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Showing 2861-2880 of 131,652 results

Delayed Medicaid Payments Force Hospitals To Make Tough Decisions

May 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has been unusually slow at processing state-directed payments, leading hospitals to withhold their own payments to medical suppliers and to trim staff. Plus, a look at the wrangling over Medicaid changes on Capitol Hill.

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NY Eases Requirements To Forcibly Hospitalize Those With Mental Illness

May 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

New York state will now authorize first responders to involuntarily hospitalize New Yorkers who cannot meet their own basic needs such as food, shelter, or medical care. Other news comes from Texas, Florida, Connecticut, North Carolina, and Michigan.

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New 400-Page HHS Report Condemns Gender-Affirming Care For Youths

May 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

It’s unclear who wrote the report, which snubs the advice and recommendations of top medical groups. It was immediately criticized by pediatric groups and transgender rights advocates.

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Morning Briefing for Friday, May 2, 2025

May 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

Behind on your reading? Catch up on this week's KFF Health News stories with The Week in Brief, delivered every Friday to your inbox. Sign up here!

First Edition: Friday, May 2, 2025

May 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

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

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A photograph showing the ornate ceiling of the dome in the Montana Capitol.

Montana Lawmakers Approve $124M To Revamp Behavioral Health System

By Sue O'Connell May 2, 2025 KFF Health News Original

The legislation calls for a new mental health facility in eastern Montana, upgrades to existing state facilities, expansion of community services, and revisions to commitment procedures.

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A photo of the exterior of a concrete office building: the headquarters of the Government Accountability Office.

Government Watchdog Expects Medicaid Work Requirement Analysis by Fall

By Sam Whitehead and Renuka Rayasam May 2, 2025 KFF Health News Original

This fall, the U.S. Government Accountability Office expects to release a report on how much it costs to run Georgia Pathways to Coverage — the country’s only active Medicaid work requirement program — as other states and Congress consider similar programs.

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A photo of a woman in a white lab coat posing by a screen with the Covered California logo.

Covered California Pushes for Better Health Care as Federal Spending Cuts Loom

By Bernard J. Wolfson May 2, 2025 KFF Health News Original

Monica Soni, Covered California’s chief medical officer, oversees an effort to hold health plans financially accountable for the quality of care they provide, including childhood vaccination rates, which have fallen in California and nationwide. She worries federal spending cuts could soon bring turbulence to the state’s Affordable Care Act marketplace.

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A photo of the exterior of a concrete office building: the headquarters of the Government Accountability Office.

Preparan análisis sobre el requisito de trabajo para Medicaid

By Sam Whitehead and Renuka Rayasam May 2, 2025 KFF Health News Original

La idea de un mandato nacional que requiera que los beneficiarios de Medicaid trabajen, estudien o realicen otras actividades que cumplan los requisitos para mantener la cobertura está ganando terreno.

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What the Health? From KFF Health News: 100 Days of Health Policy Upheaval

May 1, 2025 Podcast

Members of Congress are back in Washington, and Republicans are struggling to find ways to reduce Medicaid spending without cutting benefits. Meanwhile, confusion continues to reign at the Department of Health and Human Services. Joanne Kenen of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, and Margot Sanger-Katz of The New York Times join KFF Health News’ Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more.

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Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

Each week, KFF Health News compiles a selection of the latest health research and news.

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Viewpoints: Red Dye No. 3 By Itself Isn’t Dangerous; What Spending Cuts Would Help Streamline Medicaid?

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

Opinion writers examine these public health issues.

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Morning Briefing for Thursday, May 1, 2025

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

‘All New Vaccines’ To Undergo Placebo Testing For Approval, HHS Says

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

Public health experts worry the policy change would not only cast doubt on the safety and effectiveness of vaccines but would limit production and access. Separately, a decades-long pursuit of universal vaccines gets a $500 million boost.

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Federal Funding Pulled From Campaign To Prevent Infant Sleep-Related Deaths

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

The Trump administration’s decision to end federal participation in the Safe to Sleep campaign comes as recent data show sudden infant deaths rising. Also: Education Department grant cuts, animals in federally funded research, PEPFAR cut impacts, and more.

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Pa. Lawmakers Request Criminal Probe Over Crozer Health Closure

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

A group of state lawmakers pressed the attorney general to launch an investigation for the shuttering of Crozer Health by California-based private health company Prospect Medical Holdings. Envision Healthcare, Teladoc, Two Chairs, Epic, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, and the Leapfrog Group are also in the news.

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LA County Offers Isolated California Hospital A $3M Lifeline

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

Financially struggling Catalina Island Health faces insolvency as early as July. In other news from California: today’s UC health worker strike; a probe into health data sharing with LinkedIn; the soda tax in Santa Cruz; and more.

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Missouri Senate Panel Pushes Resolution To Reinstate Abortion Ban

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

A Republican effort to overturn Amendment 3 — which voters approved in November with 51.6% of the vote — advanced Wednesday, St. Louis Public Radio reported.

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Diabetes Death Rates At Lowest Level Since Start Of Pandemic: CDC

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

Diabetes deaths peaked in 2021 at the height of the covid pandemic, but they’ve been trending down. Although levels are still higher than before the start of covid, they are the lowest they have been in years, preliminary data show. Simultaneously, breast cancer deaths among young women fell between 2010 and 2020.

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Autism Cases Are Not Becoming ‘More Severe,’ New Research Underlines

May 1, 2025 Morning Briefing

The findings, which will be presented this week at the International Society for Autism Research, show that only mild autism cases rose between 2000 and 2016. Meanwhile, the White House has so far declined to include key autism advocacy groups and researchers in its efforts to address autism.

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