Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Residency Match Rates Largely Stable As Pool Of Applicants Grows
The 2025 Match cycle reached another all-time high with an increase of 4.1% applicants over last year's record, the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) reported Friday. Of 52,498 applicants who were registered, 47,208 submitted a certified rank order list to compete for 43,237 positions, which were likewise up 4.2% from 2024. Of the active applicants, 37,667 matched to a postgraduate year 1 (PGY-1) position, representing an increase of 4.7% from last year. (Henderson, 3/21)
Winning admission into the University of California鈥檚 most competitive majors 鈥 including computer science, engineering and business 鈥 is about as likely as hitting a home run your first time at bat. Yet even those subjects are not the hardest to get into. That honor belongs to nursing, for which you might have to hit two home runs. In a row. Just 1% of the nearly 6,000 yearly applicants to UC鈥檚 undergraduate nursing programs, at UCLA and UC Irvine, are permitted to walk through the door. (Asimov, 3/22)
More health industry news 鈥
Nurses in Butler County will be picketing today, adding their voices to a growing call for change when it comes to violence against healthcare workers. Workers will be doing informational picketing on Monday as they call for Independence Health System to increase safety measures, including having metal detectors at all of the entrances to Butler Memorial. (Shinn, 3/24)
Doctors have a message for patients: Trust is a two-way street. A recent Turning Points column discussed patients鈥 eroding trust in doctors, who for better or worse, are the front face of the healthcare system. Readers shared stories of rushed appointments, disjointed care and communication breakdowns. (Ansberry, 3/22)
Madison Evans was 16 when she first felt the sharp pain in her lower pelvis, pain that radiated through her back and grew so severe that some days she could not get out of bed. Pain relievers 鈥渃ouldn鈥檛 touch it,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ports, social events, whatever was on the calendar had to be cleared.鈥 The pediatricians Evans visited during her adolescence in Severna Park, Maryland, never asked her to rate the pain. Instead they told her, 鈥淭he cramps are bad when you鈥檙e young,鈥 and 鈥淵ou鈥檒l grow out of it,鈥 then prescribed the ineffective pills. (Johnson, 3/23)
More health systems are suing the federal government to recoup alleged underpayments for treating Medicare patients. Dozens of hospitals and health systems allege the Health and Human Services Department collectively owes them billions of dollars in Medicare disproportionate share hospital payments, which are meant to bolster providers that treat many low-income patients. (Kacik, 3/21)
In pharmaceutical news 鈥
Johnson & Johnson announced on Friday that it will invest $55 billion in U.S. manufacturing, research and development, and technology over the next four years. The planned spending聽represents a 25% increase compared with聽the company鈥檚 investments in the previous four years. (Dubinsky, 3/21)