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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
RFK Jr. Struggles To Navigate Frustrated Supporters and a Demanding Boss
Leaders of the "Make America Healthy Again鈥 movement cheered the ascent of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to Health and Human Services secretary, but their wish list is far from being realized.
Beyond Ivy League, RFK Jr.鈥檚 NIH Slashed Science Funding Across States That Backed Trump
A 麻豆女优 Health News analysis underscores how the terminations have spared no part of the country, politically or geographically. Of the organizations that had grants cut in the first month, about 40% are in states President Donald Trump won in November.
Political Cartoon: 'Health & Safety?'
麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Health & Safety?'" by Ellis Nadler.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
THANKS FOR YOUR SERVICE
VA fires thousands.
鈥 Barbara Skoglund
Crisis line besieged with gloom.
Who will answer phone?
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Summaries Of The News:
Administration News
Trump Administration May Cut A Third Of HHS' Discretionary Budget
The Trump administration is seeking to deeply slash budgets for federal health programs, a roughly one-third cut in discretionary spending by the Department of Health and Human Services, according to a preliminary budget document obtained by The Washington Post. The HHS budget draft, known as a 鈥減assback,鈥 offers the first full look at the health and social service priorities of President Donald Trump鈥檚 Office of Management and Budget as it prepares to send his 2026 fiscal year budget request to Congress. (Sun, Johnson, Roubein, Achenbach and Weber, 4/16)
麻豆女优 Health News: RFK Jr. Struggles To Navigate Frustrated Supporters And A Demanding Boss
After the Senate voted to confirm Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Health and Human Services secretary, supporters of his 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 movement cheered at having a champion in the federal government. Now the grumbling has begun. Some of Kennedy鈥檚 allies say he鈥檚 become almost inaccessible since his confirmation and complain that he鈥檚 made glacial progress advancing MAHA goals, such as halting mRNA-based covid shots and removing fluoride from drinking water. (Armour, 4/17)
More on the turmoil at HHS 鈥
Thirty-eight of 43 experts cut last month from the boards that review the science and research that happens in laboratories at the National Institutes of Health are female, Black or Hispanic, according to an analysis by the chairs of a dozen of the boards. The scientists, with expertise in fields that include mental health, cancer and infectious disease, typically serve five-year terms and were not given a reason for their dismissal. About a fifth of the roughly 200 board members 鈥 who provide an independent, expert layer of review for the vast research enterprise within the NIH 鈥 were fired. (Johnson, 4/16)
The National Institutes of Health's top researcher on ultra-processed foods announced Wednesday he was stepping down from the agency, accusing top aides to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. of censorship. "Unfortunately, recent events have made me question whether NIH continues to be a place where I can freely conduct unbiased science," the researcher, Dr. Kevin Hall, wrote in a post on social media Wednesday. (Tin, 4/16)
The entire staff of the White House agency tasked with coordinating the federal government鈥檚 efforts to combat homelessness was placed on leave on April 15. All 13 employees of the US Interagency Council on Homelessness, or USICH, received notice from the agency鈥檚 acting director on Tuesday informing them that they were being put on administrative leave, starting immediately, according to three people familiar with the matter. (Capps, 4/16)
In the months before she lost her job at the Food and Drug Administration, Karen Hollitt鈥檚 mom and boyfriend kept telling her not to worry. She鈥檇 be fine, they said; she was a veteran.聽She knew better. (Boodman, 4/17)
On DEI and Harvard 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News: Beyond Ivy League, RFK Jr.鈥檚 NIH Slashed Science Funding Across States That Backed Trump
The National Institutes of Health鈥檚 sweeping cuts of grants that fund scientific research are inflicting pain almost universally across the U.S., including in most states that backed President Donald Trump in the 2024 election. A 麻豆女优 Health News analysis underscores that the terminations are sparing no part of the country, politically or geographically. About 40% of organizations whose grants the NIH cut in its first month of slashing, which started Feb. 28, are in states Trump won in November. (Bichell and Pradhan, 4/17)
David Walt, a Harvard University medial professor, argued the Trump administration鈥檚 cut to the university鈥檚 funding is going to 鈥渃ost lives.鈥 Walt, a laureate professor working on early diagnosis of ALS, joined CNN Wednesday as the legal battle between Harvard and the Trump administration continues and more than $2.2 billion in funding was cut from the school. (Irwin, 4/16)
Amid its battle with the Trump administration over federal funding, Harvard is making a direct case to the public about why its research matters. The school revamped its homepage to read 鈥淩esearch Powers Progress鈥 and now features a video testimonial from scientists working on a gene therapy treatment for sickle cell disease and interviews with researchers developing an artificial intelligence tracking tool for autism and robotic devices for stroke survivors. (Schumaker, 4/16)
Facing Tariffs, Abbott To Invest $500 Million In US Manufacturing Facilities
Abbott Laboratories will make new investments in US manufacturing, with the impact of tariffs on medical devices and diagnostics looming over the industry. It expects to spend $500 million on two facilities, located in Illinois and Texas, Abbott said in a statement Wednesday. The investments are to expand existing plants and boost US research and development for Abbott鈥檚 transfusion business, which is responsible for screening the US blood supply. (Muller, 4/16)
Nonprofit hospitals' investment returns鈥攁 key lifeline for balance sheets during times of hardship鈥攁re at risk amid recent weeks鈥 tariff-fueled market volatility, bringing likely repercussions to organizations鈥 liquidity, debt leverage and ability to survive the coming months' potential operating challenges. The healthcare industry and other adjacent sectors have kept a close eye on President Donald Trump鈥檚 shifting tariff policy and the responses from other nations. The pharmaceutical supply chain has been a particular concern, as the products and their components were initially exempted from the highest rates even as officials signal more targeted tariffs to come. (Muoio, 4/16)
On immigrant health care 鈥
Trump immigration officials and the U.S. DOGE Service are seeking to use a sensitive Medicare database as part of their crackdown on undocumented immigrants, according to a person familiar with the matter and records obtained by The Washington Post. The database, which is managed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and includes reams of health and personal information, contains addresses sought by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials, according to the person and documents reviewed by The Post. (Natanson, Roubein and Diamond, 4/16)
Following the Trump administration鈥檚 decision to end limits on immigration enforcement in 鈥渟ensitive areas,鈥 such as hospitals, schools, and churches, more than 400 health care workers at Massachusetts hospitals and health centers signed an open letter calling for health care institutions to protect immigrant patients and workers. 鈥淎 growing number of our patients are canceling or not coming to appointments and delaying medical care that they need,鈥 the letter states. 鈥淔ear of seeking care during emergencies can be fatal, while delaying or interrupting treatment for chronic illnesses worsens health and increases cost.鈥 (Halpin, 4/17)
On transgender health care 鈥
Khai Devon鈥檚 dreams have been put on hold, indefinitely. His primary care provider approved his referral for top surgery five months ago, but he cannot find a single doctor within reasonable driving distance who will perform the operation. He has been taking time off work to contact surgeons hoping to get an appointment for a consultation, and no one will respond to his phone calls. Finding someone to help would be no issue if he were a cisgender woman, but area medical providers are in 鈥渨ait-and-see mode,鈥 he says, following an executive order from Trump in the second week of his administration, targeting trans health care. (Lang, 4/16)
On President Trump's aspirin use 鈥
After findings from President Trump's annual physical exam were released last week, observers were struck by the persistent aspirin use recorded in the doctor's report. Trump, 78, has no apparent history of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and had normal results on ECG and echocardiogram. He had well-controlled hypercholesterolemia, supported by current use of rosuvastatin and ezetimibe (Zetia). One line stood out, however: Trump's ongoing use of aspirin for "cardiac prevention." (Lou, 4/16)
Public Health
RFK Jr. Leans Into 'Environmental Toxins' As Source Of Increased Autism
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. used newly released autism figures to insist the nation is facing a crisis and promised to ferret out the 鈥渆nvironmental toxins鈥 he believes are responsible. The secretary, who in the past has repeated debunked claims that there is a link between vaccines and Autism Spectrum Disorder, said better diagnostics and awareness are responsible for only 25 percent of the increased rate, which is now 1 in 31 children. (Cirruzzo and Gardner, 4/16)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says the country will soon know what is causing a rise in autism rates, but there is little sign he has a team in place yet. Nearly two dozen prominent voices from mainstream autism research and in the anti-vaccine world said they have not been approached by Kennedy, and have no details about the proposed studies.聽(Cueto, 4/16)
In related news about vaccines, RSV, covid, and measles 鈥
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. downplayed his past criticism of vaccines as he sought to become the nation鈥檚 health secretary. Now, just two months after winning confirmation, he鈥檚 frequently returning to rhetoric from his time as perhaps the most prominent vaccine critic in the U.S. (Payne, 4/16)
A committee of independent vaccine experts voted Wednesday to recommend lowering the age at which adults can get a vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus, potentially opening up access to these vaccines for adults in their 50s who are at high risk of severe illness from RSV.聽(Branswell, 4/16)
Yesterday, Novavax聽presented early data from a real-world study suggesting that its 2024-25 protein-based COVID-19 vaccine targeting the JN.1 SARS-CoV-2 strain causes fewer and less-severe short-term side effects than the Pfizer/BioNTech mRNA COVID-19 vaccine.聽The Study of Healthcare Workers and First Responders Investigating Effects of Systemic and Local reactogenicity of COVID-19 Vaccine Doses in聽Utah (SHIELD-Utah) was conducted from September to December 2024 with University of Utah Health (UUH). (Van Beusekom, 4/16)
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is struggling to keep up with requests for help from states responding to ongoing measles outbreaks, even as a large number of cases are not being reported, a senior agency scientist said Tuesday.聽More than 700 measles infections have been reported nationwide, making 2025 the second-worst year on record in decades. There are 561 confirmed cases in Texas alone since late January, according to the most recent statistics.聽(Weixel, 4/16)
A senior scientist overseeing the measles response by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said a recent pullback of pandemic funding from states has hurt Texas鈥檚 response to its growing outbreak, now linked to 90 percent of cases in the United States. 鈥淭here are quite a number of resource requests coming in, in particular from Texas,鈥 David Sugerman, a senior CDC scientist, said during a meeting of the CDC鈥檚 vaccine advisory panel. (Sun, 4/16)
Health Industry
ACA Case At Supreme Court Next Week Likely To Profoundly Affect Health Care
For a decade and a half, Americans have been guaranteed that no matter their health insurer, certain preventive care like cancer screenings are free of charge. That鈥檚 because an Affordable Care Act provision has required insurers to fully cover services given an A or B recommendation by an expert task force. (Chen, 4/17)
More health industry news 鈥
Humana's plea for a boost to its Medicare Advantage star ratings has been rejected, the company disclosed Tuesday. The health insurer asked the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for an administrative appeal of the agency's calculation of its quality ratings for 2025, which plunged more than other leading carriers since the prior year. The agency declined last week, although the decision is subject to review by CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz until April 28, Humana wrote in a legal filing. (Tepper, 4/16)
The Permanente Medical Group and Northwest Permanente said Wednesday they have formed an affiliation. The medical groups will remain separate, but will collaborate clinically and share innovations as part of the agreement. The groups will work together on telehealth, population health and workforce wellness, in addition to pursuing more subspecialty partnerships and scaling IT initiatives, a spokesperson said. (Hudson, 4/16)
Michigan Medicine and some of its top executives face a discrimination lawsuit over an alleged gender wage gap between physician assistants.聽The class action suit, filed Tuesday in Washtenaw County Court, alleges female physician assistants at the health system are paid an average of $9,000 less each year than their male counterparts. (Walsh, 4/16)
A Medicare navigation company with ties to a pair of prominent conservatives reached unicorn status with a funding round announced Wednesday. Chapter announced it raised $75 million in a Series D funding round. The round valued the company at approximately $1.5 billion, according to a source with knowledge of the situation. (Turner, 4/16)
Also 鈥
Remote patient monitoring tools can be effective when used in shorter stints, but do not provide a meaningful return on investment for all conditions, according to a new report. The report published Wednesday from the nonprofit Peterson Center on Healthcare found remote patient monitoring programs had mixed results based on the conditions being monitored and the time patients spent in the programs. (Turner, 4/16)
Pharma and Tech
FDA Directs Knockoff Weight Loss Drugmakers To Halt Operations
Hundreds of thousands of Americans stand to soon lose their access to cheaper weight-loss drugs, with a federal crackdown on copycat versions threatening to disrupt treatment and raise costs. The Food and Drug Administration has ordered producers and sellers of the less expensive products to wind down operations in the coming weeks now that it has declared there are no longer shortages of the blockbuster drugs Wegovy and Zepbound. (Robbins and Blum, 4/16)
A daily pill may be as effective in lowering blood sugar and aiding weight loss in people with Type 2 diabetes as the popular injectable drugs Mounjaro and Ozempic, according to results of a clinical trial announced by Eli Lilly on Thursday morning. (Kolata, 4/17)
If orforglipron is eventually approved by federal regulators, it would become the first GLP-1 oral drug for weight loss to hit the market. The implications鈥攊f Lilly鈥檚 drug makes it through the testing and review process鈥攃ould be transformative, not just for the company, but for patients. (Park, 4/17)
In other pharma and tech developments 鈥
Semler Scientific has offered to pay the Department of Justice nearly $30 million to settle federal health care fraud claims related to its peripheral artery disease test, QuantaFlo 鈥 a product used by UnitedHealth Group and other large insurers. (Lawrence, 4/16)
RadNet, which runs nearly 400 radiology imaging centers in the United States, wants to put artificial intelligence into breast imaging.聽Over the last five years, the company has moved aggressively to expand its AI capabilities, deploying the technology for breast cancer screenings at its radiology practices. (Palmer, 4/17)
Limiting the use of personal protective equipment (PPE) to only N95 respirators late in the COVID-19 pandemic in Singapore healthcare facilities kept staff safe, reduced plastic waste and carbon emissions, and lowered related costs, a JAMA Network Open study concludes. (Van Beusekom, 4/16)
In global news 鈥
European regulators have finally approved the Alzheimer鈥檚 treatment Leqembi after an advisory committee initially rejected the drug last summer and then reconsidered it. The infused treatment from Japanese drugmaker Eisai and Biogen received approval for patients in early stages of the fatal, mind-robbing disease. The decision applies to all 27 members of the European Union plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein, the drugmakers said late Tuesday. (Murphy, 4/16)
Climate change and increasingly extreme weather are taking a toll on global supplies of blood, endangering the lives of people with life-threatening injuries and conditions, a new study has found. Extreme weather events and natural disasters such as bushfires and floods, fueled by rising global temperatures, are disrupting medical professionals in their efforts to collect, testing, transport and store blood, according to a study published in The Lancet Planetary Health this week. (Kan, 4/17)
State Watch
Arkansas Companies Now Must Choose Between PBMs And Pharmacies
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders has signed a first-in-the-nation law that prohibits pharmacy benefit managers from operating both retail and mail-order pharmacies, a move designed to eliminate a conflict of interest that has been blamed for boosting the price of medicines and forcing independent pharmacies to close. (Silverman, 4/16)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Accidental drug overdose deaths in San Francisco rose for the fourth straight month after showing a promising decline last year, according to preliminary figures released Wednesday by the Office of the Medical Examiner. Sixty-five people fatally overdosed in March, bringing the monthly average to 64 over the past three months 鈥 up from 59 in February, 50 in January, 43 in December and 39 in November. That makes the most recent data roughly on par with the state of overdose deaths of about a year ago, before the decline that officials at the time deemed 鈥渞emarkable鈥 and 鈥渉opeful.鈥 (Ho, 4/16)
The San Francisco Department of Emergency Management launched a new wellness room for its dispatchers, just in time for National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week. "Every second counts, so we have to make sure that we're ready to send the information in a split second," Cathy Osorio, a dispatcher with the City and County of San Francisco, told CBS News Bay (Nam, 4/16)
[Republican Missouri Sen. Josh] Hawley has made his stance clear in recent weeks: He will not support any proposal that would lead to cuts in Medicaid benefits for Missourians. (Hellmann, 4/15)
Improved birth rates are a stated priority for President Donald Trump's administration鈥攂ut proposed budget cuts could make it harder for many Americans to afford a safe, healthy pregnancy. Last week, House Republicans narrowly passed a budget resolution that calls for an $880 billion reduction to the Department of Health and Human Services (HSS) budget over 10 years. The proposed plan doesn't explicitly call for Medicaid cuts, but it would be impossible to achieve that level of savings without slimming down the program; Trump has promised not to touch Medicare but hasn't extended the same protections to Medicaid, which provided health care coverage to more than 72 million people as of October 2024. (Kayser, 4/16)
If you squint your eyes, you might be able to see how Guadalupe Regional Medical Center (GRMC) could look something like the Bolshoi Theatre. Ethereal light shining as the curtains open, a fluttering of bodies weaving in every which way鈥攁ll of them wearing the same clothes, all of them knowing where to go. "It's just like watching a ballet," Chantel Ewald, who serves as the clinical director of GRMC's Birthing Center, told Newsweek. "Everybody orchestrating what they need to do to take care of the patient, to take care of the baby and to have a good outcome. (Fung, 4/16)
Health Policy Research
Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs
The first moment between a mother and newborn has long been believed to offer lasting benefits, but a new study is challenging assumptions about how far those benefits go. A randomized clinical trial published in the journal JAMA Network Open found that skin-to-skin contact (SSC) between mothers and their newborns in the delivery room did not improve neurodevelopmental outcomes at two to three years of age. (Gray, 4/16)
A novel antibiotic recently approved for treatment of urinary tract infections also shows efficacy against gonorrhea, according to the results of a phase 3 randomized trial published yesterday in The Lancet. The multicenter聽trial, which involved more than 600 people in 5 countries with Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections, found that oral gepotidacin was noninferior to the standard regimen of intramuscular ceftriaxone plus azithromycin, with a treatment success rate of 93% and no new safety concerns.聽(Dall, 4/15)
In a prostate cancer screening program involving participants in the top decile of risk as determined by a polygenic risk score, the percentage found to have clinically significant disease was higher than the percentage that would have been identified with the use of PSA or MRI. (McHugh et al, 4/9)
One reason why our livers excel at clearing waste from our blood system is that the organ functions according to three key "zones" that perform specific major tasks. So, if scientists hope to create self-growing patches of liver organoid tissue that could help repair damaged organs, it's important that the lab-grown tissue faithfully reproduce such zones. In a groundbreaking paper published April 16 in the journal Nature, a team of organoid medicine experts at Cincinnati Children's reports achieving just such a milestone -- made from human stem cells. When these humanized organoids were transplanted into rodents whose own liver-bile duct system had been disconnected, the improved organoids nearly doubled the rodents' survival rate. (4/16)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: What Autism Families Actually Need; Encouraging Results With Stem Cells And Parkinson's
For decades, the lion鈥檚 share of autism research has focused on one elusive goal: identifying its cause. The idea is tempting鈥攊f we could just pinpoint why autism happens, perhaps we could prevent it altogether. But that pursuit has dominated the national research agenda at the expense of something far more urgent: improving the lives of autistic people and their families, here and now. (Alice Kuo and Emily Hotez, 4/17)
I鈥檓 upbeat about cell therapy development for Parkinson鈥檚 disease, but it has been a marathon. Now two new clinical trial papers published Wednesday in Nature on stem cell-based therapies for Parkinson鈥檚 are another step forward. (Paul Knoepfler, 4/16)
I鈥檓 not referring to the destructive pseudomedical pronouncements of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. I鈥檓 talking about Trofim Denisovich Lysenko (1898-1976), a Soviet agronomist who is today remembered, along with Joseph Stalin and his forced collectivization of farms, as being largely responsible for a famine that killed millions in the early 1930s in the Soviet Union. (Jon Garelick, 4/17)
On March 27, 2025, the federal government announced major cuts to the department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Average Americans could be impacted by these changes through reduced access to early education, family planning and health care, natural disaster response, and more. But the reality of these cuts, which deserves far more attention than it has received, is the disproportionate impact they could have on older adults. (Kristin Lees Haggerty and Scott Bane, 4/17)