Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: When Insurance Drops Doctors, Patients Suffer; Why I Trusted ChatGPT Health With My Medical Data
Spats between hospitals and insurers are just one of many health care problems in the US. (Jessica Karl, 1/28)
When I first heard about OpenAI鈥檚 ChatGPT Health, I felt a familiar itch. Since being diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor 18 years ago, at age 29, I鈥檝e developed a deep curiosity about my own health. That curiosity has driven me to enroll in numerous studies, connect my health records to the NIH All of Us research program, and even donate my brain tissue for research-grade genomic sequencing. (Liz Salmi, 1/29)
The nation鈥檚 public health infrastructure is being torn apart. Gaps in access, regional variations, advanced public health degrees at risk and politicized responses are putting all of us at risk. This balkanized approach to public health is accelerating a dangerous divide between communities: those that can protect their health and those that cannot. This fragmented approach is a prescription for our nation鈥檚 poorer health. (Boris D. Lushniak and Tim E. Leshan, 1/28)
Recently, the Texas attorney general launched a formal investigation into what he called 鈥渦nlawful financial incentives鈥 for childhood vaccines, saying that he would 鈥渆nsure that Big Pharma and Big Insurance don鈥檛 bribe medical providers to pressure parents to jab their kids.鈥 (Jess Steier, Elana Pearl Ben-Joseph, Jen Covich Bordenick and David Higgins, 1/29)
If you want to understand how Robert F. Kennedy Jr. became the face of American public health, you have to go back to the Covid era. (Ross Douthat, 1/29)