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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Jul 9 2025

Full Issue

Experts: Extreme Weather Is Now The Norm, People Need To Shift Mindsets

The psychological concept that a disaster "can't happen to me" or that it can't happen to a person twice helps people cope emotionally but prevents them from adequately preparing, health experts told AP. In other news: President Donald Trump has hired at least three scientists well-known for their rejection of climate change.

Climate change is making extreme weather events more frequent and intense, according to climate scientists and government data. But people and governments are generally living in the past and haven鈥檛 embraced that extreme weather is now the norm, to say nothing about preparing for the nastier future that鈥檚 in store, experts in meteorology, disasters and health told The Associated Press. (Borenstein, 7/9)

Central Texas is continuing to recover from devastating rains and "catastrophic" flooding that damaged homes and businesses and killed more than 100 people, many of whom were children. Victims and first responders may suffer physical injuries from natural disasters, such as floods, but psychologists and disaster experts say such events can also exact a heavy mental health toll 鈥 and the resources to address that cost may not always be available. (Kekatos, 7/8)

Just weeks ago, President Donald Trump said he wanted to begin 鈥減hasing out鈥 the Federal Emergency Management Agency after this hurricane season to 鈥渨ean off of FEMA鈥 and 鈥渂ring it down to the state level.鈥 But after months of promises to overhaul or eliminate the federal agency charged with responding to disasters, Trump and his administration are touting a fast and robust federal response to the devastating Texas floods. In doing so, they are aligning more closely with a traditional model of disaster response 鈥 and less with the dramatic reform the president has proposed. (Aoun Angueira, 7/9)

The Energy Department has hired at least three scientists who are well-known for their rejection of the overwhelming scientific consensus on climate change, according to records reviewed by The New York Times. The scientists are listed in the Energy Department鈥檚 internal email system as current employees of the agency, the records show. They are Steven E. Koonin, a physicist and author of a best-selling book that calls climate science 鈥渦nsettled鈥; John Christy, an atmospheric scientist who doubts the extent to which human activity has caused global warming; and Roy Spencer, a meteorologist who believes that clouds have had a greater influence on warming than humans have. (Joselow, 7/8)

More climate news from North Carolina, Hawaii, and Europe 鈥

April Barber Scales recalls her 18 summers spent incarcerated without air conditioning at the North Carolina Correctional Institution for Women in Raleigh 鈥 the state鈥檚 largest women鈥檚 prison 鈥 as physically and mentally demanding as she said relief from the grueling heat was hard to come by. She dripped sweat constantly, felt endlessly sticky and even saw people faint from the heat. (Crumpler, 7/9)

An Air Force colonel retaliated against an Army major for speaking out to Congress and a Department of Defense watchdog about the contamination fallout from the 2021 Red Hill fuel leak that tainted drinking water in Hawaii, a new report details. The 25-page report said that investigators substantiated an allegation that an Air Force colonel had retaliated against Army Maj. Amanda Feindt after she had meetings with members of Congress about the Red Hill contamination and pressured her not to continue communication. (Novelly, 7/8)

Extreme heat is a killer and its impact is becoming far, far deadlier as the human-caused climate crisis supercharges temperatures, according to a new study, which estimates global warming tripled the number of deaths in the recent European heat wave. (Paddlson, 7/9)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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