Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

NYC Mandates City Health Workers Get Vaccinated Or Be Tested Weekly

Morning Briefing

The new policy is scheduled to be announced by the mayor today and go into effect in August. Meanwhile in other states, concerns are rising about workers who have not gotten the shot, especially those working with frail seniors.

Pandemic May Have Created Over A Million New Orphans

Morning Briefing

The figure comes from a global model built by researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital, with “orphaned” meaning losing at least one parent. Separately, a study says 120,000 U.S. kids have lost a primary caregiver to the pandemic. Rising covid and long covid in children are also in the news.

CDC Adds To Mask Muddle, Saying ‘No Plans’ To Change Rules For Schools

Morning Briefing

Despite increasing pressure on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to “revisit” guidance on mask wearing in schools, including from pediatric groups, the CDC says it currently will not do so. Mask wearing issues on airplanes and in California, Las Vegas and Massachusetts are also reported.

In 2020, US Life Expectancy Fell The Most Since World War II

Morning Briefing

Estimates place nearly 75% of the blame for the 1.5-year life expectancy slip (to 77.3 years) on covid — but those are the overall data: 90 percent of the drop in life expectancy among Hispanic Americans came from covid. Overdose deaths also played a role in the decline.

Delta Dominates US Covid Cases: Just 17% Are Other Variants

Morning Briefing

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said the country was experiencing a “dramatic increase” in cases traced to the delta covid variant — up to 83% of new cases, a rise from 50% just two weeks ago.

US Officials Advise All Americans Against Traveling To Britain

Morning Briefing

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the State Department, citing the surge in covid cases in the United Kingdom, raised their travel advisories to “level 4,” the highest warning the federal government has made on trips to Britain.

Canada Sets Aug. 9 Date To Open Borders For Fully Vaccinated Americans

Morning Briefing

The rest of the (vaccinated) world will be allowed across Canada’s borders starting Sept. 7. Also in the news, the White House will send 3 million Moderna vaccine doses to Guatemala; a WHO scientist worries we’re moving further away from the pandemic’s end; and more.

Wildfire Smoke May Raise Chances Of Catching Covid

Morning Briefing

A study from the Desert Research Institute in Nevada found that covid infection rates rose during the 2020 wildfire season as smoke from other state fires reached Nevada. Ongoing wildfire risks, salmonella, lead exposure, dental care lapses and more are also in the news.

In Divisive Move, Louisiana Lawmakers Seek To Override Transgender Bill Veto

Morning Briefing

Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards refused to sign the bill that bans transgender youth from participating in sports, so the legislature will meet in special session today. In Texas, the governor says he has a way to advance legislation denying teens gender-affirming care.

FDA Approves Another Pricey Drug For Immune Condition GVHD

Morning Briefing

Kadmon is pricing Rezurock at $15,500 per month, which is comparable to other currently approved treatments for chronic graft-versus-host disease, CEO Harlan Waksal said. Other pharmaceutical industry news is on Cytokinetics, Leadiant and California Democratic U.S. Rep. Scott Peters.

Even When In The Same Hospital, Black Patients Fare Worse Than Whites

Morning Briefing

A new analysis from the nonprofit Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation finds Black patients are more likely to suffer illnesses or injuries tied to surgical procedures than white patients of the same gender and age group. Another report looks at how hospitals are working to help people injured by gun violence.

White House Wants Higher Penalties For Hospitals Dodging Price Disclosure

Morning Briefing

In a proposed rule, the Biden administration is asking for sharply higher penalties for larger hospitals that don’t make their pricing clear to the public. The government demands price transparency on at least 300 “shoppable” services, but a study says less than 6% of hospitals comply.

Infrastructure Vote Set For Wednesday; Republicans Fight It All The Way

Morning Briefing

After a month of work, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer set a vote for Wednesday to begin debate on the bipartisan infrastructure bill. News outlets note Republican adversaries will oppose progress on the legislation. Its fate is likely intertwined with a $3.5 trillion spending bill being promoted by Democrats that includes many provisions for health care.

Purdue Pharma Bankruptcy Plan Slammed By Justice Department

Morning Briefing

There are “fundamental concerns” about Purdue Pharma’s potentially unconstitutional opioid epidemic settlement plans in the Justice Department, with U.S. Trustee William Harrington even labelling the Sackler family liability releases from future lawsuits as “impermissible.”

Prisoners Temporarily Freed By Covid Emergency Must Return To Jail

Morning Briefing

The White House legal team has indicated that thousands of federal prisoners released to home confinement during the pandemic must return to jail within a month of the official state of emergency ending. But criminal justice advocates are pressing President Joe Biden for clemency.