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Friday, Sep 5 2025

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 3

  • Trump Administration Investigates Medicaid Spending on Immigrants in Blue States
  • He Built Michigan's Medicaid Work Requirement System. Now He's Warning Other States.
  • RFK Jr. Faces Senate Finance Committee: A Live Discussion聽

Note To Readers

Capitol Watch 1

  • RFK Jr. Grilled Over CDC Shake-Up, Vaccine Confusion, Abortion Pill Access

Vaccines 1

  • Massachusetts, New York Break With FDA On Covid Vaccine Limitations

Health Care Costs 1

  • HHS Broadens Catastrophic Coverage Eligibility On ACA Exchange

Administration News 2

  • Trump Administration To Distribute Gilead's New HIV Meds To Millions
  • Federal Appeals Court Rules Alligator Alcatraz May Stay Open

Gun Violence 1

  • After Minneapolis Shooting, Feds May Ban Gun Ownership For Trans People

State Watch 1

  • Minnesota Judge Dismisses Lawsuit, Keeps Abortion Protections In Place

Weekend Reading 1

  • Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Florida Will Endanger Kids By Ending School Vaccine Mandates; Susan Monarez Shares Her Side

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

Trump Administration Investigates Medicaid Spending on Immigrants in Blue States

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is hunting for Medicaid waste, fraud, and abuse in at least six Democratic-led states that expanded coverage to low-income and disabled immigrants without legal status, according to records obtained by 麻豆女优 Health News and The Associated Press. ( Angela Hart and Devi Shastri, The Associated Press , 9/5 )

He Built Michigan's Medicaid Work Requirement System. Now He's Warning Other States.

Michigan鈥檚 former top health official spent a year and $30 million building a system to implement work requirements for Medicaid recipients. The difficulties he encountered have him worried about 40 states and Washington, D.C., having to launch such systems by 2027. ( Kate Wells, Michigan Public , 9/5 )

RFK Jr. Faces Senate Finance Committee: A Live Discussion聽

麻豆女优 Health News鈥 Stephanie Armour, Julie Rovner, and Arthur Allen and 麻豆女优鈥檚 Josh Michaud discuss the biggest takeaways from Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 hearing before the Senate Finance Committee. ( 9/4 )

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Here's today's health policy haiku:

IN 'NONPROFIT' HOSPITALS

A growing pay gap
divides CEOs from the
average worker.

鈥 Timothy Kelley

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Note To Readers

Behind on your reading? Catch up on this week's 麻豆女优 Health News stories with The Week in Brief, delivered every Friday to your inbox. !

Summaries Of The News:

Capitol Watch

RFK Jr. Grilled Over CDC Shake-Up, Vaccine Confusion, Abortion Pill Access

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. struck a defiant tone as senators 鈥 Democrat and Republican 鈥 pressed him for answers about the direction he is taking the department. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e going to make America healthy again, we can鈥檛 allow public health to be undermined,鈥 said John Barrasso, R-Wyo. Kennedy indicated more upheaval is to come. Plus, looks at claims made during the hearing.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was unrepentant Thursday about his shakeup of the nation鈥檚 public health agency and overhaul of federal vaccine policy, accusing a departed director and top medical organizations of lying. (Hellmann and Cohen, 9/4)

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has no plans to try to lower the temperature around the upheaval he鈥檚 caused at his department. 鈥淲e are the sickest country in the world. That鈥檚 why we have to fire people at the CDC. They did not do their job,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淚 need to fire some of those people to make sure this doesn鈥檛 happen again.鈥 (Levien, 9/4)

The US health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, has suggested that Biden-era regulations expanding access to abortion pills could be rolled back because the Biden administration had 鈥渢wisted the data鈥 behind the pills. Kennedy made the remark more than an hour into a tense interrogation by members of the US Senate judiciary committee over his chaotic tenure at the health department, which has been marked by thousands of layoffs and the promotion of leaders with little background in public health and medicine. (Sherman, 9/4)

Almost every Democratic member of the Senate Finance Committee called on Robert F. Kennedy Jr to step down as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services following a major shakeup at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Eleven of the 12 Democratic Senators on the committee issued a statement Thursday demanding his resignation shortly before Kennedy was scheduled to testify before the committee about recent federal vaccine policy changes as well as the firing and resignations of several top CDC officials. (O鈥機onnell-Domenech, 9/4)

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., grilled Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy on his skepticism of vaccines Thursday, arguing that his actions fly in the face of one of President Donald Trump's biggest achievements. (Kapur, Leach and Khoriaty, 9/4)

President Donald Trump said Thursday that he did not watch Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at-times tense testimony in Congress, but is confident he 鈥渕eans very well.鈥 The secretary faced withering criticism from Democrats and mild rebuke from a handful of Republicans who worried that his stance on vaccines threatens Americans鈥 safety. (Johansen, 9/4)

More from the hearing 鈥

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. repeatedly cited inaccurate numbers and gave evasive responses to simple queries from lawmakers during a Senate hearing on Thursday, with one frustrated senator casting the cabinet head as "ignorant." Responding to Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), who raised concerns about the overprescription of stimulants and their side effects in kids, Kennedy stated that one in every five children in the U.S. takes these medications. (Firth, 9/4)

U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made myriad false and misleading claims on Thursday as he fielded questions examining his seven-month tenure leading the nation鈥檚 health agencies at a contentious three-hour hearing. Kennedy ignored government data, twisted legislation and pointed to unsubstantiated treatments while addressing topics such as COVID-19 vaccines, rural hospitals and school shootings. (Goldin, 9/4)

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. appeared before the Senate Finance Committee on Sept. 4 to explain his 鈥楳ake America Healthy Again鈥 agenda and defend sweeping changes to the CDC, vaccine policy and other federal health programs. Here are three of the central takeaways from the nearly three-hour hearing. 1. Mr. Kennedy鈥檚 testimony drew bipartisan criticism for his position on vaccines. Sen. Bill Cassidy, MD, R-La., had secured a commitment from Kennedy during his February confirmation that he would not limit Americans鈥 access to vaccines 鈥 a commitment the senator says Mr. Kennedy has broken. (Gamble and Condon, 9/4)

麻豆女优 Health News: RFK Jr. Faces Senate Finance Committee: A Live Discussion

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 testimony before the Senate Finance Committee follows the ouster last week of the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Susan Monarez. At least four other senior CDC officials resigned in protest. (9/4)

On autism and MAHA 鈥

CNN host Kasie Hunt and Sen.聽Markwayne Mullin聽(R-Okla.) got into a heated debate over Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 stances on vaccines, autism and several other issues that the Health and Human Services secretary defended during a congressional hearing Thursday. (Mastrangelo, 9/4)

US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pledged in April that there would be answers on the causes of autism this month. Since then, he has ousted public health officials, publicly rebuked studies showing no link between vaccines and autism, and said 鈥渋nterventions鈥 are 鈥渁lmost certainly鈥 responsible for causing rising autism rates. (Owermohle, 9/4)

Scientists provided the Trump administration with evidence of alcohol鈥檚 harms. Here鈥檚 why you still haven鈥檛 seen this new study. (Scott, 9/4)

Vaccines

Massachusetts, New York Break With FDA On Covid Vaccine Limitations

While Massachusetts will mandate insurance coverage for state-recommended shots, New York plans to give pharmacists the authority to offer vaccines to anyone over 3 without a prescription. Plus: Hawaii joins the West Coast Health Alliance; Georgia pumps the breaks on covid shots; and more.

Massachusetts became the first state in the country Thursday to require insurers to cover the cost of COVID shots and other inoculations recommended by state health officials, in another move to counter the Trump administration鈥檚 efforts to undo the long national consensus on vaccines. The rift was prompted by new federal limitations on who should receive COVID vaccines under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that have created confusion among consumers, pharmacies, and physicians and made it difficult for even those with demonstrated need to get booster shots. (Laughlin and Schmeiszer, 9/4)

In an effort to ensure more New Yorkers can get the latest Covid vaccines, Gov. Kathy Hochul is planning to sign an executive order that would authorize pharmacists to provide the shot to almost anyone who wants it, the governor鈥檚 office said Thursday. The executive order is intended to undo limits that the federal government has imposed. Last week, the Food and Drug Administration approved updated versions of the Covid vaccine, but authorized them only for people 65 and older or for younger people who have an underlying medical condition that makes Covid-19 more dangerous. Children remain eligible if a medical provider is consulted. (Goldstein, 9/4)

Hawaii is joining a coalition of West Coast, Democratic-led states forming a new public health alliance in opposition to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.聽California, Oregon and Washington state announced the alliance Wednesday, which聽officials say will provide 鈥渆vidence-based immunization guidance鈥 rooted in 鈥渟afety, efficacy, and transparency鈥 to ensure residents receive 鈥渃redible information free from political interference,鈥 according to a statement from California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D). (O鈥機onnell-Domenech, 9/4)

Big pharmacies and public health clinics in Georgia are not yet giving this year鈥檚 COVID-19 booster shots, or are putting new restrictions in place, amid vaccine uncertainty under Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy. Doctors hope the confusion will be resolved in a couple of weeks, when a federal committee appointed by Kennedy is scheduled to decide on whether to recommend the shot. It is not certain how the committee will vote. (Hart, 9/4)

Texas parents will no longer have to wait weeks for a vaccine exemption form to be mailed to them if they want their children opted out of state-required immunizations to attend school. This week, the state health agency quietly unveiled the new downloadable vaccine exemption form, the result of state Rep. Lacey Hull鈥檚 House Bill 1586 which went into effect on Monday. Along with the form, the Texas Department of State Health Services also published a document listing the benefits and risks of immunization. (Langford, 9/4)

Republican officials in Florida announced this week that they want to eliminate all vaccine mandates for schools. It鈥檚 not that simple: It will require action from state lawmakers. But the announcement raises several questions about the future spread of infectious diseases and the disproportionate impact on infants, children, the elderly and immunocompromised people in the state and country. (Rodriguez and Nittle, 9/4)

Michael Osterholm, a former Biden administration adviser on COVID-19, said Wednesday that 鈥淔lorida鈥檚 going to become a hotbed of transmission鈥 after Sunshine State officials announced they will seek to make the state the first in the U.S. to officially remove school vaccine mandates. 鈥淚 would have to tell you, as a parent or a grandparent, I wouldn鈥檛 want my kids to go into Florida in the years ahead, to go to Walt Disney World, or any place like that, because Florida鈥檚 going to become a hotbed of transmission by eliminating this particular mandate, and I think 鈥 unfortunately timely for that to be true,鈥 Osterholm told CNN鈥檚 Anderson Cooper on his show. (Suter, 9/4)

In other vaccine developments 鈥

The Department of Health and Human Services is preparing to issue a no-bid contract for a firm run by an ally of President Trump to poll Americans on their 鈥減erspectives around vaccines.鈥 The move follows a wide-reaching effort by the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to dismantle parts of the nation鈥檚 health infrastructure that develop and make recommendations for the use of vaccines. A day before the contract proposal was posted last week, Mr. Kennedy moved to fire the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention because of disagreements over his vaccine policies. The polling firm, HarrisX, is part of Stagwell, a marketing company led by Mark Penn, a former political adviser to Bill and Hillary Clinton who has now become a vocal supporter of Mr. Trump. (Cameron, 9/4)

Whistleblower complaints by two former top National Institutes of Health officials offer their inside accounts of the Trump administration鈥檚 targeting of vaccine science at the world鈥檚 largest funder of biomedical research and the reach of Matthew Memoli, the agency鈥檚 deputy director, in enacting those policies. (Oza and Molteni, 9/4)

Health Care Costs

HHS Broadens Catastrophic Coverage Eligibility On ACA Exchange

Starting Nov. 1, Affordable Care Act participants who don't qualify for the advanced subsidies or cost-sharing reductions may apply for a hardship exemption. In other news: ACA insurers might need to revise 2026 prices; companies and their employees are looking at higher health care costs; and more.

The Trump administration unveiled plans to expand access to catastrophic plans on the Affordable Care Act's (ACA's) exchanges as the expiry of enhanced premium tax credits looms. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said Thursday that consumers who do not qualify for the advanced subsidies or cost-sharing reductions can apply for a hardship exemption beginning Nov. 1, the first day of open enrollment for the marketplaces. (Minemyer, 9/4)

A federal court ruling could drive many exchange insurers to scrap their plans for 2026 鈥 again. Perhaps ironically, the latest complication facing health insurance exchange carriers is connected to a legal victory against a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services regulation that likely would suppress exchange membership. (Tepper, 9/4)

Employees of large and small companies are likely to face higher health care costs, with increases in premiums, bigger deductibles or co-pays, and will possibly lose some benefits next year, according to a large survey of companies nationwide that was released on Thursday. The survey of 1,700 companies, conducted by Mercer, a benefits consultant, indicated that employers are anticipating the sharpest increases in medical costs in about 15 years. Higher drug costs, rising hospital prices and greater demand for care are all contributing factors, experts said. (Abelson, 9/4)

On Medicaid cuts and the uninsured 鈥

Republican hopes of pursuing a second major domestic policy package this year are running into major roadblocks as they confront a lack of consensus and a grand, unifying goal 鈥 like the extension of sweeping tax cuts that held the last megabill together. The bearish view 鈥 already prevalent inside the Senate GOP 鈥 is now taking hold among some members of Speaker Mike Johnson鈥檚 leadership circle, after he was touting the possibility of a fresh party-line bill as he worked to push the first package across the line in July. (Hill and Carney, 9/5)

New Mexico鈥檚 governor is calling on state lawmakers to shore up safety net programs in response to federal spending cuts enacted by President Donald Trump, in an announcement Thursday that highlighted reduced federal support for Medicaid and food assistance programs. More than 40% of New Mexico residents are enrolled in Medicaid health care for people living in poverty or on the cusp 鈥 among the highest rates in the nation. (Lee, 9/5)

Jennifer Shigley can鈥檛 speak or walk without assistance. The 49-year-old also cannot feed or bathe herself. Her father, a retired child psychologist, described her as having the mental capacity of a toddler. 鈥淪he requires total care,鈥 Hal Shigley said. 鈥淭hank goodness she is in a facility where she鈥檚 taken good care of.鈥 (Baxley, 9/5)

麻豆女优 Health News: Trump Administration Investigates Medicaid Spending On Immigrants In Blue States

The Trump administration is taking its immigration crackdown to the health care safety net, launching Medicaid spending probes in at least six Democratic-led states that provide comprehensive health coverage to poor and disabled immigrants living in the U.S. without permanent legal status. (Hart and Shastri, 9/5)

麻豆女优 Health News: He Built Michigan's Medicaid Work Requirement System. Now He's Warning Other States

It was March 2020, and Robert Gordon was about to kick some 80,000 people off health insurance. As the Michigan state health director, he had spent the past year, and some $30 million in state tax dollars, trying to avoid that very thing. Gordon was a Democrat, a veteran of the Obama administration, and he did not want people to lose the Medicaid coverage they had recently gained through the Affordable Care Act. (Wells, 9/5)

In an effort to rein in spiraling spending on charity care, MetroHealth System is considering reducing free or discounted bills for some uninsured patients. The proposed reductions would hit, as an example, individuals making $39,000 to $63,000 annually, or a four-person family making $80,000 to $128,000 annually. (Washington, 9/5)

On Medicare Advantage 鈥

UCare will exit the Medicare Advantage market in 2026, the company announced Thursday, citing financial challenges in the business. As of Aug. 1, the nonprofit carrier had 186,700 Medicare Advantage members across Minnesota and Wisconsin, up 31.3% from the same period last year, according to data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Overall, the company is one of Minnesota鈥檚 largest health insurers, with 600,000 total enrollees. It is the state鈥檚 second-largest Medicare Advantage carrier, trailing Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, which has 242,500 members. (Tepper, 9/4)

Elevance Health will cut some Medicare Advantage plans and fully exit the Medicare Part D standalone prescription drug market next year. The for-profit Blue Cross and Blue Shield licensee will eliminate unprofitable Medicare Advantage plans covering approximately 150,000 individual and group members in total, Chief Financial Officer Mark Kaye said Thursday during the 2025 Wells Fargo Healthcare Conference. The company has prioritized HMO and Dual Special Needs Plan coverage for 2026, he said. (Tepper, 9/4)

Administration News

Trump Administration To Distribute Gilead's New HIV Meds To Millions

As plans for PEPFAR's future move forward, up to 2 million people in lower-income countries will receive Gilead Sciences' HIV prevention drugs. Meanwhile, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports how reinstated CDC staff were tasked with dismantling their own departments, including the Division of HIV Prevention.

After months of uncertainty, the Trump administration confirmed that it will work with Gilead Sciences and The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria to provide a groundbreaking HIV prevention drug to up to 2 million people in low- and middle-income countries. (Silverman and Mast, 9/4)

When the nation鈥檚 top public health agency in June reinstated more than 460 laid-off workers at the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, not everyone walked back into the job they had abruptly exited just a few months before. Instead, many 鈥 particularly in the Division of HIV Prevention 鈥 were tasked with the unexpected mission of dismantling their own departments, according to Yolanda Jacobs, a 20-year veteran of the CDC who serves as president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 2883. (Tong, 9/4)

More on federal funding and health research cuts 鈥

The president of Northwestern University announced his resignation Thursday, departing as the school contends with the Trump administration鈥檚 cuts to federal research funding and demands to address allegations of antisemitism. (McDaniel, 9/4)

A judge ruled that the Trump administration broke the law in canceling billions in federal funds for Harvard. Whether the money is returned matters for the rest of higher education. (Blinder, 9/4)

The cuts include 34 immediate layoffs, the closing of dozens of open positions and reductions made this summer in response to the elimination of federal funding for education programming. (Mullin, 9/4)

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has eliminated its Division of Blood Disorders and Public Health Genomics, putting the future of a critical federal program for Floridians with sickle cell in jeopardy. The Sickle Cell Data Collection (SCDC) program, active in 16 states including Florida, is the nation's only federally funded initiative tracking long-term data on people living with the disease. Florida has one of the highest numbers of sickle cell diagnoses in the country. (9/4)

On noncompete agreements 鈥

The Federal Trade Commission asked the public to weigh in on noncompete contract provisions, even though district courts have blocked the commission鈥檚 nationwide ban on most of those agreements. The agency issued a request for information Thursday, seeking detail about employers who unfairly restrict employees from working for a rival organization through noncompetes. These agreements can stunt wage growth, limit competition, reduce innovation and inflate prices, the FTC said. (Kacik, 9/4)

Federal Appeals Court Rules Alligator Alcatraz May Stay Open

The ruling came Thursday, halting a Miami judge's ruling to break down the Everglades immigration center. Also: U.S. Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.) is fighting to release a woman with cancer from immigration detention; fear of deportation is putting health and hunger at risk; and more.

A federal appeals court on Thursday put on hold a Miami judge鈥檚 order to dismantle the immigrant detention center in the Everglades, even as Florida officials said operations were winding down. Environmentalists and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians sued the state and federal governments for failing to conduct what they say is a required environmental study before commandeering the 39-acre site under the National Environmental Policy Act, known as NEPA. The Florida Division of Emergency Management led the project to erect tents for detainees in chain-link cages, and also to bring in portable air conditioners, lighting, and housing for 1,000 staff. The site has no electricity or plumbing, so drinking and bathing water must be trucked in daily, and waste and sewage trucked out. (Rozsa, 9/4)

U.S. Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.) is demanding immediate medical care for an Arizona woman with cancer who was detained at the Eloy Detention Center. The Democrat held a press conference at the U.S. Capitol to advocate on behalf of Arbella 鈥淵ari鈥 Rodr铆guez M谩rquez, who has leukemia, on Thursday. 鈥淵ari was diagnosed with cancer over 10 years ago and has not been able to see a specialist since she was detained in February,鈥 Ansari said during the event. (O'Sullivan, 9/4)

For years, Susanna Saul has been reassuring some of her clients that it鈥檚 safe to apply for public benefits, even if they鈥檙e not citizens. Now, she isn鈥檛 sure what to say. Saul directs legal programs at Her Justice, a Manhattan-based nonprofit that provides free legal assistance to impoverished women and their children. Its clients include victims of trafficking and domestic violence who, unlike most undocumented people, are eligible for Medicaid under decades-old federal exceptions. (Zou, 9/3)

How Supreme Court justices feel about recent rulings 鈥

Is the country in a constitutional crisis? Not according to Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. 鈥淟ook, I think the Constitution is alive and well,鈥 Barrett said Thursday at an event to promote her new book, Listening to the Law. She cast aside concerns by legal scholars over the ongoing clash between the Trump administration and the courts. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what a constitutional crisis would look like,鈥 Barrett, who was appointed by Trump in 2020, added. 鈥淚 think that our country remains committed to the rule of law. I think we have functioning courts. I think a constitutional crisis 鈥 we would clearly be in one if the rule of law crumbles. But that is not the place where we are.鈥 (Oorden, 9/4)

Speaking at a judicial conference in Memphis, Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh expressed sympathy for the district-court judges whose rulings the Supreme Court has repeatedly paused. He called trial-court judges 鈥渢he front lines of American justice鈥 and thanked them for helping to 鈥減reserve and protect the Constitution and the rule of law of the United States.鈥 (Schwartz, 9/4)

Gun Violence

After Minneapolis Shooting, Feds May Ban Gun Ownership For Trans People

The discussions focus on whether to classify being transgender as a mental illness, which would disqualify individuals from the right to own guns under existing rules. More mental health news looks at LSD to reduce anxiety, a pill to heal the brain post-stroke, and more.

Senior Justice Department officials have held multiple meetings since last week鈥檚 deadly Minneapolis Catholic school shooting to consider banning transgender people from owning firearms, according to two people familiar with the discussions. The talks 鈥 described as in the early stages by the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations 鈥 began after a 23-year-old transgender person allegedly carried out the Aug. 27 shooting that killed two children and injured 17 others during a Mass at Annunciation Catholic School. (Stein and Allison, 9/4)

The shooter who killed two schoolchildren and injured 21 other people at a Catholic church in Minneapolis visited a suburban gun shop the weekend before the attack, but the owner of the store said Thursday that his staff saw no warning signs in their interactions. (Vancleave and Karnowski, 9/4)

Eight days after the mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis, two children are still in the hospital. Ten-year-old Weston Halsne is recovering well after surgery on Wednesday to remove a bullet fragment from his neck. A funeral for one of the two children killed, 8-year-old Fletcher Merkel, is planned for Sunday. Together, Children鈥檚 Minnesota and Hennepin Healthcare 鈥 both Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Centers 鈥 treated 17 patients immediately after the shooting. When a mass casualty or crisis happens, there鈥檚 a careful choreography that starts even before ambulances reach the emergency room. (Wurzer and Stockton, 9/4)

In other mental health news 鈥

LSD reduced symptoms of anxiety in a midstage study published Thursday, paving the way for additional testing and possible medical approval of a psychedelic drug that has been banned in the U.S. for more than a half century. The results from drugmaker Mindmed tested several doses of LSD in patients with moderate-to-severe generalized anxiety disorder, with the benefits lasting as long as three months. The company plans to conduct follow-up studies to confirm the results and then apply for Food and Drug Administration approval. (Perrone, 9/4)

Neurologists are exploring medications that would help the brain recover after a stroke or traumatic injury. (Gross, 9/4)

An ultrasound 鈥渉elmet鈥 offers potential new ways for treating neurological conditions without surgery or other invasive procedures, a study has shown. The device can target brain regions 1,000 times smaller than ultrasound can, and could replace existing approaches such as deep brain stimulation (DBS) in treating Parkinson鈥檚 disease. It also holds potential for conditions such as depression, Tourette syndrome, chronic pain, Alzheimer鈥檚 and addiction. (Drobnjak O'Brien, 9/5)

State Watch

Minnesota Judge Dismisses Lawsuit, Keeps Abortion Protections In Place

The lawsuit, brought by anti-abortion organizations and crisis pregnancy centers, sought to limit abortion access, claiming that the state's abortion laws are too permissive. Other states in the news: North Carolina, Virginia, New Jersey, Wyoming, New Hampshire, and more.

A federal judge in Minnesota has dismissed a lawsuit that sought to limit abortion access in the state.聽Plaintiffs included crisis pregnancy centers and anti-abortion organizations representing several women who said they had abortions that weren鈥檛 voluntary. They filed the suit against state officials and abortion providers, claiming that Minnesota鈥檚 abortion laws are too permissive.聽(Timar-Wilcox, 9/5)

More reproductive health news from across the U.S. 鈥

A federal judge on Wednesday blocked the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission from enforcing the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act against the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops 鈥渋n a way that would require them to make accommodations for abortions, contraception, sterilization, artificial reproductive technologies, or surrogacy鈥 in violation of their religious beliefs.聽(Shumway, 9/4)

UNC Health is aiming to build a new pipeline of OB-GYNs equipped not only to practice in rural communities, but to take on leadership roles where they can address longstanding disparities in maternal care access and outcomes. The Chapel Hill, N.C.-based system recently created a first-of-a-kind obstetrics and gynecology fellowship training program dedicated to rural women鈥檚 health. The two-year program will train physicians out of UNC Health Rockingham in Eden and UNC Health Lenoir in Kinston, which both serve rural counties. (Cerutti, 9/4)

Walking through the doors of Grace Breast Imaging & Medical Spa feels like entering a living room, complete with comfortable seating and a miniature refrigerator stocked with refreshments. The calming atmosphere extends beyond the reception area. Newer mammography systems, like the one at the clinic in Clive, Iowa, are designed to make a patient more comfortable during a diagnostic test that many have historically avoided due to pain or discomfort. (Dubinsky, 9/4)

On measles, rabies, and whooping cough 鈥

Health officials in New Jersey and Virginia yesterday reported new measles cases. The New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH)聽alerted residents to a new measles case in a resident of Bergen County that's not linked to any previously reported cases in the state. It鈥檚 the tenth measles case recorded in the state this year. In Virginia, the Virginia Department of Health聽confirmed the state's fourth measles case this year is in a school-age student in the eastern region of the state who had recently traveled internationally.聽(Dall, 9/4)

The Wyoming Department of Health is done notifying local health departments for the more than 200 guests from 38 states and seven countries potentially exposed to rabies while staying at the Jackson Lake Lodge in Grand Teton National Park. (McMurtry, 9/4)

The number of cases of whooping cough in New Hampshire this year are already nearly as high as the total number of cases in 2024. According to the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services, there were 69 cases of whooping cough in New Hampshire last year, and as of June 30, the state has already seen 63 cases of the disease, which is also known as pertussis. (Richardson, 9/4)

In other health and wellness news 鈥

Former president Joe Biden, 82, recently underwent surgery to remove skin cancer lesions on his head, his spokesperson said Thursday. Kelly Scully, a spokesperson for Biden, confirmed that the former president recently had Mohs surgery, a procedure that involves cutting away layers of skin until there are no longer signs of cancer. (Vazquez, 9/4)

Weekend Reading

Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed

Each week, 麻豆女优 Health News finds longer stories for you to enjoy. Today's selections are on cancer, birth control, PFAS, heat waves, rats, and more.

The experiences of cancer patients have long been told through a narrow, often sanitized lens 鈥 framed as battles to be fought and wrapped in neatly packaged survival stories. But today, a new generation of patients is rewriting that script. As cancer rates rise among adolescents and adults under 50 鈥 even as overall rates decline 鈥 many are making sure their experiences are seen, heard and understood in all their complicated, unfiltered realities. (Cornejo, Sitz, Monroe and Conrad, 8/31)

As social media and wellness podcasters bombard young women with messages about the pill, many are questioning what they鈥檝e long been told. (Goldberg, 9/2)

When Marya Zlatnik meets with women in the early stages of pregnancy, she gives them the standard advice: take prenatal vitamins; avoid alcohol, smoking and eating raw fish. But for certain patients, the maternal fetal medicine specialist at the University of California at San Francisco, who specializes in high-risk pregnancies, adds another warning: Avoid plastic. (Osaka, Hulley-Jones and Ducroquet, 9/4)

Every time her middle school classmates streamed outside for monthly fire drills, Kira Tiller had to stay behind, worrying about what would happen to her in a real emergency. Flashing bright lights can trigger seizures for Ms. Tiller, who has epilepsy. So her teachers in Gainesville, Va., would send her to a windowless office during drills to avoid the alarm strobes. When her family requested a real emergency plan, administrators just said they would figure it out. She remembers thinking, 鈥淚 could literally be left behind to die.鈥 (Rao, 8/25)

Earlier this summer, Glen Kenny spent three days confined to a special chamber inside his University of Ottawa lab where the daytime temperature was set at 104 degrees Fahrenheit. The purpose was to see how the researcher鈥檚 61-year-old body held up in brutal indoor temperatures observed during a 2021 heat wave that killed hundreds of Canadians. (Hirji and Clark, 8/29)

The nonprofit APOPO has worked in Morogoro, Tanzania, for more than two decades to train African giant pouched rats for lifesaving missions. (Denton, 9/4)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Florida Will Endanger Kids By Ending School Vaccine Mandates; Susan Monarez Shares Her Side

Editorial writers discuss these public health issues and others.

Vaccine policy in the US is rapidly dividing into two opposing camps: state leaders who are prioritizing access to shots, and those who are taking increasingly aggressive steps to undermine confidence in them. (Lisa Jarvis, 9/4)

I served for 29 days as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Senate confirmed me to ensure that unbiased evidence serves our nation鈥檚 health, and for doing that, I lost my job. America鈥檚 children could lose far more. (Former CDC Director Susan Monarez, 9/4)

States are often called the laboratories of democracy, but Florida is on the path to becoming a petri dish. See the Sunshine State鈥檚 move this week to end vaccine mandates in public schools. (9/4)

As a father, a physician and a governor, it is my responsibility to protect every community in my state 鈥 especially the most vulnerable 鈥 from threats to their health and safety, and to advocate for the public health of the entire country. That is why I am making an appeal to Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to resign as secretary of Health and Human Services. Mr. Kennedy鈥檚 actions as our country鈥檚 chief public health officer are not just irresponsible and misguided; they are dangerous. (Dr. Josh Green, 9/4)

How many times is Robert F. Kennedy Jr. going to be allowed to lie right to U.S. senators鈥 faces about his deliberate dismantling of America鈥檚 vaccine shields before they finally insist that President Donald Trump remove this dangerous anti-science zealot from the nation鈥檚 top medical post? (9/4)

Americans trust the Food and Drug Administration to make life-and-death decisions in the open. Yet in recent months, the agency has increasingly convened ad-hoc 鈥渆xpert panels鈥 that meet without Federal Register notice, formal transcripts, standard conflict of interest reviews, or recorded votes. These expert panels have been tapped to help reshape policy on talc safety, infant formula, hormone replacement, and antidepressant therapy 鈥 without the guardrails that have long protected patients, markets, and the FDA鈥檚 reputation. (G. Caleb Alexander, 9/5)

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