Latest Morning Briefing Stories

Exodus By Puerto Rican Medical Students Deepens Island’s Doctor Drain

KFF Health News Original

Interest in medical schools is high in Puerto Rico, but many students look to the U.S. mainland for residencies because of higher pay and the commonwealth’s declining economy. The migration of young talent is both a symptom and an exacerbation of the island’s medical woes.

California Proposes Stringent Cap On Toxic Chemical In Drinking Water

KFF Health News Original

Water board officials want to limit TCP, a former pesticide ingredient and human carcinogen that has contaminated water supplies. Groundwater in other states is contaminated as well.

Pre-Obamacare, Preexisting Conditions Long Vexed States And Insurers

KFF Health News Original

Before the federal health law guarantee that consumers cannot be turned down because of their medical history, it was difficult to balance insurers’ needs to make a profit and individuals’ needs for coverage.

Health Care Worries Pull Crowd To Conservative Ohio Rep’s Town Hall

KFF Health News Original

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, sparked discord at his meeting with his district’s voters Monday when he suggested churches, schools and families are best able to handle the opioid epidemic rather than the federal government.

HHS, States Move To Help Insurers Defray Costs Of Sickest Patients

KFF Health News Original

In a letter to all governors, HHS Secretary Tom Price invited them to consider seeking federal help to set up reinsurance funds that would help cover losses that insurers have because of high numbers of sick patients.

Health Care In America: An Employment Bonanza And A Runaway-Cost Crisis

KFF Health News Original

The Trump administration has pledged to create jobs and shrink health care spending — almost a contradiction in a country where health care is a roaring engine of the economy.

Going For $1 An Ounce: The Burgeoning Trade In Mothers’ Milk

KFF Health News Original

As a fountain of nonprofit milk banks emerge, one woman’s abundant supply can fill another’s yawning demand. But critics fear that poor women will sell start selling their milk for survival, depriving their own babies of vital nutrients.

A Spoonful Of Kids’ Medicine Makes The Profits Go Up

KFF Health News Original

Even as drug pricing issues continue to draw scrutiny, federal safety regulations and incentives offer drug companies a new avenue to get a sweet return on their development costs.