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Showing 1941-1960 of 3,375 results for "Donald Trump"

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Trump Extends Social Distancing Guidelines Through April, Walking Back Talk About Reopening Country By Easter

March 30, 2020 Morning Briefing

Facing grim figures from his health care advisers and other experts, President Donald Trump reversed course on earlier “aspirational” hopes that the country could re-open in two weeks. Meanwhile, experts across the country try to figure out how to ease off on physical distancing restrictions when the time is right. And psychologists and advocates worry about the mental toll the guidelines are taking on Americans.

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Older Workers Hit Hard By Wave Of Unemployment, But Also Have Most To Fear Going Back To Jobs

May 12, 2020 Morning Briefing

The unemployment rate for older workers is higher even than the eye-popping national average, but the group is also at a much higher risk of severe complications from COVID-19. The double bind could hurt President Donald Trump in the November elections. In other news on the economic toll from the virus: delays in unemployment aid, a look at which business got help from the relief package, the worry that extreme poverty will lead to more deaths and more.

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Coalition Of Attorneys General Ask 3M To Help Prevent Price Gouging On Masks

April 22, 2020 Morning Briefing

“While 3M has committed to maintain the same prices for N95 respirators, others in the marketplace are charging unconscionable prices,” the attorneys general wrote, requesting that 3M stop doing business with distributors that violate the company’s policies. In other preparedness news: FEMA’s missteps, fact checking claims that President Donald Trump shipped masks to China, ventilator production, and personal protective gear.

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Conoce a los oficiales de salud que alertaron sobre la enfermedad del “vapeo”

By Lauren Weber September 25, 2019 KFF Health News Original

La epidemia ha provocado indignación por la falta de supervisión federal sobre el “vapeo”, pero también hay una historia de éxito de salud pública local que contar.

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Pompeo Hints That Decision To Cut Off WHO Funding Could Be Permanent

April 24, 2020 Morning Briefing

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the World Health Organization, which President Donald Trump targeted in recent weeks, needs a “structural fix” for its “shortcomings” before the U.S. would consider resuming funding. Critics of the Trump administration say the president is unfairly scapegoating the global organization as a way to shift blame from his administration’s early missteps. Meanwhile, the United States’ response to the pandemic may have undermined its position as a global leader.

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Border Patrol’s ‘Terrible Legacy’: Rapid Growth, Weak Leadership, Kickback Schemes Befell Agency, Report Says

February 10, 2020 Morning Briefing

A ProPublica investigation looks at scandals within the agency as the fourth chief leads it since President Donald Trump was elected and as senior leadership in key areas retire early. Other news from the administration is on kidney care treatment delays.

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‘Medicare For All’ Emerges As Early Divide In First Democratic Debate

By Shefali Luthra and Jon Greenberg, PolitiFact June 27, 2019 KFF Health News Original

On the first of the Democrat’s two-night debate, only New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren offered full support for a single-payer system that would banish private health insurance.

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Azar’s Early Stumbles Over Pandemic Severity, Testing Access Have Effectively Sidelined Him In Fight

April 23, 2020 Morning Briefing

Media outlets take a look at HHS Secretary Alex Azar’s early role in the pandemic efforts, and how his missteps still haunt him. Meanwhile, Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, is still in charge of the emergency-response supply chain despite his lack of experience and outcries from states about how poorly it’s being run. And the rest of the world watches in saddened disbelief as America, once looked at as a global leader, crumbles beneath the weight of the virus.

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Trump Ousts Watchdog Overseeing Coronavirus Stimulus Package In Latest Attack On Inspector Generals

April 8, 2020 Morning Briefing

President Donald Trump offered no particular reason for firing Glenn Fine, an inspector general who was known for his independence. The move is just the latest move by Trump to chip away at the watchdogs in charge of evaluating his administration. Critics say the behavior sends a message to government watchdogs to tread softly. “I cannot see how any inspector general will feel in any way safe to do a good job,” said Danielle Brian, the executive director of the Project on Government Oversight. “They are all at the mercy at what the president feels.”

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Top Health Officials Say Americans Should Brace For Tragedy This Week On Par With Pearl Harbor, 9/11

April 6, 2020 Morning Briefing

Even as President Donald Trump offered a more optimistic stance, his officials warned that this week will be tough for Americans. “This is going to be the hardest and the saddest week of most Americans’ lives, quite frankly,” said Surgeon General Jerome Adams. Meanwhile, experts fear that the number of confirmed cases in the country–which has exceeded 330,000–is only a fraction of the cases out there.

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Political, Institutional Failures Undermined U.S. Response In Early Phase Of Outbreak: What Happened In Those Key 70 Days?

April 6, 2020 Morning Briefing

The Washington Post investigates government and White House actions during the first two months of the year when top officials knew about the threat but the country failed to rise to meet it. And AP looks at how that critical time was squandered in terms of stocking up on equipment. Meanwhile, health care was already a losing issue for President Donald Trump and Republicans, and this pandemic highlights that vulnerability.

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In Desperate Times, What’s A Fair Price For A Coronavirus Treatment? Answers Range From $12.50 To Sky’s-The-Limit

May 15, 2020 Morning Briefing

Gilead has a reputation for placing astronomical prices on breakthrough drugs. But with the whole world’s eyes on the drugmaker, what will it charge for remdesivir, the only drug that everyone wants right now? Stat talks to experts to get a sense of what to expect. In other pharmaceutical news: President Donald Trump wants essential drugs to be manufactured in U.S. instead of China; scientists eye a cocktail of medications to best treat COVID patients; and the search for an elusive cure has researchers thinking outside the box.

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Must-Reads Of The Week From Brianna Labuskes

By Brianna Labuskes July 12, 2019 KFF Health News Original

Newsletter editor Brianna Labuskes wades through hundreds of health care policy stories each week, so you don’t have to.

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Must-Reads Of The Week From Brianna Labuskes

By Brianna Labuskes July 19, 2019 KFF Health News Original

Newsletter editor Brianna Labuskes wades through hundreds of health care policy stories each week, so you don’t have to.

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CDC Warned Security Leaders About Threat Of A Mysterious Pathogen On Jan. 2. What Happened Next?

April 3, 2020 Morning Briefing

Behind the scenes, the National Security Council worked around the clock to try to understand the novel coronavirus after the CDC’s Dr. Robert Redfield tipped the members off in early January. Meanwhile, the Trump administration had ended a pandemic detection program two months before the outbreak started in China. And mixed messages and shifting leadership from President Donald Trump and within the White House and Defense Department sow confusion.

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For California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, Resistance Is Personal

By Samantha Young February 4, 2019 KFF Health News Original

Xavier Becerra, the state’s first Latino attorney general, is one of President Donald Trump’s most relentless adversaries. He attributes his legal values — and his opposition to the current administration — to his upbringing as the son of Mexican immigrants.

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Reinstatement Of Captain Crozier? Navy Investigates His Firing, Possible Return To USS Theodore Roosevelt

April 16, 2020 Morning Briefing

Adm. Michael Gilday, chief of naval operations, is reviewing whether he can reinstate Captain Brett Crozier, who is in isolation on Guam with the coronavirus. Crozier was removed from command on April 2 for writing a letter asking for help for his crew that went viral. Either way, President Donald Trump could overrule the admiral’s decision. Other military news is on ways organizations are supporting troops, as well.

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Dispositivos de “vapeo” camuflados desconciertan a padres y escuelas

By Anna Maria Barry-Jester September 19, 2019 KFF Health News Original

Un mouse de computadora. Una funda para el celular. Mochilas. Unidades USB. Las opciones de kits de “vapeo” que se anuncian en internet son muchas y muy coloridas.

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Trump Likely To Bring Up Drug Prices At State Of The Union Address, But Dems Hope It Backfires

February 4, 2020 Morning Briefing

If President Donald Trump mentions drug prices in his State of the Union address, Democrats plan to argue that little has been accomplished on the issue during his tenure. To that end, more than a dozen Democratic lawmakers are bringing people with sky-high insulin bills to the address.

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Health Officials Try To Tamp Down Excitement Over Potential Treatments As Both Doctors And Public Hoard Malaria Drugs

March 25, 2020 Morning Briefing

President Donald Trump sparked a surge of interest in an old malaria treatment that might be showing promising results in treating COVID-19, causing a rush on the drug. But scientists and experts warn that any drug needs to be tested to prove its safety, and that process could take months. Meanwhile, Roche hopes its arthritis medication will show results in patients with coronavirus.

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