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
In California Governor Race, Single-Payer Is a Litmus Test. There鈥檚 Still No Way To Pay for It.
Single-payer healthcare is a central talking point in the chaotic race for California governor. In a crowded field, top-polling Democrats are declaring their support for a government-run health system but providing few details about how they鈥檇 accomplish it in the nation鈥檚 most populous state.
Listen: A Federal Agency Is After Workers' Health Data, and Critics Are Alarmed
The Trump administration is seeking unprecedented access to medical records of federal workers and retirees, and their families. The data could be used to implement cost-saving measures, but it would also give the administration access to reams of personal information. Legal experts and insurers say the pursuit is overbroad.
What the Health? From 麻豆女优 Health News: Abortion Pill Politics
A federal court鈥檚 decision to restrict availability of the abortion pill mifepristone has launched abortion back into the national spotlight. It鈥檚 also raised new questions about the job security of FDA Commissioner Marty Makary. Sandhya Raman of Bloomberg Law, Shefali Luthra of The 19th, and Jessie Hellmann of CQ Roll Call join 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more. Also, Rovner interviews 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 Andrew Jones, who wrote the latest 鈥淏ill of the Month."
Here's today's health policy haiku:
GLP-1 FOR THIS AND THAT
Opioids had their
鈥 Anonymous
time in a hyped-up spotlight.
Look where we are now.
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.
Summaries Of The News:
Outbreaks and Health Threats
More States, Countries On Alert For Hantavirus; WHO Tells People To Remain Calm: 'This Is Not Covid'
At least 12 countries are currently monitoring people who had disembarked the MV Hondius before cases of hantavirus were confirmed, the World Health Organization said at a press conference Thursday. Those countries are Canada, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Singapore, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States. Five U.S. states have said they are monitoring passengers who debarked the Hondius prior to any cases being confirmed on board for signs of聽the rare and often deadly disease: two each from Georgia and Texas, one from Virginia, one from Arizona, and an unspecified number from California, according to their respective state health departments. Each state has said none of the individuals is exhibiting any signs of the illness. (Osborne, 5/7)
A suspected new case of hantavirus was identified by authorities Friday as a British national on a remote island where the MV Hondius made a stop in April. The UK Health Security Agent said in an update on Friday that the person with the suspected case was on Tristan da Cunha, often considered "the most remote inhabited island in the world" in the South Atlantic Ocean halfway between the tips of South America and Africa. No further details about the case were made public. (Santucci and Moniuszko, 5/8)
Singapore has isolated two residents who were onboard a cruise ship linked to a deadly outbreak of hantavirus. Both men, aged 67 and 65, had been onboard the MV Hondius when it departed Argentina on April 1, the Communicable Diseases Agency said in a statement Thursday. ... If they test negative for hantavirus, they will be quarantined for 30 days from the date of last exposure. If tested positive, they will remain hospitalized for monitoring and treatment given the potential severity of infection, CDA said. (Gemmell, 5/7)
A World Health Organization (WHO) official on Thursday said the threat level imposed by hantavirus, which has killed three people aboard a cruise ship, does not resemble the pandemic-level threat that COVID-19 had six years ago. Infectious disease epidemiologist Maria DeJoseph Van Kerkhove said during a press conference that the three hantavirus deaths of a Dutch couple and a German citizen, along with the evacuation of three people suspected of carrying the virus, are not a cause for panic. 鈥淭his is not COVID, this is not influenza,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t spreads very, very differently. So, there are different precautions that people are taking.鈥 (Mancini, 5/7)
Dr. Stephen Kornfeld boarded the MV Hondius in the southern tip of Argentina last month anticipating a once-in-a-lifetime adventure, exploring vast icy expanses and remote islands, seeing wildlife like whales, dolphins and penguins up close. But a few weeks into his vacation across the Atlantic Ocean, the Oregon doctor jumped into action caring for passengers after a deadly hantavirus outbreak began spreading through the ship, sickening the vessel鈥檚 doctor. (Harvey, 5/8)
Where the ship is headed 鈥
The MV Hondius is now expected to arrive at Granadilla Port on Sunday by 12 p.m. local time, but could be delayed depending on weather conditions, officials said. The ship will not dock upon arrival but will be anchored, and all passengers will be wearing hazmat gear as they are transferred by boat to the port, according to a statement from the Canarias Region government. (5/8)
Spanish authorities on Friday were preparing to receive more than 140 passengers and crew members on board a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship headed for the Canary Islands, where health officials have said they will perform careful evacuations. The vessel is expected to reach the Spanish island of Tenerife, off the coast of West Africa, on Saturday or Sunday. 鈥淭hey will arrive at a completely isolated, cordoned-off area,鈥 said Virginia Barcones, Spain鈥檚 head of emergency services, on Thursday. (5/8)
On the U.S. response to the outbreak 鈥
The top U.S. official responsible for public health on cruise ships is stepping down, according to an internal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announcement obtained by STAT. (Payne, 5/7)
Fewer than half of U.S. states are sufficiently prepared for a health emergency, according to research released Thursday.聽Only 20 states scored 鈥渉igh鈥 on the annual report from Trust for America鈥檚 Health (TFAH) on national public health emergency preparedness. Seventeen states and Washington, D.C., scored in the 鈥渕iddle tier,鈥 and 13 states fell into the 鈥渓ow tier.鈥 The report comes as the U.S. is set to host 78 World Cup matches in 10 different states from June 11 to July 19. Five of those 10 states performed 鈥渉igh鈥 in TFAH鈥檚 assessment, four in the 鈥渕iddle鈥 range and one state 鈥 Texas 鈥 scored 鈥渓ow鈥 on health emergency preparedness in the report. (Davis, 5/7)
On April 24, nearly two weeks after the first person aboard a cruise ship died of hantavirus, 30 passengers, including six Americans, disembarked in St. Helena, a remote island in the Atlantic Ocean. The Americans are now back on U.S. soil, and three states are monitoring them; none have shown symptoms so far. That information came on Wednesday 鈥 not from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or from the State Department, which is coordinating the nation鈥檚 response to the hantavirus outbreak, but from the medical news publication MedPage Today. (The New York Times confirmed the report with state officials.) (Mandavilli, 5/7)
An unrelated hantavirus case is reported in Israel 鈥
The first case of hantavirus has been diagnosed in Israel, Maariv reported Thursday. The patient is believed to have been infected during a stay in Eastern Europe several months ago and sought medical attention after developing symptoms associated with the disease. Unlike the outbreak of the South American Andes strain currently drawing international attention aboard the MV Hondius cruise ship, however, the Israeli patient was infected with a European strain of the virus. (Gal, 5/7)
Administration News
US Starts To Revoke Passports For Some People Who Owe Child Support
The U.S. State Department will begin revoking the U.S. passports of thousands of parents who owe a significant amount of unpaid child support. The department told The Associated Press on Thursday that the revocations would begin Friday and be focused on those who owe $100,000 or more. That would apply to about 2,700 American passport holders, according to figures supplied to the State Department by the Department of Health and Human Services. (Lee, 5/7)
In other news about passports 鈥
Libyan Dr. Faysal Alghoula must renew his green card to continue caring for roughly 1,000 patients in southwestern Indiana, but hasn鈥檛 been able to since the Trump administration stopped reviewing applications for people from several dozen countries it deemed high-risk. Alghoula鈥檚 current visa will expire in September if his application is denied. But last week, the administration quietly made an exemption for medical doctors with pending visa or green card applications, possibly allowing Alghoula鈥檚 case to move forward. (Riddle and Taxin, 5/8)
On PFAS in drinking water and air pollution 鈥
The Trump administration will soon propose softening Biden-era limits on 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥 in drinking water, delaying but keeping tough standards for two common types and rescinding limits on some rarer forms of the substance, according to an EPA official. The proposal will start the formal process of rolling back parts of the first-ever limits on PFAS in drinking water finalized during former President Joe Biden鈥檚 administration. Officials at the time found they increased the risk of cardiovascular disease, certain cancers and babies being born with low birth weight. (Phillis, 5/7)
In March 2025, President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration made a tantalizing offer to coal-fired power plants, chemical manufacturing facilities and other factories: Their operations could be exempted from key provisions under the Clean Air Act, the bedrock environmental law estimated to have prevented thousands of premature deaths. All they had to do was ask. No rigorous application was needed. An email, which they had until the end of the month to send, would suffice. (Olalde, 5/8)
On the federal workforce 鈥
One employee is a survivor of a gastrointestinal cancer who sometimes loses control of her bowels. Another is undergoing breast cancer treatment that leaves her vulnerable to infections. A third has severely limited mobility and excruciating pain. They all work for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which has told them they must commute to the office each day regardless of their medical conditions. (Mandavilli, 5/7)
A panel tasked with shaping the future of the Federal Emergency Management Agency voted Thursday to approve a report recommending significant overhauls meant to streamline what it called an inefficient and 鈥渂loated鈥 agency 鈥 changes that received pushback from disaster survivors and environmental advocacy groups. (Wang, Sacks and Dennis, 5/7)
麻豆女优 Health News: Listen: A Federal Agency Is After Workers' Health Data, And Critics Are Alarmed
Ten years ago, the Office of Personnel Management suffered one of the biggest government data breaches in history. Now, the agency wants millions of federal workers' medical records. 麻豆女优 Health News reporter Amanda Seitz explained why health policy experts aren't sure OPM can safeguard the data on WAMU鈥檚 鈥淗ealth Hub鈥 on April 29. (Seitz, 5/8)
On gun violence and public health 鈥
Handguns could be mailed through the United States Postal Service for the first time in nearly 100 years if a proposed rule under the Trump administration takes effect. Democratic attorneys general in two dozen states sent a letter this week in opposition. In 1927, Congress passed a law barring the USPS from mailing concealable firearms unless they were from licensed dealers in an effort to curb crime. In January, the Department of Justice revisited the 1927 law, calling it unconstitutional and arguing that it violated the Second Amendment, and urged the postal service to change its regulations. (Hill, 5/7)
The F.B.I. said on Thursday that a gunman acted alone when he shot and killed three people and injured 15 others in an Austin bar, though the attack in March may have been prompted by 鈥渟pecific personal triggers and grievances鈥 related to the Iran War. The gunman, Ndiaga Diagne, 53, of Senegal, died after exchanging gunfire with police officers who responded to the shooting near a busy stretch of downtown Austin. (Jimenez, McGaughy and Ramirez, 5/7)
Pharmaceuticals
Medicare To Launch Pilot GLP-1 Drug Program For $50 A Month
More access to affordable weight-loss medications is coming this summer for adults on Medicare. Starting in July, certain Medicare enrollees can pay $50 a month for specific prescription GLP鈥1 medications, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Medicare announced the pilot program for the popular weight loss medications on Wednesday. The Medicare GLP-1 Bridge program will run between July 1, 2026, and Dec. 31, 2027. (Yu, 5/7)
Are GLP-1 weight-loss drugs hard on your muscles? That question has sparked controversy and concern among some scientists, doctors and the general public. Several large studies in recent years had suggested that people taking GLP-1 drugs such as Zepbound or Wegovy were losing outsize proportions of their muscle mass while also shedding body fat. In some of those studies, nearly 40 percent of people鈥檚 weight loss with GLP-1 drugs seemed to come from muscle, a much higher percentage than would be considered normal among people losing weight by dieting or other lifestyle changes. (Reynolds, 5/7)
Two insulin-dependent adolescents with type 1 diabetes and obesity had metabolic improvements after starting a low-dose GLP-1 agent, a case series showed. (Monaco, 5/8)
Amazon Pharmacy will make Novo Nordisk's Ozempic pill available for home delivery, the company announced Thursday. Per the announcement, Amazon customers will be able to secure the oral GLP-1 medication via same-day delivery or pickup within minutes at its kiosks in short order. The drug, which is approved to manage blood sugar in individuals with type 2 diabetes, was originally sold as Rybelsus but was recently rebranded to Ozempic by Novo. (Minemyer, 5/7)
In other pharma and tech news 鈥
As the Sackler family worked through a plan to pay $6.5 billion to resolve their liability over Purdue Pharma LP鈥檚 production of addictive opioids, the epidemic hit even closer to home. Joss Sackler, the wife of former Purdue board member David Sackler, admitted deleting WhatsApp messages showing she was the intended recipient of a shipment of prescription drugs seized by US border agents in 2024. Sackler, who said she was addicted to opioids at the time, pleaded guilty to obstructing a federal grand jury investigation into the transaction. (Van Voris and Kaiser, 5/7)
Two companies developing a therapy for a rare blood cancer have reached an agreement with the Food and Drug Administration that walked back the agency鈥檚 main reason for rejecting the drug in January. (Feuerstein, 5/7)
Entrada Therapeutics鈥 next-generation drug for Duchenne muscular dystrophy disappointed in an early trial, raising questions about the company鈥檚 competitiveness in an increasingly crowded field. (Mast, 5/7)
Johns Hopkins All Children鈥檚 Hospital leaders and staff came together Tuesday to celebrate expansion of the organization鈥檚 Clinical Biochemical Genetics Laboratory with a ribbon-cutting ceremony. The facility can help diagnose and monitor rare metabolic conditions. These can be life-threatening if they are not caught early. (Connor, 5/7)
Lucy Dunne鈥檚 firstborn child was diagnosed with jaundice through a blood test just one day after birth. Medical staff placed her daughter in a bassinet under an electric lamp and treated her with blue light therapy. But when Dunne鈥檚 baby cried, she was not allowed to pick her up. 鈥淒oing what I do for a living, it was pretty obvious that we could do better,鈥 Dunne said. (Zurek, 5/8)
On aging scientists and the use of AI in research 鈥
Physicist Albert Einstein, widely regarded as one of the most prolific scientists of the past century, conducted much of his transformative work at the beginning of his career, before spending years defending his theories against the burgeoning field of quantum mechanics.聽A new study shows that Einstein is not alone, and that most researchers begin their careers conducting their more disruptive work 鈥 overturning conventional wisdom and forging paths of their own 鈥 but as they age, they tend to abandon that groundbreaking energy. (Oza, 5/7)
Citations in academic papers are intended to ground research in the work that preceded it, over time creating something of a family tree explaining the roots of ideas, protocols, and studies.聽But a growing number of these citations lead to dead ends. (Oza, 5/7)
Vaccines
RFK Jr. Defends Decision To Roll Back Hepatitis B Vaccine For Infants
A family physician pressed Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Thursday on one of the most contentious decisions of his tenure 鈥 the rollback of a longstanding recommendation that all newborns receive a hepatitis B vaccine within 24 hours of birth. The question at Cleveland鈥檚 City Club came from Dr. Patricia Kellner, who said she has practiced family medicine for 40 years. (Eaton, 5/7)
Democratic lawmakers are demanding answers about the suppression of a study on COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) acting director Jay Bhattacharya, MD, PhD. In a letter sent yesterday to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr, ranking members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce said Bhattacharya鈥檚 decision to prevent the study from being published in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the CDC鈥檚 flagship publication, 鈥渁ppears to be a deliberate effort to suppress evidence of vaccine effectiveness by your hand-selected ideological ally.鈥 (Dall, 5/7)
On autism and vaccines 鈥
Aluminum additives used in vaccines are not linked to serious medical problems or long-term conditions in children, according to a report published today in The BMJ. In particular, researchers found no increased risk of asthma, autism, or autoimmune conditions such as type 1 diabetes. The analysis, which included 59 studies conducted over many years, adds to a large body of research finding no ties between aluminum in childhood vaccines and serious health problems, including a 24-year聽study聽of more than 1.2 million Danish children聽published last year in the Annals of Internal Medicine. (Szabo, 5/7)
On the spread of measles 鈥
Opera lovers who caught a matinee of La Boh猫me at the Metropolitan Opera House last month later received emails from the Met Opera letting them know that one of their fellow attendees had measles, the opera house has confirmed. (Lewis, 5/7)
Two new cases of measles were confirmed in Ottawa County this week 鈥 both tied to a person whose infection with the highly contagious but vaccine-preventable virus was identified April 21. (Shamus, 5/7)
Austin Public Health has confirmed the first case of measles in Travis County since 2025, involving an unvaccinated adult who was exposed to the virus while traveling internationally. (Love, 5/7)
Using the blood of a 56-year-old woman vaccinated against measles, scientists have isolated a fighting force of four potent virus-blocking antibodies that could pave the way toward a treatment for people exposed to the highly contagious respiratory disease making a comeback in the United States. A safe, highly effective vaccine for measles has been available since the 1960s, and the U.S. officially eliminated the disease in 2000, with sporadic cases and outbreaks. But dropping vaccination rates have sparked large outbreaks in multiple states, and the country is edging closer to the virus spreading freely again鈥攚hich puts more people at risk. (Johnson, 5/7)
State Watch
NC Abortion Clinic Closure Highlights Growing Strain On Providers
North Carolina now has one fewer abortion clinic, shrinking access to the procedure in a state where nearly 48,000 abortions were provided in 2025. Last week, A Woman鈥檚 Choice closed its clinic in Greensboro, North Carolina鈥檚 third-largest city. The closure leaves 17 abortion clinics in North Carolina, scattered over nine counties across the state, that provide in-person abortion care to thousands of patients 鈥 including people traveling from more restrictive states across the Southeast.聽(Crumpler, 5/8)
麻豆女优 Health News: 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 鈥榃hat The Health?鈥: Abortion Pill Politics
A decision Friday night by a federal appeals court not only has raised new questions about the continued availability of the abortion pill mifepristone but has also thrust the abortion issue back into the spotlight. That鈥檚 something the Trump administration had hoped to avoid during the midterm elections. Meanwhile, this week Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary, the agency鈥檚 scientists, and President Donald Trump tussled over whether to approve fruit-flavored vapes, which might help adults quit smoking but also might attract youths to vaping. (Rovner, 5/7)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
A Blacksburg-based nonprofit has eliminated more than $51 million of medical debt for 35,007 residents in Southwest Virginia, according to a press release. (Schabacker, 5/8)
A bill that seeks to bring more scrutiny to nursing home ownership and analyze private equity investment in nursing facilities gained final passage in the Connecticut House Wednesday. (Carlesso, 5/7)
On the nearly four-hour drive from a southeast Idaho prison, Kristine Scott was optimistic. One of 15 women transferred on April 3 to a minimum security prison in Boise, Scott was told she鈥檇 work at the community reentry center and live in one of the least restrictive facilities in Idaho鈥檚 prison system. But when the women arrived at the South Idaho Correctional Institution, Scott said staff told them there weren鈥檛 enough beds available in the dorms. Instead, she and five other women were led to a segregated housing unit usually reserved as punishment for inmates who violate the rules or pose a safety risk 鈥 a unit known to prisoners as 鈥渢he hole.鈥 (Bryen, 5/7)
As a single mother, Cinthya Garcia used to receive about $600 in monthly Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits to support herself and her six children living with her in Commerce City.鈥疻ith the SNAP funds, Garcia could buy meat and fresh produce to make nutritious meals for her family. (McCoy, 5/8)
鈥淏efore I say anything, I want everyone here to take a moment and think about someone finally reaching out for help and there鈥檚 no one here to answer,鈥 Jazz LedBetter said to a crowd of over 250 survivors of abuse and advocates against domestic violence and sexual assault. (Mithani, 5/6)
麻豆女优 Health News: In California Governor Race, Single-Payer Is A Litmus Test. There鈥檚 Still No Way To Pay For It
When Gavin Newsom ran for California governor in 2018, his support for a state-run single-payer healthcare system was considered a risky move and earned him hefty labor endorsements. Today, leading Democrats in the wide-open race to succeed Newsom have embraced single-payer as a political necessity, an answer to voters fed up with rising premiums and other spiraling healthcare costs. But with no clear front-runner, they are sparring among themselves in debates and political ads over who is most committed to a government-run model. (Mai-Duc, 5/8)
Also 鈥
Sophie Byroade was scrolling on Facebook last summer when she stumbled on an unusual post: It was from a mother looking for a liver donor for her sick three-year-old son. 鈥淣olan needs a liver hero,鈥 it read. The post described Nolan Smith as a 鈥渟weet, dinosaur-loving, music-dancing, water-splashing鈥 child 鈥撯 all things that reminded Byroade of her five-year-old sister. (Gomez, 5/3)
The city prepared to say its final goodbye to Chicago police Officer John Bartholomew, as visitation for the slain 10-year CPD veteran was held in Edgewater. (Kenny and Gorner, 5/7)
Health Industry
Management Consultants For Nonprofit Hospitals Might Not Be Worth The Price: Study
Nonprofit hospitals are spending millions of dollars on management consulting services, but the outcomes may not be worth the price tag. More than 20% of nonprofit hospitals hired management consultants from 2009 to 2023, spending an average of $15.7 million for consulting services, according to a study published this week on the JAMA Network. Nonprofit hospitals altogether spent more than $7.8 billion on those services during that time frame, the study found. (Hudson, 5/7)
More healthcare industry news 鈥
The Hiram W. Davis Medical Center has been slated for closure since August 2024, but some Virginia lawmakers remain hesitant to support the plan as families raise concerns about where residents with complex medical needs will go. The state-operated medical center in Petersburg provides long-term care for patients with intellectual or developmental disabilities. (Schabacker, 5/8)
Cross Country Healthcare has entered a definitive agreement to be acquired by private equity firm Knox Lane for $437 million. The transaction would take the staffing technology company private, according to a Wednesday news release. Under the agreement, Knox Lane would acquire all outstanding shares of Cross Country Healthcare common stock at $13.25 per share, for an all-cash transaction totaling $437 million. The deal is slated to close in the third quarter, pending regulatory approval. (DeSilva, 5/7)
AdventHealth Hospital for Children in Orlando reported that Black pediatric patients needed different kinds of shampoo to care for their hair. The hospital listened. (Pedersen, 5/7)
An update on the Legionella outbreak at a California hospital 鈥
Kaiser Permanente confirmed late Wednesday that 18 people were infected with Legionella at its Santa Clara medical center, where officials are still trying to determine the source of the contamination. The health system said it found the infections during routine monitoring. The hospital and its nearby medical office building remain open and are operating normally. (Vaziri, 5/7)
Weekend Reading
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
For more than a decade, Guy Shoemaker pitched military service to potential new recruits with one key promise: healthcare for life. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to have medical and dental for the rest of your life,鈥 said Shoemaker, a retired Army sergeant first class and recruiter who spent a year in Afghanistan. 鈥淚 used that phrase too many times.鈥 (Lovelace Jr., Miller, Kane and McLaughlin, 5/6)
Against expert advice, people are using new and unpredictable synthetic drugs to experiment on themselves in hopes of becoming free of addiction. (Richtel, 5/6)
On a spring weekend in Boise, Idaho, more than 100 people gathered at Ember Maucere鈥檚 home for a three-day party filled with live music, dancing, food and art. They weren鈥檛 there for a wedding or birthday. They were there because Maucere, 56, was dying 鈥 and she had invited them to celebrate her life with her. People showed up in colorful outfits, ready to take part in a silent disco, performances from local artists and group meditations. (Page, 5/8)
With cutting-edge sports medicine and sci-fi gadgetry, more and more athletes are figuring out how to extend their careers. (Gordon, 5/6)
More than 12 million people now have Parkinson鈥檚 disease, nearly double from just six years ago. From kids who pedaled behind mosquito trucks in the 1950s and '60s to veterans exposed to Agent Orange to landscapers and farmers who attribute their Parkinson鈥檚 to pesticides, a generation of elders 鈥 and increasing numbers of young-onset patients 鈥 now suffer from what we didn鈥檛 know about chemicals in the 20th century. (5/5)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Hantavirus Cruise Ship Outbreak Is A Global Warning; Should Everyone Be On A GLP-1?
The virus will not be another covid-19. But it does show how unprepared the world remains. (Lawrence O. Gostin, 5/7)
One in eight American adults is taking GLP-1s. What does that mean for how we relate to our food, bodies and one another? (Ezra Klein, 5/8)
While the number of Americans in need of care keeps rising, many health systems are struggling to find qualified nurses. The demand for qualified nurses is projected to increase nationwide, with nearly 200,000 annual job openings expected. This is driven, in part, by a mass exodus of nurses reaching retirement age. At this critical juncture facing our nation鈥檚 health systems, men remain an untapped group whose recruitment into nursing could make a difference. (Nicholas A. Giordano, 5/8)
My nursing career made me a better doctor, but also showed where our training system fails. (Dawn Zuidgeest-Craft, 5/8)
In late April, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Food and Drug Administration announced the Regulatory Alignment for Predictable and Immediate Device, or RAPID, coverage pathway. On paper, it is exactly what the medical device community has been asking for: a synchronized process that could deliver Medicare national coverage as soon as two months after FDA market authorization, rather than the year or more families and manufacturers currently endure. (Kolaleh Eskandanian, 5/8)