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Showing 3141-3160 of 131,635 results

Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

Each week, KFF Health News compiles a selection of the latest health research and news.

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Viewpoints: HHS Cuts Endanger Access To Crucial Information; Decimating Agencies Won’t Make US Healthy

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

Editorial writers discuss these public health topics.

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Supreme Court Sides With FDA Over Flavored Vape Application Denials

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court dismissed the lower court’s ruling and concluded the FDA adhered to its standards when it assessed the applications. Also, the Supreme Court is allowing a truck driver to sue a CBD company after he tested positive for THC and was fired.

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Senators Offer Up Budget Plan That Could Ease Some Health Care Cuts

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

Modern Healthcare reports that the Senate Budget Committee’s proposal includes the House’s recommendations that could lead to billions in health program cuts but also provides for greater flexibility. Plus: a proposal to offer nondairy milk options in school lunches.

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Missed Deadline: Novavax’s Covid Shot Still Awaiting FDA’s Full Approval

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

The Food and Drug Administration had already indicated that it approved the vaccine, but new agency leaders are now requesting more data. Meanwhile, FDA staffers who oversaw expert panel meetings on vaccines have been dismissed. Other news is on measles and shingles.

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CDC Tasked With Cutting $2.9B Of Its Spending On Contracts In Just Weeks

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

The Trump administration gave the agency until April 18 to reduce by 35% its spending on contracts. Also, more about the gutting of federal health agencies and how people are responding.

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Scientists, ACLU Sue NIH Over ‘Ideological Purge’ Of Research Grants

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

Also: How the push against diversity, equity, and inclusion affects transgender people and those with disabilities; the impact of Trump administration cuts on cancer research; and more.

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Supreme Court Justices Differ On South Carolina’s Planned Parenthood Case

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

Planned Parenthood’s attorney, along with liberal justices, stated that “preventing the medical provider from suing over South Carolina’s actions could allow states to exclude providers from Medicaid for any reason at all,” Roll Call reported. Also, the CDC’s IVF unit was cut Tuesday; doctors take a deeper look at the cases of three patients who died because of abortion bans; and more.

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Mass General Brigham Staff Rocked By Layoffs Of Chaplains, Abuse Counselors

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

Chaplains help families navigate the decision to take loved ones off life support and also comfort employees struggling with traumatic situations. Among other jobs cut were a clinical social worker who led violence intervention and prevention programs and a tobacco treatment specialist.

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Nashville School Shooter Manipulated Mental Health Providers, Report Says

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

Audrey Hale, who died in the 2023 attack, was able to convince providers and family members that her “homicidal and suicidal ideations were well in her past,” the investigative case summary concludes. Meanwhile, efforts are underway in Florida’s Miami-Dade County and in Ohio to ban fluoride from public drinking water. More news comes from Indiana, North Carolina, and California.

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Morning Briefing for Thursday, April 3, 2025

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

We’d like to speak with personnel from the Department of Health and Human Services or its component agencies about what’s happening within the federal health bureaucracy. Please message us on Signal at (415) 519-8778 or get in touch here.

FDA Layoffs Will Likely Force Cutbacks In Food And Drug Inspections

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

CBS reports that roughly 170 workers were laid off from the FDA’s Office of Inspections and Investigations. In related FDA news, the pharmaceutical industry is worried about the cuts; layoffs include senior veterinarians working on bird flu; and more. Also, President Donald Trump’s tariff exemptions for pharma.

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First Edition: Thursday, April 3, 2025

April 3, 2025 Morning Briefing

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

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A digital illustration with a black and white picture of President Donald Trump holding up an executive order after signing it on January 20, 2025 in Washington, D.C. and a disability pride flag with glitch visual effect applied behind his photo.

Trump’s DEI Undoing Undermines Hard-Won Accommodations for Disabled People

By Stephanie Armour April 3, 2025 KFF Health News Original

From halting diversity programs that benefit disabled workers to making federal staffing cuts, the Trump administration has taken a slew of actions that harm people with disabilities.

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A woman in a red shirt and glasses smiles at the camera as a dog behind her looks over her left shoulder.

‘If They Cut Too Much, People Will Die’: Health Coalition Pushes GOP on Medicaid Funding

By Christine Mai-Duc April 3, 2025 KFF Health News Original

As House Republicans mull a massive $880 billion cut from federal programs likely including Medicaid, constituents, disability advocates, and health care providers are joining forces to lobby GOP members in California — including those who represent rural, deeply conservative pockets that stand to lose the most.

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A photo taken from the street of a large, modern office building in Rockville, Maryland.

What’s Lost: Trump Whacks Tiny Agency That Works To Make the Nation’s Health Care Safer

By Arthur Allen April 3, 2025 KFF Health News Original

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality has helped improve health care safety in a country where thousands die of medical errors each year. It was effectively dissolved Tuesday.

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Viewpoints: Measles Is On Its Way To Epidemic Status; Eerie Parallel Between Abortion Bans And Fugitive Slave Act

April 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

Editorial writers share their thoughts on these public health issues.

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Prosecutors To Seek Death Penalty For Mangione In UnitedHealthcare Slaying

April 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi accused Luigi Mangione, 26 — on trial in the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson — of committing a “cold-blooded assassination.” President Donald Trump has restored the use of federal executions, which had been on hold since mid-2021 under the Biden administration.

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Study: Exposure To Phthalates May Impact Brain Development In Infants

April 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

The study, published Wednesday in the journal Nature Communications, looked at moms’ phthalate exposure and newborns’ brain development. Other health news is on a promising new drug in the fight against ovarian cancer, the impact of “cold-water immersion” on your body’s cells, and more.

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LA County Forms New Homeless Agency Despite Mayor’s Disapproval

April 2, 2025 Morning Briefing

According to the Los Angeles Times, the L.A. County Board of Supervisors approved a plan Tuesday to move more than $300 million in funds from the existing homeless services agency. Other news is from Massachusetts, Georgia, Colorado, Illinois, and North Carolina.

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