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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Jan 27 2017

Full Issue

In Aftermath Of Hiring Freeze Announcement, Lawmakers Move Swiftly On VA Exemptions

“We must ensure that, while we work toward our mutual goal of VA health care reform, VA is not further hampered by an inability to recruit high-quality clinicians," lawmakers wrote in a letter to the president following an executive order that mandated a hiring freeze at federal agencies.

The Wall Street Journal: Pressure Builds To Grant VA Exemptions From Hiring Freeze

The pressure for exemptions to President Donald Trump’s federal hiring freeze grew Thursday, led by Republican congressional leaders. The chairmen of the Senate and House veterans committees sent a letter to the White House asking that the president further clarify which jobs at the Department of Veterans Affairs are exempt from the order that Mr. Trump signed just days earlier, which suspended hiring throughout the federal government. (Kesling, 1/26)

New Hampshire Public Radio: N.H. Senators, Congresswoman To Trump: Spare VA Hospitals From Hiring Freeze 

Three members of New Hampshire's congressional delegation have signed on to a letter to President Trump demanding that he exempt the Department of Veterans Affairs from his executive order freezing federal hiring. Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan and Congresswoman Annie Kuster, all Democrats, say a hiring freeze at the VA will delay veterans’ access to health care and resolution of their disability claims. (Biello, 1/26)

The Wall Street Journal: Trump’s Move To Clamp Down On Communications Spurs Backlash

Agencies across the federal government are scrambling to handle a chaotic transition of power between two diametrically different leaders. This has led to confusion over what government websites can display, what employees are allowed to do with publicly funded work and growing social-media activism aimed at rebutting President Donald Trump. ... At the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a team of Trump administration appointees who referred to themselves as the “beachhead” team, visited the agency Tuesday for briefings with small groups of CMS leadership, according to an HHS official familiar with the proceedings. CMS leadership instructed agency directors Tuesday to alert employees of the ban on communications, which includes policy statements and public appearances, social media, blogs and webinars and release of documents, the official said. (Harder and Carlton, 1/27)

Modern Healthcare: Medical Supplies Would Be Hit By Trump's Proposed 20% Tax On Mexican Imports

The Trump administration on Thursday floated the idea of imposing a 20% tax on imports from Mexico to pay for a wall along the southern border aimed at stopping illegal immigration. Medical distributors and manufacturers source raw materials and finished products from many locations around the world, including Mexico. The U.S. imports more medical, surgical, dental or veterinarian instruments from Mexico than any other country. (Rubenfire, 1/26)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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