Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Kansas Health IT Officials Get First Big Test; Utah Faces Digital Incompatibility

Morning Briefing

The hospital association has asked the Kansas Information Exchange to probe pricing structures of electronic health record vendors, the Kansas Health Institute News reports. Meanwhile, in Utah, plans some analysts are raising concerns that doctors and hospitals have already signed up with systems that may not work together, the Salt Lake Tribune writes.

First Edition: July 28, 2011

Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports about the ever-growing U.S. health care tab and about the petition filed by a conservative legal center to bring their health law challenge to the Supreme Court.

House Committee Releases Foreign Operations Spending Bill With State, USAID Funding Cuts

Morning Briefing

The House Appropriations Committee on Tuesday released the FY12 Foreign Relations Authorization Act “that slashes State Department funding and foreign aid,” The Hill’s “On The Money” blog reports (Wasson, 7/26).

Efforts To Fight HIV/AIDS, NTDs Should Be Integrated

Morning Briefing

“The neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) produce a devastating level of chronic disability in sub-Saharan Africa, with some estimates suggesting that the NTD disease burden exceeds tuberculosis and is one-half that of malaria,” Julie Noblick and Richard Skolnick of George Washington University and Peter Hotez of the Sabin Vaccine Institute write in a PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases editorial. With noted relationships between the prevalence of NTDs and HIV, the diseases “demand a public health response from the established global HIV/AIDS community, in parallel with efforts to scale up NTD control,” they argue.

Boehner Plan Faces Delay As Debt Deal Continues To Be Elusive

Morning Briefing

The delay was caused both by a Congressional Budget Office analysis that found the proposal by House Speaker John Boehner didn’t score the promised savings and by conservatives’ skepticism about the plan.

Medicare Part D Ups Patient Compliance, Reduces Hospital Costs

Morning Briefing

The findings, which were published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association, suggested that for seniors, access to affordable prescription drugs would reduce their need for emergency and short-term nursing care.

India Plans To Establish Central Foreign Aid Agency To Fight Corruption, Cut Costs

Morning Briefing

India plans to establish a central foreign aid agency, “believed to be modeled on” USAID, “to prevent funds from being misused and delays in aid delivery,” the Guardian reports. “The agency will reportedly be called the Indian Agency for Partnership in Development, overseeing $11.3bn (Rs 50,000 crore) over the next five to seven years,” the newspaper writes.

U.N. Warns 3.5M Kenyans Will Need Food Aid By September

Morning Briefing

The U.N. on Tuesday said approximately 3.5 million Kenyans will need food aid by September due to drought, “while European officials warned such crises would flare up again unless more money was directed at prevention efforts,” Reuters reports (Obulutsa/Migiro, 7/26). VOA News examined how “food security experts are looking for lessons from severe droughts of the past, when worst case scenarios were avoided” (Colombant, 7/26).

World Bank Urges China To Address NCDs Or Face Economic Consequences

Morning Briefing

In a report (.pdf) released on Tuesday, the World Bank urged China to step up its efforts to fight non-communicable diseases (NCDs), “the main cause of death in the country, warning of rising health expenditure and an economic slowdown if rapid action is not taken,” Reuters reports.