From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Oz Escalates Medicaid Fraud Claims Against States After Focus on Minnesota
The Trump administration’s unprecedented actions targeting Medicaid funding in Minnesota are part of what could become a playbook as officials turn pressure toward California, Florida, Maine, and New York. (Bram Sable-Smith, 3/20)
‘How Low Can You Go?’ The Shifting Guidelines for Blood Pressure Control
The number doctors use to demarcate high blood pressure keeps going down, a trend applauded by many experts, who point to studies linking the condition and dementia. (Paula Span, 3/20)
Listen: Trump’s NIH ‘Reset’ Is Driving Away Scientists
In President Donald Trump’s second term, federal data shows, the National Institutes of Health has lost about 4,400 workers. Scientists say the departures harm the nation’s ability to respond to disease outbreaks, develop treatments, and confront public health problems. KFF Health News spoke with six scientists about why they left. (Rachana Pradhan, 3/20)
What the Health? From KFF Health News: RFK Jr.’s Vaccine Schedule Changes Blocked — For Now
A federal judge in Massachusetts this week sided with public health groups to block changes to the federally recommended schedule of childhood vaccines, dealing at least a temporary setback to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s efforts to remake the schedule. Meanwhile, Congress has put its debate over the future of the Affordable Care Act on the back burner, but the issue of rising health care costs is still front and center for the voting public. Lauren Weber of The Washington Post, Margot Sanger-Katz of The New York Times, and Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico join KFF Health News’ Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more. Also this week, Rovner interviews KFF President and CEO Drew Altman to kick off a new series looking at health care solutions, called “How Would You Fix It?” (3/19)
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Summaries Of The News:
9% Of ACA Marketplace Enrollees Drop Coverage, Cite Rising Health Care Costs
In a KFF poll, 80% of respondents said that all health care costs are higher than last year, and 55% said they will have to reduce spending on food and basic household expenses to afford care. Meanwhile, 9% have had to drop coverage altogether and are now uninsured.
ABC News:
1 In 10 ACA Enrollees Dropped Their Coverage Due To Rising Health Care Costs: Poll
When Jessica Chamberlain went to sign up for health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) for 2026, she not prepared for the sticker shock. Last year, Chamberlain was paying $59.67 in monthly premiums. This year, she would be paying nearly $100. The 43-year-old mother of two from Illinois said she was floored to see her monthly premiums were nearly doubling. (Kekatos, 3/19)
The CT Mirror:
Senate Dems Propose Their Own $200M 'CT Option' Health Care Bill
2026 is the year of the “Connecticut option.” On Thursday, the Human Services Committee passed a Connecticut option proposal put forth by Senate Democrats — separate from the policy proposal by the same name that Gov. Ned Lamont has been touting on the campaign trail and mentioned in his State of the State address in February. (Golvala, 3/19)
More news about the health care industry —
The Baltimore Sun:
Maryland Orders Cigna To Halt Underpaying Doctors Or Give Cause
Maryland regulators fined Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company $80,000 and ordered it to stop reducing payments on certain doctor-billed services — a practice that could leave patients on the hook for more of their health care costs. (Hille and Bazos, 3/20)
Modern Healthcare:
Providence Exploring Sale Of Its Health Plan
Providence is exploring the sale of its health insurance arm as the system seeks to improve its finances. The Renton, Washington-based nonprofit is weighing several strategic options for Providence Health Plan, including a possible divestment. It has not specified a timeline or publicly identified potential buyers. The 51-hospital chain is in the middle of an estimated $2 billion financial turnaround that includes cuts to administrative positions and the sale of hospitals and skilled nursing facilities. (Tepper, 3/19)
Modern Healthcare:
Stryker Cyberattack Highlights Hospital Cybersecurity Needs
Two major medtech companies recently were hit by cyberattacks, calling into question how exposed hospitals could be to such incidents that take place beyond their own walls. Stryker announced March 12 a cyberattack affected its internal Microsoft network worldwide, causing disruptions to order processing, manufacturing and shipping. A company spokesperson said Wednesday the company believes the incident has been contained and is bringing its systems back online, prioritizing those that directly support customers, ordering and shipping. Also on March 12, Intuitive Surgical said it was hit by a cyberattack that exposed customer information and employee and corporate data. (Dubinsky, 3/19)
Modern Healthcare:
Healthcare M&A, Regulatory Scrutiny To Rise: Law Firms
Law firms working with healthcare organizations say more mergers and acquisitions are likely on the way. The overwhelming majority of respondents to a Modern Healthcare survey of more than 50 law firms said dealmaking-related services are the most frequently in demand. Healthcare organizations are also commonly seeking services related to government compliance, with firms foreseeing heightened regulatory scrutiny concerning finances and billing practices. (Davis, 3/19)
Also —
AP:
A New York Man Pleads Guilty To Cyberstalking A Family Member Of The Late UnitedHealthcare CEO
An upstate New York man admitted to leaving harassing and threatening voicemail messages to a family member of slain UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson as he pleaded guilty to cyberstalking in federal court Thursday. Shane Daley, 40, was accused by federal prosecutors in August of placing multiple calls to a Thompson family member immediately after the December 2024 shooting and expressing glee about the insurance executive’s killing. (3/19)
RFK Jr. Improperly Reshaped US Policy On Trans Health Care, Judge Rules
The judge agreed with states that the government didn't follow long-standing procedures when it altered policy, noting, “The notion that ‘I will go forward and issue a declaration and see if we can get away with it’ is not a principle of governance.” Plus, the uncertainty of ACIP.
AP:
Judge Rules The Government Overreached With Transgender Health Care Declaration
A federal judge said the government overreached by issuing a declaration that called treatments like puberty blockers and surgeries unsafe and ineffective for young people experiencing gender dysphoria, according to a ruling Thursday in Oregon. Judge Mustafa Kasubhai’s ruling was centered on Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. not going through the proper administrative procedures when issuing the declaration in December. The declaration also warned doctors that they could be excluded from federal health programs like Medicare and Medicaid if they provide these treatments. (3/20)
On vaccines —
The Wall Street Journal:
HHS Weighs Replacing CDC Vaccine Advisers
Days after a federal judge said the Department of Health and Human Services’ vaccine committee members were improperly appointed, the agency is now considering whether to find a new slate of members for the panel or appeal the court’s ruling, panel members said. The future of the committee was thrown into question after one member of the panel on Thursday announced that the committee would be dismantled. Hours later he said his earlier conclusion was based on miscommunication. The panel is charged with making vaccine recommendations to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Calfas and Essley Whyte, 3/19)
KFF Health News:
KFF Health News’ ‘What The Health?’: RFK Jr.’s Vaccine Schedule Changes Blocked — For Now
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s effort to change how the federal government recommends vaccines against childhood diseases was dealt at least a temporary setback in federal court this week. A judge in Massachusetts sided with a coalition of public health groups arguing that changes to the vaccine schedule violated federal law. The Trump administration said it would appeal the judge’s ruling. (Rovner, 3/19)
On autism and MAHA —
Stat:
Autism Scientists, Advocates Take First Step In Countering RFK Jr.
Autism scientists and advocates met Thursday to develop an agenda for autism research, the first gathering of a group that hopes to command the attention of Congress and private organizations, in response to health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reshaping the federal autism advisory committee to support his agenda. (Broderick, 3/19)
MedPage Today:
Here's Why Dozens Of Autism Publications Were Retracted
Springer Nature has retracted more than three dozen publications that relied on a problematic dataset, the publisher confirmed to MedPage Today. All 38 of the papers, conference proceedings, and book chapters involved a dataset that purported to offer images of the faces of children with and without autism. However, there were major problems with how it was put together. (Robertson, 3/19)
Stat:
MAHA Movement Dismay: 2026 Farm Bill Backs Tobacco, Pesticides
The 2026 farm bill now working its way through Congress contains a number of provisions at odds with the Make America Healthy Again movement, particularly when it comes to pesticides and factory farming. One less-noticed amendment would allow tobacco farmers to receive more disaster and emergency funds — a move critics say is out of step with public health goals and MAHA’s vow to lower chronic disease rates in the U.S. (Todd, 3/20)
More news about the Trump administration —
The New York Times:
ICE Released Hundreds Of Children From Immigration Detention
The number of children being held in detention by Immigration and Customs Enforcement declined dramatically in recent weeks, as the Trump administration scaled back some of its most aggressive immigration enforcement tactics. Earlier this year, after a surge of arrests in Minnesota and elsewhere, hundreds of children were being held with their parents at a federal detention center in Dilley, Texas, where families described poor medical care, inadequate food and water and little education for children. (Mervosh, Jordan and Aleaziz, 3/20)
Politico:
Federal Workforce Unhappy, Disengaged, New Survey Finds
Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought reportedly said in 2023 and 2024 he wants to put federal workers “in trauma.” He appears to have done it. A new survey of federal workers found that, government wide, only 32 percent of the federal workforce is satisfied with and engaged in their jobs. The numbers are particularly stark at certain larger agencies: Only 20 percent of the Department of Health and Human Services staff is satisfied; along with 22.5 percent of the Treasury Department and 8.1 percent of the few employees remaining at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. (Johansen, 3/19)
The Hill:
‘Rogue Employee’ At HHS Changed Voicemail To Domino’s Pizza Recording
Callers hoping to voice complaints about federal animal testing with the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) earlier this week instead reached what sounded like the voicemail for a popular pizza chain after a “rogue” staffer changed the phone’s outgoing message. The White Coat Waste Project (WCWP), a nonprofit organization whose mission is to “expose and close the U.S. government’s $20 billion animal testing business,” urged social media followers last Friday morning to call HHS and demand the agency cut funding for cat testing at a National Institutes of Health-funded lab at the University of Missouri. (Brams, 3/19)
KFF Health News:
Listen: Trump’s NIH ‘Reset’ Is Driving Away Scientists
The past year has been rough for the National Institutes of Health, which underwent cuts to its workforce and research funding. Now, the NIH is facing a new challenge: brain drain. Thousands of employees totaling about 20% of the agency’s staff have left in the tumult of President Donald Trump’s second term. Some scientists fear this exodus will mean fewer new treatments and diminish the government’s ability to respond to disease outbreaks and other public health crises. (Pradhan, 3/20)
Stat:
Robert Califf Says Political Influence Is A 'Serious Problem’ At FDA
Hundreds of individualized treatments for rare diseases could become available over the next decade — but only if government regulators handle the new therapeutics properly. (Payne, 3/19)
Military Times:
Service Members Must Prove Sincere Religious Beliefs For Facial Hair Waivers
U.S. service members will now be granted religious exemptions from grooming standards only on “sincerely held religious beliefs,” according to a recent Pentagon memorandum. Current service members and those applying for military service who request an exception for religious reasons must provide “a sworn written attestation affirming the requester’s belief is sincerely held and religious in nature,” according to the March 11 Department of Defense memorandum. (Stassis, 3/19)
Georgia Woman, Suspected Of Taking Abortion Pill, Is Charged With Murder
Georgia bans abortion after embryonic cardiac activity can be detected, usually about six weeks into a pregnancy. Medical records estimated the woman had been pregnant for 22 to 24 weeks, AP reported. Plus: Mississippi and Ohio lawmakers weigh abortion restrictions; Wyoming and Massachusetts note patient counts at clinics; and more.
AP:
Georgia Woman Faces Murder Charge In Medication Abortion Case
A 31-year-old Georgia woman has been charged with murder by police who say she took pills to induce an illegal abortion. If state prosecutors decide to move forward with the murder charge brought by local police against Alexia Moore, her case would be one of the first instances of a woman being charged for terminating a pregnancy in Georgia since it passed a 2019 law banning most abortions. (Bynum, 3/19)
Mississippi Today:
Lawmakers In Mississippi Consider Bill To Restrict Abortion Medication
House lawmakers are deliberating sending a bill to Gov. Tate Reeves that would make it illegal for doctors to prescribe medication that could be used to induce abortion to patients in Mississippi. (Paffenroth, 3/19)
Ohio Capital Journal:
Ohio House Committee Advances Bill Mandating 24-Hour Waiting Period For Abortion Care
In a quick hearing that ended in opponents yelling “shame,” the Ohio House Health Committee approved a bill Wednesday that would effectively add a 24-hour waiting period for abortion care. (Tebben, 3/19)
WyoFile:
Wyoming’s Lone Abortion Clinic Treats Fewer Patients While Partial Ban Awaits Court Hearing
Wellspring Health Access has shifted to follow the new law, Julie Burkhart, president of Wellspring Health Access in Casper, told WyoFile on Wednesday. The clinic is serving patients whose last menstrual period lines up with the tight timeline, Burkhart told WyoFile, and is abiding by the law by screening for a heartbeat. (Harris and Klingsporn, 3/19)
GBH:
Most People Getting Abortion Services In Massachusetts Don’t Live Here
Massachusetts health care professionals are now providing abortions to more people out of state than residents. And a new report released by the state’s Department of Public Health this week suggests most of those appointments are happening without a single in-person visit. (Reale, 3/19)
In other reproductive health care news —
The 19th:
Pesticide Exposure Before Pregnancy Could Be Linked To Newborn Health Risks
Pesticide exposure may affect the health of a baby even before a person becomes pregnant, according to a new study released last week. (Kutz, 3/19)
ProPublica:
Inside A Court Hearing That Decided How She’d Give Birth
It’s difficult to put yourself in the place of Cherise Doyley, a pregnant mother of three who found herself facing a judge while in labor at the University of Florida Health hospital in downtown Jacksonville. She had arrived at the facility with a plan for her birth. She wanted to try for a vaginal delivery, but she understood from years of experience as a professional birthing doula that things don’t always go as planned. (Yurkanin, 3/20)
Verite News:
Free Crawfish, STI Testing At Upcoming Annual Block Party
The Louisiana Abortion Fund (LAAF) and SHER Lab are co-hosting a community block party this weekend in the Tremé where attendees can get free food, music and STI testing and meet representatives of dozens of local health organizations. ... It is the first year the organizations will be partnering to host the block party. In previous years, both organizations hosted similar but separate block parties. (Yehiya, 3/19)
Fluoride Bans Will Increase Cavities In Kids, Medicaid Costs By Millions: Study
The data analysis by CareQuest Institute for Oral Health shows that a significant increase in kids' cavities could raise Medicaid costs by over $40 million within three years. Florida banned community water fluoridation last year and is seeing an additional 52,131 children needing dental care. Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, and Oklahoma are all working on legislation to ban it or make it optional.
NBC News:
If States Ban Fluoride, Kids With Cavities And Medicaid Costs Could Spike, Study Finds
Tooth decay can begin very early in a child’s life. If five states ban fluoride in drinking water, the costs to Medicaid for a significant increase in kids with cavities could top $40 million within three years, a new analysis finds. CareQuest Institute for Oral Health, a nonprofit which advocates for fluoridation, used Medicaid claims data and survey responses to predict the outcomes if the five states — Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri and Oklahoma — stopped adding fluoride to water systems. (Edwards, 3/19)
AP:
States Challenge EPA Repeal Of Endangerment Finding In Climate Fight
Two dozen states, along with more than a dozen cities and counties, sued the Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday, challenging the Trump administration’s repeal of a scientific finding that had been the central basis for U.S. action to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change. A rule finalized by the EPA last month revoked the 2009 endangerment finding that determined carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare. The Obama-era finding had been the legal underpinning of nearly all climate regulations under the Clean Air Act for motor vehicles, power plants and other pollution sources that are heating the planet. (Daly, 3/19)
KFF Health News:
Oz Escalates Medicaid Fraud Claims Against States After Focus On Minnesota
The Trump administration has signaled a willingness to halt billions of dollars in federal health payments to multiple states, mirroring moves they made against Minnesota. The specific target is Medicaid, the public health insurance program that pairs state and federal money. Federal officials have announced unprecedented actions in Minnesota this year, declaring they could withhold over $2 billion in payments slated for the state and claw back nearly $260 million from last year. (Sable-Smith, 3/20)
Florida Trident:
'Take Care Of Maya' Subject Accuses Ex-Attorney Of Impropriety
Maya Kowalski, the woman at the center of the Netflix documentary “Take Care of Maya,” has filed a sworn declaration in court proceedings accusing former family attorney Greg Anderson of inappropriate comments and interactions while he represented her, explosive allegations that could reshape the already turbulent next phase of the long-running case arising from her treatment at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg. (Barfield, 3/19)
AP:
Scientists Say Blistering Southwest Heat Is Latest In Parade Of Ultra Extremes
The dangerous heat wave shattering March records all over the U.S. Southwest is more than just another extreme weather blip. It’s the latest next-level weather wildness that is occurring ever more frequently as Earth’s warming builds. Experts said unprecedented and deadly weather extremes that sometimes strike at abnormal times and in unusual places are putting more people in danger. For example, the Southwest is used to coping with deadly heat, but not months ahead of schedule, including a 110-degree Fahrenheit (43.3 Celsius) reading in the Arizona desert on Thursday that smashed the highest March temperature recorded in the U.S. (Borenstein, 3/20)
On the gun violence epidemic —
Becker's Hospital Review:
New York Expands Northwell’s Hospital Gun Violence Prevention Initiative
New York state has launched a pilot program to integrate firearm access and injury risk screening into emergency department visits. The initiative, supported by a $1.5 million investment from the New York State Office of Gun Violence Prevention, expands New Hyde Park, N.Y.-based Northwell Health’s Center for Gun Violence Prevention program to providers at three hospitals, according to a March 19 news release from Gov. Kathy Hochul. (Kuchno, 3/19)
St. Louis Public Radio:
St. Louis Seeks To Revive Law On Storing Guns In Parked Cars
A Missouri appeals court is weighing whether the City of St. Louis can require gun owners to lock up their firearms if they want to leave them in an unattended parked vehicle. (Lippmann, 3/19)
Using A Weight Loss Drug? Get Ready For A Wave Of New Options
About 10 weeks after the FDA approved a groundbreaking weight loss pill, federal regulators are now reviewing a second pill, CNN says. Meanwhile, the FDA says yes to a higher-dose Wegovy shot; results from Eli Lilly's newest medication show it reportedly helped diabetic patients lose more weight than any drug on the market; and Ozempic and Wegovy are going generic in Canada, India, and China.
CNN:
Weight-Loss Treatment Is On The Verge Of A Dramatic Shift – Again
At the end of a seemingly ubiquitous commercial for telehealth company Ro, a characteristically flabbergasted Charles Barkley speaks for us all when he remarks, “Wait, you’re telling me they have a GLP-1 pill for weight loss now?” They do – and it turns out to be as wildly popular as its injectable predecessors. (Tirrell, 3/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
Novo Nordisk’s Higher Dose Wegovy Weight-Loss Drug Gains U.S. Approval
Novo Nordisk said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a higher dosage of its Wegovy weight-loss medication, a boost for the Danish drugmaker as it faces growing competition in the obesity market. The group said Thursday that the FDA had expedited approval of the Wegovy injection with a higher dose based on results from a trial that showed 20.7% mean weight loss for participants with obesity. (Look and Orru, 3/19)
The New York Times:
Ozempic Is About To Go Generic In India, China And Canada
The blockbuster weight loss drug sold as Ozempic and Wegovy will soon go generic in countries that are home to 40 percent of the world’s population, significantly lowering the price of a costly medicine that had been largely unaffordable to nearly all but the wealthiest people. On Saturday, Novo Nordisk, the company that until now has had a monopoly on selling the drug, will lose patent protection in several of the world’s most populous countries. The first generic versions are expected to arrive in India as soon as this weekend. In the coming months, the generics are also expected to become available in China, Canada, Brazil, Turkey and South Africa. (Robbins, Tobin, Nelson, Travelli and K.B., 3/19)
Bloomberg:
Lilly’s Experimental Diabetes Shot Yields Record Weight Loss In Study
One of Eli Lilly & Co.’s most highly anticipated experimental medicines helped diabetic patients lose more weight than any drug currently on the market, underscoring its potential in the increasingly crowded race for next-generation therapies. Patients on the highest dose of the drug, called retatrutide, lost 15.3% of their body weight on average using a measure that includes those who discontinued treatment, Lilly said in a statement Thursday. The late-stage results handily beat earlier trials of the company’s diabetes blockbuster Mounjaro. (Muller, 3/19)
Bloomberg:
Obesity Drug Trials Disrupted As Placebo Patients Drop Out Early
The companies developing new weight-loss medicines have a problem: the balance of power has shifted, and patients are bailing out of their clinical trials. People who don’t lose weight can quickly figure out that they were assigned to take a placebo instead of the real drug. And with highly effective obesity medications on the market — Eli Lilly & Co.’s Zepbound and Novo Nordisk A/S’s Wegovy shot and pill — that are getting cheaper, there’s little reason to stay in a study that doesn’t yield the intended benefits. (Muller, Furlong and Kresge, 3/19)
The Colorado Sun:
Pythons' Metabolisms Offer Clue For New Weight Loss Drugs, Study Says
A molecule produced in abundance by pythons following a large meal could hold the key to developing a new class of weight loss drugs with fewer side effects, according to a study published Thursday by researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder and two other institutions. (Ingold, 3/19)
More pharma and tech developments —
MedPage Today:
FDA OKs First Drug For Liver Disease-Related Pruritus
The FDA approved linerixibat (Lynavoy) as the first drug indicated for cholestatic pruritus stemming from primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), drugmaker GSK announced on Thursday. PBC is a rare but serious autoimmune disease where bile flow from the liver is disrupted. The vast majority (89%) of PBC patients experience an internal itch -- thought to result from bile acids in circulation -- that affects sleep, quality of life, and is sometimes so debilitating it can necessitate transplant even in the absence of liver failure. (Ingram, 3/19)
Stat:
Novartis Buys Synnovation Breast Cancer Drug For $2B
Novartis said Friday it was buying an experimental breast cancer drug from Delaware-based Synnovation Therapeutics for $2 billion upfront. The deal includes includes up to another $1 billion if the drug reaches certain milestones. (Joseph, 3/20)
The Wall Street Journal:
Would You Spend $1,000 A Month On Supplements?
Kristin Leite, 38, spends about an hour organizing her “stack” for the week. “In the morning, I take four powders and about five capsules,” said Leite, an esthetician who lives in Tampa, Fla. She pops around five more in the afternoon, and at night she swallows six or seven capsules. (O'Brien, 3/18)
Fierce Healthcare:
Verily Banks $300M To Fuel AI Roadmap, Separates From Alphabet
Verily raised a $300 million investment round to accelerate its work in artificial intelligence and precision health as it also moves out from under the corporate umbrella of Alphabet. The massive round was led by Series X Capital, and includes an investment from Alphabet, who will remain a significant minority investor, but will no longer have a controlling stake in the company, Verily said in a press release. (Landi, 3/19)
Modern Healthcare:
Perplexity Health AI Tool Links EHR, Wearable Health Data
Perplexity is making its debut on the consumer health market. The artificial intelligence-enabled search engine announced the launch of Perplexity Health, which looks to provide users with personalized responses to health questions. The AI tool relies on medical literature and user-provided patient records to answer health-related inquiries. It also offers an individualized dashboard with insight on users’ behavioral patterns such as their sleep and activity levels. (Famakinwa, 3/19)
Type 1 Diabetes Tied To Higher Dementia Risk As Patients Live Longer
Plus: A study found that higher meat intake was tied to better cognitive outcomes in people with a certain genetic risk for Alzheimer's disease, MedPage Today reported.
MedPage Today:
Type 1 Diabetes Linked To Threefold Increase In Dementia Risk
Older adults with type 1 or type 2 diabetes had a higher risk of dementia, a U.S. prospective cohort study found. ... An estimated 64.5% of dementia cases in people with type 1 diabetes could be attributed to the condition, Jennifer Weuve, MPH, ScD, of Boston University School of Public Health, and colleagues reported in Neurology. (Monaco, 3/19)
MedPage Today:
Alzheimer's Gene Carriers With Higher Meat Intake Had Lower Dementia Risk
People with a genetic risk for Alzheimer's disease did not have an expected increase in cognitive decline or dementia if they consumed relatively large amounts of meat, a Swedish cohort study showed. (George, 3/19)
WUFT:
Grandparents Can Get A Cognitive Boost From The Grandkids
It might not seem like it at the time if the grandkids are making a ruckus. But babysitting them might be good for Grandma and Grandpa’s brains. A recent study in the journal Psychology and Aging suggested that grandparents’ memory, verbal fluency and other cognitive skills were fortified by the caregiving of their grandkids. (Levesque, 3/19)
In other health and wellness news —
TODAY:
Nearly 90,000 Bottles Of Children's Ibuprofen Recalled Due To 'Foreign Substance'
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has announced that nearly 90,000 bottles of children’s ibuprofen sold nationwide have been recalled. In an enforcement report, the federal agency said that 89,592 bottles of Strides Pharma’s Children’s Ibuprofen Oral Suspension are being recalled due to the “presence of foreign substance.” (Brockington, 3/20)
CIDRAP:
CDC Says Investigation Into Salmonella Outbreak Linked To Moringa Leaf Powder Is Over
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has ended its investigation into a Salmonella outbreak tied to moringa leaf powder. A total of 97 cases have been recorded, with 32 new cases since the CDC’s previous update on January 29. Illness onsets ranged from August 22, 2025, to February 27, 2026. The outbreak resulted in 26 hospitalizations but no deaths and was the first of two Salmonella outbreaks related to contaminated moringa powder in the past six months. The CDC said the two outbreaks are unrelated. (Soucheray, 3/18)
MedPage Today:
When A Trip To The Hair Salon Ends In The Emergency Room
Getting your hair washed at the salon should be a relaxing experience, but in rare cases a trip to the hairdresser can result in an emergency neurology consult. Dizziness, weakness, numbness, or a sudden headache following a hair wash could be a sign of beauty parlor stroke syndrome -- a vertebral artery stroke resulting from compression of the vessels on the back of the head. (Robertson, 3/19)
KFF Health News:
‘How Low Can You Go?’ The Shifting Guidelines For Blood Pressure Control
The patient initially came to see Mark Supiano in 2017 because her family was concerned about her short-term memory loss. While taking her history and vital signs, Supiano, a geriatrician at the University of Utah, saw one disturbing signal: Her blood pressure was 148/86, above normal despite her taking two medications intended to lower it. “Clearly that was too high,” he said recently. (Span, 3/20)
The Hill:
College Students Face Ongoing Mental Health Struggles
Depression and suicidal ideation are stubbornly high among college students despite increased efforts by universities to combat the long-growing problem. While nearly all four-year institutions and the vast majority of community colleges offer mental health services, it hasn’t been enough to combat the academic stress, increased screen and social media time, rising isolation and other factors experts say can contribute to the difficulties students face. (Lonas Cochran, 3/18)
If you need help —
Dial 988 for 24/7 support from the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. It's free and confidential.
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
Each week, KFF Health News finds longer stories for you to enjoy. Today's selections are on ICE detention, pacemakers, Candy Land, and more.
The New York Times:
Handcuffs, Tents And Pleas For Medical Care: Pregnant In ICE Detention
Women describe conditions that violate longstanding agency guidelines for how pregnant detainees should be treated. (Kitchener, Henriquez and Aleaziz, 3/20)
The New York Times:
She Died After Her Pacemaker Battery Failed. Its Maker Knew Of Problems for Years.
Gladys Knepper, at 93, had a morning routine that never wavered. She woke up at 6 and made her bed. She got a pot of coffee going and went outside to pick up her copy of The Dubuque Telegraph Herald. So when a neighbor in Dyersville, Iowa, noticed that Ms. Knepper’s newspaper was still on her doorstep on Mother’s Day in 2024, she knew something was wrong. Inside, she found Ms. Knepper sprawled on the floor. (Thomas, 3/19)
The New York Times:
New Spider Mimics ‘The Last Of Us’ Zombie Fungus Cordyceps
A newly discovered species of spider in the Ecuadorean Amazon mimics a pathogen, known as a zombie fungus, to protect itself. (Robles-Gil, 3/20)
Undark:
AI Slop Is Infiltrating Online Children's Content
Low-quality, mass-produced video content is alarming child development experts. Few guardrails are in place to stop it. (Tate Sullivan, 3/20)
The New York Times:
Overlooked No More: Eleanor Abbott, The Creator Of Candy Land, Which Was Made To Distract Children With Polio
She invented the game nearly 80 years ago to distract children who were suffering in the hospital during a polio outbreak. The goal was to reach a simple cottage at the end of the path — Home — which held a special significance for the sick children who missed their families. They loved it. (Miller and Muirhead, 3/13)
Editorial writers delve into these public health issues.
Stat:
IUD Insertion Shouldn’t Be Traumatizing — It Should Be Empowering
In recent years, a growing outcry has drawn long-overdue attention to a difficult truth: girls’ and women’s pain has too often been dismissed and undertreated in medicine. A 2022 study found that most TikTok content on intrauterine devices, or IUDs, is negative and centered on pain. While not always accurate, these posts reflect a broader truth supported by high-quality research, reputable journalism (like The New York Times podcast “The Retrievals”), and decades of shared clinical experience. But there is good news: This is changing, starting with IUDs. (Maryl Sackeim, 3/20)
Stat:
Doctors Are Abusing Part Of The No Surprises Act
Five years ago, President Trump delivered a historic victory for American patients when he signed the No Surprises Act (NSA) into law. The promise of this legislation was simple: Families would be protected from financial ruin caused by virtually unavoidable surprise medical bills. (James Gelfand and Patricia Kelmar, 3/20)
The Washington Post:
Medicare-For-All Makes A Comeback
But don’t expect any Democrats to have an easier time selling it. (Ramesh Ponnuru, 3/20)
Bloomberg:
Generic Ozempic Is A Game Changer For China And India
Until now, the revolutionary weight-loss drugs have been available largely to people with means. The entry of affordable generic versions will be a leveling force in healthcare, with global consequences. (Juliana Liu, 3/19)
The Washington Post:
Technology Can Help Seniors Age In Place And Stay Healthier For Longer
When implemented thoughtfully, these tools can help create a safer home environment while preserving independence. (Leana S. Wen, 3/19)