Morning Breakouts

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Brigham Researchers Find Security Calls More Likely For Black Patients

Morning Briefing

The researchers at the Boston hospital analyzed 423 security reports filed between Sept. 1, 2018, and Dec. 31, 2019, and found 2.8% of Black patients had calls placed for them, compared with 1.6% of white patients. In other news, a study finds rising infection rates in central line catheters that doctors use in major veins to deliver medicine, and experts call for updating language in patient records.

Study: Neurological Impact of Covid Persists

Morning Briefing

Research into long covid is finding the neurological effects of the illness can persist as other symptoms abate. In other covid news, group tours of the Capitol, suspended during the pandemic, are to resume.

Surgeon General: Health Workers Owed ‘Urgent Debt Of Action’ On Burnout

Morning Briefing

Vice President Kamala Harris joined Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy’s call to help health workers, saying, “We need to do a better job of taking care of you.” Meanwhile, statistics for health care worker burnout show it was on the rise even before the pandemic hit.

FDA Will ‘Move Quickly’ To Approve Covid Shots For Under-5s

Morning Briefing

AP reports U.S. Food and Drug Administration vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks said the agency will move fast without affecting standards. A public review by scientific advisers of Pfizer’s and Moderna’s shots may happen June 15.

Lone House Anti-Abortion Democrat Faces Unseating By Progressive

Morning Briefing

Today is election day in Texas, where Rep. Henry Cuellar —who says abortion should only be legal in cases of rape, incest, and threat to the life of the mother — is in a runoff with progressive candidate Jessica Cisneros.

2021’s US Birth Rate The First In 7 Years To Show Growth

Morning Briefing

Provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics shows in 2021 the number of babies born in the U.S. was 1% higher than for 2020. But there were still about 86,000 fewer births than in 2019. C-sections were also up.

US, World Turning To Vaccines To Tackle Monkeypox Outbreak

Morning Briefing

There is no monkeypox-specific vaccine, but an already-approved smallpox shot is effective against it. The U.S. has more than 1,000 doses of the Jynneos vaccine in stock and is releasing some. Jynneos’ maker, Denmark’s Bavarian Nordic A/S, is also making more. Other smallpox shots, stockpiled by the million, are not yet U.S.-approved against monkeypox.

Drivers’ Hourly Limits Waived For Trucks With Baby Formula Ingredients

Morning Briefing

The emergency declaration from the U.S. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration means commercial vehicles can ferry ingredients to factories with fewer impediments to the journeys than before, hopefully boosting production. Also: formula price gouging, a new conspiracy theory, and more.

Monkeypox Spreading Mostly Through Sex: WHO

Morning Briefing

The CDC issued an update that alerted gay and bisexual men that monkeypox is primarily spreading through sex. A White House official said the health risk to the general population is low.

New Conspiracy Theory: WHO Pandemic Plans Will Steal Government Power

Morning Briefing

A “visceral, passionate online backlash,” the Washington Post reports, falsely accuses the World Health Organization of a power grab because of a so-called pandemic treaty to prepare for future outbreaks. Meanwhile, in Britain, there are recommendations to change the legal smoking age to 21.

Pfizer Settles With Four States For $290,000 In Misleading Copay Case

Morning Briefing

The case centers on 5,000 people in Colorado, Kansas, Vermont, and Arizona who spent more than expected when they used coupons supplied by the drugmaker. Also: Oklahoma’s Medicaid program revamp, John Fetterman’s recovery, protection for gender expressions in Cincinnati, and more.

Some Jif Peanut Butter Recalled Due To Salmonella Risk

Morning Briefing

The voluntary product recall comes amid a multistate salmonella outbreak linked to some Jif products. Meanwhile, an Iowa company has recalled 185,000 pounds of bacon products due to possible metal contamination. Also: Virtual workouts, drug overdoses, and custom children’s caskets.

2 Wyoming Hospitals Cut Birth Services To Pay For Traveling Nurses

Morning Briefing

Two hospitals in Wyoming are reportedly so affected by the cost of paying for traveling nurse staff to make up for shortages that they have chosen to halt birthing and labor services. Meanwhile, in St. Louis, medical providers are trying a “gig economy” model to find nursing staff.

In Urban Areas, Officials Say They Wouldn’t Enforce Abortion Restrictions

Morning Briefing

Many conservative states are pledging to ban most abortions if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, but in more liberal areas of those states, some officials say they wouldn’t prosecute abortion providers or others involved in helping people get abortions.

US Army: Only 1% Refused Covid Vaccine

Morning Briefing

In other news about covid, public health officials are again urging the use of masks, and a federal judge on Friday blocked the Biden administration from lifting the Title 42 public health order.

Covid Flare-Ups Reported In Nursing Homes, States, Schools

Morning Briefing

Media outlets report grimly that covid is far from over, and is actually rising in Connecticut nursing homes, across Maryland, in Florida, Rhode Island, California, and in D.C.-area schools. Meanwhile, data show omicron was three times more deadly than delta in Massachusetts.

CDC Investigates As Child Hepatitis Outbreak Spreads To 36 States

Morning Briefing

About 180 children have been affected over the past seven months, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. In Mexico, the first child death from hepatitis has also been reported. NBC News notes there currently is still no conclusive proof linking the mystery outbreak to adenovirus.