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2025-09-17 18:15:00| Fast Company

The Food and Drug Administrations guidance on who needs the COVID-19 booster shot has changed, but many insurers will still be covering the costs for enrolleesat least through the end of the year. AHIP (formerly known as Americas Health Insurance Plans), the largest U.S. health insurance association, said Tuesday that its members will continue to cover vaccines with no cost-sharing for patients, following recommendations issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions vaccine advisory committee as of September 1.  Late last month, the FDA dramatically altered its approval for the COVID vaccines, clearing the shots only for people 65 and older or who have underlying health conditions. Those changes sowed confusion among people seeking the shot and could make it more difficult to obtain in the future. Health plans are committed to maintaining and ensuring affordable access to vaccines, the group wrote in a press release. “While health plans continue to operate in an environment shaped by federal and state laws, as well as program and customer requirements, the evidence-based approach to coverage of immunizations will remain consistent. The statement from AHIP is notable due to the massive number of Americans covered by its member companies. They include Aetna, Elevance Health, Kaiser Permanente, Cigna, CVS Health, Centene, and many Blue Cross Blue Shield state providers. The groups full member list is available on its website and illuminates which insurance providers say they will cover recommended vaccines through the end of the year.  AHIPs members account for coverage of more than 200 million Americans, though the countrys largest insurer, UnitedHealth, left the association in 2015. According to the insurers website, most UnitedHealthcare plans include COVID-19 vaccines at no additional cost, but patients could be responsible for a co-pay if receiving a vaccine during an office visit. Fast Company reached out to UnitedHealth about its COVID-19 vaccine coverage and will update this story when we receive a response. A vaccine advisory panel is at the center of controversy The health insurance associations announcement comes during a week of health policy unpredictability. On Monday, the federal government announced that five new members selected by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would be added to the CDC advisory panel that sets national recommendations for vaccines. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, also known as ACIP, has been a particular nexus of concern in light of Kennedys history of sowing vaccine skepticism and spreading anti-vaccine misinformation. ACIP safeguards the health of Americans by issuing objective, evidence-based vaccine recommendations, Kennedy said in a press release on Monday. Its new members bring diverse expertise that strengthens the committee and ensures it fulfills its mission with transparency, independence, and gold-standard science. Kennedy has moved quickly to reshape the committee, firing all of its previous members in June and accusing the group of corruption, which he said necessitated a clean sweep.  Over the coming days, I will use this platform to announce new members to populate ACIP, Kennedy wrote on X in June, claiming that none of the new members would be ideological anti-vaxxers. We should care as much about every child who could be injured by one of these products as we do every child who could be injured by an infectious disease, Kennedy wrote, referencing a common anti-vaccine talking point. Kennedys remade advisory panel, which includes vaccine skeptics and members with no prior vaccine expertise, meets late this week and may vote on recommendations for the hepatitis B vaccine, COVID-19 shots, and the childhood vaccine schedule. The panel is expected to delay the hepatitis B vaccine given to newborns until age 4, according to former CDC officials. The ACIP vote could impact what vaccines are covered for Americans next year. Former CDC Director Susan Monarez testified in the Senate on Wednesday, issuing grave warnings about Kennedys influence on U.S. health policy. Kennedy ousted Monarez last month after she declined to fire CDC leadership and refused to green-light the remade panels changes to U.S. vaccine recommendations. “Given what I have seen, if we continue down this path, we are not preparednot just for pandemics, but for preventing chronic health disease. And we’re going to see kids dying of vaccine-preventable diseases,” Monarez said.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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2025-09-17 17:45:00| Fast Company

Jerry Greenfield, co-founder of Ben & Jerrys, is leaving the iconic ice cream brand he started in 1978 with pal Ben Cohen, after ongoing political disputes with British parent company Unilever. “After 47 years, Jerry has made the difficult decision to step down from the company we built together,” Cohen wrote on X. “Im sharing his words as he resigns from Ben & Jerrys. His legacy deserves to be true to our values, not silenced by @MagnumGlobal.” Cohen ended the social media post with the hashtag #FreeBenAndJerrys, before sharing Greenfield’s letter online. In that letter, Greenfield said, its with a broken heart that Ive decided I can no longer, in good conscience . . . remain an employee,” and accused Unilever of curbing the ice cream brand’s independence to stand up and speak out in support of peace, justice, and human rightsvalues he claimed were protected under its merger agreement. The two sold the Vermont-based ice cream brand to Unilever 25 years ago in 2000, but the the relationship between the companies has since eroded, according to CNN. Ben & Jerrys is now part of The Magnum Ice Cream Company (TMICC), which Unilever recently spun off, and is now operating as a standalone global ice cream business worth an estimated $8.6 billion as of last year. A Unilever spokesperson told Fast Company that TMICC is expected list in mid-November in Amsterdam, London, and New York, and will be incorporated in the Netherlands. We will be forever grateful to Jerry for his role in co-founding such an amazing ice cream company . . . and addressing social causes into a remarkable success story,”  a spokesperson for The Magnum Ice Cream Company told Fast Company. “We disagree with his perspective and have sought to engage both co-founders in a constructive conversation on how to strengthen Ben & Jerrys powerful values-based position in the world.” Ben & Jerrys ended sales in the West Bank in 2021, saying the political situation in the occupied Palestinian territories was inconsistent with the values of the socially conscious brand, drawing criticism from Israeli officials. Last year, Ben & Jerry’s sued Unilever, claiming the parent company was trying to stop its effort to express support for Palestinians and a Gaza ceasefire. They later alleged Unilever threatened, then ousted CEO Dave Stever for defending the brands social mission, thereby breaching the terms of its merger, per the Washington Post.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-09-17 16:34:00| Fast Company

As the COVID-19 pandemic wound down, people began reflecting on the strange way it had warped their sense of time. The feeling became known as the pandemic skip: the sense of having lost milestones and experiences while life was on hold. Five years later, the sensation persists, now rebranded as the COVID pause. @himmothychalamet OP: @burrbrii #CovidPause #LostYears #SocialMediaEra #PandemicLife #FeelingYounger original sound – Himmothy chalamet I still feel like I felt when COVID started, one TikTok user said. I dont feel like I aged. Though nearing 38, she explained that she still feels more like the 32-year-old she was when the lockdowns began. Others echoed the sentiment. COVID stole my 20s. Im gonna be 29 soon and I still feel like Im 23 when covid started, or even about to be 26? one person wrote. Another added, I turned 33 this year and I still feel like I’m in my late 20s. A third summed it up: Yup. Total time warp. On Reddit, one user described the transformation more starkly: going in the pandemic I was a kid and when it was over I was an adult working a nine-to-five. They wondered whether the COVID-19 pause was real or are people just making up something new? Psychologists sometimes use the term arrested development to describe being stuck at the emotional age when a trauma or stressor occurred. In this case, that trauma was the pandemic. With education, careers, relationships, and independence all disrupted, many feel those formative years were stolen. Whether its arrested development or a kind of Peter Pan syndrome, the result is the same: minds and bodies feel out of sync. The COVID pause is so real, said a TikTok user. But he offered a silver lining: It took so much away from us that were no longer ashamed of doing certain things, like dancing on camera on TikTok.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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