Syndicate

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Home Care Agencies Often Wrongly Deny Medicare Help To The Chronically Ill

KFF Health News Original

Agencies sometimes turn away Medicare beneficiaries with chronic health problems by incorrectly claiming Medicare won’t pay for their services, say patient advocates.

If Poor Neighborhood = Poor Health, Relocation Is One Solution

KFF Health News Original

Research shows that living in more affluent, less segregated neighborhoods can improve health problems like asthma and high blood pressure. Communities around the country are experimenting with moving some families to boost their health.

Postcard From California: Alzheimer’s ‘Looks Like Me, It Looks Like You’

KFF Health News Original

At a panel discussion this week in Sacramento, patients, caregivers and others shared their perspectives on how Alzheimer’s disease affects women, who account for two-thirds of those living with the condition.

Inside The Global Race To Deliver A Vital Radioactive Isotope Used To Detect Cancer

KFF Health News Original

Moly-99, as it’s called, is created in just six government-owned nuclear research reactors — none in North America — raising concerns about the reliability of the supply.

Trump’s Work-For-Medicaid Rule Puts Work On States’ Shoulders

KFF Health News Original

States that opt to change their Medicaid program must figure out how to delineate who is covered by the new mandate, how to enforce the rules and how to handle the people seeking exemptions.

Hospital Honchos Hone New Message In Wake Of Opioid Epidemic: Expect Pain

KFF Health News Original

“We really do have a lot of responsibility and culpability,” says one hospital official who is part of a working group trying to address the opioid epidemic. Patients have to expect more pain after surgery and understand the risk of addiction, says another doctor.

Trump Administration Clears Way To Force Some Medicaid Enrollees To Work

KFF Health News Original

Allowing states to mandate that non-disabled Medicaid enrollees work as a condition for coverage would mark one of the biggest changes to the program since it began more than 50 years ago. A decision on the first of the state requests could come within days.

A Poor Neighborhood In Chicago Looks To Cuba To Fight Infant Mortality

KFF Health News Original

Infant mortality in some of the poorest ZIP codes in the United States rivals that of countries like war-torn Syria. Cuba, meanwhile, does a good job of keeping babies healthy on a tight budget. A team of Cuban health professionals recently spent time in Chicago helping peers there tackle the daunting problem.

HHS Nominee Vows To Tackle High Drug Costs, Despite His Ties To Industry

KFF Health News Original

Alex M. Azar II, the former president of the U.S. division of Eli Lilly, says the U.S. drug system encourages price increases — but he intends to work on that problem.

Despite Prod By ACA, Tax-Exempt Hospitals Slow To Expand Community Benefits

KFF Health News Original

The Affordable Care Act mandated that hospitals exempt from taxes work to provide health benefits to the community. But a study finds that has been slow to get off the ground.

Drug Overdose Deaths Soar Nationally But Plateau In Some Western States

KFF Health News Original

Fatalities are climbing in states that have been flooded by the deadly opioid fentanyl, but are remaining flat — or even falling — in many Western states, where the drug has not yet been as common as other parts of the country.