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KFF Health News Original Stories
To Keep Medicaid, Mom Caring for Disabled Adult Son Faces Prospect of Proving She Works
A proposed work requirement would make Medicaid expansion enrollees prove they’re working or meet other criteria. Most already work, but millions are expected to lose coverage if the provision passes, many from red tape. A Missouri mother who cares for her disabled son would probably be subject to the rule. (Bram Sable-Smith, 7/3)
GOP Governors Mum as Congress Moves To Slash Medicaid Spending for Their States
In 2017, when President Donald Trump tried to repeal Obamacare and roll back Medicaid coverage, Republican governors helped turn Congress against it. Now, as Trump tries again to scale back Medicaid, Republican governors — whose constituents stand to lose federal funding and health coverage — have gone quiet on the health consequences. (Phil Galewitz, 7/3)
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Pull!'" by Trevor White.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
OUR OBLIGATION
Medicaid covers
care for most vulnerable.
It’s morally right.
- Kristi Jones
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 KFF Health News or KFF.
The Morning Briefing will not be published Friday or Monday in observance of July Fourth. Look for it again in your inbox on Tuesday, July 8.
Summaries Of The News:
Speaking For Hours, Jeffries Slams 'Big Ugly Bill' That Will Decimate Medicaid
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries called the bill "immoral" and a "disgusting abomination." About 11 million people would lose Medicaid coverage, estimates show. The legislation also calls for cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.
Politico:
Jeffries Calls Out Republicans Over Medicaid Ahead Of Final Megabill Vote
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries is blasting Republican colleagues over Medicaid as he issues extended remarks ahead of the final GOP megabill vote. Jeffries is utilizing his so-called magic minute to read off letters sent in by individuals in each state who rely on benefits that potentially hang in the balance as a result of the megabill’s provisions. (Razor, 7/3)
The New York Times:
Tax Cuts Now, Benefit Cuts Later: The Timeline In The Republican Megabill
Republicans deferred some of their most painful spending cuts until after the midterm elections. (Romm, Duehren, Sanger-Katz, Plumer and Wood, 7/2)
ABC News:
Former CDC Officials Warn Proposed Budget Cuts Could Cost American Lives In 2026
Proposed funding cuts to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the fiscal year 2026 federal budget will lead to significant negative health impacts for millions of Americans, a coalition of former federal health officials said. These proposed funding cuts are not related to the "big, beautiful bill" that is making its way through Congress. (Benadjaoud and Davis, 7/3)
More on the megabill —
AP:
Empty North Carolina Hospital Explains Thom Tillis' Break With GOP
Though patients don’t rush through the doors of this emergency room anymore, an empty hospital in Williamston, North Carolina, offers an evocative illustration of why Republican Sen. Thom Tillis would buck his party leaders to vote down President Donald Trump’s signature domestic policy package. Martin General is one of a dozen hospitals that have closed in North Carolina over the last two decades. This is a problem that hospital systems and health experts warn may only worsen if the legislation passes with its $1 trillion cuts to the Medicaid program and new restrictions on enrollment in the coverage. (Seitz, 7/2)
Stat:
Why This Activist Is Putting Her Body On The Line For Americans With Disabilities
Flanked by her friends as lawmakers debated the future of a 60-year-old health care plan, Latoya Maddox raised her voice, shouting, “No cuts to Medicaid! No cuts to Medicaid!” The chanting, during a meeting of the House Energy and Commerce Committee on May 13, quickly earned her and her fellow disabled activists in the room a rough escort out by Capitol Police. (Broderick, 7/2)
KFF Health News:
To Keep Medicaid, Mom Caring For Disabled Adult Son Faces Prospect Of Proving She Works
Four years before Kimberly Gallagher enrolled in Medicaid herself, the public health insurance program’s rules prompted her to make an excruciating choice — to give up guardianship of her son so she could work as his caregiver. Now, another proposed twist in the rules could mean that, even though Missouri pays her to do that work, she might still have to prove to the state that she’s not unemployed. (Sable-Smith, 7/3)
KFF Health News:
GOP Governors Mum As Congress Prepares To Slash Medicaid Spending For Their States
The last time a Republican-controlled Congress and President Donald Trump moved to slash Medicaid spending, in 2017, a key political force stood in their way: GOP governors. Now, as Congress steamrolls toward passing historic Medicaid cuts of about $1 trillion over 10 years through Trump’s tax and spending legislation, red-state governors are saying little publicly about what it does to health care — even as they face reductions that will punch multibillion-dollar holes in their states’ budgets. (Galewitz, 7/3)
Also —
Roll Call:
Rep. Carter, Seeking Georgia Senate Seat, Surrenders Health Gavel
Rep. Earl L. “Buddy” Carter will step down as chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health, he announced Wednesday. Carter, a Georgia Republican who is challenging presumptive Democratic nominee Sen. Jon Ossoff for Senate in 2026, made the announcement via a press release Wednesday as House Republicans prepared to take up the Senate-passed budget reconciliation bill. (Wehrman, 7/2)
The New York Times:
How Health Care Remade The U.S. Economy
For years, the United States labor market has been undergoing a structural transformation. As jobs in manufacturing have receded, slowly but steadily, the health care industry has more than replaced them. The change has been particularly visible over the past year, during which health care has been responsible for about a third of all employment growth, while other categories, like retail and manufacturing, have stayed essentially flat. (DePillis and Zhang, 7/3)
'Backdoor Ban' In Megabill Will Likely Cripple Abortion Access In Blue States
Planned Parenthood stands to lose $700 million in federal funding tied to Medicaid. Planned Parenthood Federation of America's President and CEO, Alexis McGill Johnson, warned Wednesday that nearly 200 health centers could close. The legislation affects blue states more severely because those states have larger numbers of people on Medicaid, The Guardian reported.
The Guardian:
Planned Parenthood CEO Warns Budget Bill Could Devastate Group And Slash Abortion Access In Blue States
Planned Parenthood stands to lose roughly $700m in federal funding if the US House passes Republicans’ massive spending-and-tax bill, the organization’s CEO said on Wednesday, amounting to what abortion rights supporters and opponents alike have called a “backdoor abortion ban." “We are facing down the reality that nearly 200 health centers are at risk of closure. We’re facing a reality of the impact on shutting down almost half of abortion-providing health centers,” Alexis McGill Johnson, Planned Parenthood Federation of America's CEO, said in an interview Wednesday morning. The provision attacking Planned Parenthood would primarily target clinics in blue states that have protected abortion rights since the overturning of Roe v Wade three years ago, because those blue states have larger numbers of people on Medicaid. (Sherman, 7/2)
Wisconsin strikes down its 176-year-old abortion ban —
Politico:
Wisconsin Supreme Court Strikes Down State’s 1849 Abortion Ban
The Wisconsin Supreme Court on Wednesday struck down the state’s 176-year-old abortion ban in a 4-3 ruling, saying that it was superseded by a more recent state law criminalizing abortions only in cases when a fetus is viable outside the womb. The decision by the liberal-leaning majority of the court marks the end of a three-year battle over abortion in the state after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, nullifying federal abortion protections and kick-starting a fight over whether the Supreme Court decision effectively reactivated the state’s 1849 ban. (Ruhiyyih Ewing, 7/2)
In other abortion updates —
Idaho Capital Sun:
‘End The Ban:’ Idaho Organizers Start Gathering Signatures For Abortion Rights Ballot Initiative
Signature gathering has started for Idaho's abortion rights ballot initiative, which could end the state's strict abortion ban laws. (Pfannenstiel, 7/3)
Kansas City Star:
ACLU Sues To Block Proposed Missouri Abortion Ban
The ACLU of Missouri on Wednesday sued to block a proposed abortion ban from reaching the statewide ballot next year, marking the first major legal challenge intended to halt a Republican-led attempt to ban abortions again in Missouri. (Bayless, 7/2)
Nebraska Examiner:
Nebraska Abortions Rise 7% Same Year Voters Cement Restrictions
The same year Nebraskans voted to cement an abortion ban beyond the first trimester into the state constitution, the number of abortions performed in Nebraska rose about 7.6%. According to data from the state Department of Health and Human Services, at least 2,501 abortions were performed in Nebraska in 2024. That’s 176 higher than 2023’s total of 2,325 abortions in one year. Since 2020, Nebraska’s abortion rate has remained relatively level between about 2,300 to 2,500 procedures per year. All the while, the state’s abortion policy has fluctuated more wildly. (Bamer, 7/2)
CDC Recommends RSV Vaccine For High-Risk People 50 And Older
The agency's website indicates HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. adopted the previous advisory panel's suggestion to expand access on June 25. AP also reports on FDA vaccine chief Vinay Prasad's role in a decision to restrict covid shots.
AP:
RSV Vaccine Access Expanded To Some People In Their 50s, According To CDC Website
The Trump administration appears to be expanding RSV vaccinations to some adults starting at age 50, down from 60, following the advice of a recently fired panel of government vaccine advisers. The decision appears on a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention webpage but as of Wednesday wasn’t on the agency’s official adult immunization schedule. In April, the CDC’s influential Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended expanding RSV vaccination to high-risk adults as young as 50, too. But the CDC lacks a director to decide whether to adopt that recommendation and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. didn’t immediately act. (Neergaard, 7/2)
Stat:
Purported Biotech Industry Memo Calls RFK Jr. A ‘Direct Threat To Public Health'
A memo that purports to summarize a meeting held by members of a leading biotech trade group suggests deep concern about health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s stance on vaccines, and describes him as a “direct threat to public health.” (DeAngelis and Chen, 7/2)
CIDRAP:
Catch-Up Needed After Non-COVID Vaccination Plunges In First 2 Pandemic Years
Non–COVID-19 vaccination dropped in the first 2 years of the pandemic, raising concerns about potential outbreaks of avoidable diseases, the resurgence of previously controlled diseases, and widening health disparities for people with weakened immune systems, according to a study published in PLOS One. (Van Beusekom, 7/2)
On covid vaccines —
AP:
Trump Administration Official Restricted COVID Vaccine Approvals, Overruling FDA Staff
The government’s top vaccine official working under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently restricted the approval of two COVID-19 vaccines, disregarding recommendations from government scientists, according to federal documents released Wednesday. The new memos from the Food and Drug Administration show how the agency’s vaccine chief, Dr. Vinay Prasad, personally intervened to place restrictions on COVID shots from vaccine makers Novavax and Moderna. Both vaccines were approved by the FDA in May after months of analysis by rank-and-file FDA reviewers. (Perrone, 7/3)
On measles and screwworm —
CIDRAP:
More Measles Outbreaks Put US Total Within Single Digits Of Modern-Day Record
In its weekly update today, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported 40 more measles cases today, boosting the number of infections this year to 1,267, which is just 8 shy of passing the total in 2019, which was the highest since the disease was eliminated in the country in 2000. Though the large outbreak in West Texas has slowed substantially, the number of smaller outbreaks and travel-related cases continues to grow. (Schnirring, 7/2)
Axios:
US To Breed Flies To Combat Screwworm Maggot Threat At Mexico Border
The Trump administration plans to breed and sterilize billions of flies to airdrop over Mexico and southern Texas in an effort to stamp out the New World screwworm (NWS). (Falconer, 7/2)
DOJ May Strip Citizenship From Those Who Dupe Medicaid, Medicare
A legal expert notes the U.S. denaturalization policy is legit but says "its use has historically been rare and reserved for extreme cases — such as war crimes or national security threats." Plus, news about immigrant detention centers, including the "Alligator Alcatraz" set to receive occupants.
MedPage Today:
Defrauding Medicare Or Medicaid Could Put Citizenship At Risk, DOJ Says
Doctors and other naturalized citizens who commit Medicare or Medicaid fraud could be stripped of their citizenship, according to a new memo from the Department of Justice (DOJ). "The Department of Justice may institute civil proceedings to revoke a person's United States citizenship if an individual either 'illegally procured' naturalization or procured naturalization by 'concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation,'" the memo reads. (Frieden, 7/2)
AP:
Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' Detention Center To Receive Its First Immigrants
The first group of immigrants were scheduled to arrive Wednesday night at a new detention center deep in the Florida Everglades that officials have dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz,” the state’s attorney general said. “Alligator Alcatraz will be checking in hundreds of criminal illegal aliens tonight,” Florida Republican Attorney General James Uthmeier said on the social platform X. “Next stop: back to where they came from.” (Anderson and Lavandier, 7/2)
AP:
A Day Outside An LA Detention Center Shows Profound Impact Of ICE Raids On Families
At a federal immigration building in downtown Los Angeles guarded by U.S. Marines, daughters, sons, aunts, nieces and others make their way to an underground garage and line up at a door with a buzzer at the end of a dirty, dark stairwell. It’s here where families, some with lawyers, come to find their loved ones after they’ve been arrested by federal immigration agents. On a recent day, dozens of people arrived with medication, clothing and hope of seeing their loved one, if only briefly. After hours of waiting, many were turned away with no news, not even confirmation that their relative was inside. Some relayed reports of horrific conditions inside, including inmates who are so thirsty that they have been drinking from the toilets. ICE did not respond to emailed requests for comment. (Ding, 7/2)
Los Angeles Times:
L.A. ‘Under Siege’: Brown-Skinned People Targeted, Tackled, Taken, And It Must Stop, Federal Suit Says
Masked, unidentified agents have been “systematically” cornering brown-skinned people in a show of force across Southern California, tackling those who attempt to leave, arresting them without probable cause and then placing them in “dungeon-like” conditions without access to lawyers, a federal lawsuit alleges. The lawsuit filed Wednesday by immigrant rights groups against the Trump administration describes the region as “under siege” by agents, some dressed in military-style clothing and carrying out “indiscriminate immigration raids flooding street corners, bus stops, parking lots, agricultural sites, day laborer corners.” (Uranga, Mejia and Buchanan, 7/2)
The Texas Tribune:
Texas Says Undocumented Patients Visited Hospitals 80K Times
Texas hospitals received nearly 80,000 visits from undocumented patients from December through February at a cost of $329 million, according to data released by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission on Wednesday. That’s about 2% of all patient visits during that three-month period. (Langford, 7/2)
Other news from the Trump administration —
Fierce Healthcare:
CMS Sued Over Trump Administration's ACA Final Rule
Doctors for America, the Main Street Alliance and three cities have sued the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) over a recent Affordable Care Act (ACA) final rule the agency said will help counter improper enrollments. The plaintiff cities named in the lawsuit are Baltimore, Chicago and Columbus. (Tong, 7/2)
Stat:
NIH Cuts: Red States Losing Out As Canceled Grants Are Reinstated
After the first grant termination rolled into Professor Cheri Levinson’s inbox, her university told her it wasn’t worth taking the time to appeal the decision; the odds of success were too low. Ultimately, she had three National Institutes of Health grants terminated that were meant to support trainees from diverse backgrounds in her lab studying eating disorders at the University of Louisville. (Oza, 7/3)
As Pollution Rises, Non-Smokers Might Not Be Able To Dodge Lung Cancer
A new analysis shows high levels of fine-particulate air pollution causes more cancer mutations. A quarter of all lung cancer cases worldwide are among people who never smoked. Meanwhile, websites for U.S. national climate assessments have disappeared. The White House says NASA will now house the information, but reports as late as Tuesday say it was not available on their site.
Newsweek:
Never-Smokers' Lung Cancer May Worsen In Areas With Air Pollution
Lung cancer appears to mutate more in patients living in areas with higher levels of fine-particulate air pollution, such as that released by vehicles and air pollution. This is the conclusion of a study from the National Institutes of Health and the University of California, San Diego, which studied tumors in nearly 900 lung cancer patients who had never smoked. (Randall, 7/2)
More climate news —
AP:
Websites Hosting Major US Climate Reports Taken Down
Websites that displayed legally mandated U.S. national climate assessments seem to have disappeared, making it harder for state and local governments and the public to learn what to expect in their backyards from a warming world. Scientists said the peer-reviewed authoritative reports save money and lives. Websites for the national assessments and the U.S. Global Change Research Program were down Monday and Tuesday with no links, notes or referrals elsewhere. (Borenstein, 7/2)
The Guardian:
US North-East Sees Record Tick Season As Climate Crisis Sparks Arachnid Boom
Ticks have been flourishing recently in the United States. This year, as compared to recent years, there has been an increase in the reported number of blacklegged ticks, the number of such ticks that carry Lyme disease and visits to the emergency room because of bites from the tiny parasitic arachnid, according to data from universities and the US federal government. (Berger, 7/2)
Hartford Courant:
Popular Connecticut Beach Closes Due To Safety Concerns Over Ticks, Won’t Open Again Until Next Year
A popular beach in Bridgeport has been closed down to the public after officials found multiple tick species, officials said. Pleasure Beach will remain closed to the public for the 2025 summer season, according to city officials. In a Facebook post, the city said the decision comes after “extensive consultation” with state environmental experts following the discovery of multiple tick species on the island — including the invasive Asian longhorned tick. (Underwood, 7/2)
The Hill:
High Bacteria Levels Prompt Beach Closures For Holiday Weekend
High levels of bacteria are prompting beach closures and public health advisories across the U.S. ahead of the Fourth of July weekend. Public health officials are warning holiday goers to avoid swimming in bodies of water containing high levels of the bacteria Vibrio and E. coli, which can cause illness. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Vibrio is a bacterium found predominantly in coastal waters. When it is consumed or comes in contact with an open wound, it can cause a human illness called vibriosis, which can become life-threatening. (Hilling, 7/2)
Shriners Children’s Research Institute Plans $153 Million Facility In Atlanta
The facility should be operational within a year to 18 months, according to the organization. Other industry news is on business pressures facing Centene, the uncertainty of the ACA market, the use of MyChart to prevent no-shows, and more.
AP:
Shriners Children's To Open $153M Medical Research Facility In Atlanta
The nonprofit that operates Shriners Children’s hospitals across North America will locate a $153 million medical research facility in Atlanta, the group announced Wednesday. Shriners Children’s Research Institute intends to conduct research into cell and gene therapies, other biotechnology therapies, robotics, artificial intelligence, medical devices and the study of data. (Amy, 7/2)
The Wall Street Journal:
Centene Faces Earnings Crunch As More Healthy Americans Exit Insurance Plans
Centene is reckoning with multiple threats to its business, potentially leaving it with fewer and less-healthy enrollees signed up to its health-insurance plans. The end of certain pandemic-era health-insurance benefits over the past year is prompting more Americans to drop out of coverage plans, which Centene said could hollow out its earnings. On top of that, the proposed Medicaid cuts in President Trump’s budget bill would limit the number of people enrolled in Centene’s largest business, Jefferies’s David Windley said. (Hamilton, 7/2)
Modern Healthcare:
Highmark, UnitedHealthcare Prepare For ACA Market Uncertainty
As the GOP-led Congress and President Donald Trump put their stamp on the health insurance market, insurers are forced to prepare for four scenarios in 2026 — some of which will mean big premium hikes. This uncertainty stems from two major policy issues in the health insurance exchanges. Enhanced premium tax credits are set to expire at the end of the year unless Congress and Trump extend them. Republicans also seek to restore the cost-sharing payments to marketplace carriers, which Trump rescinded in 2017, and put an end to “Silver loading” marketplace premium increases. (Tepper, 7/2)
Modern Healthcare:
Astrana Health Acquires Prospect Health In $708M Deal
Value-based care platform Astrana Health acquired some of Prospect Health’s assets Tuesday for $708 million. The deal includes Prospect Health Plan, Prospect Medical Groups, management services organization Prospect Medical Systems, pharmacy RightRx and Foothill Regional Medical Center in Tustin, California. Astrana announced in November it would acquire Prospect Health’s assets for $745 million. (Hudson, 7/2)
Modern Healthcare:
Pennant Group Acquires GrandCare Health Services
Healthcare services company Pennant Group has expanded its footprint in California with the acquisition of home healthcare provider GrandCare Health Services. The company said in a Tuesday news release that locations in six Southern California counties will operate as GrandCare Home Health. The Eagle, Idaho-based company did not disclose financial terms of the deal. (Eastabrook, 7/2)
MedPage Today:
Corporatization Of Healthcare Spotlighted In New NEJM Series
The corporatization of healthcare will take some heat as the subject of a new essay series from the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). The series will define and untangle elements of healthcare corporatization in the U.S. and explore how the system can better move forward. Some elements of corporatization include increasing "corporate ownership of healthcare organizations, market consolidation and concentration, and emphasis on the bottom line" that benefit corporations and shareholders over doctors and patients, wrote NEJM editors led by Debra Malina, PhD, in an introduction to the new series. (Robertson, 7/2)
Also —
Becker's Hospital Review:
MyChart Use Linked To 21M Fewer No-Shows: Study
MyChart use was associated with 21 million fewer appointment no-shows in 2024, Epic found. Patients with an active patient portal account had a no-show rate of 6.2%, compared to 7.9% for patients without, according to the study published July 1. Epic researchers analyzed over 1.6 billion in-person outpatient visits in 2024. (Bruce, 7/2)
Medtech Companies Expand US Production To Meet Increased Demand
These expansions include millions of dollars to increase domestic manufacturing by adding new facilities and increasing capacity at existing facilities. In other news: Regeneron gets FDA green light on blood cancer drug; FDA issues alert about Abiomed blood pump controller; and more.
Modern Healthcare:
Medtech Companies Boosting Production To Meet Demand
Major medtech companies are expanding their U.S. manufacturing presence, investing millions — and in one case, billions — of dollars to boost capacity by adding facilities and expanding existing ones. Companies say they have seen increased demand for their products. Tariffs imposed by the Trump administration, along with the threat of tougher tariffs tied to a July 9 deadline, also may be a factor, although none of the companies have said so. Expanding domestic production also could offset any product shortages. (Dubinsky, 7/2)
The Wall Street Journal:
Regeneron Gets Accelerated FDA OK Of Lynozyfic For Blood Cancer Treatment
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals has won Food and Drug Administration accelerated approval of its Lynozyfic treatment for certain patients with the blood cancer multiple myeloma. Regeneron on Wednesday said the FDA green light covers Lynozyfic in adults with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma who have received at least four prior lines of therapy, including a proteasome inhibitor, an immunomodulatory agent and an anti-CD38 monoclonal antibody. (Kellaher, 7/2)
Becker's Hospital Review:
FDA Flags Blood Pump Controller Issue Linked To 3 Deaths
The FDA has issued an alert about a potentially high-risk issue involving Abiomed’s Automated Impella Controller, which is used with the company’s blood pump systems. Abiomed, now part of Johnson & Johnson Medtech, notified customers June 23 with updated instructions for use and urgent recommendations, including having a backup AIC console on hand in the event of a device failure, according to a July 1 news release from the agency. (Murphy, 7/2)
MedPage Today:
Nerve-Illuminating Agent Shows Early Promise For Reducing Surgical Morbidity
A nerve-illuminating agent to minimize surgical risk passed an early test by achieving sustained fluorescence of the obturator nerve without safety concerns in patients undergoing robotic-assisted prostatectomy. (Bankhead, 7/2)
Bloomberg:
Sperm Freezing Startups Like Legacy And Fellow Take Samples By Mail
Last summer, Alexander McKinnon was always feeling tired. “I would lie on the couch at 2 in the afternoon and fall asleep,” he says. ... By September his doctor had run a blood test and found his “super fatigue” was tied to low levels of testosterone. McKinnon was prescribed steroids to boost his energy. The trade-off was that the injections would severely reduce his sperm count. McKinnon, 32, and his wife weren’t ready to start a family, but they didn’t want to risk their ability to do so in the future. “That’s when I froze my sperm,” he says. (Popescu, 7/2)
Also —
The New York Times:
454 Hints That A Chatbot Wrote Part Of A Biomedical Researcher’s Paper
Scientists know it is happening, even if they don’t do it themselves. Some of their peers are using chatbots, like ChatGPT, to write all or part of their papers. In a paper published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, Dmitry Kobak of the University of Tübingen and his colleagues report that they found a way to track how often researchers are using artificial intelligence chatbots to write the abstracts of their papers. The A.I. tools, they say, tend to use certain words — like “delves,” “crucial,” “potential,” “significant” and “important” — far more often than human authors do. (Kolata, 7/2)
Iowa Has Launched Its New And Improved Behavioral Health Program
The overhaul, which was signed into law by Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds in May 2024, replaces the old system with a more centralized safety net system. Other states in the news include Florida, California, and Texas.
Iowa Public Radio:
Iowa's New Behavioral Health System Is Now In Effect. Here's How It Works
Iowa officials launched the state's new behavioral health system this week. It is a significant overhaul of the previous system and is aimed at better connecting Iowans with mental health and disability services. (Krebs, 7/2)
WUSF:
Contract Deadline Passes, Leaving Thousands Of Florida Blue Customers Out Of Network With Broward Health
Florida Blue customers are out of network with Broward Health after the two sides failed to reach a new insurer-hospital agreement by a Tuesday deadline. The previous contract expired without a resolution after months of negotiations, leaving patients facing higher costs for care. Florida Blue said more than 17,000 customers have been notified of the change. (Mayer, 7/2)
Los Angeles Times:
California Bars Must Now Offer Lids To Avoid Spiked Drinks
California bars and nightclubs already are required to post conspicuous signs letting customers know that drug-testing kits are available. Now they have to keep a stack of lids handy — one more method for protecting patrons from drinks that have been drugged. A new Assembly bill that went into effect Tuesday requires any establishment in the state where alcohol is sold for on-site consumption to have lids at the ready upon customer request. (Buchanan, 7/2)
Katie Couric Media:
These Foods Will Be Labeled “Not Recommended for Human Consumption” in Texas
A new law in Texas will require many popular products to have a label warning consumers that it contains ingredients “not recommended for human consumption.” It targets M&Ms, Doritos, Mountain Dew, and probably at least one of your grocery store guilty pleasures. The law, which was officially signed by Gov. Greg Abbott, requires any food containing one of more than 40 additives to include the label on its packaging by 2027. (Uda, 7/1)
AP:
Oscar Mayer Turkey Bacon Recalled Over Possible Listeria Contamination
Nearly 368,000 pounds of Oscar Mayer turkey bacon products are being recalled over possible contamination with listeria bacteria that can cause food poisoning, federal health officials said Wednesday. No illnesses have been confirmed to date, U.S. agriculture department officials said. Kraft Heinz Food Company of Newberry, South Carolina, announced the recall of the fully cooked turkey bacon that was produced from April 24 to June 11. The problem was discovered when the company’s laboratory testing indicated potential listeria contamination. (Aleccia, 7/3)
Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs
Each week, KFF Health News compiles a selection of the latest health research and news.
Stat:
New Blood Test Could Predict Preeclampsia In The First Trimester
A new blood test could predict preeclampsia as early as the first trimester. In a new study, researchers successfully predicted the early-onset subtype of the prenatal condition up to five months before clinical diagnosis. The findings are being presented Monday during the annual meeting of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology, in Paris. (Paulus, 6/30)
ScienceDaily:
Tiny Gut “Sponge” Bacteria Found To Flush Out Toxic PFAS “Forever Chemicals”
Cambridge scientists have spotted gut bacteria that greedily soak up PFAS “forever chemicals,” then ferry them safely out of the body in animal tests, removing up to three-quarters of the toxins within minutes. Their findings hint at probiotic pills that could shield people from PFAS-linked cancers, fertility issues, and heart disease while lawmakers scramble to rein in 4,700 widespread compounds. (University of Cambridge, 7/2)
CIDRAP:
Shingles, RSV Vaccines May Protect Older Adults From Dementia
Older US adults who receive the AS01-adjuvanted shingles or respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccines may be at lower risk for dementia in the next 18 months, University of Oxford researchers write in npj Vaccines. (Van Beusekom, 7/2)
ScienceDaily:
Is That Really ADHD? Why Flawed Trials May Be Misleading Millions
Researchers reviewing nearly 300 top-tier ADHD drug trials found that half skipped the rigorous, expert-led evaluations needed to rule out other conditions like depression or schizophrenia. With diagnoses often made by unqualified staff—or even by computer—many participants may not have actually had ADHD, casting doubt on study outcomes that shape treatment guidelines. (University of Copenhagen, 7/1)
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
Each week, KFF Health News finds longer stories for you to enjoy. Today's selections are on terminal cancer, NIH cuts, PFAS, aging, the Slim-Fast founder, and more. Happy July Fourth weekend!
The Washington Post:
Hundreds Of Neighbors Rally To Give A Girl With Cancer One Last Christmas
The days leading up to the Saturday night event were hot and humid but that didn’t stop the community from decorating miles of houses for Kasey Zachmann, who has terminal brain cancer. (Lang and Barrie, 6/29)
Undark:
The Impact Of NIH Cuts Ripples Beyond U.S. Borders
Rory De Vries, an associate professor of virology in the Netherlands, was lifting weights at the gym when he noticed a WhatsApp message from his research partners at Columbia University, telling him his research funding had been cancelled. De Vries was disappointed, though not surprised — his team knew this might happen under the new Trump administration. His projects focused on immune responses and a new antiviral treatment for respiratory viruses like Covid-19. (Klotz, 6/30)
ProPublica:
Trump’s First EPA Promised to Crack Down on Forever Chemicals. His Second EPA Is Pulling Back.
The agency has delayed enforcement of its standards, slashed its staff and terminated over $15 million in PFAS research grants. (Clark, 7/2)
The Washington Post:
After Lahaina Fires, Prefab Homes Are An Emergency Housing Experiment
An experiment in Lahaina, Maui, is providing prefabricated homes to those affected by the wildfires almost two years ago. (Siegel, 6/28)
The New York Times:
A Common Assumption About Aging May Be Wrong, Study Suggests
A new analysis of data gathered from a small Indigenous population in the Bolivian Amazon suggests some of our basic assumptions about the biological process of aging might be wrong. New data raises the question of whether inflammation is directly linked to aging at all, or if it’s linked to a person’s lifestyle or environment instead. (Ravindranath, 6/30)
The Washington Post:
What 4,000-Year-Old DNA Revealed About How Ancient Societies Interacted
For the first time, scientists have sequenced a complete DNA set from an ancient Egyptian man, the oldest studied sequence, dating to when the pyramids were first constructed. (Patel, 7/2)
In obituaries —
The Washington Post:
S. Daniel Abraham, Slim-Fast Founder And Political Donor, Dies At 100
Slim-Fast roared into the weight-loss market in the 1970s, and Mr. Abraham used his fortune to back Democratic candidates and push for Mideast peace. (Murphy, 7/2)
Viewpoints: Planned Parenthood Decision Has Far-Reaching Effects; Defunding Gavi Will Harm Children
Opinion writers dissect these public health topics.
The New York Times:
The Real Impact Of The Supreme Court’s Planned Parenthood Decision
The federal Medicaid law requires states to ensure that Medicaid patients are entitled to care from “any qualified provider” willing to offer it. Invoking that guarantee, a woman who was receiving birth control and other medical services at a Planned Parenthood clinic joined the organization in suing the state. (Linda Greenhouse, 7/2)
Bloomberg:
RFK Jr. Is Playing With Babies’ Lives On Vaccines
Kennedy’s decision to end support to one of America’s few remaining positive interventions in the Global South is both immoral and dangerous. It will cause resentment about inequities in worldwide healthcare access to spread and further damage US standing abroad when compared to countries like China. (Mihir Sharma, 6/2)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Guns Kill Kids More Often In Missouri Than In Most States. It's Not Coincidence.
Guns don’t kill, people kill, goes the popular old trope against rational gun-safety laws. Setting aside that it’s not strictly true (what about accidental discharges of found firearms, which kill hundreds of kids a year?), the trope is always colliding with inconvenient data. (7/2)
Stat:
Tackling Fentanyl Requires More Than Tariffs
Bogged down in the courts, President Trump’s tariffs, designed to punish trading partners for the traffic in illegally manufactured fentanyl, have been roundly criticized as a threat to U.S. economic power. Yet, amid intense political debate, few critics cite their most damning flaw: As a tool to cajole other governments in desirable directions, fentanyl tariffs are also manifestly ineffective. (Kathleen J. Frydl, 7/3)
The CT Mirror:
The Unequal Burden Of Food Insecurity And Allergies
In Connecticut, food insecurity is estimated to affect between 10.4% and 17% of the population, which equates to at least 362,500 individuals who may lack sufficient access to safe and nutritious food. Studies have shown that food insecurity disproportionately affects Black/African American, Hispanic/Latinx, and refugee families. Within these communities, certain groups, such as individuals with food allergies, face even more complex challenges. (Idalis Cardona Ortiz, 7/2)