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The Week in Brief: Friday, Sept. 19, 2025

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Friday, Sep 19 2025

Montana Advocates Worry About Federal Impacts on Support for Students With Disabilities

Alex Sakariassen

Montana has a waitlist for people with disabilities who need vocational training, even as schools and disability advocates are concerned about how federal cuts will affect those programs.

Kennedy’s Take on Vaccine Science Fractures Cohesive National Public Health Strategies

Stephanie Armour and Christine Mai-Duc and Amy Maxmen and Arthur Allen

A lack of faith in the soundness of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s new direction has led states to explore enacting their own vaccine policies. A patchwork of divergent recommendations and requirements could result.

RFK Jr.’s Vaccine Panel Expected To Recommend Delaying Hepatitis B Shot for Children

Jackie Fortiér

A federal vaccine panel, recently reshaped by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is expected to vote on delaying the hepatitis B shot for newborns. Pediatricians warn that could open the door to a comeback for a disease virtually eradicated among U.S. children.

Watch: Fired CDC Chief Says RFK Jr. Demanded She Roll Back Vaccine Policies Without Evidence

Arthur Allen and Hannah Norman

Susan Monarez and former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention chief medical officer Debra Houry described turmoil in an agency dominated by anti-vaccine political officials nominated by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

An HIV Outbreak in Maine Shows the Risk of Trump’s Crackdown on Homelessness and Drug Use

Aneri Pattani

Public health experts and advocates say the outbreak has been fueled by a confluence of local factors, including the sweeping of a homeless encampment and shuttering of a sterile-syringe program. But those issues may not remain local for long. The Trump administration is leading efforts to promote similar tactics nationwide.

Ticks Are Migrating, Raising Disease Risks if They Can’t Be Tracked Quickly Enough

Aaron Bolton, MTPR

Doctors need to know when to screen for tick-borne diseases in their communities. But it’s getting harder for local health departments to get funding for tick surveys as federal public health grants from agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dry up.

Ousted CDC Officials Clap Back at RFK Jr.

Fired less than a month after being confirmed as head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Susan Monarez appeared at a dramatic Senate hearing this week alongside another ousted CDC official and directly contradicted Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy’s earlier testimony about why she was fired. Monarez told the Health, […]

Listen: The Surprising Power of Pushback When Health Insurance Won’t Pay

Jackie Fortiér

Denied coverage for preventive care? You’re not powerless. In this new episode of NPR’s “Life Kit” podcast, KFF Health News reporter Jackie Fortiér explores why denials happen and how to avoid common pitfalls.

Exactech Will Pay $8M To Settle Lawsuits Over Defective Knee Implant Parts

Fred Schulte

Whistleblower lawsuits alleged that Exactech covered up defects in knee implants while patient injuries mounted.

Why Are More Older People Dying After Falls?

Paula Span

Some researchers suspect that rising prescription drug use may explain a disturbing trend.

Team Trump’s Answer to Ballooning Obamacare Premiums: Less Generous Coverage

Julie Appleby

Tens of millions of people face sticker shock enrolling in Affordable Care Act insurance for 2026. To save money, the Trump administration wants them to consider less generous coverage.

Projected Surge in Uninsured Will Strain Local Health Systems

Sam Whitehead and Renuka Rayasam

In South Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, many people go without health insurance, and the health system struggles as a result. Similar communities dot the nation, and more could face such difficulties under President Donald Trump’s tax-and-spending law.

Health Care Cuts Threaten Homegrown Solutions to Rural Doctor Shortages

Bernard J. Wolfson

In a rural, largely Republican region of California, homegrown efforts to bolster the medical workforce face an uphill battle, in part because of federal health care cuts approved by the GOP Congress and signed by President Donald Trump in July, as well as a state budget deficit.

An AI Assistant Can Interpret Those Lab Results for You

Kate Ruder

While patients wait to hear back from their doctors about test results, many turn to AI assistants for answers despite cautions over privacy and accuracy.

Journalists Talk New ‘MAHA’ Strategy, RFK Jr.’s Tack at HHS, and Plight of Rural Hospitals

KFF Health News journalists made the rounds on national and local media recently to discuss topical stories. Here’s a collection of their appearances.

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