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Wednesday, Jun 11 2025

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 5

  • Four Ways Trump鈥檚 鈥極ne Big Beautiful Bill鈥 Would Undermine Access to Obamacare
  • What Are 鈥業mproper鈥 Medicaid Payments, and Are They as High as a Trump Official Said?
  • Watch: RFK Jr. Dismisses All 17 Members of Vaccine Advisory Committee
  • Echoing 2020, Police Use Rubber Bullets Against Protesters in Los Angeles
  • Listen to the Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

Note To Readers

Capitol Watch 1

  • House GOP Alters Portions of Megabill That Jeopardized Quick Senate Passage

Administration News 1

  • All Of USAID's International Workforce Will Be Eliminated By Sept. 30: Report

Vaccines 1

  • Anti-Vaxxers Won't Have A Place On CDC's Advisory Panel, RFK Jr. Says

Pharmaceuticals 1

  • After Staff Layoffs, FDA Says It Will Use AI To Improve Drug Approval Efficiency

Health Industry 1

  • Congressional Report Alleges Organ Procurement Numbers Are Miscounted

State Watch 1

  • LAPD's 'Less Lethal' Methods Used At Protests Still Cause Harm, Cost State

Environmental Health 1

  • Proposed PFAS Reclassification Isn't Backed By Science, Experts Warn

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Requests For Blood From Unvaccinated Donors Pose Problems; RFK Jr.'s Latest Attack On Vaccines

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

Four Ways Trump鈥檚 鈥極ne Big Beautiful Bill鈥 Would Undermine Access to Obamacare

The combination of the House-passed spending and tax bill and the Trump administration鈥檚 regulatory action could change Affordable Care Act enrollment and the cost of insurance. The result, according to the Congressional Budget Office, is that millions of people may become uninsured. ( Julie Appleby , 6/11 )

What Are 鈥業mproper鈥 Medicaid Payments, and Are They as High as a Trump Official Said?

The vast majority of improper payments stem from documentation mistakes and do not fit the definition of waste, fraud, or abuse. They also typically stem from health care providers鈥 actions, not beneficiaries鈥 abuse. ( Louis Jacobson, PolitiFact , 6/11 )

Watch: RFK Jr. Dismisses All 17 Members of Vaccine Advisory Committee

麻豆女优 Health News鈥 C茅line Gounder joined CBS Evening News to discuss the unprecedented move by the Health and Human Services secretary. ( 6/10 )

Echoing 2020, Police Use Rubber Bullets Against Protesters in Los Angeles

鈥淟ess lethal鈥 weapons are once again being used in Los Angeles 鈥 against people protesting the Trump administration鈥檚 immigration raids. With terms like 鈥渇oam,鈥 鈥渟ponge,鈥 and 鈥渂ean bag,鈥 the projectiles may sound harmless. They鈥檙e not. ( 6/10 )

Listen to the Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

The "麻豆女优 Health News Minute鈥 brings original health care and health policy reporting from our newsroom to the airwaves each week. ( 1/6 )

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Here's today's health policy haiku:

'FORCED MEDICINE' ENDS

Freedom fighters shout.
Fluoride removed from water.
Tooth decay, costs soar!

鈥 Barbara Skoglund

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:

Capitol Watch

House GOP Alters Portions of Megabill That Jeopardized Quick Senate Passage

SNAP is among the provisions being revised after Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine) complained about it. Meanwhile, states are working to cushion the blow the GOP tax bill will have on their budgets.

House Republicans have finalized changes to the party-line tax and spending package the chamber passed last month 鈥 necessary to keep the bill in compliance with Senate rules. The amendment, which House Republicans teed up in the Rules Committee Tuesday evening and plan to adopt on the floor Wednesday, would among other things nix a policy cracking down on the fraud-plagued employee retention tax credit created during the pandemic. Republicans were relying on this provision to recoup $6.3 billion in savings to offset the massive legislation. (Scholtes, Hill and Tully-McManus, 6/10)

Democratic governors facing potential big budget problems exacerbated by the GOP megabill being fast-tracked in Washington are considering emergency measures to try to soften the blow. Blue state policymakers from Connecticut to California to New York are raising the specter that they will call lawmakers back for special sessions to tackle what could amount to hundreds of millions of dollars in additional costs as a result of President Donald Trump鈥檚 鈥渂ig, beautiful bill.鈥 And even some deep red states 鈥 like Florida 鈥 are taking steps to address the financial fallout. (Wolman, 6/11)

President Donald Trump鈥檚 plan to cut taxes by trillions of dollars could also trim billions in spending from social safety net programs, including food aid for lower-income people. The proposed changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program would make states pick up more of the costs, require several million more recipients to work or lose their benefits, and potentially reduce the amount of food aid people receive in the future. (Lieb, 6/11)

麻豆女优 Health News: What Are 鈥業mproper鈥 Medicaid Payments, And Are They As High As A Trump Official Said?

Responding to charges that President Donald Trump鈥檚 tax and spending bill would cut Medicaid coverage for millions of Americans, Trump administration officials misleadingly counter that it targets only waste, fraud, and abuse. During an interview on CNN鈥檚 鈥淪tate of the Union,鈥 Russell Vought, the administration鈥檚 director of the Office of Management and Budget, framed Medicaid as sagging under the weight of improper payments. (Jacobson, 6/11)

Also 鈥

麻豆女优 Health News: Four Ways Trump鈥檚 鈥極ne Big Beautiful Bill鈥 Would Undermine Access To Obamacare

Major changes could be in store for the more than 24 million people with health coverage under the Affordable Care Act, including how and when they can enroll, the paperwork required, and, crucially, the premiums they pay. A driver behind these changes is the 鈥淥ne Big Beautiful Bill,鈥 the name given to spending and tax legislation designed to advance the policy agenda of President Donald Trump. It passed the House on May 22 and is pending in the Senate. (Appleby, 6/11)

The state agency that regulates health insurance announced Tuesday that it estimates more than a third of people who buy insurance on their own in Colorado could drop coverage due to rising prices if certain subsidies are not extended and the federal reconciliation bill passes as-is. (Ingold, 6/11)

鈥淐atastrophic.鈥 It鈥檚 a word Courtney English returns to again and again as he reflects on the first few weeks of the year, when the Office of Management and Budget announced a temporary freeze on federal loans and grants. At that time, the threats to housing assistance and development shook city of Atlanta officials. (Reynolds, 6/10)

Administration News

All Of USAID's International Workforce Will Be Eliminated By Sept. 30: Report

In a cable sent Tuesday and obtained by The Guardian, the State Department said it will 鈥渁ssume responsibility for foreign assistance programming previously undertaken by USAID鈥 starting June 15. Plus: What NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya told a Senate panel Tuesday about recent budget cuts.

The Trump administration will eliminate all USAID overseas positions worldwide by Sept. 30 in a dramatic restructuring of remaining US foreign aid operations. In a Tuesday state department cable obtained by the Guardian, secretary of state Marco Rubio ordered the abolishment of the agency鈥檚 entire international workforce, transferring control of foreign assistance programs directly to the state department. (Gedeon and Tait, 6/10)

National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya faced questions from senators during an Appropriations subcommittee hearing Tuesday, as the federal government agency has taken hits to its staffing levels and grant-making ability since under President Trump.聽Senators focused on the Trump administration鈥檚 requested 2026 budget, which calls for cutting NIH鈥檚 funding by $18 billion from 2025 levels. (O鈥機onnell-Domenech, 6/10)

Federal research funding cuts pose an 鈥渆xistential threat鈥 to academic medicine that will have repercussions for patient care in the US, according to a new report from the Association of American Medical Colleges, highlighting what it calls significant damage already done to the nation. (Koda, 6/11)

On MAHA and RFK Jr. 鈥

The Department of Health and Human Services' budget request for the 2026 fiscal year consolidates the department's 28 divisions to 15 to make way for a new "institution of public health." The new agency, the Administration for a Healthy America, has a $20.6 billion budget designed to support Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s "Make America Healthy Again" agenda. That includes taking over 鈥 and significantly reducing 鈥 funds for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's chronic disease and global health centers along with some of the institutes that are currently part of the National Institutes of Health.聽(Gold and Ingram, 6/10)

The new agency at the center of health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 agenda is hitting its first hurdle: Congress. (Payne, Cueto and Cirruzzo, 6/11)

Calley Means has built a following within the 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 movement by railing against the failings of the U.S. health system, often pinning the blame on one issue: corruption. Means, a top aide to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., was hired as a White House adviser in March. He has used that perch to attack the nation鈥檚 leading physician groups, federal agencies and government scientists, claiming they only protect their own interests in the nation鈥檚 $4.9 trillion-a-year industry. (Perrone, 6/10)

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has made it his mission to remind Americans that they need to get off the couch and lay off the junk food. But there鈥檚 one vice he鈥檚 not talking about: smoking. That鈥檚 troubled anti-smoking activists, researchers who focus on the diseases tobacco causes and Democrats in Congress who point out that smoking, despite a marked decline in recent years, still leads to more preventable deaths than anything else. (Nguyen and Lim, 6/10)

In related news 鈥

Europe鈥檚 comparatively cautious approach to food additives is the envy of health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the Make America Healthy Again movement. A Texas bill now before Gov. Greg Abbott aims to help close the gap by slapping warning labels on foods that contain any of 44 additives and dyes. (Todd, 6/11)

Vaccines

Anti-Vaxxers Won't Have A Place On CDC's Advisory Panel, RFK Jr. Says

The Health and Human Services secretary will announce on X the "highly credentialed physicians" who will replace the 17 committee members he just fired. More are calling for Kennedy's resignation as frustration grows.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pledged to bring in 鈥渉ighly credentialed physicians鈥 and 鈥渘ot anti-vaxxers鈥 to fill newly vacant slots on an influential committee that advises the US government on vaccine policy. Kennedy made the remarks roughly 24 hours after he abruptly dismissed all 17 members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices in an unprecedented move he said was needed to restore public confidence in vaccine science. The new members will be in place before the panel鈥檚 next scheduled meeting that starts June 25, Kennedy said Tuesday. (Cohrs Zhang, 6/10)

Helen Chu went through a multi-year process to finally gain a seat on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 vaccines experts panel, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. There was a lengthy application process, and extensive conflict-of-interest vetting, followed by training about how the committee conducts its operations. Chu, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Washington, was appointed last year to a four-year term on the committee. (Branswell, 6/10)

Tuesday鈥檚 scheduled all-hands meeting at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would have been the first during the new Trump administration. Instead, after it was canceled at the last minute, dozens of current and former employees at the country鈥檚 leading public health agency rallied outside CDC headquarters in Atlanta to protest what they described as a wave of unlawful firings, the dismantling of lifesaving programs and the censorship of science. (Zadrozny, Bendix and Edwards, 6/10)

Physicians called on HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to immediately reverse his decision to fire all 17 sitting members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), and called for a Senate investigation into his actions. Less than 24 hours after Kennedy announced that HHS had removed all of CDC's vaccine advisors, American Medical Association (AMA) delegates passed an emergency resolution urging Kennedy to reverse this move during their annual meeting. (Firth, 6/10)

On Monday, health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gutted the panel of experts that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccines. That鈥檚 put the spotlight on a key Senate Republican health leader who sharply criticized Kennedy鈥檚 views on vaccines, then decided to support him anyhow. (Cirruzzo and Hogan, 6/10)

麻豆女优 Health News: Watch: RFK Jr. Dismisses All 17 Members Of Vaccine Advisory Committee

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on June 9 he is removing the entire independent committee that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccine usage, claiming members had too many outside conflicts.聽麻豆女优 Health News鈥 C茅line Gounder joined CBS Evening News to discuss what this means for the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, known as ACIP. (6/10)

Also 鈥

The Department of Health and Human Services is circulating a document on Capitol Hill to explain its decision to remove the Covid-19 vaccine recommendation for pregnant women 鈥 citing studies that largely found the shot is safe. The document, which HHS sent to lawmakers days before Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced his plan to fire the panel that advises the CDC on immunizations, says that studies have shown that women who got the vaccine during pregnancy had higher rates of various complications. (Gardner and Gardner, 6/10)

Pharmaceuticals

After Staff Layoffs, FDA Says It Will Use AI To Improve Drug Approval Efficiency

Officials at the FDA say they want to speed up approvals for new drugs and devices using tech like the new "Elsa" AI system. More news is on other uses of AI in health care, Eli Lilly refusing to work with telehealth firms over copycat drug sales, and more.

The Food and Drug Administration is planning to use artificial intelligence to 鈥渞adically increase efficiency鈥 in deciding whether to approve new drugs and devices, one of several top priorities laid out in an article published Tuesday in JAMA. Another initiative involves a review of chemicals and other 鈥渃oncerning ingredients鈥 that appear in U.S. food but not in the food of other developed nations. (Jewett, 6/10)

More about the use of AI in health care 鈥

Mayo Clinic is investing in an ambient clinical artificial intelligence startup, the health system said Tuesday. The聽Rochester, Minnesota-based health system made an undisclosed investment and entered into a collaboration focused on ambient clinical intelligence with Hellocare.ai, a healthcare artificial intelligence and virtual care company. (Turner, 6/10)

The Joint Commission, the nation鈥檚 oldest health care accreditation organization, is forming a partnership with the Coalition for Health AI to develop guidelines for responsible use of health AI, and a new certification program, STAT has learned. (Trang, 6/10)

Does the concept of artificial intelligence intimidate you? Or do you figure it won鈥檛 have much impact on your life, so why bother learning about it? Well, AI is definitely entering 鈥 and improving 鈥 your life, whether you choose it or not. (Savage, 6/9)

Other pharma and tech news 鈥

Eli Lilly & Co. will only work with telehealth firms that agree to stop selling copycat versions of weight-loss drugs, diminishing the likelihood of a partnership with one most visible players in the industry, Hims & Hers Health Inc. Hims teamed up with Novo Nordisk A/S in April to offer its rival drug Wegovy at a discounted price to patients who use its platform. The telehealth company 鈥 and its investors 鈥 had been hoping for a similar agreement with Lilly, which is working with several of Hims鈥 competitors to distribute lower-cost Zepbound. (Muller, 6/10)

The FDA narrowed the indications for pembrolizumab (Keytruda) and nivolumab (Opdivo) in gastric, gastroesophageal junction (GEJ), and esophageal cancers, according to letters sent to the respective drugmakers. The agency had originally granted PD-L1 agnostic approval for the two immune checkpoint inhibitors as first-line treatment for advanced gastroesophageal cancers. (Bassett, 6/10)

Drugmaker Innoviva Specialty Therapeutics announced today that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has accepted its new drug application (NDA) for zoliflodacin, an investigational oral antibiotic for uncomplicated gonorrhea. If the FDA approves the drug, it would be the first new antibiotic for gonorrhea in decades and a much-needed weapon against the second most common sexually transmitted infection in the world. (Dall, 6/10)

Abbott and Tandem Diabetes Care announced Tuesday an agreement to combine Abbott鈥檚 upcoming dual glucose-ketone sensor with Tandem's insulin delivery systems to create integrated diabetes solutions. The sensor聽is in development, but once it's commercially available,聽it will be able to detect an early rise in ketone levels to help patients avoid diabetic ketoacidosis. The company expects the sensor to be available next year, according to a spokesperson. (Dubinsky, 6/10)

Coinbase Global Inc. co-founder Fred Ehrsam has become the latest Silicon Valley billionaire to jump into the brain-health business, with his startup hiring at least eight people who used to work at Elon Musk鈥檚 Neuralink. Unlike Musk鈥檚 company, which inserts a chip in the brain, Ehrsam鈥檚 Nudge aims to build a consumer headset-like product using ultrasound technology that Ehrsam hopes will treat brain diseases, improve your mood and help you sleep with the push of a button. (Swetlitz and Carson, 6/10)

Health Industry

Congressional Report Alleges Organ Procurement Numbers Are Miscounted

The bipartisan report alleges that organ procurement organizations use a loophole to boost ratings and stay certified. In other news: UnitedHealth faces whistleblower claims; CVS and Cigna settle lawsuit; many physicians would consider assisted suicide for themselves; and more.

A bipartisan congressional report to be released publicly Tuesday alleges that the organizations responsible for recovering donated organs for transplantation use a federal loophole to miscount the number of organs to boost performance ratings and stay certified. (Cirruzzo, 6/10)

Attention comes in wake of ex-employees鈥 allegations that insurer paid nursing homes to reduce hospital transfers and used improper tactics to gain Medicare Advantage enrollees. (Gedeon and Joseph, 6/10)

CVS Health and the executive at the center of a legal dispute with Cigna have resolved a case over a noncompete clause. Amy Bricker was president of Cigna subsidiary Express Scripts when CVS Health announced her hire as executive vice president and chief product officer for its consumer business in January 2023. Cigna swiftly sued to prevent Bricker from taking the new job on the grounds that doing so violated her employment contract. (Tepper, 6/10)

State officials broke ground Tuesday at the site of the future psychiatric hospital in Amarillo, bringing the Panhandle one step closer to inpatient mental health care. The hospital is the long-awaited result after the Texas Legislature in 2023 approved $159 million to build an inpatient psychiatric hospital in Amarillo. Mental health advocates in the area say it is desperately needed to bring mental health resources closer to the largely rural region that鈥檚 home to nearly 436,000 people. (Carver, 6/10)

麻豆女优 Health News: Listen To The Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

Katheryn Houghton reads the week鈥檚 news: More than 100 rural hospitals have stopped delivering babies since 2021, and the federal government failed to warn the public about a major E. coli outbreak. Jackie Fortier reads the week鈥檚 news: New programs teach Black kids to swim competitively and help their parents learn too, and people in prison are often denied basic health care at the end of their lives. (6/10)

On health care personnel 鈥

The American Medical Association underwent its annual leadership change on Tuesday, inaugurating otolaryngologist Bobby Mukkamala, M.D. as the 180th president of the nation鈥檚 largest physician association. The organization鈥檚 House of Delegates, composed of its member physicians and residents, also chose urologic surgeon William Underwood III, M.D., as its president-elect. Underwood will assume the presidency in June 2026. (Beavins, 6/10)

The US Department of Labor is reassessing a decade-old rule that extended pay protections to home health aides, a move that has the potential to impact the wages of millions of US workers. In a footnote in a court filing last month, the agency said it 鈥渋ntends to reconsider鈥 regulations issued in 2013 under President Barack Obama, which expanded the scope of minimum wage and overtime rules to cover so-called 鈥渄irect care鈥 workers such as home health aides and certified nursing assistants. (Eidelson, 6/10)

Noah Wyle is heading to the pit of political power, with a visit to Capitol Hill to push for funding for programs aimed at improving mental health services for health care workers. 鈥淭he Pitt鈥 and former 鈥淓R鈥 star will touch down in Washington on Thursday to lead a panel discussion at the Cannon House Office Building focused on the 鈥渄aily mental health, financial, and bureaucratic challenges for doctors and nurses today.鈥 Wyle will be joined by his mom, Marjorie Speer, a retired nurse, along with more than a dozen health care professionals. (Kurtz, 6/10)

Many physicians said they would consider assisted dying if they were faced with advanced cancer or severe Alzheimer's disease, survey data showed. In eight jurisdictions spanning five countries, about half of physicians would consider euthanasia a good or very good option if they had very painful end-stage cancer (54.2%) or severe end-stage Alzheimer's disease (51.5%), reported Sarah Mroz, PhD, of Vrije Universiteit Brussel in Belgium, and co-authors. (George, 6/10)

State Watch

LAPD's 'Less Lethal' Methods Used At Protests Still Cause Harm, Cost State

News outlets break down the health effects rubber bullets and tear gas have on people, and how the use of such methods could open up governments to civil liability claims. Other states making news: Texas, Louisiana, Oregon, Alabama, Florida and South Carolina.

As protests have intensified, there have been reports that the LAPD is using rubber bullets against protesters. An Australian journalist was also struck. A British news photographer said that he had to undergo emergency surgery after a plastic bullet hit his thigh. In previous cases, court ordered payments to people who officers shot with rubber bullets. In March 2023, a federal jury awarded $375,000 to Deon Jones after he was shot in the face with a rubber bullet by an LAPD officer during a May 2020 protest. (6/9)

麻豆女优 Health News: Echoing 2020, Police Use Rubber Bullets Against Protesters In Los Angeles

Weapons dubbed 鈥渓ess lethal鈥 are once again being used in Los Angeles, this time against people protesting the Trump administration鈥檚 immigration raids.聽During the 2020 protests sparked by the police killing of George Floyd, 麻豆女优 Health News and USA Today documented the harm that rubber bullets and other 鈥渓ess lethal鈥 projectiles can cause. Here鈥檚 what we found.聽(6/10)

Though not explicitly designed to kill, these so-called 鈥渓ess-lethal鈥 weapons can cause serious health effects鈥攁nd, in some cases, lasting harm. The use of these weapons can result in respiratory problems, head injuries, and even death. In the United States, police force of all types results in 75,000 nonfatal injuries requiring hospital treatment and 600 to 1,100 deaths every year, according to the Law Enforcement Epidemiology Project at the University of Illinois Chicago. (Mullin, 6/10)

On LGBTQ+ health 鈥

Southern Baptist delegates at their national meeting overwhelmingly endorsed a ban on same-sex marriage 鈥 including a call for a reversal of the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 10-year-old precedent legalizing it nationwide. They also called for legislators to curtail sports betting and to support policies that promote childbearing. The votes Tuesday came at the gathering of more than 10,000 church representatives at the annual meeting of the nation鈥檚 largest Protestant denomination. (Smith, 6/10)

More health news from across the U.S. 鈥

Louisiana lawmakers on Tuesday approved a measure that targets out-of-state doctors and activists who prescribe, sell, or provide pregnancy-ending drugs to residents in the reliably red state where abortions are banned with few exceptions. Louisiana law already allows women to sue doctors who perform abortions on them in the state. The bill expands who can be sued. It includes those out of the state, who may be responsible for an illegal abortion whether that be mailing, prescribing or 鈥渃oordinating the sale of鈥 pregnancy-ending pills to someone in Louisiana. (Cline, 6/10)

Homeless people who reject three offers of shelter will be eligible for arrest on trespassing after the San Jose City Council voted Tuesday for a policy change they hope will encourage unhoused people to trade in their tents on sidewalks for beds indoors. The vote was 9-2 in favor of adding a 鈥渞esponsibility to shelter鈥 provision to the city鈥檚 encampment code of conduct, which also includes expectations that homeless people will not pitch tents near schools and playgrounds or block public rights of way. (Har, 6/10)

As the city of Portland, Oregon, clawed its way out of the pandemic, it faced a new set of crises: The city鈥檚 homeless population was growing. Tents lined some city blocks. High-powered business associations held press conferences demanding the city remove homeless people and touted self-funded surveys saying that without action, businesses and residents would flee the city. By late spring 2021, the city committed to a new strategy that then-Mayor Ted Wheeler said would 鈥渞eprioritize public health and safety among homeless Portlanders,鈥 ultimately allocating $1.3 billion by the end of 2024. (Rambo, 6/11)

Four executions are scheduled across the US this week, marking a sharp increase in killings as Donald Trump has pushed to revive the death penalty despite growing concerns about states鈥 methods. Executions are set to take place in Alabama, Florida and South Carolina. A fourth, scheduled in Oklahoma, has been temporarily blocked by a judge, but the state鈥檚 attorney general is challenging the ruling. (Levin, 6/10)

Environmental Health

Proposed PFAS Reclassification Isn't Backed By Science, Experts Warn

A group of 20 scientists has warned that narrowing the definition of what constitutes 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥 could be detrimental, lead to more lax laws, and is entirely politically and economically motivated. Also in the news: climate mandate reversals, "dirty dozen" list, and more.

A group of 20 internationally renowned scientists have issued a strong warning against attempts to narrow the definition of 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥 in what they describe as a politically or economically motivated effort to weaken regulation of the potentially harmful chemicals. (Salvidge, 6/10)

The Trump administration will propose scrapping Biden-era climate mandates requiring the nation鈥檚 power plants to curb planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions as soon as Wednesday, according to people familiar with the matter. The Environmental Protection Agency is also set to advance a plan for easing limits on mercury and other toxic air pollution from the facilities, said the people, who asked not to be named because the measures aren鈥檛 yet public. (Natter and Dlouhy, 6/10)

More than 90% of samples of a dozen fruits and vegetables tested positive for potentially harmful pesticide residues, according to the 2025 Shopper鈥檚 Guide to Pesticides in Produce. Dubbed the 鈥淒irty Dozen,鈥 the list is compiled from the latest government testing data on nonorganic produce by the Environmental Working Group, or EWG, a health advocacy organization that has produced the annual report since 2004. (LaMotte, 6/11)

An invasive species of stinging ant is spreading across the United States with detections in at least 20 states. ... Asian needle ants can sting when bothered, which can lead to symptoms such as skin reactions including hives and itching; low blood pressure; swollen tongue or throat; nausea, vomiting or diarrhea; dizziness or fainting; weak or rapid pulse; and wheezing or difficulty breathing, the USFS said. More severe symptoms can include anaphylaxis -- a potentially life-threatening allergic reaction -- or psychological reactions, such as a feeling of impending doom, according to the agency. (Kekatos, 6/10)

Warming temperatures caused by climate change have allowed for the expansion of tick habitats, with populations moving farther north. An increase in the number of days above freezing has also expanded their reproduction period. (Vaz, 6/10)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Requests For Blood From Unvaccinated Donors Pose Problems; RFK Jr.'s Latest Attack On Vaccines

Opinion writers dissect these public health issues.

As a transfusion medicine physician, I have encountered increasing requests for blood from Covid-19 unvaccinated donors or directed donations based on personal beliefs. In one case, a patient refused transfusion from the standard donor pool 鈥 insisting on receiving only blood from unvaccinated individuals 鈥 and ultimately experienced severe complications during surgery due to delayed transfusion, despite multiple consults and clear explanations that vaccination status has no impact on blood safety. (Jeremy W. Jacobs, 6/11)

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claims that his decision on Monday to purge a key vaccine advisory committee at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is about rooting out conflicts of interest and restoring 鈥渃onfidence鈥 in vaccines. His words suggest it is really about advancing his anti-vaccine agenda. (6/10)

In my three decades as a practicing pediatrician, I worked at community clinics across the country. The children in my care came from all聽walks of life聽鈥 some with private insurance, others covered under Medicaid, and many with no coverage at all. But every child, regardless of circumstance, deserved the same thing: the best protection possible against deadly, preventable diseases. That meant ensuring they were vaccinated fully and on time. (Richard Besser, 6/10)

The number of changes to vaccine policy in the United States in recent weeks is dizzying 鈥 and we鈥檝e just hit Code Red. (Michael Mina, 6/11)

This week, I joined hundreds of National Institutes of Health (NIH) staff in signing a public letter to Director Jay Bhattacharya urging immediate action to protect academic freedom and scientific integrity. One of our key asks: reinstate the people and teams 鈥 like the communications team I was part of 鈥 that have long ensured the agency鈥檚 transparency and public trust. (Bushraa Khatib, 6/10)

I recently went on a walk with my 3-year-old granddaughter. She stopped to bend down to inspect flowers and pebbles in the road. I began to think about who her first teachers might be and who prepares them for the classroom. Who are these people who teach future teachers and other young people today in colleges and universities? They are instructors and professors. I was one of them before retiring after 27 years. But many professors are now considered out-of-touch elites, especially if their work deals with disadvantaged people. Many have recently had their grants cancelled by the federal government. (Roger D. Lewis, 6/10)

In December 2023, a groundbreaking announcement grabbed headlines: After years of anticipation, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first gene therapies for treating sickle cell disease, offering hope of eliminating life-altering symptoms. News at the time also featured the treatment鈥檚 prohibitive cost 鈥 between $2 and $3 million per person. But many stories didn鈥檛 mention another fact: For many Americans with this condition, life-changing medications that cost just a few dollars a week remained 鈥 and remain 鈥 inaccessible. Never mind the million-dollar gene therapy. (Sarah Reeves, 6/11)

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