Dear Subscriber,
As you have noticed, I recently added a daily link to Kaiser Health News and supplemented items that it did not cover. Many of those non-covered items made it into the next day’s news.
As a result, I have decided to suspend my daily News and Commentary and urge you to read the Kaiser publication.
I will post periodic comments on LinkedIn and hope you will feel free to contact me for special issues that may arise.
With grateful appreciation for your interest and loyalty,
Joel Shalowitz, MD, MBA, FACP
Read today’s Kaiser Health News
About Covid-19
COVID Vaccines Still Effective Against Severe Outcomes, VA Study Suggests: Key Takeaways:
The severity of SARS-CoV-2 infections has waned since 2020, and uncertainty about the value of annual COVID shots has helped drive down adult vaccination rates.
Among veterans who received a 2024-2025 COVID shot, estimated vaccine effectiveness was 29.3% against emergency department visits, 39.2% against hospitalizations, and 64% against deaths.
Vaccines were effective across age groups, and the presence or absence of major chronic conditions and immunocompromised status.
About health insurance/insurers
CMS posts 2026 Medicare Advantage star ratings: CMS released Medicare Advantage star ratings on Sept. 9, showing an average score of 3.65 for 2026, compared to 3.92 last year.
Plans were evaluated by the agency across 40 quality criteria spanning outcomes, experience, access, operations, and pharmacy. Plans that receive 4 stars or higher earn quality bonus payments that can be used to invest in benefit design and boost 2027 revenue, while persistently low-rated plans can face more oversight and potential contract cancellation.
About pharma
How Private Equity Oversees the Ethics of Drug Research An excellent piece of investigative journalism.
BMS latest to enter in vivo CAR-T field with $1.5B Orbital buy: Bristol Myers Squibb agreed to buy Orbital Therapeutics for $1.5 billion in cash, expanding its cell-therapy portfolio with the addition of an experimental in vivo CAR T-cell therapy.
GoodRx is looking to link up with TrumpRx FYI
About the public’s health
The hidden reason scientists say bottled water may not be the cleaner choice: A new study published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials analyzed 141 existing scientific papers on microplastics and nanoplastics from single-use plastic water bottles to gauge how much plastic people may be ingesting.
Researchers at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada, discovered that the average person consumes 39,000 to 52,000 microplastic particles per year, according to a university press release.
Individuals who drink bottled water regularly ingest up to 90,000 more particles each year than those who drink mainly tap water, the study found.
About healthcare IT
Trump Called Digital Equity Act ‘Racist.’ Now Internet Money for Rural Americans Is Gone: The Digital Equity Act is part of the sweeping 2021 infrastructure law, which included $65 billion to build high-speed internet infrastructure and connect millions without access to the internet.
This year, Congress once again pushed for a modern approach to help Americans, mandating that state leaders prioritize new and emerging technologies through its $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Program.
A KFF Health News analysis found that nearly 3 million people in America live in areas with shortages of medical professionals and where modern telehealth services are often inaccessible because of poor internet connections.
About healthcare personnel
American workforce burnout reaches 6-year high:Burnout among Americans in the workplace has escalated to a six-year high, according to the 15thannual Aflac WorkForces Report released by Aflac Incorporated, a leading provider of supplemental health insurance and products in the U.S.2The report tracks the state of the American workplace among employees and employers — shining the light on trends, attitudes, needs and experiences in health care and benefits administration.