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Morning Briefing

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Friday, Oct 10 2025

Full Issue

More Military Families Seek Help From Food Pantries As Shutdown Drags On

The Armed Services YMCA says its food pantries are busy and running out of food more quickly than normal. Operations in Killeen, Texas, had about a 34% increase in demand, an ASYMCA official said. Making things worse, some U.S. troops won't get paid next week unless the government intervenes.

The government shutdown has surpassed one week and has put federal workers and military families in a financial bind, with food pantries in some portions of the country experiencing 30% upticks in traffic. 鈥淪tarting last week at our normal food operations, we saw an increase in demand,鈥 Dorene Ocamb, chief development and brand officer of ASYMCA, told Military.com. 鈥淎s a result, we ran out of food a little more quickly than normal. We had about a 34% increase in Killeen, Texas, which was the first sort of food distribution after the shutdown happened. (Mordowanec, 10/9)

Heather Campbell lost her job working for a food bank over the summer because of federal funding cuts. Her husband serves as an officer in the Air Force, but now he鈥檚 facing the prospect of missing his next paycheck because of the government shutdown. If lawmakers in Washington don't step in, Campbell鈥檚 husband won鈥檛 get paid on Wednesday. Because the couple lacks the savings to cover all their expenses, they expect to survive on credit cards to pay the mortgage and feed their three children, racking up debt as the political stalemate drags on. (Finley, 10/9)

Senators departed Washington without a deal to end the government shutdown, ensuring that it will last into next week with both sides still deadlocked. The upper chamber finished work for the week late on Thursday night when they passed the Senate鈥檚 version of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which included more than a dozen of amendment votes.聽(Weaver, 10/9)

麻豆女优 Health News: 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 鈥榃hat The Health?鈥: Starting To Feel The Shutdown鈥檚 Bite

It鈥檚 not yet clear how the federal government shutdown will end, but Democrats are continuing to draw attention to the issue they are promoting 鈥 the coming expiration of additional subsidies for Affordable Care Act insurance plans. Some Republicans are now going public with their worries about the huge cost increases many of their constituents face. (Rovner, 10/9)

More news on the federal shutdown 鈥

Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) blasted his fellow Republicans in Congress for 鈥渞unning afraid鈥 from health care, reiterating his belief that major federal health programs must be reformed 鈥渢op to bottom.鈥 Roy, who is running to replace Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R), spoke with the libertarian outlet Reason magazine to discuss his views and recent votes in Congress. (Choi, 10/9)

When the government entered a partial shutdown Oct. 1, hospitals across the country faced a major task: discharging, relocating or shifting care programs for the thousands of patients in hospital at home programs. With Congress at a standoff over healthcare cuts and Affordable Care Act premium tax subsidies, the body failed to reauthorize the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services鈥 (CMS') pandemic-era Acute Hospital Care at Home program, along with Medicare telehealth services. (Beavins, 10/9)

A district court judge on Wednesday denied the Trump administration's request to halt a lawsuit over its proposed Medicaid cuts to Planned Parenthood during the current shutdown of the federal government. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services sought a motion for a stay in the proceedings because the Appropriations Act funding the Department of Justice and the majority of other executive agencies lapsed when the government shut down on September 30. (Giella, 10/9)

Emergency Medicaid spending, an issue partly fueling the federal government's ongoing shutdown, accounts for less than 1% of the federal health insurance program's total expenses, according to a study published Thursday in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The study analyzed data from Washington, D.C., and 38 states that reported their emergency Medicaid expenditures for fiscal year 2022. (Acevedo, 10/9)

Other news from Capitol Hill on mifepristone and AI 鈥

Almost every Senate Republican on Thursday urged the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to 鈥渞eevaluate鈥 whether a newly approved generic version of the abortion drug mifepristone should stay on the market.聽The letter to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and FDA Commissioner Marty Makary from 51 of 53 Republican senators adds to the pressure the Trump administration is facing from conservatives to restrict聽access to medication abortion.聽(Weixel, 10/9)

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) is pressing the nation鈥檚 largest Medicare Advantage insurers to provide more detail about their use of artificial intelligence tools amid reports that these companies are rapidly increasing their reliance on the technology to help make decisions about patients鈥 care and coverage. (Ross, 10/9)

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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