Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Anticipation Grows Over Vaccine Approval For Younger Kids

Morning Briefing

A former FDA commissioner predicts that kids age 5 to 11 may be able to get the covid vaccine by the end of October. In other outreach news, 74% of eligible Americans have had at least one dose. Yet, misinformation is still keeping the shot out of many arms.

Midterm Pressures May Slim Down $3.5T Social Safety Net Package

Morning Briefing

News outlets report on Democrats’ worries over a planned massive spending package designed to boost the social safety net and climate change issues. 2022 midterms may be playing a role in scaling back ambitions. New taxes, child tax credit and Medicare expansion and more are also in the news.

Biden’s Covid-Testing Push Expected To Stretch Suppliers

Morning Briefing

The Washington Post explains how the president’s expansion of covid testing further emphasizes at-home testing. This, the Wall Street Journal notes, will stress suppliers — with CVS and Walgreens already limiting how many tests people can buy.

Unvaxxed People Are 11 Times More Likely To Die Of Covid

Morning Briefing

The studies also found that vaccinated people were about five times less likely to get infected, NPR reported. Other news on the spread of covid is from Idaho, Florida, Arizona, Georgia, West Virginia, Alaska, Texas and Massachusetts.

Staff’s Covid Vaccine Protest Halts Baby Deliveries At NY Hospital

Morning Briefing

After 30 staffers quit over a covid vaccine mandate, Lewis County General Hospital says it can’t safely operate its maternity department. The death of an Alabama man after treatment refusals at 43 overwhelmed hospitals, plus Intermountain Healthcare delaying almost all surgeries are also in health care industry covid news.

Surgeon General Defends New Vaccine Rules As ‘Legal’ And ‘Appropriate’

Morning Briefing

“The requirements that [President Joe Biden] announced are not sweeping requirements for the entire nation,” Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said during a weekend interview. “These are focused on areas where the federal government has legal authority to act.” And they won’t be the last, he and Dr. Anthony Fauci both signal.

Federal Mandate Shakes Up Vaccine Debate For Health Workers, Companies

Morning Briefing

President Joe Biden’s announcement that all health care workers are required to get vaccinated may have a big impact on rural hospitals in particular. While employers also wrap their arms around the implications of new federal requirements, one group not impacted by them is retired seniors.

Religious Exemption Claims On The Rise With Increased Vaccine Mandates

Morning Briefing

Though no major denomination opposes the covid vaccine — and some are actively telling church leaders not to sign exemption forms — more Americans are citing religion as a reason they won’t get the shot. News outlets examine a host of questions surrounding religious exemptions.

Longer Looks: The 20th Anniversary Of The 9/11 Terrorist Attacks

Morning Briefing

Saturday marks two decades since terrorists hijacked four planes and crashed them into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Thousands of survivors and first responders continue to suffer significant physical and mental health problems. And for all Americans, our grief is as fresh as the bright blue sky that belied that horrifying Tuesday.

Mississippi Reports Doubling Of Stillbirth Numbers During Covid

Morning Briefing

The 72 fetal deaths in unvaccinated pregnant women in Mississippi since the start of the pandemic — only those past 20 weeks of gestation — are twice the expected background rate. Period poverty, rapid covid tests, deaths prompted by Ida, drugmaker Endo and more are also in the news.

UNICEF Says US Is World’s Largest Covid Vaccine Donor

Morning Briefing

Meanwhile, a group of 112 African and 25 international organizations says the rapid proliferation of covid variants in poorly vaccinated African states is a serious risk for worsening the pandemic. Separately, the U.K.’s recent tax hike to improve health systems is only enough for two years’ support.

Delta Air Lines’ $200 Covid Insurance Employee Charge Worked

Morning Briefing

To push unvaccinated staff to get the vaccine, Delta imposed a monthly insurance fee of $200. It seems to have prompted 20% of the unvaccinated workforce to get the shot. Meanwhile, HCA Healthcare has said it won’t mandate vaccines for its 275,000 employees.

Biogen CEO Blames Confusion, Misinfo For Slow Alzheimer’s Drug Launch

Morning Briefing

Biogen CEO Michel Vounatsos said Alzheimer’s drug Aduhelm has experienced a slower launch than anticipated because of the controversy surrounding whether it works and how it was approved. Hemophilia drugs, anti-covid drug lenzilumab, digital clinical trials and more are among other news.