From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Taking a GLP-1? Doctors Say Not To Forget About Movement and Mental Health
So you’ve decided to go on a GLP-1 to lose weight. These medicines might seem like an easy way to drop unwanted pounds, but you’ll likely need to do a few other things to be successful long-term. (Emily Siner, Nashville Public Radio and Cara Anthony and Blake Farmer, Nashville Public Radio, 3/26)
CDC’s Acting Chief Promises a Return to Stability in a Tumultuous Moment
Jay Bhattacharya, head of the National Institutes of Health and interim leader of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told the CDC staff, “I know that it has been such a difficult year.” (Céline Gounder and Eric Harkleroad, 3/25)
Political Cartoon: 'The Very Sore Caterpillar?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'The Very Sore Caterpillar?'" by Dan Rosandich.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
PAYING THE PRICE
Rare disease: One-tenth
of us suffer, yet the costs
overwhelm payers.
- Hawkins Nessler
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.
Behind on your reading? Catch up on this week's KFF Health News stories with The Week in Brief, delivered every Friday to your inbox. Sign up here!
Summaries Of The News:
Jury Finds Meta, YouTube Liable In Landmark Social Media Addiction Trial
Jurors ruled that Meta and YouTube were negligent and awarded the plaintiff $6 million in damages. Meanwhile, The New York Times reports on an Irish village making a "phone-free childhood" happen.
CBS News:
Meta And YouTube Found Liable On All Charges In Landmark Social Media Addiction Trial
A jury on Wednesday found that Meta and YouTube are liable for creating products that led to harmful and addictive behavior by young users, a landmark decision that could set a legal precedent for similar allegations brought against social media companies. The jury awarded $3 million in compensatory damages and $3 million in punitive damages to the lead plaintiff in the case, a woman named Kaley. Identified in court filings by her initials "KGM," she alleged that using YouTube and Instagram from a young age led to addictive use of the platforms and contributed to her mental health problems, including depression, body dysmorphia and suicidal thoughts. (Cunningham and Pandise, 3/25)
In related news —
News-Medical.net:
Study Links Social Media Addiction To Worse Student Mental Health And Points To Family As A Key Buffer
The findings suggest that supportive family relationships may help buffer the mental health burden associated with problematic social media use. (Malesu, 3/25)
The New York Times:
A Phone-Free Childhood? One Irish Village Is Making It Happen.
Tired of seeing its elementary-school children struggle with online temptations, the town of Greystones proposed a "no smart devices" code. Most everyone bought in. (McGrane, 3/25)
CDC In Leadership Limbo As Trump Misses Deadline To Nominate Director
Jay Bhattacharya will continue to lead the agency while the administration searches for a permanent director. About six contenders are still under consideration, The Washington Post reports. Also, a month after Casey Means’ confirmation hearings, she still has not secured the surgeon general post.
The Washington Post:
White House Holds Off On CDC Pick As Search For Permanent Chief Continues
The White House has delayed nominating a new director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and is continuing a search, according to officials, as the Trump administration navigates mounting political and operational risks that have already complicated other high-profile health appointments. The responsibilities of leading the agency will remain with Jay Bhattacharya, the head of the National Institutes of Health, who has been serving as acting CDC director since last month. However, because of rules around temporary positions, he will no longer officially hold the title of acting director because his position as acting director expires at the end of Wednesday. (Sun, Roubein and Diamond, 3/25)
KFF Health News:
CDC’s Acting Chief Promises A Return To Stability In A Tumultuous Moment
President Donald Trump will soon nominate a permanent director for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, its acting chief, National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya, told agency employees at a Wednesday staff meeting. According to a recording obtained by KFF Health News, Bhattacharya at one point suggested to CDC staff that Trump could name a new leader for the agency as soon as Thursday. “But if not, I don’t think much will change,” he said. (Gounder, 3/25)
AP:
Shot-Up Windows Still In Place At CDC Headquarters
The federal government has not yet replaced the bullet-pocked windows that serve as a grim reminder of an attack at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention more than seven months ago, the agency’s acting chief acknowledged Wednesday. CDC employees asked Dr. Jay Bhattacharya about the broken windows during a staff meeting, noting that the panes were papered over. (Stobbe, 3/25)
More health news about the Trump administration —
Los Angeles Times:
Means' Surgeon General Nomination Is Stalled As Senators Question Her Experience And Vaccine Stance
Wellness influencer Dr. Casey Means’ nomination to be U.S. surgeon general is stalled a month after senators of both major political parties grilled her on vaccines and other health topics during a tense confirmation hearing, deepening doubts about her ability to secure the votes she needs for the role. The nomination has languished despite ongoing efforts from the White House and Make America Healthy Again activists, revealing how intractable rifts over health policy can be even when Congress has shown deference to President Trump. It’s become the latest snag in Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s agenda after two legal setbacks last week. (Swenson, 3/25)
AP:
Trump Administration Gives San Jose State 10 Days To Change Transgender Athlete Policy
The Trump administration gave San Jose State University 10 days to resolve what the U.S. Education Department has deemed are Title IX violations involving transgender athletes, saying the school will face legal action and the possible loss of federal funding if it fails to comply. The department in January found that the university had discriminated against women by letting a transgender athlete play on the women’s volleyball team. The department issued its ultimatum in a Tuesday letter. (3/25)
AP:
Indian Health Service Chips Away At Construction Backlog
An empty lot between a fire station and a soccer field just outside Albuquerque soon will be the home of a federal medical center first promised to Native American patients more than 30 years ago. Earlier this month, Santa Ana Pueblo Gov. Myron Armijo took officials from the U.S. Indian Health Service and the Department of Health and Human Services on a tour of the location where patients are to receive everything from dialysis and diabetes care to optometry services. (Peters, 3/26)
The New York Times:
Army Raises Enlistment Age Limit To 42 And Eases Marijuana Rules
The United States Army has officially raised its enlistment age limit to 42 from 35 and eased restrictions for people with marijuana convictions, a move that comes years after a period in which it struggled to meet its recruitment goals and as the country is engaged in a war with Iran. (Wolfe, 3/25)
The New York Times:
Cuban Patients Are Dying Because Of U.S. Blockade, Doctors Say
Cuban health care was once the pride of the island. Now the U.S. oil blockade is upending even basic medical care. (Augustin and Nicas, 3/26)
The New York Times:
How U.S.A.I.D. Birth Control Meant For Africa Was Ruined
Millions of dollars’ worth of contraceptives that have been stranded in Belgium since the Trump administration dismantled American foreign aid are no longer usable, according to a newly obtained memo written for a Trump administration official. About $9.7 million of contraceptives purchased by the United States Agency for International Development and originally destined for low-income nations in Africa got stuck in Belgium after the Trump administration shut down the agency last year. (Smialek and Nolen, 3/26)
From Capitol Hill —
CBS News:
Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, Democrat Accused Of Stealing FEMA Funds, Set To Face Rare Ethics 'Trial'
The House Ethics Committee on Thursday will hold a rare public "trial" for Democratic Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick of Florida, who is accused of stealing $5 million in federal pandemic funds and using some of the money to boost her congressional campaign. (Yilek, 3/26)
Aetna, Elevance, Humana May Be Sued In Alleged Kickback Scheme, Judge Says
The insurers are accused of paying to have customers directed to their Medicare Advantage plans and of paying brokers to limit sign-ups of people with disabilities. The companies deny any wrongdoing.
Modern Healthcare:
Aetna, Humana Medicare Advantage Marketing Lawsuit Moves Forward
CVS Health subsidiary Aetna, Elevance Health and Humana must face a civil lawsuit alleging they paid kickbacks to online brokerages for Medicare Advantage enrollments, a federal court ruled Wednesday. A whistleblower initiated the case in 2021, which the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts unsealed last year after the Justice Department intervened. (Tepper, 3/25)
Modern Healthcare:
Provider-Insurer Contract Disputes Surge Amid Denials, Downcoding
Contract disputes between insurers and health system networks are reaching the breaking point more than ever. Burdened by cost inflation, labor shortages and uncompensated care, providers are demanding rate increases plus relief from prior authorizations and other red tape. Health insurance companies, clamoring to soothe apprehensive investors, are raising premiums and enacting strict utilization management policies to tamp down spending. (Tong, 3/25)
CBS News:
State Says Video Shows Denver Assisted Living Center Took 13 Minutes To Find, Begin CPR On Resident; 'He Didn't Have A Chance'
A state investigation has found that a Denver assisted living facility took 13 minutes to locate a resident who collapsed and begin CPR -- failures regulators say placed all residents in "immediate jeopardy." The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment concluded that The Argyle assisted living facility violated multiple rules in connection with the January death of 73-year-old Robert Dutkevitch. The violations were classified at the CDPHE's most serious level, indicating 125 Argyle residents were at immediate risk of harm, according to the agency. (Maass, 3/25)
AP:
Why Some People Put Relatives Into Poverty To Pay For Nursing Homes
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimates that more than half people over age 65 will need help with daily activities such as bathing, dressing or eating at some point, either for an extended period or the rest of their lives. Some research suggests that share may be as high as two-thirds. Yet relatively few older Americans have private long-term care coverage. AHIP, a trade association representing the U.S. health insurance industry, estimates that only 3% to 4% of Americans over 50 have an active policy that covers extended care. Medicare, the main health insurance program for older Americans, generally does not pay for continuing support services in a nursing home or assisted-living community. (Sweet, 3/25)
The Assembly:
N.C. Surgeon: Organ Donors Could Be Alive During Procedure
A North Carolina surgeon has raised concerns about an innovative procedure that reanimates a dead body to enable organ transplants. (Still, 3/25)
Also —
The Washington Post:
After A Decade As A Yale Hospital Janitor, She Is Now A Doctor There
For about a decade, Shay Taylor-Allen walked the halls of Yale New Haven Hospital pushing a janitor’s cart. She mopped patient rooms, disinfected surfaces and emptied the trash. Soon, she’ll walk the halls of the hospital again, this time wearing a white coat. Taylor-Allen, 32, recently matched into an anesthesiology residency at Yale New Haven Hospital — where she spent most of her adult life working as part of the cleaning staff. “I still can’t believe it,” she said. “It is surreal.” (Page, 3/26)
FDA Approves Hunter Syndrome Drug On Heels Of Similar Drug Rejections
Last month, the FDA rejected a Hunter syndrome gene therapy from Regenxbio over a lack of clinical data. Denali Therapeutics' drug is a form of enzyme replacement therapy — not a gene therapy — that can enter the brain and slow the cognitive decline affecting two-thirds of patients.
Stat:
FDA Approves Denali Therapeutics Drug For Hunter Syndrome
The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved a new medicine from Denali Therapeutics for a condition called Hunter syndrome, a notable decision by the agency as it has recently taken tougher stances on rare disease drugs. (Joseph and Mast, 3/25)
More pharma and tech developments —
The Wall Street Journal:
Merck Reaches Nearly $6 Billion Deal For Cancer Biotech Terns
Merck has reached a nearly $6 billion cash deal to buy the cancer biotech Terns Pharmaceuticals and its promising leukemia treatment. If it proves to work safely, the experimental drug would give Merck a boost as the company prepares for its top-selling drug, Keytruda, to lose patent protection. (Loftus, 3/25)
NBC News:
ADHD Drug May Reduce Later Risk Of Psychotic Disorders, Study Finds
A large, new study found that the stimulant methylphenidate, such as the drugs Ritalin and Concerta, may lower the risk of psychosis when prescribed to younger children with ADHD. Children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder have been identified to be at greater risk of developing psychotic conditions such as bipolar or schizophrenia, compared with neurotypical kids. Some studies have suggested a link to stimulants prescribed for ADHD. (Cox, 3/25)
MedPage Today:
Non-Doctors Now Handle 40% Of Antipsychotic Scripts In Medicare
A growing proportion of antipsychotic prescriptions for older adults were written by nonphysician clinicians, reflecting shifts in the mental health care workforce and prescribing practices, cross-sectional data showed. (Monaco, 3/25)
MedPage Today:
Alzheimer's Blood Tests Together Improve Accuracy, Cut Overdiagnosis
A combination of two blood tests improved Alzheimer's disease triaging and reduced overdiagnosis in people with asymptomatic Alzheimer's pathology, a prospective cohort study showed. (George, 3/25)
Stat:
Heart Failure Detection Could Be Improved With New 3-Minute MRI
Hearts need oxygen. Heart attacks are the most dramatic example of this hunger, when blocked coronary arteries starve muscles of the oxygen they need to keep beating. Less sudden is heart failure, when lagging levels of oxygen consumption can mean the heart doesn’t pump blood through the body as well as it should. (Cooney, 3/25)
KFF Health News:
Taking A GLP-1? Doctors Say Not To Forget About Movement And Mental Health
Severe ankle pain drove Jelon Smart to start taking a weight loss injection a year and a half ago. Smart was 285 pounds and worked as a caterer in Savannah, Georgia. After she’d been standing on her feet for long hours, her ankles would be “as swollen as a football,” she said. She was walking with a limp. An orthopedic doctor diagnosed her with Achilles tendinitis and recommended losing weight to mitigate the symptoms. Smart began taking the brand-name GLP-1 Ozempic. The appetite suppression resulted in her shedding pounds quickly, at first. (Siner, Anthony and Farmer, 3/26)
Cord Blood Bank Sued By Two States Over Misleading Advertising
The company Cord Blood Registry is being sued by the attorneys general of Texas and Arizona over claims about the medical value of storing newborn cord blood, while charging new parents thousands of dollars. The lawsuits ask CBR to remove the false ads and repay families.
The New York Times:
Two States Sue Cord Blood Bank Over False Advertisements
Two states are suing a company that stores newborn stem cells, claiming that it has misled parents about the medical value of its expensive services. The company, Cord Blood Registry, houses more than a million samples of umbilical cords in Tucson, Ariz., charging families thousands of dollars in fees. CBR claims on its website that keeping those cells on ice is a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” because they have the “potential to treat 80+ conditions.” (Kliff and Ghorayshi, 3/25)
In abortion updates —
The Hill:
Hawley Bill To End FDA Approval Mifepristone Picks Up Senate GOP Support
Sen. Josh Hawley’s (R-Mo.) bill to revoke the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) approval of the drug mifepristone for use in terminating pregnancies is picking up Senate Republican support, as the push to stop its shipment across state lines is becoming a top priority of the anti-abortion movement. Hawley’s bill, which would make distributing and labeling mifepristone for abortions a violation of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, has quickly picked up the support of three other GOP senators: Sens. John Cornyn (Texas), Ted Budd (N.C.) and Marsha Blackburn (Tenn.). (Bolton, 3/25)
Dayton Daily News:
Area Lawmakers Hope To Push Contested ‘Abortion Reversal’ Treatment In Ohio
Two Miami Valley state lawmakers want to compel abortion providers in Ohio to inform patients that they might be able to “reverse” their decision after taking the first of two doses in a medication abortion. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved such a treatment, and the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists says the treatment is “not based on science” and does “not meet clinical standards.” (Kreemer, 3/24)
The Current:
Georgia Mother Released On Bond As Judge Questions Abortion-Related Murder Charge
A Coastal Georgia district attorney and a Superior Court judge said Monday they were doubtful that enough evidence exists to move forward with a malice murder charge against a 31-year-old Camden County mother arrested earlier this month for an alleged illegal abortion, paving the way for a possible reduction or dismissal of charges. (Gibbs, 3/25)
Fox News:
University Of Oregon To Offer Abortion Pills To Students This Fall
The University of Oregon recently announced the school will begin offering abortion pills to its students beginning in the fall. The Lund Report, an independent outlet that covers health news for Oregon and southwest Washington, reported the school will start offering mifepristone and misoprostol to students at the university health center only. (de Guidice, 3/25)
Michigan Child With Measles May Have Exposed ER Visitors As Outbreak Grows
Seven cases are under investigation; all of the people involved were unvaccinated against measles, CBS News reported. The emergency room treatment area of Trinity Health Ann Arbor Hospital in Ypsilanti was potentially exposed to the virus on March 21.
CBS News:
Measles Outbreak In Southeast Michigan Now At 7 Cases, Health Officials Say
A measles outbreak in Washtenaw County, Michigan, has expanded to seven cases now under investigation – a mix of children and adults, all of them who were unvaccinated against measles. The Washtenaw County Health Department gave an update on the outbreak on Wednesday, saying the most recent case, involving a young child, might have resulted in measles exposure at a hospital in Ypsilanti. (Wethington, 3/25)
On Medicaid coverage —
Fierce Healthcare:
10M Could Lose Medicaid Coverage In 2028 Under Work Requirements
As many as 10 million people could lose Medicaid coverage in 2028 following the rollout of new work requirements established under H.R. 1, a new study shows. Analysts at the Urban Institute, a left-leaning think tank, estimate that between 4.9 million and 10.1 million individuals would lose access to Medicaid, depending on how intensive eligibility checks ultimately become. The study estimates that between 2 million and 3.1 million will lose their Medicaid coverage because their eligibility would be checked more frequently, while between 3 million and 7 million would lose coverage due to the work requirements alone. (Minemyer, 3/25)
The Wall Street Journal:
Autism-Therapy Firm That Was Paid $340,000 Per Patient Is Barred From Medicaid
Indiana is barring one of the nation’s most expensive autism-therapy providers from billing the state’s Medicaid program two weeks after the company’s practices were detailed in a Wall Street Journal article, state officials said. The autism-therapy provider, Piece by Piece Autism Centers, received the highest per-patient payments in the country in 2023—about $340,000 on average—according to a Journal analysis of Medicaid billing records. (Weaver, 3/25)
More health news from across the U.S. —
Pioneer Press:
Oak Park's West Suburban Medical Center Suspends Patient Care
West Suburban Medical Center in Oak Park is temporarily shutting down its patient care amid a yearlong financial crisis, village and hospital officials said. Walk-in patients were no longer accepted after 4 p.m. Wednesday, and Oak Park Fire Department officials were informed the hospital’s emergency room was no longer accepting ambulances. (Hardy, 3/25)
San Francisco Chronicle:
SF Could Start Allowing Evictions Over Drug Use In Supportive Housing
San Francisco could empower its permanent supportive housing facilities to evict residents for using drugs, a move proponents say would help the people struggling to get sober in city-funded buildings. Permanent supportive housing aims to combine subsidized housing with individualized support services, especially for the formerly homeless. The city currently follows state guidance — which provides that the use of alcohol or drugs can’t be the sole reason for eviction — as a blanket rule across its more than 15,000 units. (Hodgman, 3/25)
St. Louis Public Radio:
St. Louis-Developed App Aids In Substance Use Disorder Recovery
Missourians struggling with a substance use disorder while lacking stable housing were 50% less likely to use an illicit drug within 30 days thanks to a specialized free app. That's according to a Washington University School of Medicine study. (Lewis-Thompson, 3/25)
Iowa Public Radio:
Report Examines Potential Link Between Environmental Factors And Iowa's High Cancer Rate
A new report looks to shed some light on how environmental factors in Iowa could affect cancer rates. The report by the Iowa Environmental Council and the Harkin Institute summarizes peer-reviewed scientific research surrounding cancer risk and environmental factors, like nitrate, PFAS, radon and pesticides. (Krebs, 3/25)
CBS News:
El Paso, Los Angeles Among The Most Polluted Cities In The U.S. In 2025, New Report Says
El Paso and Los Angeles were among the most polluted areas in the United States last year, according to a new air quality report that evaluated pollution levels around the world in 2025. The report is the latest iteration of a global analysis that the Swiss technology company IQAir publishes annually. This one centered on some of the causes of declining air quality worldwide, including wildfires, which the report's authors cited as a leading driver of the downward trend. (Czachor, 3/25)
Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs
Each week, KFF Health News compiles a selection of health policy studies and briefs.
CIDRAP:
Study Ties Use Of Weedkiller To Drug-Resistant Bacteria
New research from Argentina suggests a potential link between a commonly used herbicide and antimicrobial resistance (AMR). In a study published this week in Frontiers in Microbiology, a team led by researchers from the University of Buenos Aires assessed resistance to glyphosate in environmental bacteria from soil and bacteria collected from Argentinian hospitals. (Dall, 3/25)
MedPage Today:
First-In-Class KRAS-Degrader Promising In Pancreatic, Lung Cancers
Setidegrasib showed promising efficacy in patients with previously treated advanced KRAS G12D-mutated pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) or non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), results from a phase I trial suggested. (Bassett, 3/25)
MedPage Today:
Trial Questions Fluid Intake Targets For Preventing Urinary Stone Recurrence
An intervention designed to promote high fluid intake failed to reduce symptomatic stone recurrence in patients with a history of urinary stone disease, a randomized trial showed. (Bassett, 3/23)
Fox News:
Bone Hormone May Reverse Chronic Spinal Back Pain, Johns Hopkins Study Finds
A hormone traditionally used to treat bone loss may hold the key to stopping chronic back pain at its source, according to a new study. Chronic back pain is often linked to the deterioration of spinal discs and vertebral end plates, which are the thin layers of tissue separating the discs from the vertebrae, according to medical sources. (Quill, 3/25)
MedPage Today:
Method For More Anatomically Targeted CPR Comes Up Short
The concept of transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) guidance during CPR hit a wall when tested for the first time in a randomized trial. For patients who were in a prolonged out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) and very sick upon arrival to an emergency department (ED), subsequent performance of TEE-guided CPR with compression site adjustment was no better than standard CPR. (Lou, 3/23)
Opinion writers tackle these public health topics.
The Washington Post:
RFK Jr.’s Peptide Advocacy Is Hypocritical Quackery
FDA scientists warn that some popular peptides are ineffective and potentially dangerous. (3/24)
Stat:
New Endometriosis Guidance May Help Long-Suffering Patients
By her second period, Leah Chapman could not get out of bed. She was 12, on vacation with her family in Colorado, and the pain was so severe she stayed inside while everyone else went out. It would take 20 years before someone formally diagnosed her with endometriosis. (Sarah Berg, 3/26)
Stat:
The Truth About Perimenopause And Middle Age
The latest effort to make healthy women believe they are ill is a new movie on perimenopause, “The M Factor 2: Before the Pause,” which debuted March 19 on PBS. The film is a sequel to “The M Factor,” a movie that not only medicalized menopause, but lost accreditation as an education activity for physicians after our project coordinated a complaint that was co-signed by international women’s health experts. (Patricia Bencivenga and Adriane Fugh-Berman, 3/26)
The CT Mirror:
A World Of Medical Hurt Ahead
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) core goals are to make healthcare available to more people, improve the quality and accessibility of care, and lower overall healthcare costs. It aimed for a fundamental transformation of the U.S. healthcare system by focusing on shared responsibility, consumer protection (like pre-existing conditions), and innovation. (Howard A. Selinger M.D., 3/25)
Chicago Tribune:
As Premiums Overwhelm Illinoisans, Insurers Are Flush With Cash
It is indefensible that a health insurer can award eight-figure salaries while households absorb devastating premium hikes. (Barbara Hoare, 3/26)