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More People Are Caring for Dying Loved Ones at Home. A New Orleans Nonprofit Is Showing Them How.
Demand for home health care, including at-home hospice care, has skyrocketed since the onset of the covid pandemic. A New Orleans nonprofit is teaching people how to provide end-of-life care for relatives and community members. (Halle Parker, Verite News, 11/25)
Not Serious Enough To Turn on the Siren, Toddler鈥檚 39-Mile Ambulance Ride Still Cost Over $9,000
After her son contracted a serious bacterial infection, an Ohio mother took the toddler to a nearby ER, and staffers there sent him to a children鈥檚 hospital in an ambulance. With no insurance, the family was hit with a $9,250 bill for the 40-minute ride. (Tony Leys, 11/25)
Political Cartoon: 'Happy Thanksgiving!'
麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Happy Thanksgiving!'" by Jonny Hawkins.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
THIS IS OUR BEST?
It's a "gold standard?"
The sound of one jaw flapping
signifies nothing.
- Anonymous
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.
Summaries Of The News:
Trump's Supposed ACA Subsidy Plan Sidelined Before It Was Even Unveiled
Republicans were blindsided over news media reports that the plan would extend Obamacare subsidies, Axios reported. Meanwhile, more Americans say they will go without health insurance if subsidies aren't renewed.
The White House has postponed the rollout of a new GOP plan on Affordable Care Act subsidies amid pushback from Republicans in Congress. The issue could aggravate already frayed relationships with Hill conservatives who oppose an extension of enhanced tax credits that are due to expire at the end of the year. (Goldman, 11/25)
Officials from several U.S. states say Americans relying on subsidies to afford Obamacare health insurance are holding off on enrolling as they face 2026 premium hikes that could more than double, with one state seeing enrollment drag by as much as 33%. (Niasse, 11/24)
Republicans across the country are in a bind of President Donald Trump鈥檚 making: After voting to end the 43-day federal shutdown, they have yet to articulate a plan to tackle the upcoming spike in health care premiums. That conundrum is coming into sharp relief in Georgia, a state with an especially high reliance on the Affordable Care Act, where Republicans have one of their best opportunities to pick up a Senate seat as they fight to maintain their grip on Congress. (Hernandez, 11/24)
Rachel Phipps, a retired social worker from Kennebunk, was diagnosed last month with skin cancer, which she has been getting treatments for. If the cancer isn鈥檛 gone by her follow up appointment in December, Phipps said she won鈥檛 be seeking additional treatment because her and her husband have decided to go without health insurance. Phipps currently pays about $200 a month for her marketplace health insurance plan, covering herself and her husband, who owns a small woodworking business in Sanford. But without federal subsidies, her monthly premium will go up to $2,000 with an almost $15,000 out-of-pocket deductible, which they can鈥檛 afford. (Pendharkar, 11/25)
On veterans' health care 鈥
The Department of Veterans Affairs has completely eliminated the backlog of CHAMPVA applications, ending years of delays that left thousands of Veteran spouses, dependents, survivors, and caregivers waiting for health care coverage, and ushering in what VA leaders say is a new era of faster, more efficient access for Veteran families. 鈥淲e listened, and now the application backlog that caused so many unnecessary delays has been wiped out,鈥 VA Secretary Doug Collins told Military.com in a statement. (Lindsay, 11/24)
More on the high cost of health care 鈥
As states strive to curb health insurers鈥 use of artificial intelligence, patients and doctors are arming themselves with AI tools to fight claims denials, prior authorizations and soaring medical bills. (Vollers, 11/22)
麻豆女优 Health News:
Not Serious Enough To Turn On The Siren, Toddler鈥檚 39-Mile Ambulance Ride Still Cost Over $9,000
Elisabeth Yoder鈥檚 son, Darragh, was 15 months old in August when he developed what at first looked to his parents like hand, foot, and mouth disease. The common viral infection generally clears up in less than a week, but Darragh鈥檚 condition worsened over several days. His skin turned bright red. Blisters gave way to skin peeling off his face. ... Staff in the emergency room there quickly confirmed that Darragh had scalded skin syndrome and said he needed to be taken by a private company鈥檚 ambulance to Dayton Children鈥檚, a hospital about 40 miles away. (Leys, 11/25)
All HHS Workers Laid Off During Shutdown Have Been Brought Back
Thomas Nagy Jr., deputy assistant secretary for human resources at the Department of Health and Human Services, wrote in a federal court filing Friday that all 954 employees who received layoff notices were emailed Nov. 17 and told to return to work, The Hill reported.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has brought back everyone it laid off during the government shutdown, a top official told a California federal court Friday.聽The agency鈥檚 Office of Human Resources on Nov. 17 emailed the 954 employees who received reduction in force (RIF) notices during the shutdown informing them that those notices had been rescinded and that they 鈥渟hould return to work on their next regularly scheduled workday,鈥 wrote Thomas Nagy Jr., HHS deputy assistant secretary for human resources, in a court filing.聽Those 954 employees were set to receive their retroactive pay for the entire shutdown period, from Oct. 1 to Nov. 12, Nagy wrote.聽(Weixel, 11/24)
On the immigration crisis 鈥
Under a zero tolerance policy, the first Trump administration separated immigrant children from their families at the U.S.-Mexico border. New data suggests separations are happening all over the country, often after little more than a traffic stop. (Rosenberg, Ariza, Funk, Ernsthausen and Sandoval, 11/24)
The 11-year-old from Venezuela was alone in his Texas home, waiting for his mother, who had been detained by U.S. immigration officials. She would never come back. The boy, Emmanuel Leandro Caicedo Venecia, ended up living by himself for three months this summer, attending school, even walking to his fifth-grade graduation to collect his diploma, his mother said. A neighbor brought food, but Emmanuel mostly fended for himself. (Ferr茅-Sadurn铆, Turkewitz and Herrera, (11/25)
Amid President Trump鈥檚 immigration crackdown, special agents at the Homeland Security Department have made fewer arrests for drug crimes and seized fewer weapons than they did the previous fiscal year, according to internal government documents reviewed by The New York Times. The data comes from an internal report by Homeland Security Investigations, the agency鈥檚 crime-fighting arm. The report offers a comparison of enforcement statistics between Oct. 1, 2024, and Sept. 30, 2025, and the same period during the previous year. That time frame includes roughly four months of the Biden administration and eight months of the Trump administration. (Aleaziz, Nehamas, Keller and Berzon, 11/25)
More health news from the federal government 鈥
Concerned about the long-term health risks faced by wildland firefighters, a bipartisan group of U.S. senators has introduced a bill to make respirators available to those workers. (Woodhouse, 11/24)
Two members of Congress launched an investigation into FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD, MPH, and his use of "priority vouchers" for expedited drug approvals, suggesting that the voucher program "could undermine public confidence in FDA's decisions and raise safety concerns." "We have significant concerns that this program will enable corruption by creating a new, lucrative gift for drugmakers and allies politically favored by President Trump," Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) wrote last Thursday in a letter to Makary. (Frieden, 11/24)
A federal commission is calling for significant changes to the way the U.S. government funds and assesses scientific research. (DeAngelis, 11/25)
Kyrsten Sinema鈥檚 old enemies on the left better brace themselves: The former senator is now embracing psychedelics and cozying up to MAHA. After infuriating progressives time and again for stonewalling their priorities, the Arizona Democrat-turned-Independent decided not to seek reelection last year and instead became a senior adviser at the law and lobbying firm Hogan Lovells. She鈥檚 since taken up the cause of psychedelic medicine 鈥 pro bono, she says. (Schumaker, 11/23)
Even With SNAP Restored, Food Banks Continue To See High Demand
Food banks and pantries across the country predict the increase in demand will continue through December. Other states making news: Missouri, North Carolina, Colorado, Florida, Minnesota, and Maryland.
Although SNAP benefits returned for millions of Americans after the federal government shutdown ended earlier this month, food banks and pantries across the U.S. are still seeing droves of people showing up to receive aid. ... Despite many states saying that benefits would be available immediately following the disruption, workers at food distribution sites are seeing a surge of people -- a trend they say is likely to continue into the holidays. (Kekatos, 11/24)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
The families of six people detained in jails across Missouri sued state health officials on Monday, alleging that Missouri is illegally allowing individuals with mental health issues to languish behind bars. (Bayless, 11/24)
The cracks in North Carolina鈥檚 safety nets are widening under the compounding pressure of a months-long budget stalemate, and that鈥檚 putting the state鈥檚 most vulnerable residents at risk of falling through. (Fredde, 11/25)
In the mid-2010s, families across the country uprooted themselves to move to Colorado for reasons unrelated to outdoor adventures or craft beer. Instead, they moved for the state鈥檚 first-in-the-nation legal marijuana laws, which allowed access to cannabis-derived products they said were essential to their or their children鈥檚 health.聽(Facher, 11/24)
Florida continues to struggle in its efforts to detect and treat lung cancer early, ranking low in several key measures, according to a new report from the American Lung Association. Nearly 27% of Floridians diagnosed with lung cancer do not receive any treatment 鈥 one of the worst rates in the nation. The state ranks 45th out of 49 states with available data. (Mayer, 11/24)
On a cloudy November day on the west side of St. Paul, Camila Valenzuela-Panza pulls up to Alex McDougall and her husband and Josh鈥檚 home. She puts on her mask, knocks on the door and is greeted by two-week-old Diindiisi in McDougall鈥檚 arms.聽(Stroozas, 11/25)
In January 2025, Minnesota鈥檚 law regulating PFAS, a class of synthetic chemicals used to make products resistant to heat, grease, oil, and water, came into effect. The statute, one of the strongest of its kind in the United States, banned the chemicals across 11 categories, from cookware to textile furnishings. Beginning in July 2026, the state will also require manufacturers to report the presence of PFAS in their products and, starting in 2032, prohibit companies from selling any product with intentionally added PFAS, with some exceptions. The goal, according to the state鈥檚 Pollution Control Agency, is to protect 鈥渉uman health, the environment, and taxpayer dollars鈥 by reducing the use of PFAS. (L贸pez Lloreda, 11/25)
With global plastic production projected to top 445 million tons next year, Maryland scientists say microplastic pollution is posing growing risks to the Chesapeake Bay 鈥 and to the oysters and people who depend on it. (Godiner, 11/24)
CMS' Plan To Recoup Billions In Outpatient Payments Delayed Until '27
The clawback originally was set to go into effect in 2026. However, Stat says, Medicare will move forward with surveys that will pinpoint how much drugs cost for hospitals 鈥 surveys that hospitals have managed to push off for 20 years.
Hospitals scored a win in Medicare鈥檚 final outpatient payment rule for 2026, as they persuaded federal Medicare officials to back off a plan that would have clawed back $7.8 billion a decade sooner than originally planned. (Herman, 11/24)
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has reignited the fight over how the government can audit Medicare Advantage companies. CMS on Friday appealed to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals a federal court鈥檚 decision to vacate the 2023 Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Data Validation regulation. Under the rule, CMS eliminated a statistical tool known as the fee-for-service adjuster. The adjuster was used to compare Medicare Advantage insurance companies鈥 errors to those in traditional Medicare. (Tepper, 11/24)
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services added cardiac ablation procedures to its list of procedures covered in ambulatory surgery centers. The change is outlined in the agency鈥檚 2026 Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System and Ambulatory Surgical Center final rule, which will take effect Jan. 1. The agency added 547 procedures to the list, many of which were cardiac ablation procedures. Among them are catheter procedures to destroy abnormal heart signals and block faulty heart signals at the heart鈥檚 electrical hub. (Dubinsky, 11/24)
More news from the health care industry 鈥
New lawsuits against California nursing home owner Shlomo Rechnitz include allegations against facilities that received state licenses after a years-long impasse. (Wiener, 11/24)
As Gary Ellis lay dying in August 2023, no one at the facility caring for him called his son. Instead, staffers called Ellis鈥 court-appointed state guardian, who had recently taken charge of all decisions related to the 69-year-old man鈥檚 care. Not until it was too late did Gary Brown learn his father had been at death鈥檚 door, Brown told the Tribune. (Hoerner, Gutowski and Schencker, 11/23)
麻豆女优 Health News:
More People Are Caring For Dying Loved Ones At Home. A New Orleans Nonprofit Is Showing Them How
Liz Dunnebacke isn鈥檛 dying, but for a recent end-of-life care workshop in New Orleans, she pretended to be. Dunnebacke lay still atop a folding table that was dressed as a bed, complaining that her legs hurt. Registered nurse Ana Kanellos, rolling up two small white towels, demonstrated how to elevate her ankles to ease the pain. 鈥溾奙om鈥檚 legs are always swollen? Raise 鈥檈m up,鈥 Kanellos said. About 20 New Orleans residents listened intently, eager to learn more about how to care for loved ones at home when they鈥檙e nearing the end of their lives. (Parker, 11/25)
The 28 hospitals in the seven-county Denver metro area made roughly $53 million in profit in 2024 from patient care. But other sources of income 鈥 which, depending on the hospital, may include investments, tax dollars, donations, and income from a federal prescription drug program 鈥 brought in more than $1.5 billion for the hospitals, helping offset additional expenses and delivering the heftier profit number. (Ingold, 11/24)
The Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA), the largest union of registered nurses in the Commonwealth, said the Trump administration鈥檚 decision to snub the nursing profession will deepen the national health care crisis. Following direction from the Trump administration鈥檚 One Big Beautiful Bill, the Department of Education determined that nursing was among the programs that would now be excluded from the 鈥減rofessional degree鈥 list. This would affect how those seeking a nursing degree would be reimbursed for student loan payments. (Giella, 11/24)
Promising Injectable Alzheimer's Drug From J&J Fails In Mid-Stage Trial
Separately, Novo Nordisk's semaglutide did not slow the progression of Alzheimer's disease more than a placebo, even though some disease-related biomarkers did show some improvement. Also: GLP-1s are being marketed to the non-obese; pregnancy risks from GLP-1s; and more.
A promising Alzheimer鈥檚 disease treatment from Johnson & Johnson failed to slow the progress of the disease in a closely watched study, news that could dampen enthusiasm for a new class of potential medicines. (Garde and Mast, 11/24)
Two trials testing the Novo Nordisk weight loss drug semaglutide in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease failed, the company said Monday, showing the medicine did not slow the progression of the condition versus placebo. (Joseph and Chen, 11/24)
More news about weight loss drugs 鈥
Weight-loss drugs are coming for a new kind of customer. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 need to be obese to start a GLP-1,鈥 reads an ad from a telehealth startup, the words scrawled in icing on a cake. Another one features a slender woman excited to lose a little weight before her wedding. Yet another says patients can drop 17 pounds in two months by microdosing copycat Ozempic. They鈥檙e part of a marketing blitz that鈥檚 ramped up in recent months, with ads plastered on billboards, in subway stations and online. (Nix and Muller, 11/24)
People who stopped taking weight-loss drugs before or during pregnancy were associated with greater gestational weight gain and had a higher risk of preterm delivery and gestational diabetes compared with those who had not been prescribed the drugs before, according to a study published Monday in JAMA. (Malhi, 11/24)
Prescriptions for GLP-1 receptor agonists increased among postpartum women once semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) was approved for weight loss, a Danish epidemiological study found. In the first quarter of 2018, there were less than five postpartum GLP-1 prescriptions, but by the second quarter of 2022, the number rose to 34 per 10,000 and sharply increased to 173 per 10,000 in the second quarter of 2024, reported Mette Bliddal, PhD, of the University of Southern Denmark in Odense, and colleagues. (Robertson, 11/24)
Weight regain after the withdrawal of tirzepatide (Zepbound) may wipe out many of the cardiometabolic gains made during weight loss, a post-hoc analysis of the SURMOUNT-4 trial indicated. (Monaco, 11/24)
Other pharma and tech news 鈥
Abbott issued a medical device correction for some of its glucose sensors after internal testing found that some sensors may provide false low glucose readings. Hundreds of adverse events and seven deaths worldwide have been linked to the issue. The correction affects roughly 3 million FreeStyle Libre 3 and Libre 3 Plus sensors in the U.S. that were traced back to one particular production line. About half of these sensors are estimated to be expired or already used, according to the company's announcement. (Monaco, 11/24)
Despite the global expansion of antibiotic awareness campaigns over the past decade, the public's understanding of antibiotics remains insufficient, researchers reported last week in Clinical Microbiology and Infection. (Dall, 11/24)
For 2nd Year In A Row, Pertussis Cases Are Higher Than Pre-Pandemic Levels
Also in the news: the spread of measles, covid, flu, RSV, CWD, and more.
More than 25,000 cases of whooping cough have been recorded in the U.S. so far this year, updated federal data shows. This marks the second year in a row with higher than usual cases, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). At the same time this year, around 33,000 cases reported. Cases are well above pre-pandemic levels. In 2019, about 18,600 whooping cough cases were recorded, CDC data shows. (Benadjaoud and Kekatos, 11/24)
Other outbreaks and health threats 鈥
The current US hot spots for measles activity both reported new confirmed cases over the weekend, including exposures at a high school and an international airport.聽Officials in Utah, which has been battling a simmering outbreak in the southwestern part of the state, confirmed five new measles patients in Wasatch County in the north, east of Provo. They are the first measles patients identified in that county this year.聽All five patients are students at Wasatch High School, according to The Salt Lake Tribune. Two more possible cases are being investigated, the newspaper reported.聽(Soucheray, 11/24)
US COVID, seasonal influenza, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) activity remains low but is growing in some parts of the country, according to the most recent respiratory illness update from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).聽The CDC monitors respiratory illness activity by looking at a range of diagnoses from emergency department (ED) visits, including the common cold, flu, RSV, and COVID. Nationally,聽levels of acute respiratory illnesses are low or very low, with only three states鈥擜labama, Arkansas, and New Hampshire鈥攔eporting moderate levels.聽(Bergeson, 11/24)
A brief communication published last week in NPJ Primary Care Respiratory Medicine outlines the substantial economic burden of long COVID worldwide, estimating that persistent symptoms after COVID infection cost the global economy roughly $1 trillion each year, or roughly 1% of global gross domestic product.聽The analysis looked at data across numerous studies and reports, analyzing long COVID鈥檚 impact on national economies, healthcare systems, labor markets, and quality of life. (Bergeson, 11/24)
Two white-tailed deer at a Texas breeding facility linked to a recently uncovered deer-smuggling operation have tested positive for chronic wasting disease (CWD), an illness wildlife laws aim to prevent, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) reported yesterday. The detections were the first for Tom Green County, in west-central Texas. The farm is owned by Ken Schlaudt, 64, of San Antonio.聽(Van Beusekom, 11/21)
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department聽(WGFD) yesterday announced first-time chronic wasting disease (CWD) detections in two more deer hunt areas: 106 and 150. In Deer Hunt Area 106, in the Cody Region, a hunter harvested a mule deer buck that was part of the Clark鈥檚 Fork mule deer herd, in which CWD was first detected in 2019.聽Cody is located聽in the northwestern part of Wyoming and serves as the eastern gateway to Yellowstone National Park. (Van Beusekom, 11/21)
More health and wellness news 鈥
Researchers have found a potential link between obstructive sleep apnea and the development of Parkinson鈥檚 disease, according to a new study. Obstructive sleep apnea 鈥 a disorder in which a person experiences a fully or partially collapsed airway during sleep, causing a lack of oxygen and non-restorative rest 鈥 affects millions of Americans and often goes undiagnosed, according to the American Medical Association. Parkinson鈥檚 disease, an incurable progressive movement disorder, is the second-most common neurodegenerative disorder in the United States and is thought to affect around 1.1 million people. (Kasulis Cho, 11/25)
Women with common pregnancy complications are at increased risk for cardiovascular and metabolic health problems later in life. But many patients remain unaware of the connection. (Friedman, 11/24)
Dr. Smita Das often hears the same myth: You can鈥檛 get hooked on pot. And the misconception has become more widespread as a growing number of states legalize marijuana. Around half now allow recreational use for adults and 40 states allow medical use. But 鈥渃annabis is definitely something that someone can develop an addiction to,鈥 said Das, an addiction psychiatrist at Stanford University. It鈥檚 called cannabis use disorder and it鈥檚 on the rise, affecting about 3 in 10 people who use pot, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Ungar, 11/22)
Scientists searching for novel ways to fight cancer think they may have uncovered a promising new lead tucked away inside the cells of the bowhead whale. The findings, published in the journal Nature, are part of a growing field examining the ways that long-lived animals like the bowhead manage to keep on trucking without being felled by malignant cells. (Daniel, 11/24)
Scientists have identified five major 鈥渆pochs鈥 of human brain development in one of the most comprehensive studies to date of how neural wiring changes from infancy to old age. The study, based on the brain scans of nearly 4,000 people aged under one to 90, mapped neural connections and how they evolve during our lives. This revealed five broad phases, split up by four pivotal 鈥渢urning points鈥 in which brain organisation moves on to a different trajectory, at around the ages of nine, 32, 66 and 83 years. (Devlin, 11/25)
On mental health 鈥
Dialing down the use of social media for a week reduced symptoms of anxiety, depression and insomnia in young adults, according to a study published on Monday in the journal JAMA Network Open. Researchers followed 295 volunteers, ages 18 to 24, who opted to take a break from social media. Instructed to stay off social media as much as possible, the group on average reduced it to a half-hour per day from just under two hours. Before and after, the participants answered surveys measuring depression, anxiety, insomnia, loneliness and a number of problematic social media behaviors. (Barry, 11/24)
An OpenAI safety research leader who helped shape ChatGPT鈥檚 responses to users experiencing mental health crises announced her departure from the company internally last month, WIRED has learned. Andrea Vallone, the head of a safety research team known as model policy, is slated to leave OpenAI at the end of the year. (Zeff, 11/24)
Opinion writers tackle these public health topics.
A journey to the fringe of MAHA. (Rachael Bedard, 11/25)
A portable benefits program is the solution that meets the moment. (Patrice Onwuka, 11/24)
When the longest government shutdown in US history ended this month, Republicans mostly got what they wanted: A spending bill was passed, the government was reopened and Democrats' main demand - a deal to extend expiring Obamacare subsidies- was deferred. Now Republicans must deliver on a health-care compromise, lest millions of Americans get stuck with big bills come January. (11/25)
Like an estimated 20 million Americans, I have an incurable post-acute infection syndrome that goes by the name of long Covid. Some people refer to the long Covid experience as a 鈥渏ourney.鈥 I wish they would stop. I鈥檓 pinned down by it, stuck with it. I feel like I鈥檓 getting nowhere. (Peter Swenson, 11/25)
For years, federal policymakers have tweaked lung cancer screening guidelines as if the barrier to saving lives is a math problem. Add a few years to the eligibility age. Drop a few pack-years 鈥 a measure combining how much and how long someone has smoked. Remove a quit-time rule. Repeat. (Lisa Carter-Bawa, 11/25)