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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Aug 18 2025

Full Issue

Judge Again Rejects Ending Protections For Immigrant Minors In US Custody

Both Trump administrations have sought to end the Flores Settlement Agreement, which outlined care standards for children in detention facilities. 鈥淭here is nothing new under the sun regarding the facts or the law," said U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee in Los Angeles. Plus: D.C.'s homeless struggle with new order; aid groups seek a full appeals court review over funding block; and more.

A federal judge ruled Friday to deny the Trump administration鈥檚 request to end a policy in place for nearly three decades that is meant to protect immigrant children in federal custody. U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee in Los Angeles issued her ruling a week after holding a hearing with the federal government and legal advocates representing immigrant children in custody. (Gonzalez, 8/16)

At a farm in the south suburbs,聽upbeat Arabic music swept across the land as more than a dozen Palestinian children 鈥 many with prosthetic limbs or in wheelchairs 鈥 and their families danced and moved to the music in the center of a raised platform.聽One of the children, Khalil Abu Shaban, traveled in a circle using his wheelchair and periodically sang into a microphone as the dozens who attended the Saturday celebration at Arab Chicago Farm in Frankfort excitedly clapped for him. (Johnson, 8/17)

The minutes dragged into hours on Wednesday night as Jose Gregorio Gonzalez tossed and turned through the night. At 5 a.m. the next day, he was scheduled to donate his kidney to his younger brother, Alfredo Pacheco, who was also restless. By 2 a.m. the two couldn鈥檛 stay in bed any longer and began to get ready for a day that they thought would never come. (Presa, 8/17)

On homelessness 鈥

For some 15 years, David Brown had made a home in Washington Circle, living in a tent with a handful of others in an encampment. On Friday, that home was destroyed 鈥 his tent, clothing and other possessions were tossed into a dumpster by police officers carrying out President Trump鈥檚 crackdown on some of the city鈥檚 most powerless residents. Left with a fraction of his things, Mr. Brown and his 6-month-old puppy, Molly, moved a block away and slept outside the Foggy Bottom subway station. Sitting in a wheelchair outside the station on Saturday, he was still baffled at what was happening. 鈥淲hy is he doing this, for no reason?鈥 he asked of Mr. Trump. (Patil and Kavi, 8/18)

麻豆女优 Health News: Health Care Groups Aim To Counter Growing 鈥楴ational Scandal鈥 Of Elder Homelessness

At age 82, Roberta Rabinovitz realized she had no place to go. A widow, she had lost both her daughters to cancer, after living with one and then the other, nursing them until their deaths. Then she moved in with her brother in Florida, until he also died. And so last fall, while recovering from lung cancer, Rabinovitz ended up at her grandson鈥檚 home in Burrillville, Rhode Island, where she slept on the couch and struggled to navigate the steep staircase to the shower. (Freyer, 8/18)

On funding and research cuts 鈥

Daniel P. Johnson, a geographer at Indiana University at Indianapolis, works with a team of researchers who spend a lot of time catching blowflies, dissecting their iridescent blue-green abdomens, and analyzing the contents of their guts.聽Johnson and his colleagues are tracking the spread of Lyme disease on a warming planet. But they need a lot of additional data. They get it from NASA. The world鈥檚 foremost driver of space science is not a public health agency. But NASA鈥檚 vast data collection has quietly become important for health research, helping scientists track disease outbreaks and monitor air pollution amid climate change. (Kenen, 8/18)

Nonprofits and businesses that carry out foreign aid programs contested a recent court ruling that empowers the Trump administration to unilaterally refuse to spend billions of dollars in funding approved by Congress. The challengers on Friday asked the full US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit to reconsider a panel鈥檚 2-1 decision earlier this week that tossed out a pair of lawsuits over the funding block. (Tillman, 8/15)

The women walked miles through the dusty streets of Maiduguri, in the northeastern corner of Nigeria, carrying their emaciated children. At 7 a.m., they began lining up to wait, for hours, to be handed a small, red packet containing a special paste that could bring their children back from the brink of starvation. The children were eerily listless; they did not run, shout or even swat the flies off their faces. Their tiny, frail frames made many appear years younger than they were. (Mandavilli, 8/15)

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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