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Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
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麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories
Democrats Decry Meager Medical Care for Detainees in Funding Fight
A growing body of evidence indicates that immigrants in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement face medical consequences because of serious gaps in basic health care services. It鈥檚 adding to the political backlash against the Trump administration鈥檚 aggressive deportation policies.
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Here's today's health policy haiku:
LET SCIENCE BE YOUR GUIDE
Ignore RFK!
鈥 Ella Johnson
Childhood vaccines are quite safe.聽
Protect your children.
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Summaries Of The News:
Administration News
Save For A Few Brief Moments, Trump Avoided Health Care In Lengthy Speech
In an hour and 48-minute speech that set the record for length for the State of the Union address, President Donald Trump spent less than five minutes on healthcare issues. At approximately 35 minutes into the speech, Trump launched into attack of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), saying that it had made insurance companies rich and had benefited the companies, not people. The government, said Trump, had given insurers 鈥渉undreds and hundreds of billions of dollars a year as their stock prices soared 1,000, 1,200; 1,400 and even 1,700%, like nothing else.鈥 Trump said that is why he proposed his Great Healthcare Plan, which was unveiled in January 2026. 鈥淚 want to stop all payments to big insurance companies and instead give that money directly to the people so they can buy their own health care, which will be better health care at a much lower cost.鈥 (2/25)
In the first State of the Union address of his second term, President Donald Trump touted economic wins, including on health care, even as more than half of Americans say health care has become more unaffordable for them and their families.聽In his speech, Trump claimed he had brought prescription drug costs from the highest in the world to the lowest, thanks to his most-favored nation policy. And he implored congressional Republicans to codify the policy into law, lest his successor hike prescription drug prices.聽 (Cirruzzo and Wilkerson, 2/24)
President Trump on Tuesday blasted Democrats as 鈥渃razy鈥 and accused them of 鈥渄estroying the country鈥 after they refused to stand and applaud his proposal during the State of the Union to bar states from allowing teens to undergo gender transition treatment without consent from their parents. 鈥淪urely we can all agree no state can be allowed to rip children from their parents鈥 arms and transition them to a new gender against the parents will. Who can believe that we鈥檙e even talking about it? We must ban it and we must ban it immediately,鈥 Trump said, taking a moment to bask in applause from Republican lawmakers. (Bolton, 2/24)
Over almost two hours, President Donald Trump covered issues as varied as tariffs, men鈥檚 hockey, immigration and health care. He even touted a drug-purchasing platform offering discounted prices the government has bargained for some fertility drugs.聽But not once did he mention abortion 鈥 underscoring, just months before the midterm elections, a growing rift between the White House and a coalition that helped fuel Trump鈥檚 two presidential victories.聽(Luthra, 2/24)
President Trump claimed in his State of the Union address on Tuesday night to have ushered in a 鈥渢urnaround for the ages鈥 by citing a list of familiar falsehoods and inaccurate claims. (2/25)
In other Trump administration news 鈥
The US is ending its health aid programs in Zimbabwe after Harare withdrew from talks over a bilateral deal with Washington. An agreement would have provided the southern African nation with $367 million over five years for programs including HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention, tuberculosis, malaria and disease outbreak preparedness, according to the US embassy in Zimbabwe. As part of the proposed deal, Zimbabwe was asked to gradually increase its own funding for healthcare, it said. (Naidoo, Marawanyika, and Kew, 2/25)
麻豆女优 Health News: Democrats Decry Meager Medical Care For Detainees In Funding Fight
Fernando Viera Reyes needed a biopsy for possible prostate cancer when the Trump administration sent him to an immigration detention center in California鈥檚 Mojave Desert. There, he waited. Reyes, now 51, made repeated requests for the procedure, according to a lawsuit filed in November against the federal government, but months went by even though there was blood in his urine 鈥 a potential sign of cancer that鈥檚 spread. (Armour, 2/25)
麻豆女优 Health News: Listen To The Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'
Arielle聽Zionts聽reads the week鈥檚 news:聽Some health systems are using AI聽tools to help patients聽get primary care, and the Trump administration鈥檚 new data-sharing rules make going to the hospital more dangerous for people without legal status. (Cook, 2/24)
Vaccines
Casey Means Faces Senate Today Over Qualifications To Be Surgeon General
Dr. Casey Means will appear before the Senate on Wednesday in a long-awaited hearing to discuss her highly scrutinized nomination for surgeon general. If confirmed to the role, Means would be an outlier among surgeons general: She does not hold an active medical license (her license lapsed in January 2024) and she did not complete her medical residency (she graduated from Stanford University School of Medicine but left a surgical residency program at Oregon Health and Science University in 2018, just months before she was due to complete it). (Bendix, 2/25)
In other news about vaccines, autism, covid, measles, HPV, and hep B 鈥
Aiming to reverse recent changes to federal vaccine recommendations, 15 states led by Democrats announced on Tuesday that they were suing the Trump administration. The lawsuit, filed by a coalition of 14 attorneys general and the governor of Pennsylvania, asks the courts to nullify the administration鈥檚 decision in January to reduce the number of diseases children are routinely immunized against to 11 from 17. (Mandavilli, 2/24)
They鈥檙e prominent talking points for Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his top officials: Taking Tylenol while pregnant could be linked to autism. Antidepressants may be harmful during pregnancy. Aluminum salts in vaccines might pose a health risk. And Covid shots don鈥檛 benefit healthy children. The remarks have sowed confusion over the past year, as scientists warn there isn鈥檛 evidence to back them up. Nevertheless, federal health agencies have pursued policies based on the assertions. (Bendix, 2/24)
A group of former U.S. Coast Guard members who were discharged after refusing to receive the COVID-19 vaccine have been reinstated, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced Tuesday.聽DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said that this group of 56 servicemembers, who were removed under a vaccination requirement imposed by former President Biden in 2021, will receive back pay for the time period they were not allowed to serve.聽(Davis, 2/24)
The measles outbreak in South Carolina reached 979 cases today, but its growth seems to be slowing. Only six new cases were reported by the South Carolina Department of Public Health (DPH) in an update today.聽This is the first time since January the state has reported fewer than 10 new cases in an update. (Soucheray, 2/24)
A person with measles visited a car dealership and Wawa in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, multiple times while contagious, the health department said. According to the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services and the Office of Public Health, the infected individual visited a Nissan dealership in Royersford and a Wawa in Limerick from Feb. 16-19, 2026. (Simon, 2/24)
Cervical cancer rates in young women have dropped dramatically in the United States since a vaccine for human pappilomavirus (HPV) became available.聽States with high vaccination rates have seen the biggest drop in cervical cancer, while states with low vaccination rates have had little to no progress, according to a new study from the American Cancer Society (ACS). HPV causes 90% of cervical cancers. (Szabo, 2/24)
An聽analysis involving more than 12.4 million US newborns shows that after six years of growth, receipt of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccine birth dose fell more than 10 percentage points in the past two years. Researchers from the University of California San Diego led the study, which was published yesterday in JAMA. (Van Beusekom, 2/24)
Pharma and Tech
Ozempic, Wegovy Maker Announces List Price Cut By Up To 50% For 2027
Battling to regain its market share over rival Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk announced Tuesday that it will reduce the list prices of its popular weight loss drug Wegovy and diabetes drugs Ozempic and Rybelsus by up to half starting in 2027. (Luhby, 2/24)
For insured patients who have to pay coinsurance 鈥 a certain percentage of the list price 鈥 when buying prescription drugs, or for those in high-deductible plans who need to pay list prices before meeting deductibles, the move will bring down out-of-pocket costs. But in the complicated world of drug pricing, Novo鈥檚 move to cut 35% to 50% off the list price of its semaglutide products, Ozempic, Rybelus, and Wegovy, to $675 a month may not mean many more payers will cover the drugs, which would allow more people to get them. That, experts say, is because what matters to employers and other payers when making coverage decisions are net prices 鈥 the actual prices they pay after rebates and discounts. (Chen, 2/24)
More on weight loss and obesity 鈥
The FDA granted premarket approval to a gastric balloon system for short-term weight loss alongside lifestyle intervention, developer Allurion announced on Monday. The drug-free system is indicated for adults 22 to 65 years with obesity who had an unsuccessful attempt at weight loss with a prior program. By taking up room in the stomach, the device helps patients feel fuller and eat less. (Monaco, 2/24)
U.S. childhood and teen obesity聽rates have reached record-highs while adult obesity rates may be slowing, according to two new reports published early Wednesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Researchers used measured heights and weights from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) -- run by the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics -- to track trends over more than six decades. (Kekatos and Premaratne, 2/25)
Children born to obese parents were more likely to develop a common chronic liver disease and to struggle with weight themselves, a U.K. birth cohort study found. (Robertson, 2/24)
In other pharma and tech developments 鈥
Building up its base of medicines for lung diseases, GSK said Wednesday it was buying the privately held firm 35Pharma for $950 million in cash. The centerpiece of the deal is an experimental drug called HS235 that is set to start trials in pulmonary arterial hypertension, a form of high blood pressure in the lungs. (Joseph, 2/25)
MiniMed Group Inc., a diabetes management firm that will be separated from health-care giant Medtronic Plc, is seeking to raise as much as $784 million in an initial public offering. The Northridge, California-based firm plans to market 28 million shares for $25 to $28 each, according to its filing Tuesday with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The IPO is expected to price March 5, an investor presentation shows. (Pernell, 2/24)
What if you could swallow a tiny robot that could diagnose, monitor and treat health issues in your gut without scheduling an uncomfortable or time-consuming outpatient procedure? Researchers at the University of Maryland鈥檚 A. James Clark School of Engineering are developing a smart capsule to revolutionize how doctors practice medicine in the intestinal tract. (Hille, 2/24)
Health Industry
Texas Medical Supplier At Center Of Global Medicare Billing Scam, Feds Say
A small Austin medical supply business that appeared to be little more than a mailroom is at the center of an alleged Medicare billing scheme that prosecutors say moved quickly and funneled millions of dollars overseas, according to a newly filed federal criminal complaint. Nika Machutadze, a Russian citizen living in Texas, is charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering. Investigators say two medical equipment companies tied to him 鈥 including Centurion Superior Medical in North Austin 鈥 billed Medicare and other health programs for urinary catheters that patients did not need or receive. (New, 2/24)
More about Medicare 鈥
The pharmaceutical and biotech industries are pushing back against two Trump administration proposals that would test plans to lower drug prices in Medicare by aligning them with the prices paid in other rich countries. (Wilkerson, 2/24)
Technology companies are racing to bring tools to market aimed at helping health systems provide hospital-at-home more effectively. The federal government extended Medicare鈥檚 Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver through September 2030, making at-home reimbursement rates equal to in-hospital care. In response, providers are looking to expand their programs 鈥 including investing in technology to address common pain points. Competition for those dollars could be fierce. (Eastabrook, 2/24)
In other health care industry updates 鈥
Richard Axel, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist and professor, announced Tuesday that he was resigning as a co-director of a flagship neuroscience institute at Columbia University because of his friendship with Jeffery Epstein. The resignation is the latest fallout in the world of academia from the release of millions of pages of files in late January that showed how Mr. Epstein鈥檚 relationships with billionaires, scientists and others in positions of power continued even after his 2008 felony convictions and his prison sentence for solicitation of prostitution by a minor. (Otterman, 2/25)
University of Health Sciences and Pharmacy in St. Louis will wind down operations in spring 2027, with Washington University set to acquire its campus and absorb one of its four colleges. (Obradovic, 2/24)
Brad Boner sits in a reclining chair in St. John鈥檚 Health oncology clinic. Small partitions separate five adjacent bays where patients 鈥 some talk on the phone or type on laptops, trying to work 鈥 receive intravenous infusions. (Boyd-Fliegel, 2/24)
It鈥檚 a familiar frustration for those trying to find a doctor or therapist: You browse the provider directory on your insurance company鈥檚 portal and, at first, it seems like there are plenty of options. But it turns out that some providers are not accepting new patients, and others only work in hospital settings. Still others are out of network or don鈥檛 return calls. And some phone numbers and addresses are simply wrong. The situation is so common that there鈥檚 a term for it: a ghost network. (Bendix, Herzberg and Snow, 2/25)
Putting more residency training slots in rural areas is key to increasing access to healthcare among rural and underserved communities, several lawmakers and witnesses said Tuesday at a House hearing on advancing the next generation of the healthcare workforce. "Rural hospitals must overcome a lack of resources, staff, and patient volume to establish new residency programs while simultaneously getting reimbursed less than their urban counterparts," Rep. Adrian Smith (R-Neb.), who chaired the Ways and Means Health Subcommittee hearing in the subcommittee chair's absence, said in his opening statement. (Frieden, 2/24)
For some young children in Columbus, Ohio, reading assessments don鈥檛 start in the kindergarten classroom 鈥 they happen first in the doctor鈥檚 office. With concerns rising about lagging childhood literacy rates across the country, Nationwide Children鈥檚 Hospital has begun screening children鈥檚 literacy skills starting at age 3 during pediatrician visits. The idea is to catch reading struggles early on and guide parents on how to help their kids. (Seminera, 2/25)
From The States
Medical Puzzle: Calif. Officer Dies From Fentanyl Ingestion After Giving Narcan
Shortly after administering Narcan to a DUI suspect experiencing a possible overdose, CHP Officer Miguel Cano started to feel unwell, swerved his patrol car into a tree and was killed. His sudden death left many questions unanswered. On Monday, one piece of the puzzle was revealed 鈥 his cause of death was ruled an accident due to the effects of fentanyl, according to the L.A. County medical examiner. (Harter, 2/24)
Kate Movius moved among a roomful of Los Angeles County sheriff鈥檚 deputies, passing out a pop trivia quiz and paper prism glasses. She told them to put on the vision-distorting glasses, and to write with their nondominant hand. As they filled out the tests, Movius moved about the City of Industry classroom pounding abruptly on tables. Then came the cowbell. An aide flashed the overhead lights on and off at random. The goal was to help the deputies understand the feeling of sensory overwhelm, which many autistic people experience when incoming stimulation exceeds their capacity to process. (Purtill, 2/24)
The California program that provides the world鈥檚 only medical treatment for potentially deadly infant botulism also offers traumatized families hope of a different sort 鈥 silly cards on their babies鈥 first birthdays. Every year, staff at the state鈥檚 Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program decorate and mail roughly 200 cards to celebrate the recovery of children affected by the rare and dangerous condition. In recent months, that group has included dozens of U.S. babies affected by an outbreak of botulism tied to contaminated ByHeart infant formula. (Aleccia, 2/24)
A San Francisco lawmaker is pushing a city-wide ban on retail sales of nitrous oxide 鈥 an inhalable gas, also known as laughing gas or whippets 鈥 that has addicted teens and young adults across the nation with sometimes devastating consequences. On Tuesday, Supervisor Danny Sauter asked the City Attorney to draft legislation that would ban retail sales of the gas, which 鈥渉as been exploding in popularity in San Francisco and across the U.S.,鈥 Sauter said at a meeting of the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday. (Park and McFadden, 2/24)
Nearly two weeks after a major pipeline failure at the Colgate Powerhouse in Northern California's Yuba County, the weather has been making things even more difficult for crews who are trying to get a handle on the situation. There has also been major concern surrounding the health of the Yuba River following the incident. Yuba Water Agency suspended operations on Tuesday due to safety concerns with incoming rain. (Moeller, 2/24)
Nick Reiner, his head shaved and wearing brown clothes, pleaded not guilty Monday to two first-degree murder charges in the December stabbing deaths of his parents, 78-year-old filmmaker Rob Reiner and photographer Michele Singer Reiner, 70. ... Reiner has spoken on a podcast about his struggles with drug addiction and his trips to Los Angeles鈥檚 Skid Row to procure heroin. Over the course of a decade, he spent time at at least 18 rehab facilities paid for by his parents, and he lived in a guesthouse on their $13.5 million property in Brentwood. The Los Angeles Times reported in late December that Reiner was prescribed schizophrenia medicine before the deaths of his parents. (Reston, 2/23)
Major Health Care Changes May Be Ahead For Nearly 800,000 Hawaiians
In mid-January lawmakers from the Hawai驶i House and Senate committees on consumer protection called in executives from HMSA and Hawai驶i Pacific Health to explain their proposal to create a new system designed to address Hawai驶i鈥檚 health care crisis. Despite lengthy talk about 鈥渞isk-sharing,鈥 鈥渧alue-based care鈥 and 鈥渂ending the cost curve,鈥 the presentation by Hawai驶i Pacific Health鈥檚 chief executive, Ray Vara, and his HMSA counterpart, Dr. Mark Mugiishi, left some lawmakers with more questions than answers. (Yerton, 2/24)
Two Republican lawmakers in Tennessee are floating an amendment to an abortion bill that would bring homicide charges against expecting mothers who choose to terminate their pregnancies. ... Text of the amendment provided by Barrett to WSMV4 says, 鈥渁ll preborn children should be protected with the same criminal and civil laws protecting the lives of born persons by repealing provisions that permit prenatal homicide and assault.鈥 (Fields, 2/24)
The Alabama Senate has passed legislation that would impose new requirements on insurers that use AI to make prior authorization decisions, including a mandate that any decision to deny a request must be made by a physician or other qualified provider. The bill passed in the Senate on Feb. 19 and has been referred to the House Insurance Committee. If enacted, it would take effect Oct. 1. (Emerson, 2/24)
Artificial intelligence chatbots operating in Colorado would be required to adhere to a series of regulations aimed at protecting kids and preventing suicide under a bipartisan bill introduced in the legislature last week. (Paul, 2/25)
Federal workplace safety regulators penalized three businesses Tuesday over their failure to protect six Colorado dairy workers who were killed by exposure to highly toxic hydrogen sulfide gas after a manure pipe disconnected in an enclosed space. The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration announced proposed fines totaling $246,609 against the dairy owner and two contractors working on a manure management system. The deaths of five men and a teenager on Aug. 20, 2025, shocked the rural communities in and around Keenesburg, 35 miles (55 kilometers) northeast of Denver. (Lee, 2/25)
The legislature鈥檚 Aging Committee has introduced a bill that aims to offer some relief to long-term care insurance policyholders who have been squeezed by large premium increases. (Carlesso, 2/24)
A bill designed to stop grooming in Minnesota schools is moving forward after its first hearing on Tuesday. It follows a WCCO investigative series where a young woman聽shared what she says happened to her in high school.聽The House Education Policy Committee heard testimony on the bill.聽"My name is Hannah LoPresto. I'm a victim survivor of grooming and sexual assault by my high school band teacher," LoPresto said. LoPresto told lawmakers what she says happened to her propelled her to act.聽(Mayerle, 2/24)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Patients Lose Even With Rural Health Transformation Program; Dentists' Role In The Opioid Crisis
I always feel a heightened awareness as I navigate a catheter through the right side of the heart and into the pulmonary artery, the blood vessel carrying blood flow into the lungs. It鈥檚 a three-dimensional trip, tracked in two dimensions on fluoroscopy. Because of the strain a pulmonary embolism puts on the heart, the anatomy is distorted. While watching on the screen, I make small movements and slowly advance to find the right trajectory. The catheter jumps into position. (Daniel Torrent, 2/25)
It was a routine day in my practice. A 28-year-old man 鈥 polite, soft-spoken, and visibly anxious 鈥 walked into my dental chair for what he thought would be a quick fix for a nagging toothache. Halfway through the exam, I asked a standard question from a new screening tool we had begun using: 鈥淗ave you ever used, or do you currently use, any controlled substances?鈥 (Divya Upadhyay, 2/25)
The Health secretary released a video of him flexing with Kid Rock, while his reckless decisions have contributed to more than 900 people contracting measles in 2026. (Robert B. Shpiner, 2/22)
Future clinicians should be training on how to use this technology effectively. (Ashish K. Jha, 2/24)
We surveyed medical workers across 14 cities and 11 provinces about their experiences treating wounded protesters. (Roxana Saberi and Fatemeh Jamalpour, 2/25)