First Edition: Monday, March 9, 2026
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
KFF HEALTH NEWS ORIGINAL STORIES
KFF Health News:
Newsom Picks A Dogfight With Trump And RFK Jr. On Public Health
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has positioned himself as a national public health leader by staking out science-backed policies in contrast with the Trump administration. After Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. fired Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Susan Monarez for refusing what her lawyers called “the dangerous politicization of science,” Newsom hired her to help modernize California’s public health system. He also gave a job to Debra Houry, the agency’s former chief science and medical officer, who had resigned in protest hours after Monarez’s firing. (Hart, 3/9)
KFF Health News:
Florida Hasn’t Expanded Medicaid. Lawmakers Want To Add Work Requirements Anyway
In states that have long refused to expand Medicaid to more low-income adults, people in the program aren’t subject to new rules under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act requiring them to prove they’re working in order to get and keep coverage. That’s not stopping Florida lawmakers from trying to adopt Medicaid work requirements anyway. It’s the only legislative body in a nonexpansion state to even consider it so far. (Chang, 3/9)
KFF Health News:
KFF Health News’ ‘On Air’: Journalists Explain A Spat Over Sugary Coffee And How Measles Fools Doctors
KFF Health News senior correspondent Renuka Rayasam discussed excited delirium on Vox Media Podcast Network’s Criminal on March 6. (3/7)
VACCINES AND OUTBREAKS
AP:
FDA Vaccine Chief Dr. Vinay Prasad Exits Agency For The Second Time
The Food and Drug Administration’s embattled vaccine chief, Dr. Vinay Prasad, is once again leaving the agency — the second time in less than a year that he’s departed after controversial decisions involving the review of vaccinations and specialty drugs for rare diseases. FDA Commissioner Marty Makary announced the news to FDA staff in an email late Friday, saying Prasad would depart at the end of April. Makary said Prasad would return to his academic job at the University of California, San Francisco. (Perrone, 3/6)
Politico:
The Surgeon General Nominee Can’t Get People To Stop Asking Her About Vaccines
Casey Means, President Donald Trump’s pick for surgeon general, has achieved an unlikely feat: uniting vaccine skeptics and mainstream medical advocates against her nomination. Activists in both camps are now urging senators to vote her down. (Friedman and Paun, 3/6)
NBC News:
Measles Is 'Worse Than Expected' In Utah, Officials Say
In southern Utah, a measles outbreak that’s been simmering since last summer is showing signs of wider spread. Now, state health officials are pleading with residents to take the virus seriously. “It is not a mild infection. It is not a mild virus. It is severe illness,” Utah’s state epidemiologist, Dr. Leisha Nolen, said at a news briefing Thursday. (Edwards, 3/6)
Minnesota Public Radio:
North Dakota Has 23 Confirmed Measles Cases
Two new cases of measles were confirmed in North Dakota Friday. That brings the total to 23 for the year so far. The two new cases are in Traill and Pembina counties, which both border Minnesota. (Ratanpal, 3/7)
The Colorado Sun:
Broomfield Measles Outbreak Now Up To Seven Cases, CDPHE Says
Public health disease-trackers have identified four more cases of measles in an outbreak linked to two schools in Broomfield. The newly announced infections all involve unvaccinated children between the ages of 5 and 17. (Ingold, 3/6)
CIDRAP:
US Measles Total Approaches 1,300 Infections
The US measles count climbed by 145 today, reaching 1,281 cases, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today in its weekly update, with cases in Texas now approaching 100. For all of last year US officials confirmed 2,258 infections, a number the nation appears on pace to surpass this year. The Pan American Health Organization recently announced it has pushed back its decision on whether the country loses its measles elimination status—which it gained in 2000—to November, after the midterm elections. (Wappes, 3/6)
CIDRAP:
CDC Reports 11 More Pediatric Flu Deaths
Eleven new pediatric flu deaths were reported this week, according to the latest update on US flu activity from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). A total of 90 children have died from flu-related complications this season, the CDC said in its weekly FluView report. Approximately 85% of those deaths were in children who were not fully vaccinated against flu. (Dall, 3/6)
MORE ON THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION
Stat:
FDA Advisory Committee Meetings Fade As Controversial Decisions Grow
On Thursday, the Trump administration organized a private press conference so that a senior Food and Drug Administration official could anonymously criticize an experimental Huntington’s disease treatment made by the company UniQure. (Lawrence, 3/9)
AP:
Second Judge Limits Tear Gas Use At Portland ICE Building
A federal judge in Oregon on Friday limited federal officers’ use of tear gas during protests at a Portland federal immigration building, as part of a lawsuit filed by an adjacent affordable housing complex following months of repeated exposure. U.S. District Judge Amy Baggio issued the preliminary injunction after a hearing last month in which the complex’s residents described physical and psychological symptoms ranging from difficulty breathing, coughing, burning eyes and hives to anxiety and panic attacks. Some also testified about wearing gas masks in their own homes. (Rush, 3/7)
The New York Times:
Trump Executive Order Protected Weedkiller Roundup And A Munition, White Phosphorus
When President Trump issued an abrupt order last month compelling the production of glyphosate, the controversial weedkiller known as Roundup, he angered health activists who have long campaigned to ban the product for its links to cancer. But largely overshadowed in the furor was the order’s mention of something contentious in another way: the manufacture of munitions used by the United States military. (Tabuchi, 3/8)
RFK JR. AND MAHA
Politico:
Trump’s Food Industry Friends Are Warning Him RFK Jr.’s Agenda Is Bad For Business
America’s food-makers have a message for President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers: You must choose between Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s agenda and ours. Since Trump teamed up with Kennedy to win the 2024 election and made him Health secretary, the GOP’s traditional allies in the food industry have mostly stood down as Kennedy called their products poison and blamed them for chronic disease. They aren’t standing down anymore. (Chu, 3/8)
The Hill:
Record High In Childhood Obesity Sparks MAHA Debate
New data showed childhood obesity has hit a record high in recent years, while federal changes such as cuts to food assistance programs and a revamped food pyramid reignite debates over how to handle the issue. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report late last month showed more than 1 in 5 U.S. children and teenagers were obese between 2021 to 2023, compared to only 5.2 percent between 1971-1974. The number of children with severe obesity in recent years has hit 7 percent. (Lonas Cochran, 3/8)
MedPage Today:
Fauci Vs RFK Jr.? Here's Who Americans Trust For Public Health Advice
Public trust in federal health agencies is waning, especially in agency leaders, a survey showed. Among 1,650 U.S. adults surveyed by the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg Public Policy Center, 43% said they had confidence in agency leaders versus 57% who said they did not, while 67% of respondents said they had confidence in career scientists at the CDC, NIH, and FDA versus 33% who did not. (Firth, 3/6)
HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY
Stat:
PeaceHealth Swaps Oregon ER Doctors For ApolloMD, Prompts Backlash
A nonprofit health system’s decision to replace some of its Oregon physicians with a national chain presents an early test of a new state law designed to restrict such deals. (Bannow, 3/9)
Modern Healthcare:
Providence Plans To Sell Hospital To NorthBay Health
NorthBay Health has signed a letter of intent to acquire Providence Queen of the Valley Medical Center. The proposed transaction involving the facility in Napa, California, and related assets is expected to be completed by the end of the year, pending a definitive agreement and regulatory approval. Financial terms were not disclosed. (DeSilva, 3/6)
Modern Healthcare:
Rural Hospital Race Clock For $50 Billion Transformation Fund
Rural hospitals fear a narrowing application window and stiff competition could cut them out of the first tranche of the federal $50 billion rural health fund. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in late December awarded each state an average of $200 million for the first year of the Rural Health Transformation Program. States must allocate the funds by the end of September, and federal officials plan to start assessing progress in late summer. (Kacik, 3/6)
Stat:
Blue Cross Blue Shield Study Says AI Upcoding Is Driving Up Prices
Since last summer, health insurers have been telling investors that hospitals’ use of artificial intelligence tools for medical coding and billing is driving up the cost of health care. (Trang, 3/9)
Stat:
Health Tech Company Says It Will Join Medicare’s New Chronic Care Experiment
Health tech company Cadence said Monday it will be among the first to participate in an experimental Medicare program that will pay providers set amounts to manage their patients’ chronic conditions — and only pay them full price if their patients’ conditions improve by certain margins. The model is meant as an alternative to paying for individual services. (Aguilar, 3/9)
PHARMA AND TECH
Bloomberg:
Novo And Hims End Feud, Will Sell Obesity Drugs Together
Novo Nordisk A/S plans to sell its weight-loss drugs on Hims & Hers Health Inc.’s platform, according to a person familiar with the matter, ending a highly public feud between the two companies that spiraled into a legal battle last month. Novo and Hims plan to announce a new partnership as soon as Monday, according to the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The two companies had a similar agreement last year, but Novo abruptly scrapped it after Hims refused to stop marketing and selling copycat medications. (Muller, 3/7)
Bloomberg:
Generic Ozempic Could Cost Less Than $3 A Month, Study Shows
Generic versions of Novo Nordisk A/S’s hit shots Ozempic and Wegovy could be sold for under $3 a month, a new study showed, underscoring their potential to unlock global access to powerful weight-loss drugs. Generic injectable semaglutide, the main ingredient in both blockbuster drugs, could cost $28 to $140 a year, according to researchers at the University of Liverpool. By contrast, Novo’s US list price is $1,027.51 for Ozempic and $1,349 for Wegovy, though it has pledged to cut both to $675 on Jan. 1. Direct-to-consumer prices are lower, at $349 a month for most doses of Wegovy. (Kresge, 3/6)
The Washington Post:
GLP-1 Drugs Like Ozempic Can Raise Bone And Tendon Injury Risk, Large Study Suggests
The miracle of rapid weight loss has always come with fine print. Until recently, it read mostly like a list of digestive complaints — stomachaches, constipation — generally unpleasant but tolerable and rarely severe. New research presented this month suggests the drugs may affect something more structural: bone. In an analysis of nearly 150,000 patients, researchers found that people taking GLP-1 medications faced a significantly higher risk of skeletal disorders. (Eunjung Cha, 3/8)
Bloomberg:
Agilent Buys Medical Instruments Maker Biocare For $950 Million
Agilent Technologies Inc. agreed to acquire privately held Biocare Medical, which makes instruments and materials used in cancer research, in an all-cash transaction valued at $950 million. Biocare will become part of the Agilent Life Sciences and Diagnostics Markets Group, according to a statement reviewed by Bloomberg News. The deal is expected to be accretive earnings per share about 12 months after it closes, and will “accelerate innovation and support long-term value creation for our shareholders,” Agilent Chief Executive Officer Padraig McDonnell said in the statement. (Baker and Davis, 3/9)
The Washington Post:
The Surprising Way Breast Cancer Screenings Could Reveal Heart Disease
A new study finds AI can potentially detect artery calcification in routine mammograms, helping identify women at risk of heart disease, the leading cause of death. (Johnson, 3/9)
STATE WATCH
Chicago Tribune:
Illinois Orders 21 Communities To Remove Forever Chemicals From Drinking Water By 2029. But Who Will Pay?
But many towns cannot afford the millions of dollars needed to upgrade their water systems with equipment to remove PFAS, and grants are limited. That means ratepayers could end up footing the bill. (Freitag, 3/8)
New Hampshire Public Radio:
State Senate Votes Down Bill To Protect Medical Providers Offering Abortions
A bill that would have codified the right to reproductive health care services in New Hampshire — including contraception, abortion and assisted reproduction — was voted down 16-8 by the state Senate on Thursday. (Richardson, 3/6)
The Colorado Sun:
Polis Plan To Ban Purchase Of Soda With Food Stamps Stalled By Concerns It Would Shame Low-Income Coloradans
A plan to prohibit Coloradans from using food-assistance benefits to buy soda and sugary fruit juices was stalled Friday by a state board after opponents argued it was an overreach that could harm the dignity and autonomy of low-income families. (Brown, 3/6)
Charlotte Ledger:
A New Perk For State Workers: Free Surgery
What if your health plan offered free surgery, but only by surgeons on its approved list? That’s the incentive behind a new program the North Carolina State Health Plan is rolling out for more than 700,000 teachers, state workers and their families. (Crouch, 3/9)
Maryland Matters:
Maryland Behavioral Health Advocates Seek Provider Pay Boost
Advocates know Maryland lawmakers are working with a tight budget this year, but worry that another year without rate increases for behavioral health professionals will worsen a 34,000-person workforce shortage and threaten the services that struggling Marylanders need. (Brown, 3/6)
Wyoming Public Radio:
Trainings Offer Tools For Wyomingites To Help Support Suicide Prevention
Gov. Mark Gordon recently announced a handful of free trainings this month to help Wyomingites learn how to support people who are struggling with suicidal thoughts. (Habermann, 3/6)
LIFESTYLE AND HEALTH
NPR:
Teens Are Sleeping Less Than Ever And Screens Aren’t Primarily To Blame
The spring time change can mean waking up a little groggy. But the situation may be worse for many teenagers who appear to be getting less sleep than ever, according to a new report in the Journal of the American Medical Association. That's concerning because adolescents really need their beauty rest. (Daniel, 3/8)
Fortune:
Chatbots Are 'Validating Everything' Even If You're Suicidal. Research Shows Dangers Of AI Psychosis
Artificial intelligence has rapidly moved from a niche technology to an everyday companion, with millions of people turning to chatbots for advice, emotional support, and conversation. But a growing body of research and expert testimony suggests that because chatbots are so sycophantic, and because people use them for everything, it may be contributing to an increase in delusional and mania symptoms in users with mental health. (Gioino, 3/7)
The Washington Post:
Paula Doress-Worters, Who Co-Wrote ‘Our Bodies, Ourselves,’ Dies At 87
In the days and weeks after she gave birth to her first child, a healthy, much-loved baby named Hannah, Paula Doress-Worters found herself painfully, inexplicably depressed. “I felt terrible,” she recalled years later, “because she was a wanted child. She was lovely. But sometimes I just couldn’t get out of bed.” The neighbors grew worried. Her husband called the obstetrician. And when doctors arrived at their home in the Boston suburbs, Ms. Doress-Worters ran from the room. She was chased, sedated and hospitalized for a month. (Smith, 3/7)
RECALLS
CBS News:
Baby Sleepsuit Sold At Walmart Recalled Over Potential Choking Hazard
A model of infant sleepsuits has been recalled over a possible choking hazard, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced this week. The zipper head on the recalled HALO Magic Sleepsuits poses a danger to babies, according to the recall announcement. The products were sold on the company's website as well as at major retailers, including Amazon.com, Walmart.com and Target.com. There have been at least 15 reports of the zipper head detaching from the garment, the CPSC said Thursday, but no injuries have been reported. (Intarasuwan, 3/7)