Hello,
Welcome to Insider Healthcare. I'm healthcare editor Leah Rosenbaum, and today in healthcare news:
- UnitedHealth has a new plan to increase profits by steering patients to in-house doctors;
- No Delta-specific COVID vaccine is coming in the near future, but that's OK;
- An early study in mice shows the benefits of a COVID-19 vaccine patch.
If you're new to this newsletter, sign up here. Comments, tips? Email me at [email protected] or tweet @leah_rosenbaum. Let's get to it…

UnitedHealth Group Inc.'s campus in Minnetonka, Minnesota.
Associated Press
The health-insurance giant UnitedHealth is sending more members to in-house doctors in a bid to lower costs and increase profits

Associated Press
- The biggest US health insurers have spent years pushing into care-delivery and pharmacies.
- Now they want to lower their costs and increase profits by connecting these different businesses.
- Most recently, UnitedHealth touted a new insurance plan that steers members to in-house doctors.

Registered nurse Alix Zacharski, left, receives a Pfizer COVID-19 booster shot from Douglas Houghton, right, at Jackson Memorial Hospital Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2021, in Miami.
AP Photo/Lynne Sladky
There's no Delta-specific booster coming to save you – what we have is good enough

AP Photo/Lynne Sladky
- The technology behind Pfizer and Moderna's vaccines makes it easy to tweak shots to target coronavirus variants.
- Current booster shots aren't specific to Delta, because the original vaccines are still effective against the variant.
- If spread of COVID-19 gets under control through vaccinations, there may never be a need to change them.

People hold their plaster patches after being administered doses of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine.
MADAREE TOHLALA/AFP/Getty Images
A COVID-19 vaccine patch could produce a better immune response than an injection, an early study shows

MADAREE TOHLALA/AFP/Getty Images
- A COVID-19 vaccine patch produced a better immune response than an injection among mice.
- The patch introduces the vaccine into the skin, where there are more immune cells than muscle.
- The vaccine will be tested in humans in 2022, the study lead author said.
More stories we're reading:
- How the founders at Cityblock and UniteUs convinced investors to bet hundreds of millions on Medicaid-focused startups (Insider)
- Infants across the US are dying of syphilis, a preventable disease (ProPublica)
- Over the last four decades, HIV/AIDS has killed at least 700,000 Americans. COVID-19 has killed more in two years. (Insider)
- Democrats are trying to find an agreement on reforms to prescription drug pricing (The Hill)
- A Carlyle executive's fight to save her son leads to 'big opportunities' investing in clinical trials (Insider)
-Leah
Read the original article on Business Insider