- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Oz Says California’s Not Fighting Health Care Fraud, but Data Shows It’s Part of a Larger Battle
- Lawmakers Seek To Protect Crisis Pregnancy Centers as Abortion Clinic Numbers Shrink
- Many ACA Customers Are Paying Higher Premiums. Most Blame Trump and Republicans, Poll Finds.
- Watch: Affordability Plagues Health Care in Its Shift From Nonprofit to Profit Machine
- Political Cartoon: 'Thoughts Per Second?'
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Oz Says California’s Not Fighting Health Care Fraud, but Data Shows It’s Part of a Larger Battle
Trump administration officials say the state allows rampant fraud and have promised to investigate, blaming the “Russian, Armenian mafia” in the hospice and home health care industry. But data shows hotbeds of health care fraud throughout the country, with California outperforming most other states in recovering fraud dollars. (Don Thompson, 3/19)
Lawmakers Seek To Protect Crisis Pregnancy Centers as Abortion Clinic Numbers Shrink
Some states have tried to crack down on crisis pregnancy centers, accusing them of deceptive practices. But now conservative lawmakers are pushing legislation to increase protections for the organizations, which work to dissuade women from abortions. (Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez, 3/19)
Many ACA Customers Are Paying Higher Premiums. Most Blame Trump and Republicans, Poll Finds.
A KFF poll offers insights into people’s insurance coverage decisions and how those choices could play into their vote in November’s midterm elections. (Julie Appleby, 3/19)
Watch: Affordability Plagues Health Care in Its Shift From Nonprofit to Profit Machine
On “What the Health? From KFF Health News,” distributed by WAMU, chief Washington correspondent and host Julie Rovner sat down with Drew Altman, president and CEO of KFF, to talk about the likelihood of a national health care debate. (Julie Rovner, 3/19)
Political Cartoon: 'Thoughts Per Second?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Thoughts Per Second?'" by Mike Seddon.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
CAUGHT UP IN COPAYS
Washington snowfall.
Your bill just came due again.
False spring is over.
- Anonymous
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Covid Killed 155,000 More Americans In 2020-21 Than Thought, Study Finds
Scientists dug into the death certificates of people who died of the virus in hospitals and compared the symptomology with those who died outside of care. They estimate the U.S. death toll was undercounted by 16%. Plus, "medical freedom" is putting public health at risk.
AP:
Study Estimates More Than 150,000 Uncounted COVID-19 Pandemic Deaths
The COVID-19 pandemic’s early death toll was much higher than the official U.S. count, according to a new study that spotlights dramatic disparities in the uncounted deaths. About 840,000 COVID-19 deaths were reported on death certificates in 2020 and 2021. But a group of researchers — using a form of artificial intelligence — estimate that as many as 155,000 unrecognized additional deaths likely occurred in that time outside of hospitals. That would mean about 16% of COVID-19 deaths went uncounted in those years. (Stobbe, 3/18)
CIDRAP:
Antibiotic Used In COVID Patients Tied To Increased Signs Of Antibiotic Resistance
In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, nearly 75% of hospitalized COVID patients received antibiotics on admission, primarily because of limited treatment options and concerns about bacterial coinfections. One of those antibiotics was azithromycin, a macrolide antibiotic commonly used for respiratory infections. Use of azithromycin was driven in part by a study, now retracted, that suggested it could improve outcomes in COVID patients when used in combination with the antimalaria drug hydroxychloroquine. Although subsequent trials would find the combination had no benefit for COVID patients, widespread azithromycin use continued for several months. (Dall, 3/18)
More on vaccines and RSV —
Stat:
Vaccines' Indirect Benefits Overlooked In Battle Over 'Medical Freedom'
With a backlash against vaccines following the Covid-19 pandemic — and the rise of health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — there has been an intense focus among some in the United States on the importance of individual autonomy and “medical freedom” when it comes to choosing which immunizations to get and when. (Branswell, 3/19)
ProPublica:
How RFK Jr.’s Vaccine Agenda Risks A Return Of Childhood Plagues
Dr. Adam Ratner hovered over a gravely ill infant in a New York City intensive care unit on a grim day in 2022. The 3-month-old girl spiked a fever two days earlier and had become lethargic. Soon she was having seizures and struggling to breathe. She didn’t register Ratner’s towering frame or the bright hospital lights. Her eyes stared up and to the right, eerily frozen. (Callahan, 3/19)
Chicago Tribune:
Chicago Public Health Officials Report High RSV Activity
The respiratory illness RSV is still going strong in Chicago — an unusually late showing for the virus, which can strike infants especially hard. RSV activity has moved from moderate to high in Chicago, according to the Chicago Department of Public Health. Though it’s typical for RSV to spread more widely in the winter — along with illnesses like the flu and COVID-19 — it’s often more prevalent earlier in the season. (Schencker, 3/18)
The CDC recommends taking extra precautions against polio if you travel —
The Washington Post:
Here’s What You Need To Know About Polio Before You Travel
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) updated a travel advisory earlier this month that recommends travelers take extra precautions when visiting certain countries where polio is circulating. (Felton, 3/19)
Senate Dems Unveil Framework To Try To Make Health Insurance Affordable
The three goals of the Democrats' plan, Stat reports, are to make insurance affordable, make it simple, and end “corporate greed.” Meanwhile, a new survey finds that almost 1 in 10 Americans who had ACA plans last year dropped health insurance entirely, after federal subsidies expired and costs spiked.
Stat:
Senate Democrats Lay Out Plans To Overhaul Health Insurance
Democrats are laying out their plans to rebuild the health care system in the hopes of eventually regaining control of Congress and the White House. On Thursday, a dozen Senate Democrats proposed a framework for private health insurance with the goal of making it affordable, and more standardized and simple. (Wilkerson, 3/19)
Fierce Healthcare:
To Tackle Costs, Lawmakers Weigh Curbs On Provider Consolidation
Provider consolidation was tip of the tongue Wednesday during a hearing that sat hospital and physician association leaders across from legislators. Members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Health often returned to the issue when seeking answers on the drivers of, and solutions for, Americans’ rising healthcare costs. (Muoio, 3/18)
On ACA subsidies and affordability —
The Wall Street Journal:
Millions Of Americans Are Going Uninsured Following Expiration Of ACA Subsidies
Nearly one in 10 people who had Affordable Care Act plans last year dropped health insurance altogether, after premium costs rose sharply because of the expiration of federal subsidies, according to a new survey. Most of those who remained in ACA plans reported larger out-of-pocket healthcare expenses in the form of higher copays, coinsurance or deductibles, according to the survey from health-research nonprofit KFF. About one-sixth of those who still have ACA coverage, or 17%, weren’t sure they would be able to afford their new premium payments for the entire year, indicating more people might drop insurance as the year goes on. (Wilde Mathews, 3/19)
KFF Health News:
Many ACA Customers Are Paying Higher Premiums. Most Blame Trump And Republicans, Poll Finds
Most people who get their health coverage through the Affordable Care Act say they face sharply higher costs, with many worried they will have to pare back other expenses to cover them, according to a poll released Thursday. Some are uncertain whether they will be able to continue paying their premiums all year. Still, 69% of those enrolled last year signed up again this year, often for less generous coverage. About 9% said they had to forgo insurance, according to the survey by KFF, a health information nonprofit that includes KFF Health News. (Appleby, 3/19)
CBS News:
A Typical U.S. Family Needs Annual Income Of $145,000 To Thrive, Study Finds. About Half Fall Short
Roughly half of Americans fall short of the annual income needed to cover their basic needs, according to new research. A U.S. family with children needs about $145,000 in income to be considered economically secure, according to a March 16 report from the Urban Institute. About 49% of Americans live below that financial threshold, the nonpartisan think tank found. In 2024 (the latest available data), the median household income for married couples in the U.S. was $128,700, U.S. Census data shows. (Picchi, 3/18)
KFF Health News:
Watch: Affordability Plagues Health Care In Its Shift From Nonprofit To Profit Machine
On What the Health? From KFF Health News, distributed by WAMU, chief Washington correspondent and host Julie Rovner sat down with Drew Altman, president and CEO of KFF, to talk about the likelihood of a national health care debate to rein in costs. As the midterm elections approach, the cost of health care is the public’s top economic concern, Altman said. Although past reforms have significantly increased the number of people with health insurance, they have not successfully addressed affordability, he said. (Rovner, 3/19)
On TrumpRx —
NBC News:
TrumpRx Isn't Doing Much For Drug Prices. What Would It Take To Change That?
Americans are furious about drug prices. The Trump administration’s answer? A new website. But more than a month after its launch, the site, TrumpRx.gov, remains small — offering discounts on just 54 prescription drugs. Many of those drugs already have cheaper generic versions or savings programs available elsewhere, and the discounts can’t be used with insurance or count toward a deductible. Awareness of the site remains limited. (Lovelace Jr., 3/18)
The Hill:
Mark Cuban Backs TrumpRx For Lowering Drug Costs
Billionaire enterpreneur Mark Cuban on Wednesday touted the federal government’s TrumpRx drug platform, saying the initiative is saving Americans money. “Everyone wants me to rip on TrumpRx,” Cuban wrote on the social platform X. “Reality is, it’s saving patients money on IVF and a few other drugs. A lot of money. IMO, anything that saves patients money is a win.” Cuban, who has criticized President Trump and endorsed former Vice President Harris in the 2024 presidential race, co-founded Cost Plus Drugs — which intends to cut out pharmaceutical middlemen and reduce the price of prescription drugs — in 2022. (Rego, 3/18)
363 Pregnant, Postpartum Immigrants Deported In 13 Months Of Crackdown
The 19th breaks down the data from the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration from January 1, 2025, through Feb. 16, 2026, noting an uptick from previous years of immigrants who were deported. It also offers a picture of what is happening with prenatal care in immigration facilities.
The 19th:
ICE Has Been Deporting Pregnant Immigrants. DHS Just Told Us How Many.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has detained and deported hundreds of pregnant, postpartum and nursing immigrants since the start of the Trump administration, the Department of Homeland Security confirmed for the first time Wednesday. Federal policy says that such individuals should only be detained in limited circumstances. (Luthra, 3/18)
The 19th:
Pregnant People In ICE Detention Report Lack Of Medical Care
Amanda Isabel Fanego Cardoso was about 11 weeks pregnant when she was detained last September, then transferred between five immigration facilities over several months. Because her medical care was so limited, she said, it was only after her release this February that she learned she had developed potentially life threatening pregnancy-related conditions. (Luthra, 3/18)
Updates from the FDA —
Stat:
FDA’s Top Infectious Disease Regulator To Depart Agency
The Food and Drug Administration official in charge of reviewing infectious disease products is leaving the agency, according to an email viewed by STAT. (Lawrence, 3/18)
NBC News:
FDA Pulls Proposed Rule Barring Teens From Indoor Tanning
The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday withdrew a proposed rule that would have barred all Americans under age 18 from using tanning beds. Dozens of states — including California, Delaware, Illinois, Kansas and Minnesota — as well as Washington, D.C., already ban the use of tanning beds for minors. Other states have restrictions that allow teens to use tanning beds with parental consent. (Sullivan, 3/18)
CIDRAP:
Six In 10 US Foodborne Illnesses In 2024 Linked To Contaminated Produce, Annual Report Reveals
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Office of Coordinated Outbreak Response, Evaluation, & Emergency Preparedness (CORE+EP) has released its annual report on 2024 foodborne illness investigations, showing that vegetables and fruits were responsible for 60% of illnesses, trailed by multi-ingredient foods (20%), dairy products (10%), and nuts and seeds and eggs (5% each). The multi-ingredient foods were frozen shakes, shrimp salad, bagged salad mix, chocolates, gummies, and cones, while the nuts were walnuts, and the cheese consisted of raw cheddar, queso fresco, and cotija. The produce included mangoes, romaine lettuce, spinach, cucumbers, jalapeno peppers, carrots, onions, sprouts, alfalfa sprouts, basil, and parsley. (Van Beusekom, 3/18)
MedPage Today:
First TAVR System Approved For Severe Aortic Regurgitation
The FDA approved the Trilogy Transcatheter Heart Valve System for the treatment of symptomatic severe aortic regurgitation, device maker JenaValve Technology announced. This approval makes Trilogy the only transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) system indicated for patients with symptomatic severe aortic regurgitation who are at high risk for surgical aortic valve replacement. (Lou, 3/18)
On federal funding for scientists —
Stat:
National Survey Of NIH-Funded Researchers Shows Precarious State Of U.S. Science — ‘This Is Like The Titanic’
A nationwide STAT survey of federally funded researchers reveals that, a year after Donald Trump’s return to the White House, many academic scientists are reeling. Rather than waning, the impacts of the administration’s seismic changes to science funding are intensifying, causing researchers to drastically scale back the ambition of their work and driving some to shut down their labs entirely. (Wosen, 3/19)
Stat:
Researchers Surveyed By STAT Detail The Scientific And Personal Toll Of Grant Cuts: ‘This Can’t Be How It Ends’
Scientists, as a whole, are a resilient and patient bunch. Expanding the frontiers of human knowledge by even an iota can take decades and comes with frequent disappointment. But for many, the uncertainty they’ve confronted over the past year, amid a dizzying array of funding cuts, delays, and other changes by the Trump administration, is unprecedented. It has caused some biomedical researchers to hit their breaking point. (Wosen and Oza, 3/19)
Medicare Issues Nationwide Enrollment Moratorium On New Medical Suppliers
As part of an ongoing Texas Medicare fraud case, the federal government has imposed a six‑month nationwide block for most new medical supply companies to prevent high‑risk suppliers from entering the system. Plus: AI delays care for some seniors; Stryker cyberattack disrupts surgery schedule; and more.
CBS News:
Medicare Freezes New Supplier Enrollment As Russian‑Linked Texas Fraud Case Unfolds
When the CBS News Texas I‑Team returned to a small North Austin office tied to an alleged multimillion‑dollar Medicare billing scheme, two workers were inside placing what appeared to be medical billing records into large black trash bags. They did not respond when asked whether someone instructed them to discard the documents. Weeks earlier, the same two employees told the I‑Team they had been hired to open mail and scan documents and were unaware of the fraud allegations or arrest of the man who ran the company. (New, 3/17)
WP Intelligence:
Exclusive: Medicare’s AI Experiment Leads To Delayed Care For Some Seniors
Doctors and other providers in six states must get permission from AI-driven tech companies before giving seniors selected medical care. The experiment is a pilot program that could be expanded. (Adams, 3/17)
Stat:
HHS Watchdog Details Misuse Of Antipsychotic Drugs In Nursing Homes
A pair of federal watchdog reports released Thursday urge Medicare to do more to crack down on nursing homes’ use of antipsychotic drugs and inappropriate schizophrenia diagnoses for residents with dementia. (Bannow, 3/19)
More health care industry developments —
Bloomberg:
Stryker Cyberattack Delays Surgeries For Some Patients
The cyberattack against Stryker Corp. has delayed surgeries for some patients, the company said Wednesday, adding to the fallout from the incident last week. The medical technology company said its products are safe and its systems are being restored, but disruptions to ordering, manufacturing and shipping have held up procedures for patients waiting on custom implants. (Swetlitz and Thornton, 3/18)
CBS News:
$900 Million Proposal Aims To End Decades-Long Healthcare Desert In Georgia
A $900 million proposal to build a new hospital in South Fulton aims to address what some call a medical desert. South Fulton doesn't have any hospitals. People who live there have to drive some 30 minutes or more to get to an emergency room. A proposal to build a hospital in Union City would make emergency room care more accessible. (Head, 3/17)
Modern Healthcare:
Highmark Health, BCBS Kansas City Affiliation Approved
Highmark Health and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City are set to finalize an affiliation agreement. The deal, which resembles an acquisition with no cash changing hands, was approved by the Missouri Commerce and Insurance Department. The affiliation is expected to close March 31, the two parties announced Tuesday. (Tong, 3/18)
Modern Healthcare:
MedArrive Buys Inbound Health’s Patient Routing Software
Technology company MedArrive acquired some software assets of shuttered hospital-at-home company Inbound Health. MedArrive announced the purchase Wednesday but did not disclose financial terms. (Eastabrook, 3/18)
Modern Healthcare:
Geisinger Seeks Capital Requirement Relief After Risant Merger
Geisinger is asking Pennsylvania regulators to relax capital requirements for its insurance businesses, set as part of its 2024 acquisition by Risant Health. Risk-based capital requirements are designed to ensure an organization has enough money in reserve to cover the risks it assumes. Geisinger is requesting the requirement threshold be lowered for the next 13 years, according to a filing it made on behalf of its insurance subsidiaries and Risant with the Pennsylvania Insurance Department. (Hudson, 3/18)
Modern Healthcare:
Health Insurance Bankruptcies Increased In 2025
States shut down more troubled health insurance companies in 2025 than during the prior year, but the total remained below historical trends. Georgia and Minnesota each declared Sonder Health Plans and UCare insolvent last year, according to a preliminary analysis of financial filings the credit ratings agency AM Best performed for Modern Healthcare. In 2024, Opticare Vision Services was the sole health-related insurance company subject to these measures when Utah placed it in rehabilitation, AM Best reported last week. (Tepper, 3/18)
Also —
The Baltimore Sun:
Why Are Doctors Burning Out And Dying By Suicide
In her surgical care for women with reproductive cancers, Dr. Maryann Wilbur said she faced repeated demands from both insurance companies and the hospitals she worked for to compromise on providing the best care for her patients. “You start to see there are perverse incentives in both directions to withhold care — to perform care that is not needed — to perform the wrong care,” Wilbur told The Baltimore Sun. “What we have here is a reimbursement model that is based around the dollar and not on patient outcomes.” (Hille, 3/18)
If you need help —
Dial 988 for 24/7 support from the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. It's free and confidential.
Wisconsin Expands Postpartum Medicaid Coverage To 12 Months
The expanded coverage for new moms will begin July 1. Plus, looks at health care proposals that leaders and lawmakers are considering in Maine, Delaware, and Maryland.
WPR:
Gov. Tony Evers Signs Law Extending Postpartum Medicaid Coverage To 1 Year
Thousands of mothers in Wisconsin will now have access to postpartum Medicaid coverage after Gov. Tony Evers signed a bill extending the program from 60 days to one year. The effort has been years in the making, with Evers including it in all four of his proposed budgets since he took office in 2019. In a press release after he signed the bill, Evers said he’s proud to have gotten it “across the finish line.” (Peek, 3/18)
More health news from across the U.S. —
Bangor Daily News:
Maine’s Health Care ‘Mess’ Is A Focus Of The Crowded Race To Replace Janet Mills
Nine gubernatorial candidates attended a forum Wednesday in Augusta hosted by the Maine Primary Care Association. The candidates — four Democrats, four independents and one Republican — all agreed that Maine’s next governor must tackle an increasingly costly and complex health care crisis. Several have already released health plans, though on Wednesday they differed on how and where to focus spending. (Kail, 3/18)
WHYY:
Delaware Lawmakers Try Again To Cap Excessive Hospital Costs
Delawareans with private insurance pay some of the highest prices in the nation for hospital services. Research also shows the state’s hospitals generally have higher profits than the national average. New legislation sponsored by Senate Majority leader Bryan Townsend, D-Newark, aims to invest more in primary care and reduce hospital spending. But the powerful health care lobby fiercely opposes the bill. (Mueller, 3/17)
Stat:
Md. Bill Would Force Pharma To Disclose Ties To Disease Awareness Campaigns
In a bid for transparency in pharmaceutical marketing, a bill introduced in the Maryland legislature would require drugmakers to disclose that they sell or are developing a medicine to combat an illness in disease awareness advertisements. (Silverman, 3/18)
KXET:
First Round Of Rural Health Funding Available For Critical Access Hospitals In North Dakota
$10 million in federal funding is now available for critical access hospitals in North Dakota, as part of the first year of the Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP). The funding opportunity is meant to support the retention of health care professionals in North Dakota’s 37 critical access hospitals and their clinics, thus making rural healthcare more sustainable throughout the state. (Segal, 3/18)
WUN:
Rhode Island Sees Spike In Drug Overdoses, Health Officials Issue Statewide Alert
Rhode Island health officials are warning the public after a spike in non-fatal drug overdoses last week surpassed a statewide threshold for the first time since 2023. Officials noted that fentanyl continues to be detected in stimulants such as cocaine and crack cocaine, as well as counterfeit pills — putting people who use stimulants at heightened risk of opioid overdose, particularly those with lower opioid tolerance. (Belmore, 3/18)
The Conversation:
Magic Mushroom-Infused Products Appear In Colorado Gas Stations – What Public Health Officials Want Consumers To Know
Hallucinogenic chocolate bars were removed from six Denver-area gas stations. The PolkaDot-branded chocolate bars were marketed as “mushroom blends” and said to include lion’s mane, reishi, turkey tail and cordyceps — all non-hallucinogenic varieties. But laboratory tests showed otherwise. The bars contained psychoactive drugs: psilocybin and psilocin, the principal psychedelics found in Psilocybe mushrooms, as well as other chemical relatives called synthetic tryptamines. (Kroll, 3/17)
The Conversation:
Power Outages Can Threaten The Lives Of Medical Device Users – Knowing Who Is Most At Risk Will Help Cities Respond
We analyzed data from more than 2,600 households reporting the use of medical devices, drawn from a nationally representative federal survey of nearly 18,500 American homes. Using statistical modeling, we identified four distinct groups, each facing a very different situation when the power goes out. (Dean and Asmussen, 3/18)
KFF Health News:
Oz Says California’s Not Fighting Health Care Fraud, But Data Shows It’s Part Of A Larger Battle
For weeks, Mehmet Oz has been waging a public feud with California leaders over health care fraud, accusing the blue state of failing to adequately combat such abuse. Oz, who heads the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, alleged that there was approximately $3.5 billion of fraud in the hospice and home health care industry in Los Angeles County alone. “This administration under President [Donald] Trump is not going to tolerate taxpayer dollars being stolen because people aren’t paying attention anymore. We’re focused on this,” Oz said. (Thompson, 3/19)
Also —
The Orange County Register:
Huntington Beach Father With Terminal Cancer Watches Daughter Graduate In Special Ceremony
Friends arranged the ceremony over the weekend, making sure Bill Kerwin, a local coach and school district staffer, enjoyed seeing the major life milestone happen. (Wang, 3/17)
Menopause Before 40 Leads To 40% Higher Risk Of Heart Attacks: Study
The study shows that women who undergo premature menopause have a higher risk of fatal and nonfatal heart attacks. Black women were found to be three times as likely as white women to experience premature menopause.
The New York Times:
Women Who Undergo Menopause Before 40 Face Higher Heart Attack Risk
Women who go through menopause before turning 40 have a significantly higher lifelong risk of heart attacks than women who go through the transition later, according to a new study. The study found that women who went through what is referred to as premature menopause had 40 percent more fatal and nonfatal heart attacks throughout the course of their lives than those who went through menopause after 40. (Rabin, 3/18)
On abortion and 'crisis pregnancy centers' —
The Boston Globe:
Mass. Abortion Rates Doubled After Supreme Court Nixed Roe V. Wade
In the years since the US Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade in 2022, Massachusetts has emerged as a major national provider of abortion care, with new state data showing terminations using medication have more than doubled, and most patients receiving care are from out of state. The increase was driven largely by the rapid expansion of telehealth services in which providers can prescribe abortion pills, as well as a surge of patients traveling from states that imposed tighter restrictions following the Supreme Court decision. (Rahal, 3/18)
The Hill:
HHS Investigating 13 States For ‘Coercing’ Healthcare Providers To Provide Abortions
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced today that it is launching investigations into 13 states for violating a federal health refusal clause and “coercing” healthcare entities into providing or performing abortion services. The states HHS will be investigating are California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington. States will have 20 days to respond to letters sent by HHS. (Choi, 3/19)
Montana Free Press:
What We Know About The Anaconda Man Accused Of Planning To Kill A Montana Abortion Doctor
An Anaconda man accused of planning to kill an abortion provider in Missoula earlier this month and firing a gun at a Helena clinic in 2023 is being held on $5 million bail. After his arrest, Charles Felix Jones, 20, admitted to firing into the front entry of the Helena Planned Parenthood clinic in 2023 when he was 17 years old, according to charging documents. Neither the police nor the FBI had previously identified a suspect in the case. (Fairbanks, 3/18)
Axios:
Hawley's Abortion Pill Move Puts Republican Senators In A Bind
While Sen. Josh Hawley's bill won't get Democratic votes needed to advance in the Senate, it's roiling the waters within the GOP caucus. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), locked in a tough primary, quickly endorsed the legislation. Senate health committee Chair Bill Cassidy (R-La.), who's also facing a primary challenge, held a hearing in January on what he termed the dangers of mifepristone but hasn't said whether his panel will take up Hawley's bill. Sen. Jon Husted (R-Ohio), who faces a competitive reelection race, told Axios he hasn't seen Hawley's bill when asked for his position on it. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) likewise said he had not seen the bill. But asked if Republicans are talking about the issue in general, he replied, "No." (Sullivan, 3/19)
KFF Health News:
Lawmakers Seek To Protect Crisis Pregnancy Centers As Abortion Clinic Numbers Shrink
Conservative lawmakers in multiple states are pushing legislation drafted by an anti-abortion advocacy group to increase protections for crisis pregnancy centers, organizations that provide some health-related services but also work to dissuade women from having abortions. The legislation would prohibit state and local governments from requiring crisis pregnancy centers to perform abortions, provide referrals for abortion services, or inform patients about such services or contraception options. It also would allow crisis pregnancy centers to sue the violating government entity. (Orozco Rodriguez, 3/19)
Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs
Each week, KFF Health News compiles a selection of health policy studies and briefs.
ABC News:
Pregnancy Outcomes Could Be Significantly Impacted By Men's Health, Study Suggests
A new study suggests men's health may significantly influence their partners' pregnancy outcomes, as well as their children's future health. The new review, published in the journal The Lancet on Monday, analyzed multiple studies and concluded that a man's health prior to conception, including their mental health, nutrition, lifestyle choices like smoking, and environmental factors, may all have an impact on their partner's pregnancy. (Jinnah and Yu, 3/17)
MedPage Today:
Prehospital Whole-Blood Transfusion No Better Than Standard For Severe Hemorrhage
Logistical advantages and safety aside, whole-blood transfusion offered no clinical improvement for the treatment of life-threatening hemorrhage in the prehospital setting, the randomized SWiFT trial found. (Lou, 3/17)
CIDRAP:
Shingles Vaccine Tied To Half The Risk Of Cardiac Events In Older Adults With Heart Disease
Shingles vaccination may halve the one-year risk of serious cardiac events among older adults who have heart disease, adding to accumulating evidence that the vaccine may protect against health conditions in addition to shingles (herpes zoster), University of California researchers say. The study findings will be presented at the upcoming American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session in New Orleans. (Van Beusekom, 3/17)
MedPage Today:
Hidradenitis Suppurativa Linked To Higher Risk Of Self-Harm, Including Suicide
Patients with hidradenitis suppurative (HS) had a significantly higher incidence of self-harm, including suicide, compared with the general population, a large registry-based study from Denmark showed. (Bankhead, 3/16)
Becker's Hospital Review:
Telehealth Helps Breast Cancer Patients Adhere To Treatment: Study
Telehealth use is associated with higher adherence to endocrine therapy among women with breast cancer, according to a study in the Journal of Cancer Survivorship. Researchers from Athens-based University of Georgia analyzed claims data from the Merative MarketScan database, examining more than 1,100 commercially insured women under age 65 who were diagnosed with nonmetastatic breast cancer and started endocrine therapy in 2018 and followed for five years after. (Bruce, 3/16)
Opinion writers discuss these public health topics.
The New York Times:
What Happened When A MAHA Activist And A Yale Scientist Worked Together
The wide-ranging suspicions being voiced in East Palestine mirror what we hear as hosts of a podcast that explores the breakdown in Americans’ trust in public health, medicine, science and one another. Alongside a doctor and virologist, we convene discussions among public health veterans, scientists and populist critics of traditional health institutions. (Brinda Adhikari and Tom W. Johnson, 3/17)
The Washington Post:
America’s Leaders Should Move Beyond ‘Try Harder’ To Fix Health Crisis
The nation’s health crisis is a design flaw, not a lack of personal responsibility. (Aaron E. Carroll, 3/19)
Stat:
How A 340B Successor Might Arise From The Drug Price Negotiations
The 340B drug discount program requires manufacturers to sell drugs to safety-net hospitals at deep discounts, so they can reinvest the savings into care for low-income and uninsured patients. (Sujith Ramachandran, 3/19)
The Boston Globe:
As Adult Foster Care Costs Spike, State Seeks Answers
An influx of new providers raises questions about quality. (3/19)
Bloomberg:
Britons Live Longer But Sicker As Healthy Life Expectancy Falls
If the rise of precautionary full-body scans, experimental anti-aging treatments and trendy supplements tells us anything, it’s that we’re obsessed with living as long as possible. (Lara Williams, 3/19)