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Showing 521-540 of 131,597 results

Lurie Children’s Hospital In Chicago Halts Even More Trans Care For Minors

January 21, 2026 Morning Briefing

Lurie was one of just a few Chicago-area hospitals that still provided gender-affirming medications to minors. The hospital announced Tuesday that it had been threatened with a federal probe and would no longer offer the meds for those under 18 who hadn’t previously been treated at the hospital.

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CDC Official Downplays Potential Loss Of Measles Elimination Status In US

January 21, 2026 Morning Briefing

Ralph Abraham, principal deputy director of the CDC, claimed the continued spread of the virus is ‘just the cost of doing business.” As Stat notes, however, elimination status is lost if a country is unable to stop ongoing transmission of the virus and circulation continues for a year or longer.

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Red Cross Asks For Blood Donations As It Declares A Severe Shortage

January 21, 2026 Morning Briefing

The American Red Cross says hospital demand is outpacing donor blood supply, which is impacted by factors including inclement weather and the flu season. Other public health news is on cancer research, mental health, and gun violence.

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First Edition: Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026

January 21, 2026 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

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A woman wearing a yellow headband and a brown sweatshirt stands in front of a garage door, posing for a portrait.

Medicaid Tries New Approach With Sickle Cell: Companies Get Paid Only if Costly Gene Therapies Work

By Phil Galewitz January 21, 2026 KFF Health News Original

The government is using sickle cell treatments to test a new strategy: paying only if the therapies benefit patients. With more expensive treatments on the horizon, the program — created by the Biden administration and continued under President Trump — could help Medicaid save money and treat more patients.

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A woman wearing a yellow headband and a brown sweatshirt stands in front of a garage door, posing for a portrait.

Los pagos de Medicaid por el tratamiento de la anemia falciforme dependerán de su éxito

By Phil Galewitz January 21, 2026 KFF Health News Original

Actualmente hay dos terapias génicas aprobadas por la FDA, con costos de $2,2 millones por paciente en un caso y $3,1 millones en el otro, sin incluir el gasto de la hospitalización prolongada que requieren.

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Estados Unidos podría perder su estatus de país libre de sarampión

By Amy Maxmen January 21, 2026 KFF Health News Original

Esto marca un cambio importante desde que Estados Unidos eliminara el sarampión en el año 2000. Hasta ahora, el virus aparecía de manera esporádica, con personas infectadas en el extranjero, pero rara vez provocaba brotes locales debido a las altas tasas de vacunación.

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A woman with dark hair leans with her eyes closed on the back of a man wearing glasses who looks at the camera

Ante el aumento en los precios del seguro médico, las familias enfrentan decisiones difíciles

By Lynn Arditi January 20, 2026 KFF Health News Original

Millones de personas de clase media con planes de salud de ACA enfrentan aumentos drásticos en las primas en 2026, al no contar con el respaldo de los subsidios mejorados que el Congreso no ha renovado.

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Pig Kidney Recipient Gets A Human Organ, Making Transplant History

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

Doctors and scientists have been able to fine-tune treatment for future xenotransplant patients after guiding New Hampshire patient Tim Andrews through an experimental pig kidney transplant that his body rejected months later but that bought him time while waiting for a human kidney match.

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Viewpoints: AI In The Doctor’s Office Isn’t Scary — It’s The Future; Stem Cell IVF Needs Guardrails Instead Of Fear

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

Editorial writers tackle these public health issues.

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Phantom Exchange Enrollees May Haunt Health Insurers As Sign-Ups End

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

Some insurers are still seeing enrollees who were automatically enrolled when their previous carrier left the market, and they are not counting on them paying their premiums. Early evidence suggests that more exchange enrollees than usual will not keep their plans this year. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump focuses blame on insurance companies for rising health care costs.

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Future Of Abortion Rights In Virginia Will Be Decided By Voters

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

A proposed constitutional amendment protecting reproductive rights cleared the Virginia General Assembly last week. The issue will go before voters in November. Virginia currently allows abortion through the second trimester of pregnancy.

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Minnesota Residents ‘Holding Off’ On Medical Care In Order To Avoid ICE

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

Also: More older adults are protesting in California; geriatricians say it can be beneficial to their health. Other news from around the nation comes from Maryland, Florida, Oregon, and Illinois.

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Morning Briefing for Tuesday, January 20, 2026

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

As Vaccinations Dip, Experts Warn That Few ERs Can Fully Care For Sick Kids

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

Only about 17% of hospitals met standards for high pediatric readiness in a 2024 national study of almost 5,000 emergency departments, Axios reported. In related news, the United States is on the cusp of losing its measles elimination status.

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Maternal Acetaminophen Use Does Not Increase Autism Risk, Review Confirms

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

Acetaminophen remains “the first-line treatment that we would recommend if the pregnant women have pain or fever in pregnancy,” said Dr. Asma Khalil, the lead author of the study. Other MAHA news looks at fluoridated water, whole milk, and more.

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First Edition: Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026

January 20, 2026 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

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A photo of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and JD Vance waving to an audience at a conference in D.C. Behind them is a sign reading "MAHA Summit."

GOP Promotes MAHA Agenda in Bid To Avert Midterm Losses. Dems Point to Contradictions.

By Stephanie Armour January 20, 2026 KFF Health News Original

As fractures emerge in the Make America Great Again movement, some Republicans see its health-focused “MAHA” counterpart as the party’s next big thing. But doubts abound.

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Readers Balk at ‘Gold Standard’ of Autism Treatment

January 20, 2026 KFF Health News Original

KFF Health News gives readers a chance to comment on a recent batch of stories.

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Physician-Journalist Shines Light on Measles Upsurge and New GLP-1 Study

January 17, 2026 KFF Health News Original

KFF Health News’ editor-at-large for public health recently took to the airwaves to discuss topical stories. Here’s a collection of her appearances.

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More From KFF Health News

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