Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Teens Are Ditching Drinking But Taking Up Toking: Study

Morning Briefing

USA Today reports that part of the reason that a new study is showing marijuana use up among teens, one scientist thinks, is that the risk perception of the drug is dropping. Also: improving access to cancer care, Katie Couric’s cancer diagnosis, mammograms, a rise in STI diagnoses, and more.

San Francisco Plans To Cut Drug Overdoses 15% By 2025

Morning Briefing

The plan, a “first of its kind,” was released Wednesday by the Department of Public Health. It also includes goals for reducing racial disparities in overdose deaths. Separately, reports say it’s impossible to tell how many people seeking abortions are actually traveling to California.

Automated Insulin Delivery System Shows Promise In Clinical Trial

Morning Briefing

Trials of Beta Bionics’ iLet “bionic pancreas” device showed that the math needed to manage Type 1 diabetes can be reliably taken on by an automated system, which could lead to better blood glucose control for patients. The cost of insulin, and other drugs, is also in the news again.

New Alzheimer’s Drug Under Scrutiny For Cost, Patient Benefits

Morning Briefing

The first “clearly successful clinical trial for a new Alzheimer’s disease treatment in two decades,” Stat notes, has brought intense scrutiny to the drug and Japanese maker Eisai. Renewed concerns over treatment costs, an investor “bonanza,” and worries if it will really impact patients’ lives are reported.

Worker Shortage Pushes Hospitals To Boost Low-Earners’ Benefits

Morning Briefing

The ongoing staff shortage is pressuring health systems to address concerns of some of their lower-earning staff, Modern Healthcare reports. Axios, meanwhile, highlights the “vague” language some nonprofit hospital systems use for charity care.

White House Aims To Modernize Decades-Old Federal Food Programs

Morning Briefing

At a White House summit Wednesday, President Joe Biden engaged public and private sector representatives to tackle hunger and food insecurity in the U.S. Among the targets discussed are updates to federal food assistance programs like WIC and SNAP, which have not been overhauled since their 1969 inception.

Hurricane Ian An Unwelcome Visitor At Many Southern Hospitals

Morning Briefing

The storm swamped HCA Florida Fawcett Hospital in Port Charlotte, Florida, forcing the four-floor hospital to cram patients into just two floors. Meanwhile, as Ian trudged north toward Georgia and South Carolina, hospitals there prepared for potential impacts.

Emergence Of Viruses Like Monkeypox, Covid Linked To Climate, Experts Say

Morning Briefing

Researchers studying zoonotic diseases expect the spread of such viruses to increase as more animal habitats are destroyed and the planet continues to warm. In related news, data on the monkeypox vaccine shows encouraging signs of efficacy.

People’s Personalities Were Changed By Pandemic, Researchers Find

Morning Briefing

Other “collective stress events” haven’t been linked to personality change, The Guardian reports, but now psychologists find the peculiar combination of long-term duress and social isolation seem to have led to changes in the minds of young adults: more anxiety, for one.

What Food Can Be Labeled ‘Healthy’? FDA Proposes Update To Rules

Morning Briefing

The Food and Drug Administration issued proposed rules that would only allow food packaging to bill the products as “healthy” — and use a new symbol — under more limited federal criteria. The measure is part of the Biden administration’s stepped-up efforts to combat diet-based diseases like diabetes.

Loneliness, Unhappiness Age You Faster Than Smoking

Morning Briefing

A new study looks into how biological age can outpace chronological age when people suffer poor mental health, and at a rate worse than smoking and that of certain diseases. Separately, research looks at how pregnancy during a hurricane can later impact a child’s mental health.

Researchers Find Possible Drug For Treating Glioblastoma

Morning Briefing

The small-molecule drug can target proteins involved in circadian processes and may prove useful against the most common cancerous brain tumor in adults. Conversely, other research finds that poor reporting on harms caused by cancer screenings could potentially expose patients to hazards.

Walmart Will Cover Workers’ Fertility Treatments Under Insurance

Morning Briefing

AP, reminding us that Walmart is also the nation’s largest private employer, says the retailer has partnered with fertility startup Kindbody. Also: a $20 million donation to Episcopal Health Foundation to boost Texas health care, a $35 million investment in GoHealth, and more.

$1.5 Trillion And Climbing: Congress Finds Cost Of Opioid Crisis

Morning Briefing

That $1.5 trillion figure was reached in 2020, a Congressional report shows, and it is likely to grow. Meanwhile, ABC News reports the Department of Justice seized of 10 million fake fentanyl-laced pills between May and September of this year alone.

Study Finds Covid Shots Do Have Temporary Impact On Periods

Morning Briefing

Media outlets report that previous stories about the impact that covid shots had on menstrual periods were valid, as shown by a study involving nearly 20,000 people globally. Separately, a study says a new covid mutation seems to lead to resistance to the antiviral drug remdesivir.