals could lose substantial business. Also in the news, consumer groups mobilize to fight the Trump administration’s proposal to allow nursing homes to force residents to settle complaints through mediation and in support of a decision during the Obama administration to hold up Medicaid money for Texas because of anti-abortion laws there.

As ACA Emerges From The Rubble Intact, Attention Shifts To Enrollment Season

Morning Briefing

Many questions remain about what exactly the enrollment period will look like, and if President Donald Trump and his administration will try to undermine sign-ups. Meanwhile, the damage may already be done to the individual marketplace following months of uncertainty.

Doctor Tackles Internet’s Most Dubious And Dangerous Medical Advice With Empathy And Snark

Morning Briefing

Dr. Jennifer Gunter is loved and loathed by many for taking on Republicans, President Donald Trump and Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle brand Goop. In other public health news: seniors who don’t take their meds, back pain, transgender police recruits and flame retardants.

Most Effective Opioid Addiction Treatment Banned From Majority Of Jails

Morning Briefing

Much of the criminal justice system still takes a punitive approach to addiction. Many who work in corrections believe, incorrectly, that treatments like methadone, itself an opioid, allow inmates to get high and simply replace one addiction with another. In other news on the crisis: driving under the influence; answers about the epidemic; how health law repeal would hurt those fighting addiction; and more.

Trump Blaming Mexico For N.H.’s Opioid Crisis Exposes Lack Of Understanding Of The Epidemic

Morning Briefing

In a phone call with Mexico’s leader, President Donald Trump called New Hampshire a “drug-infested den,” and placed the blame on Mexican cartels. However, the crisis has its roots in prescription drug abuse, which can come from a local doctor.