First Edition: Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
麻豆女优 HEALTH NEWS ORIGINAL STORIES
麻豆女优 Health News:
States Change Custody Laws To Keep Children Of Detained Immigrants Out Of Foster Care
As immigration authorities carry out what President Donald Trump has promised will be the largest mass deportation operation in U.S. history, several states are passing laws to keep children out of foster care when their detained parents have no family or friends available to take temporary custody of them. The federal government doesn鈥檛 track how many children have entered foster care because of immigration enforcement actions, leaving it unclear how often it happens. In Oregon, as of February two children had been placed in foster care after being separated from their parents in immigration detention cases, according to Jake Sunderland, a spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Human Services. (Orozco Rodriguez, 4/14)
麻豆女优 Health News:
New Orleans Takes Steps To Assess And Clean Lead In Playgrounds After Investigation
New Orleans plans to revamp the commission that oversees city parks and playgrounds and is seeking $5 million in federal aid after an investigation published by Verite News and 麻豆女优 Health News found high levels of lead contamination in playgrounds throughout the city. Mayor Helena Moreno signed an executive order on April 7 that creates a task force to improve the New Orleans Recreation Development Commission. (Parker, 4/14)
VACCINES
The Trump administration is considering Houman Hemmati, an ophthalmologist, entrepreneur and frequent Fox News guest, to serve as the nation鈥檚 next top regulator of vaccines and treatments for complex diseases, according to three people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal conversations. If selected, Hemmati would replace Vinay Prasad, who is slated to leave the high-ranking position at the Food and Drug Administration at the end of April after a rocky year. Prasad had overseen controversial decisions about drugs and a new plan to tighten vaccine approvals, which drew condemnation from former agency leaders. (Roubein and Diamond, 4/13)
THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION
The White House will make the case Monday to Congress 鈥 and to voters 鈥 that it has developed a strategy to address frequent frustrations involving U.S. medical care, such as too few physicians and too much paperwork. The Trump administration casts its physician-focused agenda as a fix for a strained health care system 鈥 pointing to a $50 billion funding program for rural health it contends will boost the number of doctors in remote areas, efforts to reduce payment distortions that favor hospitals rather than doctors, and regulatory changes intended to speed insurance approvals for tests and follow-up care. (Diamond, 4/13)
The FDA said it reminded more than 2,000 pharmaceutical companies and researchers about legal requirements to publish clinical trial data, warning that a publication preference for positive trials could be skewing the available evidence on therapies. (Ingram, 4/13)
Federal regulators have cited three contractors, including one owned by a campaign donor to President Donald Trump, for safety violations stemming from the death of a worker helping build a major immigration detention center last year. Violations deemed serious by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration were found in its investigation into the July 21, 2025, death of Hector Gonzalez, 38, who was crushed by falling materials in a construction accident as contractors raced to build Camp East Montana in El Paso, Texas. (Foley, 4/13)
THE LATEST FROM CMS
Medicare Advantage plans would have to respond to urgent prior authorization requests for medications within 24 hours, and standard requests within 72 hours, under a proposed rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Issued Friday, the proposed rule also would require full disclosure of claims denials and appeals outcomes, according to a CMS press release. (Frieden, 4/13)
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services picked 150 digital health companies and healthcare providers to participate in the launch of its tech-enabled chronic care model. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) announced in December the Advancing Chronic Care with Effective Scalable Solutions (ACCESS) Model as a 10-year payment program to encourage the use of technology to treat chronic diseases. CMS aims for the ACCESS Model to provide stable, recurring payments for technology used to treat diabetes, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, obesity, depression and anxiety. The model will help pay for telehealth software, wearables and wellness apps that address the conditions. (Landi, 4/13)
A new model from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation could expand value-based care to more healthcare organizations. The Trump administration in December announced it would launch the Long-term Enhanced Accountable Care Organization Design model, or LEAD, next year. Industry groups say LEAD鈥檚 features offer long-term financial predictability and make it easier for a wider array of participants to explore value-based care opportunities. (Early, 4/13)
CAPITOL WATCH
Republicans in Congress are trying to attract more people to direct-to-consumer drug purchases on platforms like TrumpRx by requiring insurers to count that spending toward patients' deductibles and out-of-pocket limits. Paying cash for drugs has limited appeal for insured patients, in part because it doesn't help them get to the point where insurance picks up a bigger portion of their health costs. (Goldman, 4/14)
Reps. Eric Swalwell (D-California) and Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) separately announced plans to depart from Congress on Monday ahead of possible expulsion votes related to allegations of sexual misconduct. ... The departures of Swalwell and Gonzales 鈥 one Democrat and one Republican 鈥 would mean the Republicans鈥 narrow majority in the House remains unchanged if they leave the chamber at the same time. (Alfaro and Wang, 4/13)
'MAKE AMERICA HEALTHY AGAIN'
Tests of intelligence and brain function showed the same results whether or not people drank fluoridated water growing up, a highly anticipated, long-term study found. The new research, published Monday in the respected Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first to measure community water fluoridation exposure during childhood in the U.S. and any potential impact on cognition up to age 80. The results contradict claims made by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that fluoride is 鈥渋ndustrial waste鈥 associated with IQ loss. (Edwards and Ozcan, 4/13)
Prenatal exposure to acetaminophen (Tylenol) was not associated with an increased risk of autism in offspring, with or without adjustments for sibling comparisons, nationwide data from Denmark showed. (George, 4/13)
The Trump administration loves red meat, and could soon change what students eat in schools. But an unlikely collection of groups that includes key constituents for the president agree on one message: Don鈥檛 put kids on the carnivore diet. (Altavena, 4/13)
HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY
A federal judge dismissed an Elevance Health subsidiary鈥檚 No Surprises Act lawsuit against billing dispute consultant company HaloMD and several California-headquartered providers. Anthem Blue Cross in July 2025 filed suit in the Central District Court of California. The complaint accused HaloMD and the providers of allegedly inappropriately winning higher reimbursements through the No Surprises Act鈥檚 independent dispute resolution system. (DeSilva, 4/13)
Persistence in appealing denied health insurance claims resulted in overturned decisions between 30% and 78% percent of the time, when the case reached independent review organizations (IROs), an analysis of completed external appeals showed. (Clark, 4/13)
While artificial intelligence solutions can reduce administrative burden in prior authorizations and billing, organizations are reporting increased transaction volumes and higher costs, according to a new report. The Peterson Health Technology Institute took insights from a January 2026 workshop featuring senior leaders from a spectrum of organizations, ranging from health systems to federal agencies. Leaders discussed ways in which technology and policy can enable AI to reduce administrative costs, accelerate payment cycles and promote high-value care. (Gleeson, 4/13)
The hospitals that emerged from the bankruptcies of Steward Health Care System and Prospect Medical Holdings Inc. were supposed to help stabilize one of the world鈥檚 largest hospital landlords by restoring a battered tenant base after two years of industry stress. Instead, many are already showing signs of renewed distress. Several hospitals in Florida, California and other states 鈥 all important tenants of Medical Properties Trust Inc., the hospital landlord known as MPT 鈥 have fallen behind on payments to vendors and other creditors, court filings and other records show. (Biswas, 4/13)
St. John鈥檚 Health Board of Trustees is looking at various strategies to keep the Jackson hospital afloat ahead of a fall property tax vote that could decimate its tax income. That鈥檚 after an already tough year for rural hospitals, which battled high rates of uncompensated care and delayed federal funding that is expected to shrink from past years. (McMurtry, 4/13)
Triage nurse Tammy Scott said she was helping a man with chest pains when she was stabbed in the head. The blow came out of nowhere, she said Monday. She looked around and saw a woman with a butcher knife coming at her inside the SSM Health DePaul Hospital emergency department. (Rieck, 4/13)
NURSING HOMES AND ELDER CARE
The scene was concerning enough to prompt the homeless shelter staff to call the fire department. A woman using a walker had shown up, incontinent and carrying 鈥渁 large bag of medications.鈥 She was diabetic, managing a tibia fracture and alcohol-related dementia, and she was 鈥渄umped鈥 at the shelter, according to federal inspectors. (Zuckerman, 4/13)
Lower courts blocked the effort to send home Haitian immigrants, part of an already shrinking workforce in nursing homes. The Supreme Court will hear the case this month. (Rowland, 4/14)
The first of the youth-obsessed baby boomers turn 80 this year, including President Trump, and they want to shake up old age. Having reached octogenarian levels, a generation that shaped much of our past is shaping the future of aging for themselves and those who follow. They want better healthcare and housing, cures for dementia and a say in when to die. New professions and products will appear. Their massive spending will shift and innovators will follow. (Ansberry, 4/13)
MPOX
A man with advanced HIV died with drug-resistant mpox replicating in his brain, US scientists found, in a case that shows how the virus can persist and evolve just as global health programs to check such infections are being scaled back. The findings, based on a detailed autopsy by researchers at the National Institutes of Health and released as a preprint Thursday, suggest mpox can spread far beyond the skin lesions that typically define the disease. The virus was found infecting the brain and continuing to multiply there despite lower viral levels than in other tissues. (Gale, 4/14)
CANCER
When Ben Sasse, a former United States senator (R-Neb.), learned he had metastatic pancreatic cancer, he quickly chose action over comfort. Whatever he could do to save his life, for as long as he could, he wanted to try it. Perhaps his only option, doctors told him, was to enroll in a clinical trial. (Chen, 4/14)
ESPN college basketball broadcaster Dick Vitale announced Monday that he has been diagnosed with melanoma in his lung and liver cavity. Vitale, 86, will soon start immunotherapy treatments. The legendary ESPN personality has been ravaged by health struggles in recent years, battling multiple forms of cancer. (Williams, 4/13)
People who survived cancer as teens and young adults are at increased risk of developing cancer later in their lives, according to research from the Canadian Medical Association Journal. Approximately 16% of adolescent and young adult cancer survivors who stayed cancer-free for at least five years are at high risk, compared to about 12% of people in the same age group without cancer. (Negussie, 4/13)
Anemia, a common blood disorder, may be a major risk factor for developing cancer. That's according to new research from Sweden, which sought to discover whether newly developed anemia is an early warning sign of cancer or death from any cause. (Stabile, 4/13)
STATE WATCH
With tough new regulations looming in the president鈥檚 domestic policy bill, officials are coming up with plans to keep New Yorkers insured. (Goldstein, 4/14)
Nebraska is racing to implement Medicaid work requirements by May 1 鈥 eight months before the national deadline set by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed by Congress last summer. And not only is the state first out of the gate, its government plans to do it without hiring any additional staff, even as other state health departments prepare to bring aboard dozens if not hundreds of new employees to determine who should remain enrolled and who should be booted from the safety net health insurance program. (Ollstein, 4/14)
Mayor Zohran Mamdani said Sunday he鈥檒l move ahead with plans to open five city-run grocery stores, with the first set to debut next year in East Harlem. The first store will be constructed on city-owned land next to a food hall in East Harlem in northern Manhattan, an area where nearly 40 percent of residents receive public assistance benefits. 鈥淎t our stores, eggs will be cheaper. Bread will be cheaper. Grocery shopping will no longer be an unsolvable equation,鈥 Mamdani said. (Craig, 4/13)
Seeking to cap the cost of medicines, the Maryland Prescription Drug Affordability Board set an upper payment limit for a widely prescribed diabetes treatment, marking only the second time a state panel has taken such a step. (Silverman, 4/13)
More than 2,000 military veterans in Middle Tennessee will have to transition to a new care facility after a recent announcement that their current facility is closing. The McMinnville VA Clinic, about 75 miles southeast of Nashville, is winding down operations and will close May 31. 鈥淲e understand the decision to transition services at this facility reflects broader efforts to address staffing challenges and improve the delivery of care,鈥 read a joint statement sent to Military.com from Tennessee U.S. Senators Marsha Blackburn, Bill Hagerty, and Congressman Scott DesJarlais. (Dennis, 4/13)
San Francisco saw a 鈥渟ignificant decline鈥 in sexually transmitted infections in 2025, city health officials said Monday, crediting expanded prevention efforts and the growing use of a post-exposure antibiotic. Cases of syphilis fell 24%, chlamydia dropped 18% and gonorrhea declined 5% compared with 2024, according to the San Francisco Department of Public Health. (Vaziri, 4/13)
A Catholic priest is called to serve. But for Father Ray, that call was getting harder to answer. After seven years as pastor at St. Augustine Parish in South San Francisco, the Rev. Raymund Reyes, 62, was in kidney failure. He was tired all the time, and dialysis three days a week wiped out what little energy he had left. He was put on a waiting list for a kidney transplant, but told it could take eight years. (Allday, 4/13)
Decades of anger and frustration are turning into cautious optimism for some victims of contaminated drinking water at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, as about two dozen of more than 3,700 lawsuits seeking compensation for damages appear headed for trial later this year in federal court in North Carolina. (Magner, 4/13)
The Texas attorney general鈥檚 office is investigating Lululemon Athletica Inc.鈥檚 apparel for the presence of so-called 鈥渇orever chemicals,鈥 which have been linked to health problems. 鈥淓merging research and consumer concerns have raised questions about the potential presence of certain synthetic materials and chemical compounds in their apparel,鈥 the office of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement. The probe 鈥渨ill examine whether Lululemon鈥檚 athletic apparel contains PFAS or 鈥榝orever chemicals鈥 that their health-conscious customers would not expect based on the brand鈥檚 marketing.鈥 (Roeder and Meier, 4/13)
MENTAL HEALTH
The mountains closed early. The skiing was not great. Workers dependent on ski crowds didn鈥檛 bank the cash they wanted to cover things like the soaring cost of health insurance and housing.聽The pressures on mountain-town workers are high this spring as the high-country transition season descends. (Blevins, 4/13)
If you鈥檙e avoiding small talk or casual chats because you think they鈥檒l be boring, you may be missing out on meaningful connections, new research finds. People consistently underestimate how interesting and enjoyable these conversations will be, said Elizabeth Trinh, the study鈥檚 lead author and a doctoral student in management and organization at the University of Michigan鈥檚 Ross School of Business. (Mantel, 4/13)
As more states legalize recreational marijuana use, here鈥檚 what the research says about what cannabis is really doing to your brain. (Klein, 4/14)
GLOBAL WATCH
Hanan Balkhy has a lot on her plate these days. Balkhy is the director of the World Health Organization鈥檚 Eastern Mediterranean region, an entity that includes several of the countries caught up in the conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran. The problems it has been posing 鈥 not just to individuals鈥 health and safety but to entire health care systems 鈥 are robbing her of sleep. (Branswell, 4/14)