Latest KFF Health News Stories
Health Overhaul Continues To Put Democratic Congressional Candidates In Hot Seat
News outlets report on how the health law is playing in various House and Senate races.
Lines Drawn Over San Francisco Court-Ordered Outpatient Mental Illness Treatment
Elsewhere, a program in Wisconsin assigns peer specialists to help those with mental illness reintegrate into society, cuts to mental health programs in Iowa haven’t materialized and North Carolina lawmakers look for ways to prevent suicide.
Nonprofit Religious Groups Pose Next Challenge To Contraceptive Mandate
The issue in more than four dozen lawsuits from faith-affiliated colleges, hospitals and charities is how far the government must go to accommodate them. Meanwhile, the administration weighs steps to provide contraceptive coverage, and the high court’s Hobby Lobby decision may help Democrats mobilize female voters.
Ill. Supreme Court Rules State Can’t Cut Retiree Health Benefits
The Court said the benefits are protected under the Illinois Constitution. The state wants to cut the benefits to save money on the state’s pension liabilities.
State Highlights: N.C. Medicaid Changes, Problems
A selection of health policy stories from California, North Carolina, Illinois, Wisconsin, Virginia, Texas and Colorado.
A selection of editorials and opinions on health care from around the country.
Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including a range of stories related to the implementation of the health law, and the politics surrounding it.
High Court Temporarily Sides With Christian College On Contraceptives
Wheaton College is suing the government because it objects to the special accommodation on birth control that the Obama administration set up for religious-affiliated groups. The court said while its case goes forward, the college could be exempted. That order drew a furious response from the Supreme Court’s three women justices.
A selection of health policy stories from North Carolina, Idaho, Massachusetts and the District of Columbia.
Digital Mammograms May Not Be Better At Diagnosing Older Women: Study
The Yale review adds to the mixed report card on digital mammography, reports NPR. Meanwhile, big increases in vaccination prices are straining public health budgets and creating dilemmas for some doctors, finds The New York Times.
NIH Expands Effort To Diagnose Misunderstood Disorders
The agency announces $43 million for its Undiagnosed Disease Network, which by the summer of 2017 is expected to enroll at least 300 new patients with mysterious and intractable conditions per year. Meanwhile, online ER booking in California is the latest example of how hospitals are attempting to compete with one another.
Health Law Still Looms As Issue In Midterms
Nearly seven in 10 adults say their view of the health law will factor in their congressional voting decisions this fall, a new Bankrate.com survey finds. Other stories look at positions staked out by candidates in Tennessee, Kansas and Oregon.
Longer Looks: Rethinking Involuntary Commitment; Awaiting A Transplant
This week’s articles come from The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Cincinnati Enquirer, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and WBUR.
Viewpoints: Expanding Hobby Lobby Decision; The Faux War On Women; Dispute Over Pelvic Exams
A selection of editorials and opinions on health care from around the country.
Administration Cites Hobby Lobby Ruling To Religious Nonprofits
The Obama administration uses the Supreme Court’s opinion Wednesday to buttress its claim it has offered religious nonprofits an acceptable compromise to the health law’s contraceptive coverage mandate. Meanwhile, House Democrats craft legislation that would bar for-profit companies from denying coverage.
Research Roundup: 20M Gain Insurance, Coverage’s Effect On Surgery Choices; Opioid Use
This week’s studies come from The New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA Surgery, JAMA Internal Medicine, the Pew Charitable Trusts, The Urban Institute, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Ford Foundation.
VA’s Medical Inspector Steps Down
Dr. John Pierce, the director of the VA’s medical inspector office, had served in that role since 2004 and is the fifth senior official at the VA to step down during the past six weeks. Also, stories look at how lawmakers are trying to reform the VA and just why the VA was developed 100 years ago.
Mass. To Weigh Options On Abortion Safeguards; Mo. Gov. Vetoes Bill
Mass. Gov. Deval Patrick says he wants new legislation by the end of the month to strengthen security around clinics. Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon vetoes a bill that would require women to wait 72 hours for the procedure.
Medicare Proposes To Slightly Raise Kidney Care Payments
Federal officials released plans for the raise in a proposed rule Wednesday.
Government Has Yet To Resolve Subsidy Inconsistencies
The inspector general report details that the government isn’t quite sure how to fix the problem. In the meantime, a new health startup looks to cash in on helping companies enroll low-wage earners in Medicaid instead of company plans.