Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Doctors Should Strike If RFK Jr. Doesn鈥檛 Resign;聽The Struggle To Access Covid Vaccines Has Begun
On behalf of the misleadingly named Make America Healthy Again movement, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.聽Kennedy Jr. has launched an undisciplined assault on biomedical science and public health: defunding research at the National Institutes of Health, canceling mRNA vaccine studies, purging dedicated government scientists, gutting the Preventive Services Task Force and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, and trying to force millions off Medicaid. (Richard L. Kravitz, 9/12)
Despite Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 assurances that anyone who wants a coronavirus vaccine can receive one, many readers wrote about their difficulties accessing the updated 2025-2026 shot. In today鈥檚 newsletter, I wanted to share their stories and provide some advice for people seeking the vaccines. (Leana S. Wen, 9/11)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 efforts to undermine vaccines in America are not just scientifically absurd. They鈥檙e also financially ruinous. The costs of medical care in the United States have been skyrocketing for years, forcing health insurers to raise their premiums faster than overall inflation and pushing Medicare鈥檚 trust fund ever deeper into trouble. (Donald G. McNeil Jr., 9/12)
Health insurance costs in the United States are on track for their biggest jump in at least five years, according to multiple surveys, adding turbulence to an uncertain economy and boosting expenses for millions of Americans already beset by inflation. (Peter Whoriskey and Paige Winfield Cunningham, 9/12)
President Trump has turned Make America Healthy Again into one of his administration鈥檚 signature promises. It is a laudable goal, too. By several measures, the United States is the world鈥檚 least healthy high-income country. As is so often the case with Mr. Trump, however, he has both identified a real problem and enacted a set of policies that will worsen that problem. (9/12)
Few diseases cause as much misery as migraine headaches, the world鈥檚 most prevalent neurological malady. More than 1 billion people get migraines. Almost all are young, and most are female. Migraines are a common cause of missed work. They affect about 10% of school children and 20% of women, and generate an emergency room visit every 10 seconds. Lost productivity and migraine-associated medical expenses are estimated at more than $40 billion per year. (John C. Hagan III, 9/11)