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Showing 3901-3920 of 131,635 results

Wisconsin Supreme Court Weighs Clash Over Conversion Therapy For LGBTQ+

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

Justices are examining whether a GOP-led legislative panel overreached its authority when it blocked the ban that forbids professionals from counseling people to try to change their sexual orientation or gender identity. More news comes from Massachusetts, New York, Colorado, and elsewhere.

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First Covid, Now Wildfires: Calif. Teens Say Their Mental Health Is Suffering

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

The disaster has again disrupted the education and nutrition of thousands of children. In Pasadena alone, five school sites were destroyed or severely damaged, leaving 14,000 students with no clear plan. And it’s not just students: Almost half of Pasadena’s district employees lived in the evacuation zone, the Los Angeles Times noted.

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Morning Briefing for Thursday, January 16, 2025

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

FDA Prohibits Red Dye No. 3, Which Is Linked To Cancer In Rats

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

Food safety advocates, who had urged the ban for decades, do not anticipate difficulties in the transition and hope this will lead to more bans on synthetic dyes. Also in public health news: baby formula, processed meats, and more.

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NIH Director To Step Down After Only One Year In The Role

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

National Institutes of Health Director Monica Bertagnolli will resign Friday. The Hill reports that while the agency has typically held bipartisan support, residual Republican dissatisfaction over the handling of the pandemic “has pushed NIH squarely into partisan crosshairs.” Also in the news: a conservative effort to oppose Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination; Trump’s plans for HHS; and more.

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New Rule From DEA, HHS Will Allow Some Opioid Treatment Via Telehealth

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

Roll Call reports that the newly finalized rule will allow for health care providers who have not seen a patient in person to prescribe six months’ worth of buprenorphine via telehealth. Also in pharma news: FDA’s proposed nicotine crackdown; FDA’s fast-track approval process for drugs; insulin prices; and more.

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Industry Leaders Back Policy Allowing Interstate Health Care Professionals

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

Texas is being encouraged to join existing interstate compacts, which would allow health care workers from nine professions to practice in other states and out-of-state workers to come to Texas. Other health industry news is on furloughs, contract deals, updates on the J.P. Morgan conference, and more.

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First Edition: Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025

January 16, 2025 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

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A close up photo of an unidentifiable toddler sitting in his mother's lap while a doctor puts a band-aid on his arm after receiving a vaccination.

Childhood Vaccination Rates, a Rare Health Bright Spot in Struggling States, Are Slipping

By Daniel Chang and Sam Whitehead January 16, 2025 KFF Health News Original

Mississippi, Tennessee, and West Virginia — states with some of the worst health outcomes — also have some of the highest childhood vaccination rates. But doctors and health officials worry a rising tide of vaccine skepticism is causing those public health bright spots to dim.

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A photo of the exterior of the California Capitol.

New California Laws Target Medical Debt, AI Care Decisions, Detention Centers

By Christine Mai-Duc January 16, 2025 KFF Health News Original

California has a few major changes coming to its health policy landscape in 2025. New laws that took effect Jan. 1 ban medical debt from credit reports, allow public health inspections of private immigration detention centers, and ban toxic chemicals in makeup.

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A close up photo of an unidentifiable toddler sitting in his mother's lap while a doctor puts a band-aid on his arm after receiving a vaccination.

Las sólidas tasas de vacunación infantil, un raro punto positivo de salud en estados complejos, están disminuyendo

By Daniel Chang and Sam Whitehead January 16, 2025 KFF Health News Original

Defensores, médicos, investigadores, y funcionarios de salud pública temen que estos logros en algunos estados como Mississippi y Tennessee estén desapareciendo.

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Viewpoints: GOP Plan To ‘Make America Healthy Again’ Would Have The Opposite Effect

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

Opinion writers discuss these public health topics.

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After 2 Deaths, Philips Recalls Software That Mishandled Some EKG Readings

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

Another 109 people reported injuries after using the remote cardiac monitoring software, Modern Healthcare reported. Other pharmaceutical and tech news is on the FDA’s drug approval system and a rapid diagnostic test for bloodstream infections.

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FDA Wants Easier-To-See Nutrition Labels On Most Packaged Foods, Drinks

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

The proposal would require brands to list sodium, sugar, and fat on the fronts of packages in an effort to help people make better choices. Also in the news: A possible overhaul in how obesity is defined.

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A Drink A Day Might Be Fine. More Than That? Not So Much, Study Finds.

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

The risk of premature death increases when people consume a couple of drinks a day, an HHS report says. A trade group disagrees, arguing the report is “rife with bias and conflicts of interest.” And in other health news, a federal judge has temporarily blocked a new warning label on cigarettes.

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FTC Finds Top Three PBMs Took In Billions From Inflated Drug Costs

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

During a roughly five-year span, CVS Health, Cigna, and UnitedHealth benefited the most from increasing prices for generic drugs that treated illnesses such as HIV and cancer. Some of the price hikes topped 1000%. Other news is on the price of drugs under Trump; how the shift to online therapy has worsened disparities in care; and more.

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Insurers Won’t Be Required To Cover Free OTC Birth Control After All

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

The Biden administration ran out of time to expand contraception coverage under the Affordable Care Act, The 19th reports. It’s not likely the incoming Trump administration would support such a mandate. More news is about abortion pill stockpiles, an OB-GYN mobile van, Meta’s LGBTQ+ policy, and more.

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Biden Team Begins Cooperation With Trump Officials On Bird Flu Response

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

“We sent them all of the information on our work,” a Biden health official told NBC News. Public health officials raise concern that a lack of coordination could imperil the response to the emerging H5N1 threat. Other news is on the current norovirus wave and MIS-C recovery.

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Trump Administration Could Squelch Biomedical Innovation, Experts Warn

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

Although some concede reforms are needed at the National Institutes of Health, and specifically the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, overhauling the agency whose research saves lives is a concern. ProPublica explains why.

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Newly Sworn In, W.Va. Governor Immediately OKs Vaccine Exemptions

January 15, 2025 Morning Briefing

On his first full day in office, Republican Gov. Patrick Morrisey approved religious exemptions from school vaccinations. Also: the threat of contaminated water from the California wildfires; a new Mississippi law that stops people from being jailed while awaiting mental health care; and more.

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