Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
WHO Adopts New Pandemic Treaty Without The US
World Health Organization members on Tuesday adopted a treaty aimed at preparing for and responding to future pandemics, what countries say is both a tangible example of how they鈥檙e learning the lessons of Covid-19 and a marker for the continued importance of international collaboration. (Joseph, 5/20)聽
Stripped of U.S. funding, the World Health Organization chief on Monday appealed to member countries to support its 鈥渆xtremely modest鈥 request for a $2.1 billion annual budget by putting that sum into perspective next to outlays for ad campaigns for tobacco or the cost of war. After nearly 80 years of striving to improve human lives and health 鈥- which critics say it has done poorly or not enough -- the U.N. health agency is fighting for its own after U.S. President Donald Trump in January halted funding from the United States, which has traditionally been WHO鈥檚 largest donor. (Keaten, 5/20)
On covid and measles 鈥
President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration is slated to lay out its approach to Covid vaccination at an event Tuesday that could spell major changes in what is required to get regulatory approval for immunizations. The US Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 YouTube channel is featuring an upcoming town hall, set to begin Tuesday at 1 p.m. in Washington, titled 鈥淎n evidence based approach to Covid vaccination.鈥 The two speakers listed are FDA Commissioner Marty Makary and Vinay Prasad, an outspoken critic of the drug industry who was recently appointed to lead the agency鈥檚 division that oversees vaccines. (Smith and Cohrs Zhang, 5/19)
The rate of new measles infections in Texas has slowed as immunity to the virus builds and vaccinations rise. Texas 鈥 the epicenter of the outbreak in the US this year 鈥 reported just one new measles infection on May 16, bringing the state鈥檚 total to 718 cases. (Nix, 5/19)
A new Annenberg Poll shows that 87% of Americans say the benefit of childhood measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination outweighs the risk, and 67% say they know that MMR vaccines don't cause autism. 2025 may see the highest measles case count in the United States since the disease was officially eliminated in 2000. (Soucheray, 5/19)