Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Report: Gains In Enrolling Kids In Public Health Care Programs

Morning Briefing

The report issued by the Department of Health and Human Services found that the number of children eligible but not enrolled in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program fell. Meanwhile, HHS also awarded $40 million in grants for more outreach.

Research Roundup: Majority Of Docs Face Malpractice Claims

Morning Briefing

This week’s studies and reports come from the Government Accountability Office, the Journal Of General Internal Medicine, New England Journal Of Medicine, Harvard Medical School’s Department Of Health Care Policy, Health Affairs, the Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

First Edition: August 19, 2011

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including a range of reports looking ahead to the work of the deficit ‘super committee’ and other budget news.

Isolation of HIV Antibodies Advances Search For AIDS Vaccine

Morning Briefing

A team of researchers has “identified 17 potent antibodies whose discovery opened up valuable pathways in the search for an AIDS vaccine,” Agence France-Presse reports (8/17). The researchers “at and associated with the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), the Scripps Research Institute, the biotechnology company Theraclone Sciences and Monogram Biosciences Inc., a LabCorp company, report in the current issue of Nature” that the antibodies are “capable of neutralizing a broad spectrum of variants of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS,” according to a joint press release (8/17).

U.K., Islamic Countries Pledge Additional Funds For Famine Aid In Somalia

Morning Briefing

During a visit to the Somali capital of Mogadishu, U.K. International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell on Wednesday pledged an additional $41.5 million in aid to Somalia, to be distributed through UNICEF, BBC News reports. The funding will enable UNICEF “to provide supplementary rations for up to 192,000 people

New Quick Malaria Diagnostic Test May Help Reduce Overtreatment

Morning Briefing

“Health workers often treat patients for malaria even when a test indicates a different cause of the illness,” a behavior seen across sub-Saharan Africa “that worries many health experts,” PRI’s The World reports. “Prescribing malaria medication to patients who don’t need it wastes precious resources in a country already dealing with drug shortages

‘Real Action’ Needed On NCDs

Morning Briefing

“We were deeply perturbed to learn that the negotiations for the Outcomes Document of the U.N. High Level Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), a mere month or so away, had stalled because member states failed to reach consensus,” Nalini Saligram, CEO of Arogya World, and Sandeep Kishore, an MD/PhD candidate at the Cornell/ Rockefeller/ Sloan-Kettering Institute, write in a Huffington Post opinion piece.

New Rules Would Help Consumers Comparison Shop For Health Plans

Morning Briefing

The proposed regulations, issued Wednesday by the Department of Health and Human Services, are designed to make sure insurers and employers provide consumers with “plain English” information about health insurance coverage to empower them to make informed choices.

NCD Alliance Says U.S., Canada, E.U. Stalling Efforts To Fight NCDs

Morning Briefing

The NCD Alliance, which represents about 2,000 health organizations from around the world focused on non-communicable diseases (NCDs), “on Thursday accused the United States, Canada and Europe of harming efforts to fight cancer, diabetes, heart and other diseases because they will not agree to set United Nations targets,” Reuters reports (Kelland, 8/18). The first-ever U.N. High-Level Meeting on the Prevention and Control of NCDs is scheduled for September 19-20 in New York.

Actress Mandy Moore Leads Bipartisan Congressional Group To Cameroon To Highlight Disease Prevention

Morning Briefing

“Actress, singer and humanitarian Mandy Moore recently led a bipartisan delegation of congressional staffers on a trip to Cameroon to promote foreign aid and disease prevention there,” Foreign Policy’s “The Cable” reports.

VOA News Examines Ethics Of Clinical Drug Testing In African Nations

Morning Briefing

VOA News examines the ethics of conducting clinical drug trials in developing countries, particularly in Africa. Several international ethical frameworks outline guidelines for clinical trials, “including the World Medical Association’s Declaration of Helsinki and the WHO’s Good Clinical Practice Guidelines,” but they are not mandatory, the news service writes.

Japan To Fund Polio Vaccination Efforts In Pakistan

Morning Briefing

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) is providing approximately $65 million to Pakistan’s government to provide polio vaccination campaigns in the country, “one of the most difficult fronts against the disease as global health organizations risk missing their goal of stopping polio globally the end of 2012,” the Wall Street Journal reports. “If Pakistan achieves certain goals with the money, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will repay the loan to Japan, according to officials briefed on the plan,” according to the newspaper (Guth, 8/18).