Latest KFF Health News Content

Latest KFF Health News Stories

CDC: Infection Rate Among Children Rose ‘Steadily’ From March To July

Morning Briefing

News on children includes new developments in the South Korean study about kids’ transmission of COVID-19 and an uptick in fast food consumption, while news on pregnancy includes the virus’ spread among pregnant Latina women and the stress of a pandemic on a growing baby.

Poll: 35% Of Americans Won’t Get COVID Vaccine

Morning Briefing

Hopes for defeating the coronavirus are pinned to an eventual vaccine, yet only 60% of Americans polled say they will get inoculated. Other vaccine news reports on “challenge” trials, more safety concerns and other development pipeline news.

PPE Supply Shortages: FDA Makes List Of What Might Run Out

Morning Briefing

Some rural hospitals and other health care groups struggle to keep key supplies in stock, and a nurses group warns new spikes could lead to early pandemic-like shortages. News is also on how some industries are adapting to the need for new supplies.

Testing Slows When Public Health Experts Say US Needs To Ramp Up

Morning Briefing

With coronavirus results delayed in many cases, some states say they are limiting the number of test conducted to give labs time to catch up. Other testing and contact tracing developments are also in the news.

Appeals Court: Trump Violated Law By Stopping ACA Subsidies For Low-Income Patients

Morning Briefing

The ACA established cost-sharing subsidies for individuals whose incomes were below 250% of the federal poverty level. Also, Pennsylvania is one of six states shifting in the next several years from the federal insurance exchange to run their own online marketplaces.

Doctor Of ‘Humble Beginnings’ Hopes To Inspire Young People In Louisiana

Morning Briefing

Media outlets report on a Black security guard turned doctor at Baton Rouge General Medical Center, a Rhode Island physician helping patients figure out voting and other stories about medical professionals.

And Another Departure: HHS CIO Resigns

Morning Briefing

The Department of Health and Human Services’ chief information officer, José Arrieta, will leave the agency at the end of the month. Arrieta’s team is responsible for the controversial migration of COVID-19 hospital data from CDC to HHS.

Pentagon Proposes $2.2 Billion In Cuts That Could Gut Military Health Care

Morning Briefing

Defense Secretary Mike Esper’s budget-slashing efforts put health care services provided to veterans and active service members in the crosshairs. And an internal Pentagon report finds that not enough mental health care is being provided to its troops.

170,000 People In US Have Died From COVID-19

Morning Briefing

As the nation passes that tragic mark — with a lack of collective mourning that could be damaging, mental health experts say — new confirmed coronavirus cases in the U.S. hit the lowest daily level since June.

‘Pennie’-Pinching States Take Over Obamacare Exchanges From Feds

KFF Health News Original

Pennsylvania and New Jersey are leaving the federal marketplace this fall to save money and will start their own insurance exchanges. Kentucky, New Mexico, Virginia and Maine are looking to join them in 2021 or beyond.

Trust, Fear and Solidarity Will Determine the Success of a COVID Vaccine

KFF Health News Original

Polio terrified Americans, and in 1955, when Jonas Salk’s vaccine became available, they snapped it up like candy. Sixty-five years later, COVID is the latest dread virus, but many undercurrents could inhibit its acceptance.

With COVID Vaccine Trial, Rural Oregon Clinic Steps Onto World Stage

KFF Health News Original

A small allergy clinic in Medford, Oregon, might seem an unlikely place to recruit hundreds of volunteers to test the Moderna vaccine against COVID-19. But its steward has a record of leading hundreds of clinical trials.