Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Pioneer Or 'Embarrassment': Psychiatrist Eyed For Top Mental Health Post Gets Mixed Reviews
The Trump administration is struggling to fill a top mental-health post, a job created last year to coordinate the efforts of far-flung federal agencies. The assistant secretary position in the Department of Health and Human Services was first offered to a Florida judge, but the offer was withdrawn due to his lack of a medical background, according to people familiar with the matter. A second candidate had broad support but pulled out. Now a leading contender is Michael Welner, a forensic psychiatrist who has testified for the prosecution in numerous high-profile criminal cases, according to a half-dozen people familiar with the process including Dr. Welner himself. He faces opposition for some controversial positions. (Hackman, 4/18)
In other聽Trump administration news聽鈥
Donald Trump railed against President Barack Obama鈥檚 decision to bring patients with Ebola to the United States for treatment in 2014. Now that Trump is president, his administration is preparing for similar, and possibly larger-scale, evacuations. The State Department and Department of Health and Human Services said Tuesday they led an unprecedented inter-agency drill last week to test their preparedness to deal with a new outbreak of Ebola or another deadly, highly infectious disease. (Lee, 4/18)
It was a 鈥渇ix鈥 that didn鈥檛 fix much 鈥 but Veterans Choice is expected to be extended anyway, with a stroke of President Donald Trump鈥檚 pen that could come as early as Wednesday. Veterans Choice is a $10 billion response to the 2014 scandal in which Veterans Affairs health facilities altered records to hide months-long waits for care in Phoenix and elsewhere. The troubled Choice program pays for private-sector health care for veterans and was set to expire in August, but the VA and some of the program鈥檚 harshest critics in Congress have agreed to extend it, with a few changes, until January. They said that will give the VA time to propose a more comprehensive package of reforms 鈥 fixes for the fix. (Whitney, 4/19)