Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Trump Walks Back Comments On 'Cutting' Medicare, Social Security
Former President Trump in a new interview sought to clarify comments from earlier in the week in which he said there are ways to go about 鈥渃utting鈥 entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare. 鈥淚 will never do anything that will jeopardize or hurt Social Security or Medicare,鈥 Trump told Breitbart News on Wednesday. 鈥淲e鈥檒l have to do it elsewhere. But we鈥檙e not going to do anything to hurt them.鈥 (Samuels, 3/14)
The president鈥檚 vigorous State of the Union address has partly reset the political narrative and is still delivering dividends. The prime-time look at Biden in his element, dominating the stage, offered a robust counter-image to the one Americans have sometimes seen 鈥 of a bewildered statesman who cited phone chats with dead European leaders and confused Mexico and Egypt in a news conference meant to fix the age issue. (Collinson, 3/13)
Top Biden administration officials went on the offensive at POLITICO鈥檚 2024 Health Care Summit Wednesday in Washington, laying out the health care issues President Joe Biden will emphasize in his rematch with Donald Trump. Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra and Domestic Policy Adviser Neera Tanden said Biden would push to restore abortion rights, lower drug prices and bolster the Affordable Care Act. (Paun and Payne, 3/13)
麻豆女优 Health News' 'What The Health?' Podcast: Maybe It鈥檚 A Health Care Election After All
Health care wasn鈥檛 expected to be a major theme for this year鈥檚 elections. But as President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump secured their respective party nominations this week, the future of both Medicare and the Affordable Care Act appears to be up for debate. Meanwhile, the cyberattack of the UnitedHealth Group subsidiary Change Healthcare continues to do damage to the companies鈥 finances with no quick end in sight. (3/14)
On stuttering 鈥
Last year, Harry Abramson wrote President Biden a letter, asking him one big question: How did he overcome his stutter? According to Biden鈥檚 campaign, Harry, 9, wrote to the president for advice 鈥 saying that maybe, if he learned how to control his stutter, he, too, could one day be president. Biden, who regularly talks about his struggles with a stutter and the work he鈥檚 put into overcoming it, wrote back. And, on Wednesday, he met with Harry during a visit to Milwaukee to personally deliver some advice. (Alfaro, 3/14)
A symphony of synapses fires every time a songbird sings. For Erich Jarvis, a neurobiologist at Rockefeller University, the neural pathways he finds particularly interesting inside a birds鈥 brain are those that enable the bird to make new sounds from listening to their environment. (StFleur, 3/15)