Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

U.K. Mandates Covid Shots By Early 2022 For Frontline Health Workers

Morning Briefing

The New York Times reports that the British government has said that all frontline health workers in the National Health Service must be vaccinated by the spring. Meanwhile, Russia and Germany report record covid numbers, and India has reached a billion shots administered.

Shipping Backlog Blamed For Driving Rising Costs In Medical Supply Industry

Morning Briefing

The CEO of Cardinal Health blamed congestion in shipping ports and high commodities prices for causing a rise in the cost of making and distributing medical supplies. Separately, a report says private health insurers are paying “considerable” markups over Medicare rates for outpatient drugs.

Pennsylvania’s New Home Care Program Criticized For Poor Quality

Morning Briefing

The AP reports on what advocates say is the “eroding quality” of home care services under Pennsylvania’s new managed care system. Separately, a news investigation reportedly played a role in improving EMS response times at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

Lawsuits Challenging Texas Abortion Law To Be Heard In Court

Morning Briefing

A state district judge is expected to hear over a dozen cases now consolidated, that were filed by doctors and abortion rights groups over the constitutionality of Texas’ near-total ban on the procedure. News outlets report on other abortion news from Indiana and Massachusetts, as well as Cecily Strong’s “SNL” skit.

Bat Populations May Harbor Coronavirus Similar to SARS-CoV-2

Morning Briefing

A newly published study says researchers back in 2010 found a close cousin to the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus in Cambodian bats. A fascinating French study suggests that having lingering long covid symptoms may have led participants to believe that they had COVID-19, when they did not. Other diseases, anxiety, or deconditioning related to the pandemic could be the cause of the symptoms, the study said.

Patient’s Brain Swelling, Death After Taking Aduhelm Under Investigation

Morning Briefing

The newly approved, if controversial, Alzheimer’s drug Aduhelm is in the news after a patient who’d taken the medication was hospitalized for brain swelling and then died. The drug’s maker Biogen is investigating if there is any link. Meanwhile, a trial finds psilocybin is useful for combatting depression.

Lobbyists Spend Big To Push Changes In Drug Pricing Legislation

Morning Briefing

They want changes on the time period of drug exclusivity and the tax treatment of rare disease drugs — and are shelling out record lobbying dollars to influence the bill. Also, news on the Biden administration efforts to get covid vaccine to war-ravaged countries.

A Backlash Against Covid Vaccine Lies Gains Strength

Morning Briefing

Pfizer’s CEO actually calls people who spread disinformation “criminals.” Newsmax’s White House reporter is banned from Twitter for promoting her theory that Satan has something to with the covid vaccine. And the NFL fines the Green Bay Packers and its quarterback for violating the league’s covid rules. But Senator Elizabeth Warren is sued by a book publisher for criticizing covid misinformation.

More Heat And Ozone Affecting Health

Morning Briefing

The environmental impacts on health are examined: ozone in Western U.S. cities and heat worldwide. And the impact of covid on the environment. Also news on flu, food and dying vets.

Oklahoma Supreme Court Reverses $465M Opioid Ruling Against J&J

Morning Briefing

In a 5-1 ruling, the Oklahoma Supreme Court justices overturned a lower court’s ruling that Johnson & Johnson had violated the state’s public nuisance statute — an argument on which thousands of opioid cases against drugmakers hinges.

OSHA To Rely On Whistleblowers To Report Vaccine Mandate Violations

Morning Briefing

The AP says the Occupational Safety and Health Administration doesn’t have nearly enough staff to track workplace safety violations of the Biden administration’s covid vaccine mandate. So it will rely on a “corps of informers” instead. Meanwhile, reports say mandates do really work.

FDA To Weigh Allowing Pfizer Boosters For Anyone 18 Or Over

Morning Briefing

Pfizer and BioNTech asked Monday for authorization to start administering additional covid vaccine doses to any adult in the U.S. The companies submitted new study data on efficacy that was not available when a similar request was denied in September. The New York Times reports that the Food and Drug Administration is expected to grant the request.