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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Jul 17 2026 9:22 AM

Full Issue

Confusing Language In NC Law Prompts Head-Scratching Over Medicaid Dental Coverage

New legislation signed into law on July 7 seems to say that access to some oral health surgeries for Medicaid recipients will be halted on July 1, 2027. But Mark Casey, dental director for Medicaid at the state Department of Health and Human Services, said the provision does not eliminate the coverage, NC Health News reported.

North Carolina Health News: Oral Health Advocates Try To Unravel Mystery Of Two NC Budget Paragraphs 

People who pay close attention to the machinations of state budget-making these days in North Carolina know that you can’t just look at the bottom line to understand how lawmakers’ spending choices will shape communities, families and the health care they’ll have access to. You have to become adept at reading between the budget lines to get the sweeping effect. (Blythe, 7/17)

KFF Health News: KFF Health News’ ‘What The Health?’: States Start Their Medicaid Cuts

When Republicans passed their big budget bill in 2025, they scheduled many of the Medicaid reductions to take effect in 2027, after the 2026 midterm elections. But in anticipation of getting less money from Washington come January, many states are already cutting their Medicaid programs, making the issue more relevant for voters in November. (Rovner, 7/16)

More health news from across the U.S. —

New Hampshire Public Radio: Health Services For Granite Staters Affected By State Budget Cuts

The current state budget required New Hampshire’s Department of Health and Human Services make $51 million in cuts over two fiscal years, marking the largest reduction in its budget in the past 30 years. (Richardson, 7/16)

Connecticut Public: Key Lawmaker Wants CT To Explore Partnership To Make GLP-1s

A key lawmaker wants Connecticut to explore manufacturing generic weight-loss drugs despite Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont’s administration backing away from the idea. (Khan, 7/16)

AP: Sister Of Tennessee Death Row Inmate Targets Doctor Who Participated In Failed Execution

The sister of a Tennessee death row inmate whose execution was halted because of problems inserting an IV has filed a complaint against the doctor who was involved. The complaint filed Wednesday with the Tennessee Department of Health by Tonya Hervey says Tony Carruthers suffered excruciating pain during the May 21 attempt to administer a lethal injection and the family believes he now has partial paralysis that they attribute to a stroke. It does not specifically say how or when they believe the stroke occurred, and Hervey declined an interview request. (Loller, 7/16)

AP: Ghost Gun Company Must Pay $100M In The Death Of A Kentucky Teen

A ghost gun company has been ordered to pay more than $100 million in the death of a Kentucky teenager who had purchased the company’s pistol-building kit online. The verdict — believed to be the largest ever against a gun dealer — was awarded by a jury Wednesday following a trial focused on whether the vendor, Husky Armory LLC, skirted federal regulations barring the sale of the gun-assembly kits to those under 21. (Offenhartz and Lovan, 7/17)

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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