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Showing 681-700 of 131,597 results

A Dose Of Upbeat And Inspiring News

December 23, 2025 Morning Briefing

Today’s stories are about a paraplegic’s trip to space, notable health care wins of 2025, philanthropy after loss, and a secret Santa’s mission to boost the spirits of people in need.

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CMS Generates 400 Medicare-Funded Residency Slots

December 23, 2025 Morning Briefing

MedPage Today reports that the slots will be spread across 135 hospitals in 37 states, with almost two-thirds of them in primary care and psychiatry residency programs. Other health industry news is on medtech, CVS Health, outpatient cosmetic surgery, and more.

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New ALS Drug Targets Cell Mutation, May Slow Progression: Study

December 23, 2025 Morning Briefing

The small study suggests that the drug, tofersen, might even be able to slow muscle degeneration and reverse ALS symptoms by targeting a specific mutation — SOD1 mRNA — which affects 2% of people with ALS. Plus: HIV drugs, a Nipah virus vaccine, hydroxychloroquine, and more.

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Morning Briefing for Tuesday, December 23, 2025

December 23, 2025 Morning Briefing

GLP-1 pill approved, cosmetic surgery, autism care, vexing medical bills, Medicare, IVF coverage, ALS drug, and more.

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Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy Becomes First GLP-1 Oral Pill After FDA Approval

December 23, 2025 Morning Briefing

The Wegovy pill has also been approved for reducing cardiovascular risks. Novo plans to launch the drug in January. Also in the news: the U.S. strikes health funding deals with nine African countries; Trump wants fewer guardrails on AI in health; and more.

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First Edition: Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025

December 23, 2025 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations. NOTE TO READERS
The First Edition will not be published Dec. 24 through Jan. 2. Look for it again in your inbox on Jan. 5. Happy holidays from all of us at KFF Health News!

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An Arm and a Leg: A Few More Good Things From 2025

By Dan Weissmann December 23, 2025 Podcast

“An Arm and a Leg” looks back on state laws passed in 2025 aimed at removing medical debts from credit reports and reining in corporate influence on medicine.

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Medical Bills Can Be Vexing and Perplexing. Here’s This Year’s Best Advice for Patients.

By Emmarie Huetteman December 23, 2025 KFF Health News Original

As the crowdsourced investigative series from KFF Health News approaches its eighth anniversary, “Bill of the Month” offers its top takeaways of 2025 to help patients manage, decipher, and even fight their medical bills.

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Surgery tools sit in the foreground as surgeons work in the background

After Outpatient Cosmetic Surgery, They Wound Up in the Hospital or Alone at a Recovery House

By Fred Schulte December 23, 2025 KFF Health News Original

Some patients who had liposuction or other surgeries later required emergency hospital care — and some died, court records show.

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A mother holds her 3-year-old daughter in her arms on their porch. The daughter is wearing a big smile.

It’s the ‘Gold Standard’ in Autism Care. Why Are States Reining It In?

By Bram Sable-Smith and Andrew Jones December 23, 2025 KFF Health News Original

States facing yawning budget shortfalls have begun cutting Medicaid reimbursements for a wide variety of services. In some states, dramatic cuts are targeting therapies that many families of autistic people say are essential to caring for their loved ones.

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Seasonal Viruses On The Rise As Holiday Travel Increases

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

As one of the busiest travel weeks begins, cases of flu, norovirus, and covid are on the upswing nationwide. Also: The CDC has reported two new flu-related deaths in children and nearly 5 million cases of influenza across the U.S.

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As Children Wait For Care, Lawsuit Delays Florida’s KidCare Expansion

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

Florida lawmakers unanimously passed the expansion two years ago, but an ongoing lawsuit Florida filed against CMS stands in its way. Other news from around the nation comes from Minnesota, Maryland, Colorado, California, and Louisiana.

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Viewpoints: Why Republicans Remain Divided On Health Care; Vaccines, Measles, And Future Of Public Health

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

Opinion writers tackle these public health topics.

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HPV Vaccines Prevent Much More Than Cervical Cancer, Study Finds

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

The research, published in JAMA Oncology, found that the rate of precancerous vulvar or vaginal lesions was 37% lower in those who’d gotten at least one dose of HPV vaccine. Also: proton beam radiation therapy, mpox, and more.

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Morning Briefing for Monday, December 22, 2025

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

Insurance and drug costs, Medicare and Medicaid, vaccines, mental hospital failures, gun deaths, seasonal viruses on the rise, and more.

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With ACA Prices Set To Soar, Trump Pushes Health Insurers To Lower Costs

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

President Donald Trump said Friday that he would meet with insurance companies soon to pressure them to lower patients’ prices, Bloomberg reported. Insurance companies “are making so much money, and they have to make less, a lot less,” Trump said. In other news, CMS has created an Office of Rural Health Transformation to oversee the $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Program.

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Nine Drugmakers Agree To Trump’s ‘Most-Favored-Nation’ Pricing Deal

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

The deal requires the pharmaceutical companies to match what they charge in other developed countries for newly launched medications, including in commercial and cash-pay markets, as well as Medicare and Medicaid.

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UnitedHealth Releases First External Review In Bid To Regain Public Trust

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

UnitedHealth has pledged to take close to two dozen specific actions across the areas in which the report found it lacking, including unresolved issues regarding patient care management, and prior authorizations. Plus, several Illinois hospitals with religious ties spurn medical aid-in-dying law.

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First Edition: Monday, Dec. 22, 2025

December 22, 2025 Morning Briefing

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

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A portrait of a woman wearing a shirt that has a picture of her family at a reunion celebration.

Criminally Ill: Systemic Failures Turn State Mental Hospitals Into Prisons

By Sarah Jane Tribble and Doug Livingston, The Marshall Project - Cleveland December 22, 2025 KFF Health News Original

There has been a steep rise in the share of people with severe mental illnesses being sent to state psychiatric hospitals on court orders after being accused of serious crimes. The shift has all but halted patients’ ability to get care before they have a catastrophic crisis.

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