Latest News On Hospitals

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Centros de órganos a pacientes de trasplantes: vacúnense contra covid o bajarán en la lista de espera

KFF Health News Original

En todo el país, un número creciente de programas de trasplantes ha optado por excluir a los pacientes que se niegan a recibir las ampliamente disponibles vacunas contra covid, o darles una prioridad menor en las abarrotadas listas de espera de órganos.

Organ Centers to Transplant Patients: Get a Covid Shot or Move Down on Waitlist

KFF Health News Original

At issue is whether transplant patients who refuse the shots are not only putting themselves at greater risk for serious illness and death from covid-19, but also squandering scarce organs that could benefit others.

Student Nurses Who Refuse Vaccination Struggle to Complete Degrees

KFF Health News Original

The Biden administration is requiring workers at health care facilities that accept Medicare and Medicaid payments to be vaccinated. For the minority of nursing students who have refused a shot, the new policy could mean they can’t get the training they need in a hospital or other health care venue.

A Colorado Town Is About as Vaccinated as It Can Get. Covid Still Isn’t Over There.

KFF Health News Original

San Juan County, Colorado, is one of the most vaccinated counties in the U.S. Leaders across the country continue to expound on the vaccine as the path forward in the pandemic. But San Juan’s experience the past few weeks with its first covid hospitalizations shows that, even with an extremely vaccinated population, masks are still necessary.

Hospitals Confront Climate Change as Patients Sick From Floods and Fires Crowd ERs

KFF Health News Original

Patients sickened in heat waves, flooding and wildfire have raised awareness of climate change’s impact on health. Now, some hospitals are building solar panels and cutting waste to reduce their own carbon footprints, with support from a new office at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. But the industry is moving slowly.

The Part of the ‘Free Britney’ Saga That Could Happen to Anyone

KFF Health News Original

Britney Spears was forced into psychiatric care — and compelled to pay for it. That can happen to any patient who has an episode of serious mental illness, piling financial woes onto their stress and vulnerability.

At an Overrun ICU, ‘the Problem Is We Are Running Out of Hallways’

KFF Health News Original

Billings Clinic in Montana is past the tipping point as it looks for places to add intensive care unit beds and is on the cusp of rationing care to deal with the surge of sick covid patients in a state with significant anti-vaccination sentiment.

Covid-Overwhelmed Hospitals Postpone Cancer Care and Other Treatment

KFF Health News Original

Patients with advanced cancer and heart disease are among those who have had to have surgeries and other treatments delayed and rescheduled as a high number of critically ill, unvaccinated covid patients strain the medical system.

Under Pressure, Montana Hospital Considers Adding Psych Beds Amid a Shortage

KFF Health News Original

A hospital in Bozeman, Montana, is considering whether to add inpatient psychiatric care after a concerted push from mental health advocates. But even if it adds beds, hospitals across Montana provide a cautionary tale: finding enough workers to staff such beds is its own challenge, and some behavioral health units routinely reach capacity.

ICUs Are Filled With Covid — And Regret

KFF Health News Original

Unvaccinated people are filling intensive care beds and dying of covid in record numbers in Tennessee and other Southern states. Many tell their nurses and doctors they regret the decision not to get the vaccine when they could.

ECMO Life Support Is a Last Resort for Covid, and in Short Supply in South

KFF Health News Original

Many more people could benefit from the lifesaving treatment than are receiving it, which has made for messy triaging as the delta variant surges across the South and in rural communities with low covid vaccination rates.

Delta Cutting ‘Like a Buzzsaw’ Through Oregon-California Border Counties

KFF Health News Original

Zoom in on states with overall good vaccination rates and you see a checkerboard effect, with rural areas far lagging urban zones. That’s allowed the pandemic to rage in places like Jackson County, Oregon, overwhelming hospitals.

Lack of a Vaccine Mandate Becomes Competitive Advantage in Hospital Staffing Wars

KFF Health News Original

After months of burnout from the pandemic, hospitals are scrambling to fill nursing and other jobs. Some administrators, particularly in rural areas, are afraid to implement vaccine mandates that alienate their short-handed staffs.

Jaw Surgery Takes a $27,119 Bite out of One Man’s Budget

KFF Health News Original

A Seattle patient discovers the hard way that you can still hit a lifetime limit for certain types of care. And health plans can vary a lot from one job to the next, even if the insurer is the same.