Health Care US-News

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Scholarly / Policy Research / Institutional Analysis

What We Know So Far About 2026 ACA Marketplace Enrollment, Premiums, and Deductibles

| Matt McGough, Jared Ortaliza, Justin Lo, and Cynthia Cox | KFF | May 19, 2026

This KFF analysis examines early 2026 ACA Marketplace enrollment, premiums, and deductibles after the expiration of enhanced premium tax credits. It reports sharply higher net premiums, a shift toward bronze plans, and higher deductibles, making it useful for understanding how affordability pressures are reshaping health coverage.
CMS Announces Early Adopters to Advance Solutions for Electronic Prior Authorization, Accelerating Momentum Ahead of 2027 Requirements

| Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services | May 2026

CMS announces early adopters for electronic prior authorization systems ahead of 2027 requirements. This is a useful institutional source for tracking how prior authorization reforms are moving from policy discussion into implementation.
An Agenda For CMS: Strengthen Integrated Care Programs For Dually Eligible Adults With Behavioral Health Needs

| Health Affairs Forefront | April 20, 2026

This Health Affairs article focuses on improving integrated care for people eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid, especially those with behavioral health needs. It also situates the problem within broader Medicaid cuts and access concerns.
United States — International Health Care System Profiles

| Commonwealth Fund | May 2026

This country profile summarizes how the U.S. health care system is financed and organized, including Medicare, Medicaid, employer coverage, private insurance, and out-of-pocket spending. It is a useful background source for comparing U.S. health care structure with current policy debates.
Status of State Medicaid Expansion Decisions

| KFF | May 6, 2026

KFF’s updated tracker shows which states have adopted ACA Medicaid expansion and which have not. It is useful for connecting national Medicaid policy debates to state-level coverage differences.
Rural Hospitals and Communities Feeling Impact of H.R. 1 Medicaid Cuts, Rural Health Fund Falls Short

| Adam Searing | Georgetown University Center for Children and Families | May 1, 2026

This analysis argues that Medicaid cuts are already stressing rural hospitals and that the rural health fund does not fully offset the damage. It is useful for articles about how federal health policy affects rural access and local hospital survival.
Evolving Better Health Care for Every American

| G. S. Schmidler | NEJM Catalyst | 2026

This NEJM Catalyst article discusses value-based care, prevention, social determinants of health, and operational strategies for improving U.S. health care delivery. It is more systems-oriented than breaking news and can be used as a research/policy framework source.
Making US Public Health a Good Idea Again

| T. Timpka | The Lancet Regional Health – Americas | 2026

This article reflects on weaknesses exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic and argues for rebuilding U.S. public health capacity. It is relevant for broader discussions of health infrastructure, prevention, and federal/state public health preparedness.
Trump's 2027 Budget Calls for Further Cuts to Health Research

| S. Devi | The Lancet Oncology | 2026

This Lancet Oncology news article discusses proposed Trump administration cuts to health research funding, including NIH-related concerns. It is useful for tracking how federal budget politics may affect biomedical research and cancer-related science.


Ephemeral / Fast-Moving News

Affordable Care Act Enrollment Projected to Plunge by 5 Million as Costs Spike, Analysis Shows

| Associated Press | May 20, 2026

AP reports on a KFF analysis projecting that ACA Marketplace enrollment could fall by nearly 5 million people in 2026 as premiums and deductibles rise. The article is useful for public-facing coverage of how subsidy expiration is affecting real-world enrollment.
US Health Regulators to Speed Up Medicare Device Coverage

| Reuters | April 23, 2026

Reuters reports that U.S. health regulators announced a program to speed Medicare coverage for certain medical devices, potentially shortening reimbursement timelines from a year or more to as little as two months. This is useful for coverage of Medicare innovation, medical devices, and reimbursement policy.
Trump Touts a Major TrumpRx Expansion, Adding More Than 600 Generic Drugs

| Associated Press | May 19, 2026

AP reports on the TrumpRx expansion, which added more than 600 generic medications to a federal drug-discount website. The article is useful for tracking prescription drug affordability, direct-to-consumer pharmacy models, and political messaging around drug prices.
JD Vance Threatens Health Funding to States That Don't Comply With White House Anti-Fraud Effort

| Jessica Glenza | The Guardian | May 13, 2026

The Guardian reports on Vice President JD Vance’s threats to withhold federal health funding from states that do not comply with anti-fraud measures targeting Medicare and Medicaid. The piece is useful for the politics of Medicaid oversight, federal-state conflict, and fraud enforcement.
Vance Takes His Fight Against Fraud to Red Ohio, Muddying Waters for GOP's Vivek Ramaswamy

| Associated Press | May 20, 2026

AP reports on the expansion of Medicaid fraud politics into Ohio, including tensions among Republicans and responses from state officials. This is useful for showing how health care fraud enforcement has become an election and governance issue.
Eli Lilly Shares Bought on Trump's Behalf as His Policies Benefited Drug Firm

| The Guardian | May 19, 2026

The Guardian reports on financial disclosures involving Eli Lilly shares purchased on Trump’s behalf while administration policies affected drug pricing and obesity medication access. This article is useful for discussions of conflicts of interest, drug pricing, and pharmaceutical policy.
Hundreds of US Hospitals at Risk of Shutting Down From Medicaid Cuts

| The Cardiology Advisor | April 15, 2026

This article reports that hundreds of U.S. hospitals may be at risk of closure or service cuts because of Medicaid reductions. Although just outside the strict one-month window, it is closely related to the current May coverage of rural hospital stress and Medicaid funding.


Lawmakers, Health Groups Resist Their States’ Rural Health Fund Plans

| Arielle Zionts and Sarah Jane Tribble | KFF Health News | 3/4/26

This piece shows that even when rural health money is available, political conflict and implementation disputes can delay how it reaches struggling communities. It ties those delays to places already dealing with hospital closures, service reductions, and weak rural access.
Clinics Sour on CMS After Agency Scraps 10-Year Primary Care Program Only Months In

| Andrew Jones | KFF Health News | 2/13/26

KFF Health News reports that clinics expected long-term federal support to strengthen primary care, only to have the program canceled. The article presents the reversal as a setback for already fragile clinics that need stability to maintain services in underserved areas.
Rural Hospitals Face a Funding Crisis — How It Could Get Worse

| Commonwealth Fund authors page lists authors on article | Commonwealth Fund | 2/9/26

The explainer says more than 200 rural hospitals have completely or partially closed since 2005 and hundreds more are at risk. It also argues that recent policy changes could further erode services, even at hospitals that remain open.
More Than 31,000 Nurses, Health Care Workers Strike at Kaiser Permanente, Arguing for Safe Staffing Levels, Fair Wages

| Mary Kekatos | ABC News | 1/26/26

This article says the strike affected at least two dozen hospitals and hundreds of clinics in California and Hawaii. Workers argued that unsafe staffing levels were undermining care delivery, making it a clear example of health resources under strain.
States Race To Launch Rural Health Transformation Plans

| KFF Health News | KFF Health News | 1/14/26

This article describes states scrambling to deploy rural health money as many hospitals remain cash-strapped and vulnerable. It connects uneven state support and delays to the broader decline of hospital capacity and service availability in rural America.
Largest Nursing Strike in New York City History Begins Amid Stalled Contract Negotiations

| Bill Hutchinson and Mary Kekatos | ABC News | 1/12/26

ABC reports that about 15,000 nurses walked off the job while accusing hospitals of failing to address safe staffing and patient-care concerns. The story fits your theme because it centers on workforce shortages and strained hospital capacity in a major city system.
Trump Administration Announces Allocation of Rural Health Fund to States

| AP News | AP News | 12/29/25

AP reports on the distribution of a multibillion-dollar rural health fund meant to shore up fragile systems facing service cuts and closure risk. The story underscores that states are trying to keep access alive in communities where hospitals and clinics have been under mounting financial pressure.
Trump Administration Rolls Out Rural Health Funding, With Strings Attached

| PBS NewsHour | PBS NewsHour | 12/29/25

This piece covers a new rural health fund while emphasizing that the money comes with deadlines and constraints. It presents the program as an attempt to stabilize shrinking health infrastructure, but not a full solution to deeper shortages and closures.
What to Know About the Impacts Medicaid Cuts Are Having on Rural Health Care

| Michael Casey, Amanda Swinhart, and Devi Shastri | AP News | 11/19/25

AP uses the closure of a New Hampshire health center to show how Medicaid cuts are already reducing access to care in small communities. The story says rural systems are being forced into hard choices that can leave older and sicker patients traveling farther or dropping out of care.
Struggling Rural Hospitals Compete for Billions of Dollars in Federal Funding

| PBS NewsHour | PBS NewsHour | 11/8/25

PBS reports that rural hospitals across the country are losing money and competing for limited federal relief. The segment frames the fight for funding as part of a larger access crisis in communities that have already lost hospitals or core services.
The Quiet Collapse of America’s Reproductive Health Safety Net

| Céline Gounder | KFF Health News | 10/30/25

This article explains how flat or reduced federal family-planning funding is pushing clinics to cut contraception, preventive care, and staffing. It highlights rural clinic closures and argues the remaining safety-net providers do not have the capacity to absorb all displaced patients.
Health Centers Face Risks as Government Funding Lapses

| Paula Andalo | KFF Health News | 10/3/25

Federally funded community health centers serving millions of low-income patients were described as facing severe financial strain from expiring grants and Medicaid pressure. The piece says some centers may cut staff, reduce services, or close altogether, worsening emergency room crowding.