Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:
麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories
Maryland Taps Affordable Care Act Fund To Help Pay for Abortion Care
The state is using an old source of funding to pay for a new money crunch: assisting out-of-state patients with the costs associated with abortion.
Breaking Down Why Medicare Part D Premiums Are Likely To Go Up
Insurers will take drug costs, frequency of use, and other factors into account as they set premium amounts for the 2026 plan year.
Trump Further Politicizes Science
President Donald Trump鈥檚 latest executive order about science and medicine seeks to take funding decisions out of the hands of career scientists and give them to political appointees instead. And a gunman, reportedly disgruntled over covid vaccines, shoots at the headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, killing a law enforcement officer. Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, Shefali Luthra of The 19th, and Sarah Karlin-Smith of the Pink Sheet join 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more. Also this week, Rovner interviews Aaron Carroll, president and CEO of the health services research group AcademyHealth, about how to restore the public鈥檚 trust in public health.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
IN THE EYES OF THIS BEHOLDER
It's a big, bad bill.
鈥 Philippa Barron
Nothing beautiful at all.
Let's use the right words.
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of 麻豆女优 Health News or 麻豆女优.
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Summaries Of The News:
Vaccines
HHS Reinstates Defunct Task Force on Safer Childhood Vaccines
The Department of Health and Human Services said Thursday it is reviving a long-defunct task force aimed at improving the safety of childhood vaccines, fulfilling a demand of anti-vaccine activists. The resurrection of the panel appears to be the first concrete step to achieve HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 longtime goal of upending the current childhood immunization schedule, which recommends which shots children receive and when. (Roubein and Sun, 8/14)
As calls for HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to resign have gone unheeded, opponents are stepping up their game and calling for him to be impeached -- though experts question the move's validity as a path forward. Last week in an Instagram post, pediatric allergist Zachary Rubin, MD, called for Kennedy's impeachment, which garnered tens of thousands of likes. And today, Stand Up for Science launched a petition to impeach Kennedy. (Fiore, 8/14)
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) is demanding Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 鈥渋mmediately鈥 fire a key ally from his role as vaccine advisor on a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) panel due to 鈥渆scalating and violent鈥 rhetoric in the wake of an attack on CDC headquarters.聽Blumenthal wrote a letter to Kennedy on Wednesday calling for him to fire Robert Malone from the CDC鈥檚 Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). (Weixel, 8/14)
Things President Donald Trump talked about publicly this week: Sylvester Stallone鈥檚 body, the $200 million ballroom he wants to build at the White House, receiving a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, not receiving a Kennedy Center lifetime achievement award and taking over the police force in the nation鈥檚 capital. Something Trump hasn鈥檛 talked about: a gunman, upset by coronavirus vaccines, who on Aug. 8 killed a police officer while firing hundreds of bullets at the headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Edwards and Bensen, 8/15)
More on 'Make America Healthy Again' 鈥
WK Kellogg Co. plans to remove artificial dyes from its breakfast cereals in the next two and a half years, according to the company and the attorney general of Texas. The maker of Froot Loops and Apple Jacks gave the timeline as U.S. food producers face increasing pressure from the U.S. government and consumers to phase out synthetic colorings from their products. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Wednesday that Kellogg had signed an agreement assuring his office that the Michigan-based company would 鈥減ermanently remove toxic dyes鈥 from its cereals by the end of 2027. (Grantham-Philips, 8/14)
A highly anticipated White House report on the health of American children would stop short of proposing direct restrictions on ultraprocessed foods and pesticides that the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has called major threats, according to a draft of the document that was reviewed by The New York Times. The report, if adopted, would be good news for the food and agriculture industries, which feared far more restrictive proposals than the ones outlined in the draft. Through his 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 movement, Mr. Kennedy has sought to overhaul the nation鈥檚 diet by pushing those industries to make major changes. (Blum, Mueller and Callahan, 8/14)
An unusual about-face that played out at the Food and Drug Administration over the last week illustrated the power of the 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 movement, particularly with its focus on 鈥渘atural鈥 drugs. Last Thursday, the agency published a statement saying it had concerns about the safety and effectiveness of unapproved thyroid medications made from animal tissue after it received complaints from patients and reports of adverse events. As a result, the FDA said it had notified drugmakers of its 鈥渋ntent to take action鈥 against the products, but added that it wouldn't do so immediately to give patients time to switch medications. (Lovelace Jr., 8/14)
On a social media post, Dr. Joseph Ladapo wrote that he supports the consumption of raw milk to reap what he calls "potential health benefits," but cautions consumers about the risks. (Gillespie, 8/13)
Reproductive Health
Trump's Wide Birth Control Mandate Exemptions Went Too Far, Judge Finds
The Trump administration鈥檚 religious and moral carve-outs to an ObamaCare requirement that all employer health plans cover contraception at no cost were blocked on Wednesday by a federal judge.聽District Judge Wendy Beetlestone in Philadelphia issued a summary judgment that the rules were arbitrary, capricious and an overreach of the authority of the agencies that wrote them in 2017.聽Under the rules, essentially any for-profit or nonprofit employer or insurer was allowed to exempt themselves from following the birth control mandate on moral and religious grounds. The rules also let publicly traded companies obtain a religious exemption, but not a moral one.聽(Weixel, 8/14)
Costco Wholesale Corp. has decided not to dispense the abortion pill mifepristone at its more than 500 pharmacy locations, a decision hailed by a group of faith-based activists who urged the retailer to avoid selling the drug. Costco said in a statement that it hasn鈥檛 seen consumer demand for the pill, and had no comment on whether the conservative group had any role in its decision. (Green and Nix, 8/14)
Women in remote and rural parts of Hawai驶i have long struggled to access abortion care. (Valera, 8/13)
麻豆女优 Health News: Maryland Taps Affordable Care Act Fund To Help Pay For Abortion Care
Maryland is the first state to tap into an old fund connected to the Affordable Care Act to help solve a new problem: helping pay the expenses of patients who travel to Maryland for an abortion. With abortion now restricted or illegal in 22 states, jurisdictions like Maryland have become a destination for patients from as close as neighboring West Virginia to as far as Texas. (Maucione, 8/15)
Also 鈥
A drug used in medical abortions could help prevent women at high risk of breast cancer from developing the disease, according to an international group of doctors and scientists. However, 鈥渟tigma鈥 around mifepristone is stopping pharmaceutical companies from investigating its potential as a new treatment doctors could offer to reduce the risk of breast cancer, they say. Companies appear reluctant to carry out trials despite the fact that three previous studies all found that the drug shows promise as a way of slowing down the growth of cancerous cells. (Campbell, 8/14)
Administration News
To Align Drug Prices With Trump's Priorities, Eli Lilly Raises Them Abroad
Eli Lilly said Thursday that it would increase the prices of medicines in Europe and other developed markets 鈥渋n order to make them lower鈥 in the U.S., an apparent response to the Trump administration鈥檚 calls to do so. It singled out the list price of its popular weight-loss drug in the U.K. as part of that effort. (Chen and Payne, 8/14)
President Trump鈥檚 planned 15 percent tariff on medicines from Europe has shined a spotlight on Ireland, which sends the United States tens of billions of dollars鈥 worth of cancer medications, weight-loss drug ingredients and other pharmaceutical products each year. No other country sends more. Manufacturing blockbuster medications there offers tax benefits for American drug companies. But the appeal of Ireland for the industry goes deeper: Drugmakers have long shifted their patents and profits there, as well, to avoid billions of dollars in taxes. (Robbins, 8/14)
On immigration and homelessness 鈥
A federal judge ordered the nation鈥檚 health department to stop giving deportation officials access to the personal information 鈥 including home addresses 鈥 of all 79 million Medicaid enrollees. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services first handed over the personal data on millions of Medicaid enrollees in a handful of states in June. After an Associated Press report identified the new policy, 20 states filed a lawsuit to stop its implementation. (Seitz and Kindy, 8/14)
The DeSantis administration is making arrangements to hold immigrant detainees at a North Florida prison as a federal judge weighs whether to temporarily shut down Alligator Alcatraz, the makeshift immigration detention camp in the Everglades. 鈥淲e are calling this the deportation depot,鈥 Gov. Ron DeSantis said at a news conference on Thursday. 鈥淭his will be operational soon, it is not going to take forever, but we are also not rushing to do this right this day.鈥 (Ceballos, 8/14)
Federal authorities were attempting to clear homeless encampments in northwestern Washington on Thursday night as part of President Trump鈥檚 sprawling takeover of the city鈥檚 law enforcement apparatus, after city officials and advocates had spent much of the day urging unhoused people to go to shelters or risk arrest. A federal operation that had been expected to start at 6:30 p.m. seemed to get underway only after dark. At around 9 p.m., federal agents from the F.B.I. and the U.S. Secret Service arrived at Washington Circle in the Foggy Bottom area to remove a few tents where homeless people had long stayed, according to Wes Heppler of the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless. They retreated after a woman presented a city notice saying she had until Monday to leave. (Robertson and Bogel-Burroughs, 8/14)
On DEI and research funding 鈥
A federal judge on Wednesday declined a request to block an Alabama law that bans diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in public schools and the teaching of what Republican lawmakers dubbed 鈥渄ivisive concepts鈥 related to race and gender. U.S. District Judge David Proctor wrote that University of Alabama students and professors who filed a lawsuit challenging the law as unconstitutional did not meet the legal burden required for a preliminary injunction, which he called 鈥渁n extraordinary and drastic remedy.鈥 The civil lawsuit challenging the statute will go forward, but the law will remain in place while it does. (Chandler, 8/14)
Last November, in the days following Donald Trump鈥檚 election, leaders at the National Institutes of Health began discussing how to prepare for the coming administration. Any presidential transition comes with uncertainty. But with the conservative policy playbook known as Project 2025 proposing that 鈥渢he NIH monopoly on directing research should be broken,鈥 rumors had begun to fly. (Oza, Molteni and Chen, 8/15)
For most of Mary Woolley鈥檚 career, science and politics have existed harmoniously. On only a few occasions have they become misaligned, said Woolley, who has served as president and CEO of the research advocacy group Research!America since 1990. Those occasions include a movement to slash the budget of the National Institutes of Health in the mid-1990s, a wave of skepticism of science during the Covid-19 pandemic, and the Trump administration鈥檚 current slashing of research funding.聽(Paulus, 8/15)
In an unexpected move, the Trump administration signaled recently that it may rely on a controversial federal law to sidestep Harvard University patents that emerged with the help of U.S. government funding. (Silverman, 8/14)
麻豆女优 Health News: 麻豆女优 Health News' 'What The Health?': Trump Further Politicizes Science聽
A new executive order from President Donald Trump has potentially broad implications for the future of the federal research enterprise by transferring direct funding decisions away from career professionals to political appointees. And a gunman, reportedly disgruntled over covid vaccines, attacked the headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, highlighting how increasingly inflammatory rhetoric from health critics endangers the public health workforce. (8/14)
Coverage And Access
Caregivers Bring Lawsuit Against Department Of Veterans Affairs
Two survivors of veterans who died from military-related illnesses are challenging the Department of Veterans Affairs' practice of dropping family caregiver application appeals once a veteran passes away. The daughter of an Army Vietnam veteran who cared for her father in his final years and the wife of a separate Vietnam-era veteran filed a potential class-action suit Monday in federal court arguing that their cases should still be considered by the Board of Veterans Appeals even though their veterans had died. (Kime, 8/14)
Veterans will no longer be exempt from work requirement rules for food stamps under President Trump鈥檚 鈥渂ig, beautiful鈥 spending and tax law, leaving many worried about how they will find employment. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which is the federal aid program formerly known as food stamps, currently allows work exemptions for veterans, but that will soon end under legislation signed into law last month. (Samee Ali, 8/14)
In Medicaid and Medicare news 鈥
A network of clinics that provides health care in Maine asked a judge Thursday to restore its Medicaid funding while it fights a Trump administration effort to keep federal money from going to abortion providers. President Donald Trump鈥檚 policy and tax bill, known as the 鈥 big beautiful bill,鈥 blocked Medicaid money from flowing to Planned Parenthood, the nation鈥檚 largest abortion provider. The parameters in the bill also stopped funding from reaching Maine Family Planning, a much smaller provider that offers health care services in one of the poorest and most rural states in the Northeast. (Whittle, 8/14)
Missouri鈥檚 67 rural hospitals are pondering a dramatically different future under President Donald Trump鈥檚 new budget plan. The recently approved budget bill will slash federal Medicaid spending by more than $1 trillion over the next decade. By some estimates, it could lead to 8.6 million people nationwide losing health coverage. (Cunningham, 8/13)
麻豆女优 Health News: Breaking Down Why Medicare Part D Premiums Are Likely To Go Up
Medicare enrollees who buy the optional Part D drug benefit may see substantial premium price hikes 鈥 potentially up to $50 a month 鈥 when they shop for next year鈥檚 coverage. Such drug plans are used by millions of people who enroll in what is called original Medicare, the classic federal government program that began in 1965 and added a drug benefit only in 2006. The drug plans are offered through private insurers, and enrollees must pay monthly premiums. (Appleby, 8/15)
As the Trump administration tries to make Medicare more modern through the use of digital health apps, it faces a horde of unresolved policy issues that could present challenges to its stated goal to "stop theoretical debates and start delivering real results." On July 30, 60 healthcare and tech companies committed to engage in a Health Tech Ecosystem Initiative led by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' (CMS') Administrator Mehmet Oz, M.D. The CMS will create an app store of vetted digital health solutions, require apps to use modern identity solutions and integrate AI chatbots to give beneficiaries information about healthcare access.聽(Beavins, 8/14)
More on health insurance coverage and costs 鈥
Health insurance premiums for Californians buying coverage through Covered California will rise by an average of 10.3% in 2026, the state marketplace announced Thursday. Officials warned that costs could climb even higher if Congress allows enhanced federal subsidies to expire at the end of next year. The projected increase 鈥 up from a 7.9% hike in 2025 鈥 is driven largely by rising medical and prescription drug costs. (Vaziri, 8/14)
Born in September 2024, Cameron is the child that Alyssa and Brad Casacci always wanted. But within hours of Cam鈥檚 birth, their world was turned upside down. 鈥淭hey did an MRI on this 1-day-old baby and kind of confirmed the worst: He had a very large stroke on the left side of his brain. [Additional] seizure activity was secondary to that injury,鈥 Alyssa told Nexstar鈥檚 WIVB. The family was then transferred to Oishei Children鈥檚 Hospital in Buffalo, New York, where they spent the next 19 days holding out hope for a miracle to save their baby boy. (Morello and Petree, 8/14)
When John Karadell was admitted to the hospital after a stroke, his doctors quickly pushed for him to begin an intensive form of rehabilitation 鈥 the sooner the better. 鈥淭hey used words like, 鈥楾his is crucial. This is essential to your recovery,鈥欌 said Karadell, 58, of Howell, Michigan. ... But after 11 days in a hospital bed with no word on when he鈥檇 be transferred to the facility, Karadell said he learned his health insurer, Aetna, had denied coverage for what鈥檚 known as acute post-stroke rehabilitation. (Lovelace Jr., Kane and Thompson, 8/14)
Health Industry
Berkshire Hathaway Gobbles Up $1.6B In Shares Of UnitedHealth Group
Warren Buffett鈥檚 Berkshire Hathaway Inc. bought shares of UnitedHealth Group Inc. in the second quarter, sending the health insurer鈥檚 stock soaring in post-market trading. The chief executive officer of the Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate acquired 5 million shares in UnitedHealth, granting Berkshire a stake worth $1.6 billion, according to a filing Thursday. (Rajbhandari, 8/14)
UnitedHealth Group鈥檚 Optum closed its $3.3 billion acquisition of home health company Amedisys. Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based Amedisys disclosed the completion of the $3.3 billion deal Thursday in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. A spokesperson for Optum said the company is pleased to finally finish the purchase, which was subject to months of antitrust scrutiny from the federal government. (O鈥機onnell-Domenech, 8/14)
More health industry developments 鈥
Nike co-founder Phil Knight and his wife, Penny Knight, are donating $2 billion to Oregon Health & Science University鈥檚 Knight Cancer Institute鈥攖he largest known single gift to a U.S. university, coming at a time when colleges鈥 public funding is under siege. The gift will roughly double the size of the cancer center, expanding its capacity to treat patients and conduct research. (Bachman and Subbaraman, 8/14)
Penn Medicine and Saint Francis Health System recently received federal go-ahead to launch hospital-at-home programs, despite the program鈥檚 uncertain future. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services鈥 Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver is set expire at the end of next month. Congress still must decide if it will extend or end the program, which provides Medicare reimbursement at the same rate for in-home care as in-facility care. Still, CMS approved waivers about two weeks ago for Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Saint Francis Health System鈥檚 program at two facilities. (Eastabrook, 8/14)
For more than a year, the Federal Trade Commission has been investigating Hims & Hers Health Inc.鈥檚 business practices, including whether it has made it too hard for customers to cancel subscriptions, according to people familiar with the probe. The company, which hasn鈥檛 been formally accused of wrongdoing, didn鈥檛 respond to a Bloomberg request for comment. Hims House, a Hims investor community, said in a post on X that it received an official statement from the company saying the inquiry was previously disclosed. (Muller and Nylen, 8/14)
A Baltimore County woman pleaded guilty Thursday to federal identity theft charges for impersonating a nurse at 40 healthcare facilities across Maryland, according to the U.S. Attorney鈥檚 Office for the District of Maryland. (Schumer, 8/14)
In tech news 鈥
Health technology company Philips announced plans Thursday to invest more than $150 million in U.S. manufacturing, research and development. Part of the plan involves expanding its Reedsville, Pa., manufacturing facility, which produces AI-enabled ultrasound systems for hospitals. The company is also expanding its image-guided therapy facility in Plymouth, Minn. More projects similar to these will be announced in the next several years, according to the company. (Dubinsky, 8/14)
Health systems say connectivity with their electronic medical record vendor determines which AI solutions they are choosing to adopt. That鈥檚 one of the findings suggested in a report published in July from industry group the Healthcare Financial Management Association and Eliciting Insights, a healthcare strategy and research firm. The report, 鈥淗ealth System Readiness for Artificial Intelligence,鈥 surveyed 233 health systems on a wide range of topics, including how they鈥檙e selecting solutions from AI vendors. (Broderick, 8/14)
Whoop Inc., the maker of screen-less fitness bands, said it will not disable its blood-pressure tracking tool despite a request from the US Food and Drug Administration. The FDA last month sent a warning letter to Whoop stating that the company鈥檚 Blood Pressure Insights feature, or BPI, which both measures blood pressure and provides related feedback, means that the Whoop is operating as a medical device. (Kelly, 8/14)
Lifestyle and Health
Updated Blood Pressure Guidelines Frown On Alcohol Consumption
The next time you get your blood pressure checked, expect your medical provider to be a bit more aggressive about high levels. And if you like a glass of wine with dinner or a cocktail on the weekends, brace yourself: New guidelines from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology released Thursday suggest you abstain. (Christensen, 8/14)
A study in rural China demonstrating the power of intensive blood pressure control clinched the deal. The large, cluster-randomized controlled trial convincingly demonstrated that well-controlled blood pressure 鈥 below 130/80 mm鈥塇g 鈥 lowered the risk of dementia by 15% and cognitive impairment by 16%. (Cooney, 8/14)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
In a small study, an engineered antibody showed 鈥渁mazing鈥 promise in countering metastatic cancer. That is, according to a Phase 1 clinical trial published Thursday in Cancer Cell. Researchers directly injected the drug, which stimulates the immune system to attack cancer cells, into 12 patients鈥 tumors. Six of the patients had significant tumor reduction even in non-injected sites, with two experiencing complete remission. The research could lay the groundwork for new treatments for the most advanced cancer patients. (Paulus and Russo, 8/14)
The FDA is cracking down on foaming, mousse sunscreen products. This week the agency posted a handful of warning letters that it sent to companies over the marketing of such products. The companies were U.S.-based companies Supergoop!, Vacation, and Fallene along with Stockholm-based Kalani Sunwear and K & Care Organics from Israel. In the warning letters, the FDA called attention to the fact that the companies' respective products are "intended for use as an over-the-counter (OTC) sunscreen drug product" but have no FDA-approved application in effect. (Henderson, 8/14)
Smokers with substance use disorders (SUDs) who quit cigarettes were more likely to report recovery from their other addiction, according to a nationally representative cohort study. Among more than 2,600 individuals followed for 4 years, a fully adjusted model showed that a change in smoking status from "current" to "former" was associated with a 30% increase in the likelihood of SUD recovery (OR 1.30, 95% CI 1.07-1.57), reported Wilson Compton, MD, of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) in Bethesda, Maryland, and colleagues. (Firth, 8/13)
A mother's weight before pregnancy could be linked to autism-like behaviors in her children. This is the conclusion of a study by researchers at the University of Hawai驶i at M膩noa, who found that obesity can trigger metabolic shifts that cause lasting epigenetic changes in a mother's eggs. (Millington, 8/14)
More than 100,000 Drinkmate carbonation bottles are being recalled across the U.S. and Canada because they can explode during use, with several consumers reporting cuts and other impact injuries. According to a Thursday notice from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, the recall covers certain 鈥淒rinkmate 1L Carbonation Bottles鈥 sold individually or as part of the sparkling water maker鈥檚 鈥淥mniFizz鈥 starter kits. That includes about 106,200 bottles in the U.S., the safety regulator noted, as well as 5,000 in Canada. (8/14)
Also 鈥
Inner speech 鈥 the internal monologue in your brain as you think about what to say 鈥 can be decoded by computers and might one day help people unable to speak to express themselves, according to a study published Thursday.聽(Broderick, 8/14)
State Watch
Fourth Person Dies From Legionnaires鈥 Disease In New York Outbreak
A fourth person has died in connection with a Legionnaires鈥 disease outbreak in New York City, health officials disclosed Thursday as they revealed that some cooling towers that tested positive for the bacteria are in city-run buildings. The outbreak in Central Harlem has sickened dozens since it began in late July. Seventeen people were hospitalized as of Thursday, according to the health department. The bacteria that causes Legionnaires鈥 disease had been discovered in 12 cooling towers on 10 buildings, including a city-run hospital and sexual health clinic, health officials said. (8/15)
The New York State Department of Health (NYDOH) is warning about the risks of congenital syphilis after three infant deaths related to the disease have been reported in the state so far this year. The deaths occurred outside of New York City and are part of "a concerning rise" in congenital syphilis cases in the state and across the nation, according to the NYDOH. (Kekatos and Cobern, 8/15)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
The Supreme Court cleared the way for a Mississippi law that requires age verification to use social media and parental consent before minors can create accounts, a setback for the technology group that challenged the measure. A trade group representing some of the internet鈥檚 most powerful social media companies said the law presents 鈥済rave First Amendment harms鈥 because it imposes burdens on teens and adults to access protected speech and to use a powerful tool for making their voices heard. (Jouvenal, 8/14)
As Texas lawmakers debate a ban on the synthetic THC industry, another unregulated, but deadlier synthetic drug known as kratom is lying in wait to take over the ever-growing statewide demand for recreational drugs. (Simpson and Keemahill, 8/15)
Colorado has reported a measles case in an unvaccinated child from Adams County who had recently traveled to Chihuahua state, which is Mexico's measles hot spot.聽The child is under 5 years old and is hospitalized.聽In July, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said there were 2,597 cases and 9 measles deaths in Mexico, with most of the cases recorded in Chihuahua state. This case raises Colorado's 2025 total to 17, with 5 patients requiring hospitalization. (Soucheray, 8/14)
Health officials in Massachusetts are warning the public about a potentially deadly bacteria in coastal waters after a person was infected. The state鈥檚 Department of Public Health issued a warning Wednesday about Vibrio bacteria following what it called "an extremely rare case" of Vibrio vulnificus infection. Officials said the person was most likely exposed to it while at a beach on Buzzards Bay. (Burke, 8/14)
An invasive tick species is creeping its way into more parts of the country as warming temperatures help it spread a little-known infection that can leave people with debilitating symptoms and, in rare cases, dead. In May, scientists at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station in New Haven discovered for the first time that the longhorned tick had become a carrier for the bacterium that causes the Ehrlichiosis infection. With cases already on the rise, that was a big cause of concern. (Bork, 8/14)
On air pollution and 'forever chemicals' 鈥
The Pennsylvania county where an explosion at a U.S. Steel plant south of Pittsburgh killed two people and injured more than 10 others announced Thursday that it is stepping up air quality monitoring in the area of the sprawling facility that has a troubled environmental record. The Allegheny County Health Department announced that mobile air units provided by the state and Carnegie Mellon University will be stationed in the Mon Valley where the plant is Thursday and Friday. The county said these measures are part of its ongoing investigation into Monday鈥檚 explosion at Clairton Coke Works. (Casey, 8/15)
After a federal judge blocked Perdue Farms鈥 attempt to dismiss a class-action lawsuit over PFAS pollution from its Salisbury facility, the company and the plaintiffs are beginning to chart a way forward. (Schumer, 8/14)
Residents of Elkton, Maryland, worry about the 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥 in their water but say W.L. Gore & Associates has always been a good neighbor. (Ajasa, 8/14)
Weekend Reading
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
The once-nationwide fitness test for young people etched itself into people鈥檚 memories, according to experts in exercise testing, physiology and behavior. (Reynolds, 8/10)
Passengers are facing blocked wheelchair space, getting stuck in doors and suffering other indignities 35 years after the Americans With Disabilities Act became law. (Castro-Root, 8/14)
The original formulation of the soft drink 7Up contained lithium; the drink was marketed under the name Bib-Label Lithiated Lemon-Lime Soda. The lithium was removed in 1948 after the Food and Drug Administration banned the use of lithium citrate in soft drinks. (Johnson, 8/9)
A guitarist in a death metal band was one of several people who found that personalized deep brain stimulation eased their pain and helped them reduce pain medication. (Belluck, 8/14)
When Dariya Quenneville鈥檚 infant daughter was ready for solid food, she skipped the mushed up avocado and banana. On the menu instead? Raw egg yolk and pur茅ed chicken liver. (Petersen, 8/12)
Nurdles, a colloquial term for the plastic pellets, are the raw material used for nearly all plastic products. Lentil-sized, at between 1-5mm, they can be devastating to wildlife, especially fish, shrimps and seabirds that mistake them for food. They also act as 鈥渢oxic sponges,鈥 attracting so-called forever chemicals such as PCBs and PFAs in seawater on to their surfaces, and also carry harmful bacteria such as E coli. (McVeigh and Shaii, 8/12)
Erin Kissane a group of about 80 volunteers launched 鈥淯nbreaking鈥 in May, a digital project focused on 鈥渕apping the damage done [by the Trump administration] and its human costs.鈥 The website monitors a growing number of issues, including the defunding of food safety programs and Medicaid. (Pratt, 8/11)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: US Scientists Living In Fear Not Only For Their Jobs, But Also For The Future Of Research In Our Country
Since the start of the second Trump administration, I have heard from colleagues in the medical research community about their experiences. Many are afraid to speak openly but want the public to understand the effects of these policy decisions on the future of science. I am sharing some of their stories here, while respecting their wishes to omit details that would identify them. (Leana S. Wen, 8/14)
Several days after a drug overdose, Kentuckian TJ Hoover was declared brain dead. Doctors prepared him for organ removal surgery, and as the procedure was about to begin, Hoover woke up. Reports indicate that hospital professionals allegedly disregarded signs that Hoover was still alert, and opted to move forward with harvesting anyway until it was undeniable that their patient was not dead.聽(8/14)
The recent decision by federal health officials to exclude voluntary liaisons, including the nation鈥檚 leading physician organizations, from the process of reviewing and informing vaccine recommendations threatens patient and public health. (8/15)
Since 2010, suicide rates among young men have risen by a third 鈥 they are now higher than they are among middle-aged men. The share of college degrees going to men has fallen to 41 percent, lower than the women鈥檚 share in 1970. One in 10 men aged 20 to 24 is effectively doing nothing 鈥 neither enrolled in school nor working. That鈥檚 twice the rate in 1990. (Robert D. Putnam and Richard V. Reeves, 8/15)
The scarcity of recovery stories like mine distorts drug policy. It bolsters the continued dominance of abstinence-only rehabs and recovery housing, which deters many people who could benefit from seeking help. It enables most residential treatment and recovery homes to reject long-term use of the addiction medications like buprenorphine and methadone 鈥 the only treatments proven to cut opioid overdose deaths in half 鈥 based on the mistaken idea that taking them means a person isn鈥檛 really sober or in recovery. (Maia Szalavitz, 8/14)