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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Jun 24 2025

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 2

  • 鈥榃e Need To Keep Fighting鈥: HIV Activists Organize To Save Lives as Trump Guts Funding
  • Push To Move OB-GYN Exam Out of Texas Is Piece of AGs鈥 Broader Reproductive Rights Campaign
  • Political Cartoon: 'Identity Crisis?'

Note To Readers

Medicaid 1

  • Medical Debt Would Surge 15% Under Bill's Medicaid, ACA Cuts, Report Says

Reproductive Health 1

  • Telehealth Scripts Contribute To Continued Rise In Abortion Numbers

Administration News 1

  • GOP Sen. Cassidy Criticizes Vaccine Advisers, Says They Shouldn't Meet Yet

Pharma and Tech 1

  • VA To End Last Medical Research Project Involving Primates This Month

State Watch 1

  • Texas Opts Out Of Federal Summer Lunch Program For Low-Income Kids

Lifestyle and Health 1

  • As States Sizzle And Heat-Related Illnesses Rise, Federal Response Falters

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Kids Won't Get Healthy Unless RFK Jr. Tackles Guns; Doctor Debunks Idea Of 'Too Many' Vaccines

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

鈥榃e Need To Keep Fighting鈥: HIV Activists Organize To Save Lives as Trump Guts Funding

While Congress fails to stave off cuts to HIV care, community leaders in Mississippi and beyond race to limit the damage. ( Amy Maxmen , 6/24 )

Push To Move OB-GYN Exam Out of Texas Is Piece of AGs鈥 Broader Reproductive Rights Campaign

Following a petition from Democratic state attorneys general, the American Medical Association adopted a position that medical certification exams should not be required in person in states with restrictive abortion policies. The action鈥檚 success was hailed as a win for Democrats trying to regain ground after the fall of Roe. ( Annie Sciacca , 6/24 )

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Political Cartoon: 'Identity Crisis?'

麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Identity Crisis?'" by Arcadio Esquivel.

Here's today's health policy haiku:

ASSISTANCE IS NEEDED

Stripped of vital care,

Who will catch the fall?

鈥 Nikki Grace

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鈥檇 like to speak with personnel from the Department of Health and Human Services or its component agencies about what鈥檚 happening within the federal health bureaucracy. Please message us on Signal at (415) 519-8778 or get in touch here.

Summaries Of The News:

Medicaid

Medical Debt Would Surge 15% Under Bill's Medicaid, ACA Cuts, Report Says

Think tank Third Way estimates the Republicans' Big, Beautiful Bill will cause an extra 5.4 million people to incur medical debt by as much as $22,800. Meanwhile, hospitals are urging Congress to protect their funding. So far, GOP senators are waving off their concerns, Modern Healthcare reports.

Proposed federal spending cuts to health care in Republicans鈥 鈥淥ne Big Beautiful Bill Act鈥 may increase some families鈥 medical debts by as much as $22,800, according to a new report from Third Way, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank. (Konish, 6/23)

Hospitals have beseeched Republicans not to leave them bearing the financial burden of the more than $1 trillion in healthcare cuts they hope President Donald Trump signs into law by Independence Day. The message doesn鈥檛 seem to be breaking through, based on interviews last week with several GOP senators, some of whom seek even steeper spending reductions. (McAuliff, 6/23)

The American Hospital Association launched an ad campaign Monday urging Congress to protect hospital funding as lawmakers consider more than $1 trillion in healthcare cuts. The ad shows a montage of patients receiving care and emphasizes the important role hospitals play in their communities. It ends with the statement, 鈥淭ell Congress: Protect hospital care.鈥 The new campaign launches as the Senate mulls over potential healthcare cuts as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which legislators hope President Donald Trump will sign into law by July 4. (Hudson, 6/23)

Senate Republicans are scrambling to rewrite major parts of their 鈥渂ig, beautiful bill鈥 in deference to key holdouts and the chamber鈥檚 parliamentarian as the clock ticks on a self-imposed deadline. GOP leaders are aiming to start voting Thursday, but senators emerged from a closed-door briefing on the status of the megabill Monday night saying that some of their biggest sticking points 鈥 ranging from key tax decisions to a deal on Medicaid 鈥 remain unresolved. (Carney and Kashinsky, 6/23)

President Donald Trump鈥檚 tax-and-spending agenda is nearing a climactic vote in the Senate this week in the wake of air strikes on Iran, which risk embroiling the US in a prolonged Middle East conflict. Trump鈥檚 $4.2 trillion tax-cut package, partially offset by social safety-net reductions, does not yet have the support it needs to pass the Senate. Fiscal hawks seeking to lower the bill鈥檚 total price tag are at odds with Republicans worried about cuts to Medicaid health coverage for their constituents and phase-outs to green energy incentives that support jobs in their states. (Wasson, 6/23)

From Capitol Hill to CDC headquarters in Atlanta, this last week of June will yield important clues about the direction of health policy under President Donald Trump 鈥 and whether a GOP Congress will go along. On Wednesday, Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine), who鈥檚 spoken out against global health cuts, will question Russell Vought, director of the White House鈥檚 Office of Management and Budget, who鈥檚 spearheaded them. (Zeller, 6/23)

Marely Chavarria Santos was born with a failing heart. The tip of her liver jutted out through a hole in her abdomen. A piece of her intestine was so narrow that nutrients couldn鈥檛 pass through. Her heart was so sick, it eventually ballooned to the size of a large lemon, pushing onto her lungs and other organs. When Marely was about 3 months old, doctors put her on a list to receive a heart transplant. After the surgery, Marely spent another six months in transitional care before finally coming home in January. She鈥檚 now nearly 2 years old. A big reason she is able to live at home is because of Medicaid. The public health insurance program for low-income and disabled people covers the cost for medically fragile children dependent on technology. Similar care in a hospital or another facility would be far more expensive. (Schorsch, 6/21)

Other health news from Capitol Hill 鈥

Drugmakers have taken a beating on Wall Street in recent months, perhaps because President Donald Trump has threatened the pharmaceutical industry with tariffs and demanded it reduce prices while his health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has questioned the safety of its products. Amidst the turmoil, pharma stocks have taken a hit. But a POLITICO review of stock trading by lawmakers found that many, including Republicans, are buying 鈥 suggesting they don鈥檛 think the Trump administration鈥檚 attacks on the industry are going to do lasting damage. Members of Congress are allowed to trade stocks, so long as they disclose their purchases. (Chu, 6/23)

Reproductive Health

Telehealth Scripts Contribute To Continued Rise In Abortion Numbers

A recent report finds that 2024 saw a rise in abortion numbers across the country despite restrictions and outright bans in multiple states. Telehealth-prescribed pills account for a quarter of all abortions. Also, NBC reports on a crisis pregnancy center support group that has advised its members to avoid giving ultrasounds to women suspected of having ectopic pregnancies.

The number of abortions in the U.S. rose again in 2024, with women continuing to find ways to get them despite bans and restrictions in many states, according to a report out Monday. The latest report from the WeCount project of the Society of Family Planning, which supports abortion access, was released a day before the third anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade and ended nearly 50 years of legal abortion nationally for most of pregnancy. (Mulvihill, 6/23)

One of the largest crisis pregnancy center support groups in the United States is telling its member clinics to avoid performing prenatal ultrasounds on women who they suspect have ectopic pregnancies, according to recordings obtained by NBC News of a recent presentation by a legal group that advises the faith-based nonprofits. The guidance comes in the wake of a lawsuit against a Massachusetts center that misdiagnosed an ectopic pregnancy. (Brooks, 6/23)

Out-of-state doctors are pushing for laws that will make it harder to detect who prescribes and sends abortion medication, as anti-abortion lawmakers look for ways to stop the flow of pills to their states. (Luthra, 6/23)

A retired Laramie County district judge heard arguments on June 23 to temporarily block part of a new state law that would exclude the use of abortion pills, among others, for off-label uses. (Clements, 6/23)

A government watchdog says it鈥檚 unclear when 鈥 or even whether 鈥 we鈥檒l know going forward how the end of national abortion protections impact Americans鈥 health outcomes, livelihoods and financial futures as the federal government turns away from abortion data collection indefinitely. (Carrazana, 6/23)

More reproductive health care news 鈥

New moms can donate their placentas under a Mercy Health initiative called Beginnings and Blessings. The program, which rolled out a year ago and has since expanded to six Mercy hospitals across the state, is the first step in the processing, manufacturing and distribution of donated birth tissue. (Schrappen, 6/23)

AI is making its way into women鈥檚 health in unusual ways, from a sanitary napkin that can predict ovarian cancer to an algorithm trained to detect patterns of endometriosis years before traditional diagnostic methods. In Miami, women鈥檚 health leaders say this is a new era of AI, enabling earlier diagnoses, more personalized treatments, and long-overdue attention to female medical conditions that have historically been misunderstood. (Goodman, 6/23)

麻豆女优 Health News: Push To Move OB-GYN Exam Out Of Texas Is Piece Of AGs鈥 Broader Reproductive Rights Campaign

Democratic state attorneys general led by those from California, New York, and Massachusetts are pressuring medical professional groups to defend reproductive rights, including medication abortion, emergency abortions, and travel between states for health care in response to recent increases in the number of abortion bans. The American Medical Association adopted a formal position June 9 recommending that medical certification exams be moved out of states with restrictive abortion policies or made virtual, after 20 attorneys general petitioned to protect physicians who fear legal repercussions because of their work. (Sciacca, 6/24)

In related news about mifepristone 鈥

Mifepristone (Korlym) reduced HbA1c levels in patients with inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes and hypercortisolism, a randomized placebo-controlled trial showed. Among 136 patients, the least squares mean change in HbA1c was -1.47% with mifepristone versus -0.15% with placebo at 24 weeks (P<0.001), reported John Buse, MD, PhD, of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, at the American Diabetes Association (ADA) annual meeting. (Monaco, 6/23)

Administration News

GOP Sen. Cassidy Criticizes Vaccine Advisers, Says They Shouldn't Meet Yet

In a post on X late Monday, Louisiana's Bill Cassidy, a physician, said the new members of ACIP 鈥 handpicked by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 鈥 鈥渄o not have significant experience studying microbiology, epidemiology, or immunology." Cassidy also said a CDC director should be in place to approve any recommendations. The previous CDC director, Mandy Cohen, left office in January.

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) called for the delay of this week鈥檚 meeting of a federal vaccine advisory panel handpicked by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr, citing concerns about members鈥 lack of experience and potential bias towards vaccines. 鈥淲ednesday鈥檚 meeting should not proceed with a relatively small panel, and no CDC Director in place to approve the panel鈥檚 recommendations,鈥 Cassidy wrote in a聽post on X late Monday evening. (Weixel, 6/23)

A coalition of 41 infectious disease, medical, veterinary, and public health organizations has signed on to a letter to the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) calling for a federal advisory committee on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) to meet as soon as possible. The President's Advisory Council on Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria (PACCARB), a group established in 2014 to provide recommendations to HHS for addressing the AMR threat, was scheduled to meet on January 28 to 29. ... But that meeting was canceled amid a larger HHS pause on government-related scientific meetings. (Dall, 6/23)

More on the Trump administration 鈥

Only a few days after reports emerged that the director of the FDA's cell and gene therapy office had been abruptly put on administrative leave, a new departure shows that an intense period of leadership turnover at the agency isn't over. Monday, Jacqueline Corrigan-Curay, M.D., the acting director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), wrote in an email to colleagues that she'd be retiring from the agency in July, according to reports in Bloomberg, Endpoints News and Stat. Corrigan-Curay has been with the FDA for more than eight years. (Sagonowsky, 6/23)

Top officials in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) are touting a multipronged effort from major payers to reform the oft-criticized prior authorization process. Mehmet Oz, M.D., administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), said during a press conference Monday that the prior auth pledge is just the first step in a broader push. Oz and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. met with major payers earlier in the day to discuss the commitments. (Minemyer, 6/23)

On the immigration crisis 鈥

Florida鈥檚 attorney general, James Uthmeier, a Trump ally who has pushed to build the detention center in the Everglades, has said the state will not need to invest much in security because the area is surrounded by dangerous wildlife, including alligators and pythons. A spokesperson for the attorney general said work on the new facility started on Monday morning. ... Immigrant advocates criticized the move. 鈥淭he fact that the administration and its allies would even consider such a huge temporary facility,鈥 he said, 鈥渙n such a short time line, with no obvious plan for how to adequately staff medical and other necessary services, in the middle of the Florida summer heat is demonstrative of their callous disregard for the health and safety of the human beings they intend to imprison there," said Mark Fleming, the associate director of federal litigation at the National Immigrant Justice Center. (Aleaziz, 6/23)

The Supreme Court on Monday allowed the Trump administration to deport migrants to countries other than their own, pausing a federal judge鈥檚 ruling that said they must first be given a chance to show that they would face the risk of torture and potentially clearing the way for the administration to send men held at an American military base in Djibouti to South Sudan. The court鈥檚 order gave no reasons and said the judge鈥檚 ruling would remain paused while the government pursues an appeal and, after that, until the Supreme Court acts. The court鈥檚 three liberal members issued a lengthy dissent. (Liptak, 6/23)

On federal funding and research cuts 鈥

Angelina Brown passed out while she was exercising one day, a scary experience that led her to a diagnosis of atrial fibrillation. It鈥檚 a condition in which the heart鈥檚 upper chambers beat irregularly, and it鈥檚 the most common heart rhythm abnormality in adults, affecting about 10 million Americans. (Tirrell, 6/23)

In New Hampshire, the state鈥檚 cancer registry has been used to determine that there is a higher-than-usual rate of kidney cancer in Merrimack, where water supplies have been polluted with PFAS chemicals. Registry data also prompted state officials to look into high childhood cancer rates and whether they have environmental causes. (Hoplamazian, 6/24)

麻豆女优 Health News: 鈥榃e Need To Keep Fighting鈥: HIV Activists Organize To Save Lives As Trump Guts Funding

Cedric Sturdevant woke up with 鈥渁 bit of depression鈥 but made it to church, as he does every Sunday. In a few days, he would drive from Mississippi to Washington, D.C., to join HIV advocates at an April rally against the Trump administration鈥檚 actions. It had clawed back more than $11 billion in federal public health grants to states and abruptly terminated millions of dollars in funds for HIV work in the United States. Testing and outreach for HIV faltered in the South, a region that accounts for more than half of all HIV diagnoses. (Maxmen, 6/24)

Pharma and Tech

VA To End Last Medical Research Project Involving Primates This Month

The VA's spinal cord research project involving monkeys is wrapping up, marking the culmination of efforts by activists and lawmakers alike to end studies that harm dogs, cats, and primates. Also in the news: a drug to treat lung cancer, diabetes drugs and loss of vision, and more.

The Department of Veterans Affairs will end its spinal cord research involving monkeys this month, with the conclusion of studies on stem cell therapy to treat injuries and understand the impact of bruising on spinal cords. The completion wraps up decades of VA research using primates to study a host of medical conditions and treatments, coming at the end of a long effort by activists and lawmakers to halt studies that harm dogs, cats and primates. (Kime, 6/23)

In pharmaceutical news 鈥

AstraZeneca鈥檚 Datroway drug has been approved in the U.S. to treat adult patients with non-small cell lung cancer. The British pharmaceutical company said Tuesday that the drug has been approved for patients who have already received chemotherapy. The drug has been approved under an accelerated approval process after a Phase 2 trial, and supported by data from a Phase 3 trial. However, continued approval might be contingent upon verification of clinical benefits in a confirmatory trial, the company said. (Whittaker, 6/24)

Diabetes is the leading cause of vision loss in people between 18 and 64 years old, according to the American Diabetes Association 鈥 and the best way to prevent this is to control blood sugar levels. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1s), such as Ozempic and Mounjaro, have become popular medications for controlling diabetes and treating obesity 鈥 but new Canadian research suggests they can also lead to a paradoxical side effect in the form of eye problems. (Sudhakar, 6/23)

Novo Nordisk A/S scrapped a partnership with Hims & Hers Health Inc. after less than two months, saying the US company is using 鈥渄eceptive marketing鈥 to sell copycat versions of its obesity blockbuster Wegovy. Hims, a telehealth platform, wasn鈥檛 stepping back enough from its practice of mass marketing off-brand imitations of the weight-loss medicine, Novo executives said. (Kresge and Muller, 6/24)

A monthly weight loss drug from Amgen helped people lose about 20% of their body weight, according to the results of a phase 2 clinical trial. If approved, the drug, called MariTide, could make Amgen the first new entrant into a market that鈥檚 been dominated by Novo Nordisk, which makes Ozempic and Wegovy, and Eli Lilly, which makes Mounjaro and Zepbound. (Lovelace Jr., 6/23)

State Watch

Texas Opts Out Of Federal Summer Lunch Program For Low-Income Kids

The Summer EBT program, which would have given qualifying families $120 per child to pay for summertime lunches in 2027, has been vetoed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who cited federal funding uncertainty. Other news comes from New York, Missouri, North Carolina, and Georgia.

Gov. Greg Abbott has vetoed a $60 million budget measure that would have allowed Texas to enter a federal summer lunch program for low-income children. (Langford, 6/23)

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed sweeping legislation Sunday to slap warning labels on potentially tens of thousands of food and beverage packages 鈥 a move that could have ripple effects across the country. The first-of-its-kind legislation requires labels on foods containing 44 dyes or additives commonly found in the country鈥檚 food supply, such as in baked goods, candy and drinks. The new mandate will set off a scramble within the food industry, which must decide whether to reformulate its products to avoid warning labels, add the newly mandated language, stop selling certain products in Texas or file lawsuits against the measure. (Roubein, 6/23)

Rural Americans are likelier to develop chronic pain than their urban counterparts, a grim trend exacerbated by limited access to health care, age and economic status. About 3 million Texans live in the state鈥檚 200 rural counties. More people call rural Texas home than states such as Kansas, Mississippi and New Mexico. (Ramos, 6/23)

In health news from New York 鈥

Mayor Eric Adams announced he will not move forward with a contentious effort to cut costs by shifting retired city workers to a Medicare Advantage plan, bringing a sudden end to a four-year saga. (Kaufman, 6/23)

Mayoral frontrunner Andrew Cuomo thinks the state should take on a larger role funding rental subsidies for homeless New Yorkers 鈥 a pledge that鈥檚 at odds with his actions as governor. During his tenure in Albany, Cuomo did the opposite: he cut off state funding in 2011 for a rental voucher program known as Advantage, prompting City Hall to eliminate the program altogether. Housing experts have long blamed the subsequent sharp rise in the city鈥檚 homeless shelter population on those critical decisions, even as they disparaged the voucher program at the time. (Chadha, 6/23)

Jasmine Stradford sat on her porch near Binghamton, New York, with toys, furniture, garbage bags full of clothing and other possessions piled up around her. She and her partner were being evicted after falling behind on rent. So last June, they and their children 鈥 then ages 3, 12 and 15 鈥 turned to New York鈥檚 emergency shelter system for help. It was built to provide homeless residents not only beds, but also food, help finding permanent housing and sometimes child care so parents can find work, attend school or look for apartments. (Norris, 6/24)

From Missouri, North Carolina, and Georgia 鈥

St. Luke鈥檚 Hospital in Des Peres will close its doors permanently on Aug. 1, officials told employees on Monday. The 143-bed hospital on Dougherty Ferry Road in St. Louis County didn鈥檛 have enough patients to justify keeping it open, spokeswoman Kelly Webb-Little said in an emailed statement. (Fentem, 6/23)

On a bitter November morning in Newland, North Carolina, Ashton Johanson climbed aboard the purple dental bus parked outside High County Community Health鈥檚 medical clinic.聽Inside the cramped mobile unit, the floor heaters sputtered. Supplies were running low. The suction machine had been acting up for weeks. (Mirmow, 6/24)

A jury on Wednesday awarded nearly $2.5 million to a Georgia couple whose baby was decapitated during childbirth, after they accused a doctor of posting a video from the infant鈥檚 autopsy on social media without their consent, according to a defense lawyer and court documents. Jessica Ross had been in labor for several hours with her first child on July 10, 2023, when the baby became stuck behind her pelvic bone, according to court documents. Ms. Ross and her partner, Treveon Isaiah Taylor Sr., accused their obstetrician in a separate lawsuit of applying excessive force to the baby鈥檚 neck, separating the head from the body. (Kirk, 6/20)

Lifestyle and Health

As States Sizzle And Heat-Related Illnesses Rise, Federal Response Falters

The Trump administration is slow-walking rules proposed during the Biden years that would protect workers from extreme heat. 鈥淲e have a lot of reason to believe that it's going to take a dire toll on people鈥檚 health,鈥 one scientist says. More news is about #SkinnyTok, sobriety, and microplastics.

Federal efforts to help people cope with extreme heat appear to be melting away even as the nation prepares for another summer of record high temperatures and increasing numbers of heat-related illnesses and deaths. (Magner, 6/23)

An intense and nearly historic weather pattern is cooking much of America under a dangerous heat dome this week with triple-digit temperatures in places that haven鈥檛 been so hot in more than a decade. The heat wave is especially threatening because it鈥檚 hitting cities like Boston, New York and Philadelphia early in the summer when people haven鈥檛 gotten their bodies adapted to the broiling conditions, several meteorologists said. (Borenstein, 6/24)

More health and wellness news 鈥

The social media platform TikTok recently banned a hashtag called #SkinnyTok after European regulators warned it was promoting unrealistic body images and extreme weight loss. The company had seen an onslaught of content featuring emaciated-looking young women peddling tips on how to drop weight quickly. Now the hashtag may be gone, but eliminating this kind of harmful content is not that simple. There's still no shortage of people 鈥 on TikTok and other social media platforms 鈥 spreading unhealthy information on how to eat fewer calories and get very, very thin. (Riddle, 6/24)

John Plageman was covered head-to-toe in Green Bay Packers gear in April as he stood a few feet away from a beer tent at the National Football League draft. But he wasn鈥檛 drinking beer. The 53-year-old was hanging out with 20 other football fans drinking water in a 鈥済ratitude circle鈥 at a sober tailgate. His group, Section Yellow, is a safe space for football fans to be boldly sober in one of the most intense drinking environments in American sports. (Wernau, 6/23)

Ripping the plastic wrap from the meat or prepackaged fruit and veggies you purchased at the grocery store may contaminate your food with micro- and nanoplastics, according to new research. Plastic contamination may also occur when you鈥檙e unwrapping deli meat and cheese, steeping a tea bag in hot water, or opening cartons of milk or orange juice. Glass bottles and jars with a plastic-coated metal closure may also shed microscopic bits of plastic, the study found. (LaMotte, 6/24)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Kids Won't Get Healthy Unless RFK Jr. Tackles Guns; Doctor Debunks Idea Of 'Too Many' Vaccines

"Make America healthy again鈥. We can all get behind this slogan and agree that much more could be done to improve the health of people living in the US. Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health and human services secretary, recently released a report detailing the challenge of the US鈥檚 health. About 90% of it outlines the high rates of obesity, mental health issues and chronic disease, 10% covers vaccine skepticism, and 0% looks at solutions or any discussions of the systemic social and economic issues that drive much of the US鈥檚 health problems. (Devi Sridhar, 6/24)

In 1986, a typical child was recommended to receive 11 vaccine doses 鈥 seven injections and four oral. Today, that number has risen to 50 to 54 doses by age 18, depending on whether one or two flu shots are given in the first eligible year, and on a few product- and age-specific factors that determine whether a child receives two or three HPV doses, three or four Hib doses, or two or three rotavirus doses. That鈥檚 a substantial increase in the number of shots, which is why some are alarmed by the idea of 鈥渢oo many, too soon.鈥 But the science should offer worried parents a great deal of comfort. (Jake Scott, 6/24)

There has been a lot of brouhaha in the news media and on social media about the alleged cover-up of former President Joe Biden鈥檚 health status, with a emphasis on his cognitive frailties and performance. (Dr. Anand Kumar, 6/23)

We appreciate President Trump鈥檚 steadfast commitment to protecting Medicare and Medicaid and his leadership in standing with America鈥檚 working families, seniors, and veterans. As leaders of urban health systems that serve our nation鈥檚 most vulnerable 鈥 low-income workers, children, and the elderly 鈥 we are writing with both deep appreciation and growing concern to urge that the president and Congress protect the safety-net hospitals that provide essential care to the Americans who need it most. (Esmaeil Porsa and Christine Alexander, 6/23)

With each week鈥檚 Centers for Disease Control update of measles case numbers, the United States creeps closer to a grim, now seemingly inevitable milestone. Driven by a months-long, multistate outbreak centered in West Texas, this year鈥檚 total 鈥 now more than 1,200 cases, including three deaths 鈥 will soon be the highest in more than 30 years. We will have surpassed even the banner year of 2019, when measles dominated the news, strained public health systems, and prompted emergency declarations and school closures 鈥 a prelude to Covid. (Adam Ratner, 6/24)

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