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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Apr 28 2025

Full Issue

Many Drug Addiction Programs Will Be Discontinued, HHS Draft Budget Says

The New York Times reported that grants to provide and train first responders to administer the overdose-reversal nasal spray Narcan would be eliminated, as could treatment initiatives for pregnant and postpartum women.

The opioid overdose reversal medication commercially known as Narcan saves hundreds of thousands of lives a year and is routinely praised by public health experts for contributing to the continuing drop in opioid-related deaths. But the Trump administration plans to terminate a $56 million annual grant program that distributes doses and trains emergency responders in communities across the country to administer them, according to a draft budget proposal. In the document, which outlines details of the drastic reorganization and shrinking planned for the Department of Health and Human Services, the grant is among many addiction prevention and treatment programs to be zeroed out. (Hoffman, 4/25)

More on the budget cuts and funding freeze 鈥

Federal health officials have reversed the decision to fire a few dozen scientists at the Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 food-safety labs, and say they are conducting a review to determine if other critical posts were cut. A spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed the rehirings and said that several employees would also be restored to the offices that deal with Freedom of Information requests, an area that was nearly wiped out. (Jewett, 4/25)

The funding geyser that propelled US medical advances for much of the past century may be drying up as the Trump administration pulls back federal research money from Harvard University and other New England institutions that have been reliable engines of discovery and innovation. Yet as labs scramble for alternative funding sources 鈥 from foundations, industry, even their university hosts 鈥 there鈥檚 little hope, in the short term, that those players can fill the gaps resulting from White House rollbacks. (Gokee, Saltzman and Weisman, 4/28)

A global race to recruit US scientists is heating up as President Donald Trump鈥檚 sweeping cuts to research funding and federal agencies trigger an exodus from the country鈥檚 research institutions. Canada, France, Germany, Denmark, Norway, and Australia are among nations offering incentives 鈥 including funding, streamlined immigration pathways and competitive relocation packages 鈥 to entice scientists facing mounting uncertainty at home. (Gale, 4/27)

More than 23 years after the Twin Towers collapsed, blanketing lower Manhattan in toxic dust and debris, the number of people diagnosed with 9/11-related illnesses is still growing.聽Since 2011, the main resource for people exposed to the fumes has been the World Trade Center Health Program, which covers treatment for cancer, asthma and post-traumatic stress disorder, among other health conditions.聽(Bendix, 4/26)

President Trump鈥檚 tariffs are adding hundreds of millions of dollars in costs to individual medical device firms and diagnostic companies. The biggest manufacturers are relatively unbothered by it. (Herman, 4/28)

At the Department of Health and Human Services, 10,000 jobs are gone. Billions of dollars in research sent to scientists and universities was shut off. Public meetings to discuss flu shots and other vaccines have been canceled. Fluoride in drinking water may be the next to go, according to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Kennedy has done a blitz of his 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 campaign at day cares, schools and health centers around the country where he has promised to work with Trump鈥檚 other agency leaders to prohibit soda from the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, limit dyes in the food supply and call for fluoride to be removed from drinking water. (Seitz, 4/27)

Also 鈥

Three children who are US citizens were deported to Honduras with their mothers last week, including a 4-year-old receiving treatment for metastatic cancer, according to the families鈥 attorneys and civil rights and immigration advocacy organizations. (Andone, 4/27)

Many LGBTQ+ parents don鈥檛 feel safe in the United States, according to a new survey.聽A third of LGBTQ+ parents in the U.S. recently surveyed by the market research company Kantar, in partnership with DIVA Charitable Trust and The Curve Foundation, don鈥檛 feel like they have the same legal rights as other families. Although 63 percent of those parents are legally married, the many benefits of a legal union still don鈥檛 outweigh the hurdles that LGBTQ+ parents face when raising a family. (Rummler, 4/25)

麻豆女优 Health News: RFK Jr. Exaggerates Share Of Autistic Population With Severe Limitations

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attracted notice 鈥 and in some quarters, outrage 鈥 for remarks about autism, a topic he鈥檚聽clashed聽with scientists about for years. Kennedy held an April 16聽press conference聽pegged to a new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention聽report聽that found the聽prevalence聽of autism rising to 1 in 31 among 8-year-olds, the latest in a series of increases in recent decades. Kennedy said 鈥渁utism destroys families鈥 and is an 鈥渋ndividual tragedy as well.鈥澛(Jacobson, 4/28)

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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