Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Trump Administration Is Wreaking Havoc On Americans' Health; The Courts Must Protect Us From Harm
I am a family physician with 39 years experience caring for patients and teaching medical students and family medicine residents. Donald Trump鈥檚 executive orders and election have removed the sense of stability and security that many, but not all Americans had become accustomed to 鈥 much in the same way that a child relies on the safety provided by his or her parents in a home that feels safe and secure. (Howard A. Selinger M.D., 4/28)
A lawsuit in late March that awarded Georgia man John Barnes $2.1 billion in damages looked like another piece of good news for one of the tens of thousands of litigants against Bayer, the agrochemical giant that since 2018 has owned Monsanto, maker of the popular weedkiller, Roundup. (John Klar, 4/27)
As the Trump administration downplays climate change and its harms, a transformative shift is underway that is reshaping how we use energy and offering extraordinary health benefits. Regardless of what happens in Washington, here in New England we should embrace clean-energy technologies 鈥 not only because it鈥檚 good for the planet, but for the immediate health benefits in our communities. (Dr. Ashish K. Jha, 4/28)
Dear Robert F. Kennedy Jr.: Autism hasn鈥檛 and won鈥檛 ever stop me from reaching my goals. Your start as director of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has been incredibly toxic, specifically to the autism community. You have aggressively pushed a narrative about a so-called autism 鈥渆pidemic鈥 that simply isn鈥檛 there. You have compared this supposed epidemic to COVID-19, claiming that people with autism cannot work, play sports, write poems or function in day-to-day life. It even led to ideas to create an autism registry, which your agency walked back on Friday. (Madden Rausch, 4/27)
There鈥檚 absolutely room for new research and new debate about the causes of chronic illness or autism or obesity 鈥 all areas where the official understanding of things doesn鈥檛 have definite answers for a lot of people. And there鈥檚 always good reason for skepticism about the medical-industrial complex writ large. But Kennedy seems committed to his own set of low-evidence theories 鈥 the vaccine-autism link being the most prominent example 鈥 and he seems to be working backward from the outsider perspective, rather than trying to genuinely create dialogue between the establishment and its critics. (Ross Douthat, Jessica Grose and David Wallace-Wells, 4/27)
Who鈥檚 on the couch here? The psychiatrist or the poet? The poem or the practice of psychiatry? As a poet and a psychiatrist/therapist, I exist in both practices, and the worlds of each enrich the other. Each speaks with abandon, and each interrogates the other, and there are many ways in which each discipline supports the other, some obvious, some not so obvious. (Owen Lewis, 4/28)