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
This Teen Never Got His Day in Vaccine Court. His Former Lawyer Now Advises RFK on Its Overhaul.
The federal government鈥檚 Vaccine Injury Compensation Program was supposed to help patients with their medical bills while protecting vaccine supply. But allies of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are routinely transferring cases from that program to launch lawsuits against drugmakers.
Medicare Advantage Insurers Face New Curbs on Overcharges in Trump Plan That Reins in Payments
Proposed Trump administration changes to federal Medicare Advantage payments would stop health insurers from mining patient data for extra medical diagnoses that generate more bills to taxpayers even without treatment.
Political Cartoon: 'You look offbeat?'
麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'You look offbeat?'" by Dan Reynolds.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
AN ORDINARY HERO
Alex Pretti cared.
鈥 Kymberli Brady
Veterans held in his hands.
Duty dimmed by loss.
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.
Note To Readers
We want to see your clever, heartfelt, or hilarious tributes to the policies that shape health care. Submit your poem 鈥 whether conventional, free-form, or haiku 鈥 by noon ET on Wednesday, Feb. 4. The winning poem will receive a custom comic illustration in the Morning Briefing on Feb. 13. Click here for the rules and to enter!
Summaries Of The News:
Health Care Costs
Americans' Biggest Pocketbook Worry Is The Cost Of Health Care, Poll Reveals
Yes, Americans are worried about their bills for groceries, housing and utilities. But their biggest pocketbook anxiety arises from the cost of health care, according to a new poll, and their rising concern is likely to affect this year鈥檚 midterm elections. Voters say that the issue will alter their election choices, with about three-quarters indicating that health care costs will affect their choices in November, according to the poll released Thursday by 麻豆女优, a nonpartisan health policy organization. (Whoriskey, 1/29)
More on Obamacare, Medicare, and prescription drug costs 鈥
More than a million fewer people have signed up for Affordable Care Act coverage for 2026, according to federal data released Wednesday. The drop comes after the expiration of the enhanced federal premium subsidies caused monthly payments to skyrocket for many enrollees. (Luhby, 1/28)
Their health care premiums have skyrocketed. And now, women and LGBTQ+ people across the country are scrambling. (Luthra, Rodriguez and Rummler, 1/28)
While President Donald Trump went easy on insurers in his broader health plan, he鈥檚 drawing the line at trouble-ridden Medicare Advantage. Health insurers cheered last year when the Trump administration agreed to pump $25 billion more into private Medicare plans in 2026, hoping it signaled a turnaround from the Biden administration鈥檚 more modest yearly increases. Instead of the big boost the insurers say they badly need, the Trump administration on Monday offered an increase of less than 1 percent, or $700 million, in 2027. (Hooper, 1/28)
In mid-December, President Donald Trump 鈥 fresh off a deal that saw nine more major pharmaceutical companies promise to lower drug prices 鈥 said he鈥檇 pressure health insurers to do the same. 鈥淚 want to meet with them, and I want to say, 鈥業 want you to cut your rates way down, way, way down,鈥欌 Trump said. 鈥淎nd maybe if they do that, we鈥檒l be able to not cut them out.鈥 More than a month later, no meeting has taken place and the president has not publicly demanded they lower premiums, as he did five times between mid-December and early January. (Haslett and Hooper, 1/28)
麻豆女优 Health News: Medicare Advantage Insurers Face New Curbs On Overcharges In Trump Plan That Reins In Payments
Medicare Advantage health plans are blasting a government proposal this week that would keep their reimbursement rates flat next year while making other payment changes. But some health policy experts say the plan could help reduce billions of dollars in overcharges that have been common in the program for more than a decade. (Schulte, 1/29)
HIV/AIDS activists heralded the approval of a new twice-yearly pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) medication last year, but these celebrations were tempered by聽insurers鈥 reluctance聽to cover its exorbitant cost.聽In the months since,聽payers are coming聽around,聽and聽more聽patients have access to this landmark advancement.聽In June, the Food and Drug Administration approved聽Yeztugo, an聽injection of the drug lenacapavir, as a聽form of HIV聽PrEP.聽The drug is manufactured by Gilead Sciences.聽PrEP medication comprises preventative medications for HIV-negative people at high risk of exposure. (Choi, 1/28)
Vaccines
Autism Council Stacked With Panelists Who Question Vaccine Safety
The Department of Health and Human Services on Wednesday announced the appointment of 21 new members to a federal committee that advises health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on autism. (Broderick, 1/28)
The Trump administration is asking Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, to phase out the use of vaccines containing the preservative thimerosal if it wants future US funding. Thimerosal is a mercury-containing preservative that鈥檚 been used in small amounts in some multidose vaccine vials since the 1930s to prevent microbial contamination. Although the preservative is no longer used in any routinely used US vaccines, it is used in some multidose vaccines in other countries. (Dall, 1/28)
More on RFK Jr. and vaccine policy 鈥
The Trump administration鈥檚 abrupt overhaul of the federal vaccine schedule sent shockwaves through American health care earlier this month. But the biggest impacts are likely to come in the weeks and months ahead, as activists seek to use the momentum to loosen state-level vaccine requirements. (Payne and Cueto, 1/29)
A meeting this month between the head of the American Medical Association and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has prompted infighting within the nation鈥檚 leading lobbying group for doctors. Following the Jan. 7 meeting, a contingent of member doctors wrote to the AMA鈥檚 board chair because they view Kennedy as a threat to public health whom the group should shun, according to correspondence obtained by POLITICO. (Levien, 1/28)
Four Senate Democrats are pushing US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to detail his plans for revamping how the federal government compensates people who are harmed by vaccines, as well as how he, his family and associates will benefit from the change. On Tuesday, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Edward Markey of Massachusetts, Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland sent Kennedy a letter highlighting his ties to a law firm that represents people suing the pharmaceutical company Merck & Co. (Nix and Edney, 1/28)
麻豆女优 Health News: Her Son鈥檚 Injury Never Got Its Day In Vaccine Court. Their Lawyer Is Now Advising RFK Jr. On Its Overhaul.聽
The federal government鈥檚 Vaccine Injury Compensation Program was supposed to help patients with their medical bills while protecting vaccine supply. But allies of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are routinely transferring cases from that program to launch lawsuits against drugmakers. (Rosenfeld, 1/29)
In related news about the spread of measles 鈥
As the South Carolina measles outbreak approaches 800 cases, states across the nation are tracking their first measles cases of 2026. In Florida, three cases have been documented this year, including two from the Tampa Bay area. According to local news, health officials say measles cases were confirmed in Hillsborough, Manatee, and St. Johns counties, and all case-patents are between ages 20 and 24 years. The patient in Manatee County likely acquired the virus outside of the country, but the other two people have no history of international travel.聽(Soucheray, 1/28)
Reproductive Health
HHS Rule Reversal Leaves Access To Abortion Drugs Up To Pharmacists
After Roe v. Wade was overturned, the Biden administration enforced a rule in 2022 mandating that retail pharmacies receiving any federal funding had to carry and dispense mifepristone, misoprostol, and methotrexate鈥攄rugs used in medication abortions and, in the case of methotrexate, the treatment of ectopic pregnancies and autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus鈥攊n order not to discriminate on the basis of sex and disability. The Trump administration formally withdrew that rule on Tuesday, allowing pharmacists to refuse to stock or dispense misoprostol and methotrexate, despite their other uses. (Metraux, 1/28)
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has ended abortion services and most abortion counseling for veterans nationwide, with officials telling Military.com that a Department of Justice (DOJ) opinion leaves the agency no legal authority to provide that care. The rollback follows a DOJ opinion issued last year that VA officials said required an immediate reversal of a 2022 Biden administration policy that expanded abortion access within the VA system. (Radzius, 1/28)
The Indiana Senate passed an abortion medication ban bill Tuesday, largely along party lines, with one Republican joining all Democrats present to vote against the bill. (Kukulka, 1/28)
On transgender health care in California and Indiana 鈥
The Trump administration announced Wednesday that a California policy allowing school districts to withhold information from parents about their child鈥檚 gender identity violates federal law. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said a federal investigation determined state officials 鈥渆gregiously abused鈥 their authority by pressuring local districts to keep quiet about transgender students. (He, 1/28)
The Indiana Senate gave final approval to a gender definition bill Tuesday along party lines. Senate Bill 182 defines female, male, gender, and sex for all Indiana statutes. The bill states that the Department of Correction has to assign an offender to a facility or program that is based on the inmate鈥檚 biological sex at birth. (Kukulka, 1/28)
Administration News
Government Shutdown Is Days Away Amid Impasse Over DHS Funding
The impasse between Republicans and Democrats over the Homeland Security funding bill means a partial government shutdown is likely at the end of the week. Most of the federal government will close Saturday unless Congress passes legislation to keep it open. Democratic senators have said they will not vote for any funding bill unless Republicans agree to remove DHS funding from a larger appropriations package or include new measures to rein in the agency. (Beggin and Meyer, 1/28)
More on the immigration crisis 鈥
Over the last several days, many Americans have seen upsetting, and often violent, images and videos of protests in Minneapolis amid a flood of ICE agents entering the city for a federal immigration enforcement operation. Research has shown that images of extreme violence can impact mental health, increasing symptoms of anxiety and depression. (Kekatos, 1/28)
Veterans Affairs employees have not received any agencywide acknowledgment of the killing of ICU nurse Alex Pretti, frustrating workers already upset by Trump officials鈥 immediate response to their colleague鈥檚 death, according to current and former officials and employees. The 37-year-old Pretti, who worked at the Minneapolis VA, was fatally shot Saturday by federal agents participating in the Trump administration鈥檚 immigration crackdown across the city. (Kornfield and Diamond, 1/28)
The US Department of Homeland Security says a person in detention at an Arizona Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility has measles, a highly contagious virus that can cause high fevers and a distinctive rash. (Howard, 1/28)
Haitians are a vital source of employees for health care providers in many communities. The Trump administration is removing legal status next month for 330,000 of them. (Jordan, 1/29)
Health Care Personnel
Walmart Invests In Pharmacy Workers, Raises Pay As Clinics Lose Popularity
Walmart is reshaping pharmacy jobs 鈥 raising pay and elevating thousands of technician roles as it invests more heavily in pharmacy workers, the world's largest retailer tells Axios. (Tyko, 1/28)
More news about health care personnel 鈥
Caring for the elderly in America is costly 鈥 too costly for many people to afford. Now, the Trump administration is attempting to tackle that problem by rolling back wage protections for more than 3 million workers who care for seniors and the disabled in their homes. (Hsu, 1/29)
Manhattan prosecutors urged a judge on Wednesday to set a July trial date in Luigi Mangione 鈥檚 state murder case in the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, two months before jury selection in his federal death penalty case. In a letter, Assistant District Attorney Joel Seidemann asked Judge Gregory Carro to begin the New York trial on July 1, arguing that the state鈥檚 interests 鈥渨ould be unfairly prejudiced by an unnecessary delay鈥 until after the federal trial. (Sisak, 1/29)
Fugitive former Loretto Hospital executive Anosh Ahmed, who fled to Dubai before his indictment on massive fraud charges, has been arrested in Serbia and is awaiting possible extradition to stand trial in Chicago, federal prosecutors disclosed in a court filing Wednesday. (Meisner, 1/28)
A woman who stole identities to work as a nurse or physician鈥檚 assistant in multiple states has been sentenced to more than six years in federal prison. U.S. Attorney Tim VerHey in western Michigan said it was a 鈥渉appy accident鈥 that Leticia Gallarzo didn鈥檛 harm anyone while starting intravenous lines, distributing medications, removing catheter lines and supervising others. (Dall, 1/28)
An evolutionary biologist filed a lawsuit against Cornell University this week that alleges the Ivy League school used unlawful race-based hiring practices and intentionally discriminated against qualified candidates by refusing to consider White people. (Svrluga and Meckler, 1/28)
Dr. Angella D. Ferguson, a pediatrician whose groundbreaking research aided in the early diagnosis and treatment of sickle cell anemia, a painful and deadly disease that disproportionately afflicts people of African descent, died on Jan. 6 at her home in Chevy Chase, Md. She was 100. Her death was confirmed by her nephew Roger W. Ferguson Jr., an economist and former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve. (Roberts, 1/28)
In other health industry developments 鈥
Hours before a deadly explosion ripped through a Pennsylvania nursing home last month, staff grew concerned about the smell of natural gas on several floors and brought in workers from the local utility company to check it out, federal regulators said Wednesday. The preliminary report by the National Transportation Safety Board provides details about the three hours that passed between the report of a gas odor and the thunderous blast in Bristol, just outside Philadelphia, as well as how utility workers were on the scene for much of that time. It also notes that a utility worker traced the leak to a valve in a meter set in the basement boiler room. (Scoloforo, 1/28)
Lurie Children鈥檚 Hospital is in the early stages of planning a new children鈥檚 hospital in the Downers Grove area, Lurie announced Wednesday. The new hospital would be the system鈥檚 first hospital with inpatient beds outside of its main facility in Streeterville. The plan follows years of closures of pediatric units at community hospitals across Illinois. (Schencker, 1/28)
Sword Health has acquired Kaia Health in a $285 million deal, the companies said Wednesday. Both companies operate in the virtual musculoskeletal care space. Sword combines artificial intelligence and motion-tracking technology to deliver virtual physical therapy services. Kaia is focused on both musculoskeletal and pulmonary care.The deal will allow Sword to expand its U.S. presence and marks the company鈥檚 entry into Germany. (Famakinwa, 1/28)
Also 鈥
Organs from medically complex donors would get more use as part of a proposed rule for greater federal government oversight of organ procurement organizations (OPOs). The proposed rule, released Wednesday by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), would require OPOs to assess their performance in placing organs from older donors or donors with less-than-optimal health status, and when possible take action to improve their performance to help widen the pool of life-saving matches. (Frieden, 1/28)
When the world鈥檚 scientists finally pieced together a first draft of the human genome in 2003, one of the biggest surprises was just how little of it 鈥 only about 20,000 genes 鈥 are involved in the business of producing proteins. At first, the remaining 98% appeared not to do much of anything at all. (Molteni, 1/28)
Public Health
US Life Expectancy Hits Record High Thanks To Drop In Overdose Deaths
Life expectancy in the U.S. reached a record high in 2024 following a substantial decline of drug-overdose deaths, according to figures released by the federal government Thursday. The life expectancy at birth for the average American was 79 years old in 2024, up 0.6 year from the year prior, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 National Center for Health Statistics. The increase signals a rebound from declines in life expectancy during the coronavirus pandemic and progress in combating the opioid crisis. (Calfas, 1/29)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
On Wednesday, a new study published in JAMA by researchers at the University of Washington in Seattle projected that by 2035, nearly half of all American adults, about 126 million individuals, will be living with obesity. The study draws on data from more than 11 million participants via the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 National Health and Nutrition Examination and Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, and from the independent Gallup Daily Survey. (Maga帽a, 1/28)
The early bird may not only catch the proverbial worm but also have a healthier heart, new research suggests. People who naturally stay up late, self-described night owls, are likelier to have poor heart health than people with more traditional sleep-wake schedules, according to a study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Heart Association. (Leake, 1/28)
Firearm injuries among parents were associated with increased rates of psychiatric disorder diagnoses and mental health visits in their children, according to a study using U.S. commercial health insurance claims data. (Jeffrey, 1/28)
Gerber is recalling some of its arrowroot biscuits over potential contamination of soft plastic and paper pieces, the Food and Drug Administration announced Wednesday. ... No illnesses or injuries have been reported, according to Gerber's voluntary recall announcement. (Intarasuwan, 1/28)
Health Policy Research
Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs
Higher stages of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a disorder associated with repetitive head impacts often from contact sports like American football, were tied to increased odds of dementia, autopsy data showed. (George, 1/27)
The Food and Drug Administration paused trials for two experimental gene therapies from Regenxbio after one child developed a brain tumor, the company announced Wednesday. (Mast, 1/28)
In a challenge to conventional thinking, a study hints that sleeping with the head elevated may actually increase intraocular pressure (IOP) in patients with glaucoma rather than lower it. (Dotinga, 1/27)
Scientists at the University of California San Diego have discovered a path between the brain and the immune system that could potentially lead to new ways to ease heart attacks. They showed that disabling specific parts of that circuit could profoundly improve outcomes in mice with experimentally induced heart attacks. "The injury almost disappears," says UCSD neuroscientist Vineet Augustine, who led the new study appearing Tuesday in the journal Cell. (Landhuis, 1/27)
Real-world data from Japan suggest that an organic mental disorder (one not caused by psychiatric illness, such as Alzheimer鈥檚 disease [AD] and/or delirium) is a key risk factor for COVID-19 infection and hospitalization among older adults. (Van Beusekom, 1/27)
A population-based study from British Columbia suggests that a substantial share of people already carry antibodies that may help protect against avian influenza A(H5N1), though levels vary by age and birth cohort, reflecting past exposure to different flu viruses. (Bergeson, 1/28)
A trial that placed adults infected with influenza virus and uninfected people in the same hotel room with limited ventilation but a high air-recirculation rate for two-week stints found no viral transmission, which the authors say provides insight into how to prevent infection. (Van Beusekom, 1/28)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: When Insurance Drops Doctors, Patients Suffer; Why I Trusted ChatGPT Health With My Medical Data
Spats between hospitals and insurers are just one of many health care problems in the US. (Jessica Karl, 1/28)
When I first heard about OpenAI鈥檚 ChatGPT Health, I felt a familiar itch. Since being diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor 18 years ago, at age 29, I鈥檝e developed a deep curiosity about my own health. That curiosity has driven me to enroll in numerous studies, connect my health records to the NIH All of Us research program, and even donate my brain tissue for research-grade genomic sequencing. (Liz Salmi, 1/29)
The nation鈥檚 public health infrastructure is being torn apart. Gaps in access, regional variations, advanced public health degrees at risk and politicized responses are putting all of us at risk. This balkanized approach to public health is accelerating a dangerous divide between communities: those that can protect their health and those that cannot. This fragmented approach is a prescription for our nation鈥檚 poorer health. (Boris D. Lushniak and Tim E. Leshan, 1/28)
Recently, the Texas attorney general launched a formal investigation into what he called 鈥渦nlawful financial incentives鈥 for childhood vaccines, saying that he would 鈥渆nsure that Big Pharma and Big Insurance don鈥檛 bribe medical providers to pressure parents to jab their kids.鈥 (Jess Steier, Elana Pearl Ben-Joseph, Jen Covich Bordenick and David Higgins, 1/29)
If you want to understand how Robert F. Kennedy Jr. became the face of American public health, you have to go back to the Covid era. (Ross Douthat, 1/29)