Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Vaccine Mistrust Dropping, No Thanks To Spanish-Speaking Social Media

Morning Briefing

New studies show covid vaccine hesitancy is broadly dropping across the U.S., but a report in USA Today highlights how social media misinformation may be increasing mistrust among Spanish-speakers in the U.S.

Democrats Eye Drug-Price Reform As A Piggy Bank

Morning Briefing

Drug pricing reforms in Congress will be a tempting income source to pay for Democrats’ extensive wish list of spending projects. Lawmakers also urge an investigation of insulin price hikes.

Moderna, Pfizer Covid Vaccines Shown Highly Effective In Real-Life Use

Morning Briefing

A new U.S. study shows that when covid vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna are used in real-world applications — when given to 4,000 healthcare workers, other essential workers — they are 90% effective at preventing serious covid infections.

Over 20 World Leaders Call For Pandemic Cooperation Treaty

Morning Briefing

Official signatures from the U.S. and China were absent from a letter calling for future pandemic planning published in newspapers around the world. Meanwhile, worries deepen that the WHO’s report on the coronavirus’ source is inconclusive.

White House Indicates Covid Vaccine Passports Are A Private Sector Matter

Morning Briefing

Messaging from the White House suggests that there is no federal mandate for rolling out covid vaccine passport systems, leaving the matter to the private sector. Other reports highlight the potential scam issues such passports may bring.

‘Impending Doom’: Biden, CDC Director Warn Of Fourth Wave If Nation Lets Down Guard

Morning Briefing

President Joe Biden urged states to maintain or reinstate mask mandates and for Americans to remain cautious: “This is deadly serious.” At a briefing earlier in the day, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said she is “scared” over the direction the covid case numbers are taking in the U.S.

Biden: 90% Of Americans Eligible For Covid Vaccine By April 19

Morning Briefing

President Joe Biden confidently declared that at least 90% of U.S. adults will be eligible to receive coronavirus vaccines by April 19. States follow with expanded eligibility requirements. Meanwhile, all the “Operation Warp Speed” trappings have been jettisoned by the Biden administration.

Researchers Say Middle-Aged Women Have Higher Long-Covid Risks

Morning Briefing

In other news, the FDA has cleared Amazon to develop its own brand at-home covid test; scientists may have learned why cold foods cause tooth pain; and new research suggests some human brain cells remain highly active after death.

Child Welfare Safety Net Suffers In Pandemic; Summer Camps May Be On

Morning Briefing

The AP notes the number of official reports related to children’s welfare, including abuse investigations, have dropped at a “staggering” rate during the pandemic. Meanwhile Dr. Anthony Fauci suggests unvaccinated children could still go to summer camp. And better air flow is seen key to safe school re-openings.

Georgia’s Re-Opening Plan Defied Local Health Experts’ Advice

Morning Briefing

In news from across the U.S., Georgia’s plan to un-lockdown ignored expert health advice; weddings in Oahu, Hawaii can now have 100 guests if they’re held outside; and Florida’s governor threatens to sue the CDC if it continues its summer ban on cruise ships.

Long-Term Mental Health Impact Of Pandemic ‘Grief’ Highlighted

Morning Briefing

Worry and uncertainty caused by covid may have a bigger than expected mental health toll, the Washington Post reports. Meanwhile anti-smoking efforts may have suffered due to the stress of the pandemic.

How The Pandemic Reshaped Health Care Costs And Practices

Morning Briefing

“Skyrocketing” healthcare costs during the pandemic cause concern while health systems’ charity-care spending dropped. And telehealth changes could become permanent. And the FDA approves the first personalized cell treatment for patients with multiple myeloma.

Biden’s Medicaid Push Gets Support Boost From Stimulus

Morning Briefing

As reports suggest stimulus cash is helping boost President Joe Biden’s plan to expand Medicaid, the administration says the next package will be split in two. Child care spending is emphasized in the plan, but infrastructure upgrades will come before health and family spends.