Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

First Gender-Affirming Surgery In Federal Prison Ordered By Judge

Morning Briefing

Separately, in Florida, the Department of Health advised that minors seeking transgender care should not receive such medical aid. In Alabama, parents try to overturn a law denying care to their trans children. Media outlets cover other transgender issues, including controversial sports bans.

Study Shows Time-Limited Eating Doesn’t Fight Obesity

Morning Briefing

Meanwhile, CNN reports on why we shouldn’t compliment people losing weight. Also: a story about a man desperately dieting to get a Taco Bell menu item back, expanding complaints of sickness from Lucky Charms, meat allergy illness from tic bites, and the “gut healing” trend on TikTok.

Ohio Doctor Acquitted Of Fentanyl Overdose Deaths

Morning Briefing

William Husel had been accused of “wildly” over-prescribing fentanyl and killing 14 patients. Lawyers note Husel is still facing civil suits. A surge in food bank use and a bill to end coroner investigations of miscarriages in California, abortion access in South Dakota and more are also in the news.

Nearly Half Of Americans Breathing Unsafe Air, ALA Report Finds

Morning Briefing

The American Lung Association’s annual “State of the Air” report looked at Americans’ exposure to smog and soot, which can cause asthma attacks, heart attacks, strokes, lung cancer and other health problems — possibly even a positive covid test.

Scientists Find Bacterial Correlation With Aggressive Prostate Cancer

Morning Briefing

A new study has identified five types of bacteria in samples from men with the illness, and though the link is not proved to be causal, it raises hopes that treatments may be developed later. A separate study has found higher numbers of mutations in brain cells of Alzheimer’s disease sufferers.

As More People Use Marijuana, Secondhand Smoke Risks Rise

Morning Briefing

Media outlets cover the risk of lingering particles from bong smoke — including to pets and children — “copycat” food packaging used by marijuana edibles, pet poisonings from accidental edible ingestions, and various political and legal maneuvers relating to legalization.

Justice Department Will Appeal Ruling That Voided Travel Mask Mandate

Morning Briefing

The decision was based on a determination by the CDC that masking on public transit “remains necessary to protect the public health.” Based on other pandemic-related rulings, court watchers say the Biden administration move could be an uphill climb.

CDC Vaccine Advisers Weigh Who Should Get Boosters, And When

Morning Briefing

The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met Wednesday to discuss recommendations on future doses of covid vaccine. Some members leaned toward advising that people under 50 years old wait for the next generation of shots.

Across US, Covid Cases Are Up But Hospitalizations Are Down

Morning Briefing

And a new study that was done before the omicron variant hit suggests that natural immunity from a covid infection may offer longer-lasting protection than an mRNA vaccine. Even so, the study’s authors stressed that “vaccination is a considerably safer way to acquire that immunity.”

Black People Mostly Left Out Of Alzheimer’s Clinical Trials

Morning Briefing

A Bloomberg report says that only 2% of patients included in Alzheimer’s drug trials reported in the past decade were Black, despite Black people being more likely to develop the disease. Also: layoffs in Boston’s biotech hub and students trying out robotic surgery in Utah.

Covid Delays Cause Epidemic Of Patients In US Hospitals

Morning Briefing

Fox News reports on the experiences of doctors across the U.S. as a wave of people are needing hospital assistance now after avoiding medical facilities during the pandemic, causing backlogs. Separately, in California, Sutter Health is locking out thousands of nurses who staged a strike.

Hepatitis Outbreak Has Affected At Least 9 Kids In Alabama

Morning Briefing

Media outlets report on a “mysterious” outbreak of liver damage in children which had originally been found in Great Britain and is now affecting kids in the U.S. Other news comes from California, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, Alaska, and Texas.

Brain Tumor Cluster in NJ Investigated

Morning Briefing

So far, the city of Woodbridge, New Jersey, is taking the lead in the investigation, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars for testing at a school that graduated roughly 15,000 people over the last 30 years. About 100 people who attended the school reportedly have been diagnosed with brain tumors. In other news, a record number of Americans have died of drug overdoses, and a strange story of a man who inhaled a dentist’s drill bit during a procedure.

Ohio Judge Temporarily Blocks Restrictive Abortion Law

Morning Briefing

The law would likely shut down surgical abortion clinics in southwestern Ohio, and the judge’s order gives them until mid-June to meet new requirements under the law. In Texas, former State Sen. Wendy Davis has filed a suit challenging the state’s strict abortion law that bans abortions after six weeks of pregnancy.