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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, May 4 2026 8:36 AM

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 3

  • HHS鈥 Healthy Food Agenda Puts Hospitals on Notice About Patients鈥 Meals
  • She Survived 2 Shootings. Research Helps Explain Why Her聽Pain Persists Years Later.
  • Journalists Share Latest on Baby Formula Safety, Estrogen Patches, and Postcancer Costs

Reproductive Health 1

  • Mifepristone Makers Ask High Court To Restore Mail Access To Abortion Pill

Medicaid 1

  • Nebraska Starts Enforcing Medicaid Work Rules; 25K May Lose Plans

Administration News 1

  • Foreign Doctors Can Again Get Visas Allowing Them To Practice In US

State Watch 1

  • Proposed Trump Administration Rule Would Prevent Trans People From Taking Refuge At Homeless Shelters

Health Industry 1

  • After Merger, New Hampshire's Exeter Hospital Struggles To Maintain Standard Of Care, Patients Say

Public Health 1

  • Suspected Hantavirus Outbreak On Cruise Ship Kills 3, Sickens At Least 3 Others

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Are The 'Blue Zones' A Fraud?; Oversight Is Necessary For FDA's Fast-Track Of Psychedelics

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

HHS鈥 Healthy Food Agenda Puts Hospitals on Notice About Patients鈥 Meals

The backlash was immediate after the Trump administration served notice that hospitals and nursing homes should limit sugary drinks and dietary supplements in favor of what the Department of Health and Human Services terms 鈥渞eal food.鈥 ( Stephanie Armour , 5/4 )

She Survived 2 Shootings. Research Helps Explain Why Her聽Pain Persists Years Later.

Witnessing a shooting, hearing gunfire, losing someone, or living in a violent area can leave people with chronic pain and stress long afterward. ( Alma Beauvais, The Trace , 5/4 )

Journalists Share Latest on Baby Formula Safety, Estrogen Patches, and Postcancer Costs

麻豆女优 Health News journalists made the rounds on national and local media recently to discuss topical stories. Here鈥檚 a collection of their appearances. ( 5/2 )

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Summaries Of The News:

Reproductive Health

Mifepristone Makers Ask High Court To Restore Mail Access To Abortion Pill

The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, based in New Orleans, sided with Louisiana that dispensing the drug via telehealth threatens the safety of pregnant women and the sovereignty of the state, which bans abortion in nearly all instances. The ruling also halts access to mifepristone for non-abortion purposes, such as easing miscarriages, Politico reports.

Two companies that make the abortion drug mifepristone asked the Supreme Court on Saturday to hit pause on Friday鈥檚 lower court ruling that cut off telemedicine access to the pills nationwide, including in states where abortion is legal. The emergency appeals ask the high court to temporarily restore a federal policy that allows the pills to be prescribed online and delivered by mail, arguing that failing to do so would cause 鈥渋mmediate chaos鈥 and leave patients around the country in limbo. (Ollstein, 5/2)

Friday's ruling affects all states, even those without abortion restrictions. "This is a huge access issue for patients that haven't got providers close by, or providers close by who are willing to prescribe," said Josh Thorburn, owner of Eddie's Pharmacy in Los Angeles. (Schoenbaum and Mulvihill, 5/2)

U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley has opened a new front in the fight about medication abortion, pushing legislation to revoke federal approval of mifepristone, urging the Justice Department to investigate its manufacturer and helping launch a national political group aimed at reshaping abortion debates after a string of losses on the ballot. The push has made Missouri a central arena in the national fight over mifepristone. (Spoerre, 5/4)

More reproductive health news 鈥

Embarking on a second term about six months after the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 conservative majority struck down the federal right to abortion, Gov. JB Pritzker declared in his January 2023 inaugural address that the new realities facing those seeking the procedure 鈥渄emand that we establish a constitutional protection for reproductive rights in Illinois.鈥 In the four legislative sessions since, however, Pritzker and the Democratic-controlled Illinois General Assembly have taken no visible steps toward realizing that goal. (Petrella, 5/3)

The path leading to the track at a Durham middle school on Saturday was marked with signs bearing the names of Black women who died from pregnancy-related causes. (Bonner, 5/3)

Infection remains a top cause of maternal mortality with most infection-related maternal deaths being preventable, a descriptive study of Maternal Mortality Review Committee (MMRC) data found. (Robertson, 5/3)

Rates of menopause hormone therapy significantly differed by racial group, a retrospective cohort study found. Non-Hispanic white patients had the highest utilization of menopause hormone therapy at 10.8% while Black patients had the lowest rate at 5.4%, reported Nikita Chigullapally, an MD candidate at the Carle Illinois College of Medicine in Urbana, Illinois, in a presentation at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) annual meeting. (Robertson, 5/3)

麻豆女优 Health News: Journalists Share Latest On Baby Formula Safety, Estrogen Patches, And Postcancer Costs

C茅line Gounder, 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 editor-at-large for public health, discussed the results of the FDA鈥檚 largest baby formula safety test on CBS News 24/7鈥檚 The Daily Report on April 29. She also discussed how women seeking treatment for menopause symptoms are facing a shortage of estrogen patches on CBS News鈥 CBS Mornings on April 27. (5/2)

Medicaid

Nebraska Starts Enforcing Medicaid Work Rules; 25K May Lose Plans

It's the first state to roll out the requirements, and critics blasted Nebraska leaders for doing so eight months before the deadline. As NBC News reported, new Medicaid enrollees will need to submit proof that they鈥檝e worked the required number of hours or that they qualify for an exemption. People already on Medicaid will have until at least the end of July to do the same.

Nebraska on Friday became the first state to implement Medicaid work requirements, eight months ahead of the federal deadline mandated in President Donald Trump鈥檚 鈥渂ig, beautiful bill.鈥 The move is expected to strip coverage from around 25,000 residents who qualified for the program under the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 Medicaid expansion, according to the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan research group. An estimated 72,000 Nebraskans will be subject to the policy, which applies to 鈥渁ble-bodied鈥 adults ages 19 to 64. (Lovelace Jr., 5/1)

Voters in seven states bucked their conservative leaders to expand Medicaid at the ballot box. Now officials in six of them are deploying tactics to make the upcoming implementation of work requirements especially strict, which could dramatically reduce the number of people covered. (Ollstein, 5/3)

Health systems aiming to scale hospital-at-home programs are using health equity as a rallying point in their efforts to convince more state Medicaid programs to pay for the care. Providers argue states that don鈥檛 pay for in-home acute care are denying poor patients the same care options offered to patients covered by private insurance and Medicare. They also say states could be missing opportunities to identify social determinants of health that can negatively affect patient outcomes and drive up Medicaid spending. (Eastabrook, 5/1)

On SNAP benefits 鈥

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins this week attributed a multimillion-person drop in the number of participants receiving food stamps through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program to the tamping down of fraud and an improved economy. But experts discount those factors, saying the primary driver of the decrease was more likely new legislation that changed how the program runs. (Goldin, 5/1)

In other news from Capitol Hill 鈥

The bipartisan reauthorization would add five more years to the Rural Community Hospital Demonstration, a payment model for "tweener" rural hospitals. (Muoio, 5/1)

U.S. Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV) and Ted Budd (R-NC) on Thursday introduced the Veterans Protection from Fraud Act of 2026, a bipartisan proposal aimed at increasing criminal penalties for individuals who deliberately target veterans in fraud schemes. The bill would impose a sentencing enhancement of up to 10 years in prison for defendants convicted of fraud offenses that intentionally target veterans. Lawmakers say the measure is designed to deter increasingly common scams that exploit veterans鈥 benefits, financial stability, and trust in government institutions. (Fuller, 5/1)

Hundreds of thousands of Americans have switched to health insurance that covers a lot less of their care this year. Republicans hope a lot more will follow them. The shift since January was driven by GOP lawmakers鈥 decision at the end of December to reduce the help the government provides to people who don鈥檛 get insurance through work, but instead buy it in the Obamacare marketplace. The reduction in those subsidies sent Obamacare customers searching for plans that cost less. (Hooper, 5/3)

Administration News

Foreign Doctors Can Again Get Visas Allowing Them To Practice In US

Some hospitals were forced to put physicians on administrative leave after a policy put in place by the Department of Homeland Security in January froze decisions on visa extensions, work permits, and green cards for citizens of 39 countries, The New York Times reported.

Foreign doctors will be able to receive visas allowing them to practice in the United States, after the Trump administration quietly changed a policy to exempt them from a travel ban. A Department of Homeland Security policy stemming from a travel ban that was put in place in January had frozen decisions on visa extensions, work permits and green cards for citizens of 39 countries. As The New York Times reported last month, some physicians were subsequently placed on administrative leave by hospitals, and many others faced the imminent threat of being forced to stop working. (Jordan, 5/3)

The budding scientist had left India for the U.S. for her Ph.D., because as she saw it, no other country offered the same opportunities for researchers. Set to finish her doctorate this summer, she also had a postdoctoral fellowship lined up in America. Now those plans have changed. (Joseph, 5/4)

The reports detail how guards have increasingly used chemical agents and physical tactics on detainees, including groups demanding adequate water, food and medical care. (MacMillan, Ba Tran, Cornejo and Melgar, 5/4)

The number of detainees at Mississippi鈥檚 Adams County Correctional Center appears to have nosedived in the past few weeks, leaving several housing units vacant. (Joshi, 5/1)

More Trump administration updates 鈥

Leaders in Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 Make America Healthy Again movement are outraged over President Donald Trump鈥檚 surgeon general nominee switch. Since Trump announced on Thursday that Nicole Saphier, a radiologist and former Fox News medical contributor, would replace Casey Means, a close ally of the health secretary, as the president鈥檚 pick for the nation鈥檚 鈥渢op doctor,鈥 they鈥檝e rushed to social media to share why they believe Trump鈥檚 decision is short sighted. (Friedman, 5/2)

麻豆女优 Health News: HHS鈥 Healthy Food Agenda Puts Hospitals On Notice About Patients鈥 Meals

Complaints about hospital food are certainly not new, and Jell-O and fruit juice are often the butt of related jokes. But the Trump administration has recently upped the ante. It is urging the public to report hospitals and nursing homes that serve sugary drinks, nutrition shakes, or meals that it says don鈥檛 meet dietary guidelines established last year by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, with officials vowing to withhold millions of dollars in federal funding if violations occur. (Armour, 5/4)

Mindbending may be just the word to describe the Oval Office ceremony on April 18, when President Trump ordered federal agencies to speed up research into the potential therapeutic uses of illegal psychedelic compounds like LSD, peyote and MDMA. Here was a law-and-order Republican and lifelong teetotaler championing the hallucinogenic substances that a previous Republican president, Richard Nixon, had condemned as 鈥減ublic enemy No. 1.鈥 (Jacobs, 5/3)

Also 鈥

The daughter of Iranian immigrants, Asal Sayas worked in the White House and Senate, lobbied for AIDS research and became a tireless champion for people with cancer. (Smith, 5/2)

State Watch

Proposed Trump Administration Rule Would Prevent Trans People From Taking Refuge At Homeless Shelters

A rule unveiled last week would require federally funded shelters to board people based on their birth sex. The proposal now goes through a 60-day comment period. The 19th reports that an estimated 40% of the nation鈥檚 homeless youth population identifies as LGBTQ+.

The Trump administration鈥檚 push to exclude transgender Americans is moving to the nation鈥檚 homeless shelters. On Tuesday, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) introduced a proposed rule that requires federally funded shelters to house prospective tenants based on their birth sex alone. (Sosin, 5/1)

State lawmakers declined to back a Trump-inspired plan to move 1,300 homeless people to a campus on the edge of Salt Lake City, but supporters are trying to keep the plan鈥檚 spirit alive. (DeParle, 5/4)

More health news from across the U.S. 鈥

A bill awaiting Gov. Ron DeSantis' signature creates a state board of Naturopathic Medicine to assist the Department of Health in overseeing naturopathic doctors in the state. Opponents say naturopathy is not supported by science. (Maguire, 5/3)

The Bay Area could be in for an earlier and longer mosquito season this spring and summer 鈥 even as officials race to contain the potential explosion of a new invasive mosquito species that is already spreading in parts of the East and South Bay. A mild winter, warm stretches of weather in February and March, and a rainy spring this year have created an ideal habitat for mosquito breeding, which means more mosquito production and more chances for the transmission of mosquito-borne diseases like West Nile, the main disease of concern in California. (Ho, 5/3)

麻豆女优 Health News: She Survived 2 Shootings. Research Helps Explain Why Her聽Pain Persists Years Later

In 2019, Mia Tretta, then a high school freshman at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, California, was struck in the stomach by a round from a .45-caliber semiautomatic handgun fired by a schoolmate. Two students were killed during the attack, including her best friend, and two others were injured. When she graduated from high school, she enrolled at Brown University, the scene of another shooting in December 2025, while she was studying for finals in her dorm room. (Beauvais, 5/4)

After a potluck supper, a short guided meditation and a quick lesson in resistance singing, a couple dozen people made their way to a quiet room at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta. As a choir warmed up downstairs, they gathered 鈥 some strangers, some friends - to discuss a topic that鈥檚 normally off-limits: death. (Christensen, 5/1)

鈥淭he students actually do learn from me,鈥 said Karl Arps, who has been an EMT instructor at Fox Valley Technical College for 19 years. (Page, 5/4)

On social media and mental health 鈥

New Mexico state prosecutors are seeking fundamental changes to Meta鈥檚 social media apps and algorithms to safeguard children in the second phase of a landmark trial on allegations that platforms such as Instagram have created a public safety hazard. Opening statements are scheduled Monday in the three-week bench trial to decide whether the platforms of Meta, which also owns Facebook and WhatsApp, pose a public nuisance under state law. (Lee, 5/4)

Cellphone bans got devices out of students鈥 hands, according to the first large study. But behavior and academics have not improved, at least so far. (Goldstein, 5/4)

Health Industry

After Merger, New Hampshire's Exeter Hospital Struggles To Maintain Standard Of Care, Patients Say

Exeter Health Resources in 2023 merged with Beth Israel Lahey Health, which had pledged to maintain and expand access to clinical services. But in 2024, cuts were made to pediatric dental care, neurology, podiatry, and the advanced life support paramedic intercept service, The Portsmouth Herald reported.

Exeter Hospital patients say they are scrambling for answers about care after recent service cuts and are questioning the benefits of Exeter Health Resources merger with Beth Israel Lahey Health. (Sullivan, 5/4)

In other healthcare industry news 鈥

Baptist Health plans to eliminate multiple services and clinics at its Fort Smith hospital. The cuts will affect an estimated 150 employees, including 10 physicians, according to a statement from the Little Rock, Arkansas-based system. The layoffs will take place over the next 60 days. (DeSilva, 5/1)

The Tallahassee branch of the NAACP and a group of Tallahassee residents claim Tallahassee Memorial Hospital would be operating without a license due to it and Florida State University still negotiating a lease. (Wood, 5/2)

State and local leaders are raising red flags over a proposed combination of WakeMed Health & Hospitals with Charlotte-based Atrium Health. They want more time to scrutinize the deal, citing concerns about costs and competition. (Crouch and Hoban, 5/4)

Dozens of nurses and community members picketed outside of the University Medical Center of New Orleans on Friday (May 1) morning after accusing the hospital of bad faith bargaining in a federal labor complaint.聽鈥淯MC, you鈥檙e no good, treat your patients like you should,鈥 the protesters chanted during their march on the corner of Canal and S. Galvez streets.聽Friday marked the first day of the nurses鈥 five-day strike 鈥 their longest since they entered contract negotiations. (Parker, 5/1)

In the back room of a fire station, Jill Ridenhour opens a package. Printed on the side, in all caps, it reads 鈥淗uman Blood.鈥 Ridenhour is a field supervisor for emergency medical services at Summit Fire and EMS in Colorado鈥檚 ski country. She pulls out a clear pouch filled with dark liquid and examines it. (Cohen, 5/1)

Public Health

Suspected Hantavirus Outbreak On Cruise Ship Kills 3, Sickens At Least 3 Others

CNN reported that the three who died were cruise passengers on the MV Hondius, said Oceanwide Expeditions, the company that operates the ship. It's currently anchored at Cape Verde, off the west coast of Africa. Passengers won't be allowed to disembark, the country's health minister said.

Three people are dead and at least three others are sick after a suspected outbreak of hantavirus aboard a cruise ship sailing in the Atlantic Ocean, the World Health Organization (WHO) said Sunday. The three dead were cruise passengers on the MV Hondius, said Oceanwide Expeditions, the company that operates the ship, which is currently anchored in Praia, the capital of Cape Verde, an island nation off the west coast of Africa. Passengers will not be allowed to disembark in Cape Verde, the country鈥檚 health minister Maria da Luz Lima told Radio Cabo Verde on Sunday. However, local health authorities have visited the ship and assessed two symptomatic crew members 鈥渞equiring urgent medical care,鈥 Oceanwide Expeditions said in its statement. (Harvey, 5/4)

In other health and wellness news 鈥

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA)聽approved the drug Auvelity this week for the treatment of agitation in adults with Alzheimer's dementia. The聽extended-release tablet is the first FDA-approved medication for this condition that is not an anti-psychotic. Anti-psychotics carry serious risks including stroke, sedation and increased death in older adults, according to the FDA. Having a non-antipsychotic聽option may be safer for patients, experts say. (Miao and Joseph, 5/1)

By the time doctors detect pancreatic cancer, it鈥檚 often too late to treat effectively. But a new study suggests that artificial intelligence might be able to find signs of the disease before tumors are visible on a scan. An AI model developed at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, detected abnormalities on patients鈥 CT scans up to three years before they were diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, according to research published this week in the journal Gut. (Bendix, 5/2)

Specific bacteria in the gut could predict a person鈥檚 risk of developing Parkinson鈥檚 disease years before symptoms appear, new research suggests. Led by researchers from University College London (UCL), an observational study analyzed the gut microbes of 271 patients in the U.K. who had been diagnosed with Parkinson鈥檚. (Rudy, 4/30)

In recall updates 鈥

New Zealand infant formula maker a2 Milk Co. is recalling batches of product sold in the US after detecting a toxin linked to vomiting and diarrhea, marking its first brush with a contamination scare that has rattled the global industry. Three batches of a2 Platinum USA-label formula have been recalled after manufacturer Synlait Milk Ltd. identified cereulide, a2 said. The recall, which began on May 1, impacts just the US and not the company鈥檚 most lucrative market in China. No confirmed incidents of infant illness or harm have been reported, it said. (Withers, 5/3)

A federal investigation into a multistate outbreak of a foodborne bacterium that hospitalized three people is over, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In total, the CDC identified nine people across three states who were sickened with Escherichia coli after eating cheddar cheese or drinking milk from Raw Farm, LLC, a dairy in California's Central Valley that sells unpasteurized products. (Boden, 5/1)

Second Nature Brands has issued a recall of its Keto Crunch Smart Mix on Friday after discovering the product may contain undeclared cashews, pistachios and cherries, posing a potential risk to consumers with allergies. The recall was announced on Saturday by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which warned people with allergies or severe sensitivities to these ingredients could face serious or life-threatening reactions if they consume the affected product. (Marsden, 5/3)

In global news 鈥

Ukraine is intensifying drone strikes on Russian oil facilities, hitting a key Black Sea refinery four times in two weeks and setting off a days-long carcinogenic blaze that environmentalists say represents one of the country鈥檚 worst ecological disasters since the fall of the Soviet Union. A plume of black acrid smoke once again rose over Russia鈥檚 Black Sea city of Tuapse on Friday after Ukraine struck the refinery and oil terminal there overnight, the fourth in a spate of attacks that have also caused oily droplets of 鈥渂lack rain鈥 to fall on residents and contaminated more than 30 miles of coastline as an oil slick spread. (Abbakumova and Belton, 5/4)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Are The 'Blue Zones' A Fraud?; Oversight Is Necessary For FDA's Fast-Track Of Psychedelics

Opinion writers tackle these public health topics.

When French geneticist Jean-Francois Deleuze first launched the AGENOMICS study in 2022, he hoped to identify genetic patterns among 1,200 French citizens who鈥檇 lived more than 100 years and to compare those to centenarians hailing from one of the world-famous 鈥渂lue zones.鈥 Then he started having doubts. (Shelley Wood and Eric J. Topol, 5/4)

The attention to psychedelics is overdue, and there鈥檚 a real opportunity to build a stronger scientific base for a promising field. Yet this area of medicine also demands extra care 鈥 or the US risks unleashing complex therapies into an infrastructure unprepared to support them. (Lisa Jarvis, 5/4)

Prices at hospitals have grown faster than prices in virtually any other sector of the economy. (Zack Cooper, 5/4)

They operate like big businesses while not providing enough charity care. (Scott Hodge, 5/4)

A recently published paper delivers a finding that should be well known to every executive in Western pharma: China has gone from accounting for less than 8% of global clinical trials in 2010 to surpassing the United States in annual registered trial volume by 2020, reaching more than 5,000 trials per year in 2024. Eighty-eight percent of that growth, among private-sector sponsors, was driven by domestic Chinese firms, not multinationals relocating R&D. (Dennis Kwok, 5/4)

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