Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Wars, Pandemic Darken The News In Gates Foundation Annual Report

Morning Briefing

GeekWire says the annual Goalkeepers Report is typically upbeat, but this year’s report covering efforts to reach six of the UN Sustainable Development Goals is grim reading. AP notes Bill Gates says technological progress could help solve world hunger, where food aid can no longer help.

Oregon Is 1st To Get Mental Health Aid From Biden’s American Rescue Plan

Morning Briefing

The federal government will give financial support for mobile crisis intervention teams that help when police aren’t needed. Meanwhile, health officials have confirmed that a California resident died from monkeypox.

US Shareholder Case Over AstraZeneca Covid Shot Research Dismissed

Morning Briefing

The lawsuit had claimed the drugmaker had concealed problems during development of its covid vaccine. Separately, in Europe, regulators have cleared Pfizer’s updated booster shots targeting later covid variants, amid news 17 million Europeans got long covid early in the pandemic.

FDA Will Discuss OTC Birth Control Pill Sales In November

Morning Briefing

The application from pharma firm Perrigo will be discussed Nov. 18, and could lead to the nation’s first over-the-counter birth control pill sales. Contrastingly, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham says he plans to introduce legislation to ban abortion on a national level.

Getting Bivalent Jab By Halloween Will Protect You For Thanksgiving, Jha Says

Morning Briefing

“You don’t want to be the person who gives it to your grandma,” White House covid czar Ashish Jha said. In other news, U.S. researchers have found an antibody that neutralizes all variants of covid. The results are similar to research reported last week from Israel’s Tel Aviv University.

Patent Battle Over Generic Versions Of Gilead HIV Drug Settled

Morning Briefing

Five drugmakers had proposed generic versions of Gilead’s HIV and hepatitis B drugs and are now licensed to sell them from around 2031 onward. Also in the news: Medicare advantage star ratings, and more.

Staffing And Pay Disputes Drive 15,000 Minn. Nurses To Picket Lines

Morning Briefing

The three-day work stoppage impacting 15 hospitals in the Minneapolis and Duluth areas is the largest private-sector nurses strike in U.S. history. Workers want a 30% pay increase and bolstered staffing. Hospital executives say those demands are too expensive and unrealistic.

Biden Moves To Boost Domestic Biomanufacturing, Re-Energize Cancer Moonshot

Morning Briefing

President Joe Biden issued an executive order Monday to encourage biotech production and research in the U.S. as part of a strategy to compete with China in this space. Afterwards, speaking at the John F. Kennedy library in Boston, the president urged the nation to redouble efforts to eradicate cancer — a goal he called “bold, ambitious, and I might add, completely doable.”

In Study, Cancer Drug Outperforms Chemotherapy

Morning Briefing

Patients taking Amgen’s Lumakras went 5.6 months without their cancers getting worse, compared with 4.5 months for patients taking the chemotherapy docetaxel, the Wall Street Journal reported, and 25% of patients who took Lumakras lived for at least one year without their cancers getting worse, compared with 10% of those using docetaxel.

Calls To 988 Mental Health Line Rising

Morning Briefing

NPR says that in the first month since launch, 988 has seen a 45% increase in overall call volume and other text-based contacts, with the latter demonstrating enormous growth. Meanwhile, the U.S. will reportedly dedicate $35 million to boost 988 efforts for Native Americans.

US Makes Strides In Tackling National Child Poverty Problem

Morning Briefing

The New York Times reports America’s high child poverty rate set it apart from other rich nations but that efforts to expand safety nets have driven a 59% drop in child poverty since 1993. Also: the baby formula shortage, stress in pregnancy, news on nutrition, and more.

In Oregon, Problem Drinking Drives Effort For More Alcohol Tax

Morning Briefing

Oregon has among the highest rates of problem drinking in the U.S., and rising deaths, The New York Times reports, even as some efforts to curb excessive drinking have fallen aside. Meanwhile, in California, an effort to expand services offered by optometrists is controversial.

Most Americans Think Health Care System Is A Failure

Morning Briefing

A new AP-NORC poll shows a majority of Americans say health care is not handled well in the country; women as well as Black and Hispanic Americans are particularly critical. Medicare decisions on doctors’ pay, Medicare drug cost caps, the Blue Cross antitrust deal, and more are also in the news.

Boston Children’s Hospital Threatened Again

Morning Briefing

The type of threat wasn’t specified, the Boston Globe explains, but two weeks ago the hospital faced a bomb threat. Reports say hospital staff involved with treating transgender children have also been harassed. Other media outlets cover nursing home and nursing staff strikes, and health worker cuts.

More Kids Are Getting Virus That Can Sometimes Cause Polio-Like Syndrome

Morning Briefing

Doctors across the country are seeing an uptick in hospitalizations for enterovirus D68. Meanwhile, the governor of New York has declared a disaster emergency after polio was detected in more wastewater near New York City, suggesting it is spreading throughout communities.

Antiviral Tpoxx Moving To Late-Stage Trials As Monkeypox Treatment

Morning Briefing

The National Institutes of Health has begun enrollment in the next stage of testing for Siga Technologies Tpoxx — a pill used to treat smallpox that has not received federal approval as a treatment for monkeypox yet. Meanwhile, a CDC report says that only 3.5% percent of recipients experienced adverse reactions to the drug.