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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, May 8 2025

Full Issue

MAHA Influencer 'Dr. Casey' Means Tapped As Surgeon General

The Stanford-educated doctor, who aligns with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is a critic of "Big Food, Big Pharma, and ... a broken health care landscape," Stat reports. Separately, Kennedy revives the autism database, a plan Democratic Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker swiftly pushed back on.

The health entrepreneur and 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 leader Casey Means has been nominated to be the U.S. surgeon general after President Trump pulled his prior nominee suddenly on Wednesday. (Cueto, 5/7)

President Trump said on Wednesday that he would nominate Casey Means, a Stanford-educated doctor turned critic of corporate influence on medicine and health, as surgeon general. Dr. Means, an ally of the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has described becoming disillusioned by establishment medicine. She rose to prominence last year after she and her brother, Calley Means, a White House health adviser and former food industry lobbyist, appeared on Tucker Carlson鈥檚 show. (Mueller and Jewett, 5/7)

On RFK Jr. and autism 鈥

After weeks of confusion about his plans for autism research, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said on Wednesday that his department would build a 鈥渞eal-world platform鈥 that would allow researchers to hunt for causes of the disorder by examining insurance claims, electronic medical records and wearable devices like smart watches. The department will draw the records from Medicare and Medicaid, which together cover around 40 percent of Americans. (Gay Stolberg, 5/7)

As health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. prepares to investigate vaccine complication rates, chronic diseases, and autism, real patients鈥 health records have emerged as a coveted resource. (Palmer, 5/8)

Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday signed an executive order that formally restricts the unauthorized collection of autism-related data by state agencies. Pritzker鈥檚 order responds to federal efforts under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to create databases of personal information for those with autism 鈥渨ithout clear legal safeguards or accountability,鈥 according to a news release from Pritzker鈥檚 office. (Wright, 5/7)

Spencer Goidel, a 33-year-old federal worker in Boca Raton, Florida, with autism, knew what he could be losing when he got laid off from his job as an equal employment opportunity specialist at the IRS. Because of his autism spectrum disorder diagnosis, Goidel had been able to secure his spot as one of more than 500,000 disabled workers in the federal government under Schedule A, which allows federal agencies to bypass the traditional hiring process and pick a qualified candidate from a pool of people with certain disabilities. (Hunter and Hussein, 5/6)

In other 'MAHA' news 鈥

Victims of radiation exposure are putting their hopes in the Trump administration to push through a long-stalled $60 billion bill to compensate people sickened by nuclear waste. Despite President Donald Trump鈥檚 efforts to gut environmental and public health regulations and agencies, the bill鈥檚 supporters are encouraged by the administration鈥檚 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 initiative, writes Andres Picon. (Skibell, 5/6)

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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