Health Industry

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Competition Suffers Most If UnitedHealth Exits Obamacare In 2017: Analysis

KFF Health News Original

A Kaiser Family Foundation analysis released Monday, a day ahead of UnitedHealth’s expected announcement, finds 1.1 million consumers would have no choice in health insurance plans if the giant insurer drops out of Obamacare marketplaces as threatened.

Genetic Counselors Struggle To Keep Up With Huge New Demand

KFF Health News Original

After Angelina Jolie disclosed her genetic predisposition for breast cancer, demand for genetic tests went up. Counselors help interpret those tests, and demand for their services has increased, too.

A Dearth Of Hospital Beds For Patients In Psychiatric Crisis

KFF Health News Original

A California Assembly bill would require creating a mandatory registry for available psychiatric hospital beds, but the state hospital association calls it unworkable.

Hospitals Eye Community Health Workers To Cultivate Patients’ Successes

KFF Health News Original

These non-medical workers are increasingly being seen by hospitals as a critical point of contact for patients and a way to help hold down readmission rates and improve health outcomes.

Hospital Software Often Doesn’t Flag Unsafe Drug Prescriptions, Report Finds

KFF Health News Original

A survey conducted by the Leapfrog Group finds that though many hospitals have computer-based medication systems in place to protect against errors, many still fall short in highlighting possible problems.

Patients’ Assessment Of Their Health Is Gaining Importance In Treatment

KFF Health News Original

As medicine moves to a patient-centered model, doctors and other health providers are slowly adding patients’ self-reports to the other tests and exams they use to determine care.

Mortgages For Expensive Health Care? Some Experts Think It Can Work.

KFF Health News Original

An MIT economist and Harvard oncologist propose offering loans to patients to cover the cost of expensive, curative drugs, financed by private sector investment in loan securities.

When Medicare Advantage Drops Doctors, Some Members Can Switch Plans

KFF Health News Original

In the past eight months, Medicare officials have quietly granted the special enrollment periods to more than 15,000 Medicare Advantage members in seven states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.

Pharmaceutical Company Has Hiked Price On Aid-In-Dying Drug

KFF Health News Original

Valeant Pharmaceuticals, the company that makes Seconal, the drug most commonly used in prescribed for terminally ill patients who want to end their lives, physician-assisted suicide, has doubled the price to more than $3,000.

Device Maker Olympus Hiked Prices For Scopes As Superbug Infections Spread

KFF Health News Original

The device manufacturer had a close relationship with Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles — until its scopes were linked to infections and the company raised the price for new ones by 28 percent.

Study: Primary Care Doctors Often Don’t Help Patients Manage Depression

KFF Health News Original

Physicians were less likely to use “care management processes” with patients who have depression than with those who had other chronic conditions, the researchers found.

Electronic Records Offer A Chance To Ensure Patients’ End-Of-Life Plans Aren’t Lost In Critical Moments

KFF Health News Original

Some experts say this opportunity has not been realized, but advocates and policymakers are focusing on fixes that would make the digital versions of end-of-life planning documents easy for health professionals to locate.

Hackers Seek Ransom From Two More California Hospitals

KFF Health News Original

A malware attack against two Prime Healthcare hospitals in South California, which federal authorities are investigating, comes soon after a case in which hackers demanded ransom from a Los Angeles hospital.

More Sickle Cell Patients Survive, But Care Is Hard To Find For Adults

KFF Health News Original

For many years, most people with sickle cell died in childhood or adolescence, and the condition remained in the province of pediatrics. During the past two decades, advances in routine care have allowed many people to live into middle age and beyond, but barriers to care remain.

Saving Amanda: One Family’s Struggle To Deal With A Daughter’s Mental Illness

KFF Health News Original

​It took eight years for Amanda Lipp to get adequate care for her mental illness. Now, she and her mom, Pam, are sharing their story to fight stigma around mental illness so others don’t have to go it alone.