Monday's health stories

FDA weighs process for annual COVID shots
A Food and Drug Administration expert panel this week will consider a process for updating COVID shots that resembles the annual strain selection process for seasonal flu vaccines, according to briefing documents released on Monday.
The big picture: The agency is sketching out a long-term strategy that responds to new strains and shifting threats, replacing a system that's been largely drawn up and revised on the fly.
- Advisers are due to meet on Thursday to discuss the state of the pandemic and whether COVID vaccines need to be modified again.
Details: FDA anticipates conducting an assessment at least annually starting in the spring, with advisers meeting around early June to discuss the strain selection process.
- A decision on the recommended vaccine composition could be made in time for any updated vaccine to be in production in time to be deployed no later than September, according to the documents.
- A more vaccine-resistant variant would likely trigger, on an as-needed basis, an ad-hoc strain selection meeting.
- Public health officials have previously said they think COVID shots could be administered on an annual schedule, like for the flu.
Looking ahead: After the panel meeting, the FDA will consider whether to change existing vaccine authorizations and the process to select strains.

New rural hospital model a lifeline for some, a gamble for others
The Biden administration is offering struggling rural hospitals a new financial lifeline starting this month, but with an unusual twist: Facilities that opt in have to agree to close their non-emergency inpatient services.
The big picture: Becoming a "rural emergency hospital" brings enhanced Medicare payments and upward of $3 million in subsidies each year. But patients typically have to leave within 24 hours, meaning those who can't go home have to be discharged to a full-service hospital, possibly in another state.

Roe's 50th anniversary: Where the abortion fight goes now
Both sides in the abortion fight are trying to claim symbolic high ground on Sunday's 50th anniversary of Roe v. Wade while looking ahead to a new phase that will be largely fought in state capitals and the courts.
What’s happening: Anti-abortion groups are celebrating the culmination of their decades-long effort to overturn the federal right to the procedure while abortion rights advocates are pressing to maintain access in states where it remains legal.


