Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
CDC Vaccine Databases, Crucial For Managing Outbreaks, Are Out Of Date
Nearly half of the databases that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention used to update regularly surveillance systems that tracked public health information like Covid vaccination rates and hospitalizations for respiratory syncytial virus have been paused without explanation, according to new research. The findings, published Monday in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine, indicate that at the start of 2025, the CDC maintained 82 databases that were updated at least monthly. But by the end of October, the study found, 38 had gone stale, with 34 showing no new entries at all in the previous six months. (Bendix, 1/26)
In related news about vaccine skepticism and MAHA
A Senate committee Monday narrowly approved a bill that would create a new path for parents who dont want their schoolchildren vaccinated, with the proposals sponsor saying parents should be in the drivers seat but opponents warning of public health consequences. (Saunders, 1/27)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: Trump Policies At Odds With Emerging Understanding Of Covids Long-Term Harm
Possible risk of autism in children. Dormant cancer cells awakening. Accelerating aging of the brain. Federal officials in May 2023 declared an end to the national covid pandemic. But more than two years later, a growing body of research continues to reveal information about the virus and its ability to cause harm long after initial infections resolve, even in some cases when symptoms were mild. (Armour, 1/27)
Republicans have embraced HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s healthy food crusade, hoping it will boost their prospects in the midterms. Some Democrats fear it might work. The health secretary was in Pennsylvania last week, touting a new campaign to take back Americans health. It was the first of what is expected to be many stops ahead of the midterms where the secretary, a former presidential candidate with a constituency all his own, will tout the administrations efforts to keep Americans, especially children, healthy. (Haslett and Doherty, 1/27)
Prominent cardiology leaders wrote a letter to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. demanding a "forward-looking" U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) roster that will be willing to adopt the latest science on cardiovascular prevention. The nonprofit Society for Heart Attack Prevention and Eradication (SHAPE) coalition of physicians, scientists, and public health leaders criticized past USPSTF recommendations for lagging "far behind contemporary science and real-world clinical needs." (Lou, 1/26)
More on the Trump administration
Executives who donated to the presidents super PAC met privately with him and urged a repeal of the rule, which was intended to prevent neglect of patients. (Vogel and Jewett, 1/27)
The US officially exited the Paris Agreement on Jan. 27. Its the second time President Donald Trump has pulled out of the pact that commits almost 200 countries to keep global warming to no more than 2C (3.6F), and ideally 1.5C, above pre-industrial levels. Compared with his first term in office, Trump has escalated his retreat from global cooperation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. (Roston and Kahn, 1/27)
The use of a hurtful word still considered taboo is emblematic of the provocative language that courses through the manosphere sector of social media these days almost gleefully transgressive language often adopted in messaging from the White House. Diplomacy is out and mockery in, whether by displaying plaques that insult former presidents, depicting Donald Trump spraying excrement on protesters from a military jet or using the R-word to question the intelligence of a political opponent, as Mr. Trump did in a Truth Social post on Thanksgiving Day, in which he called Minnesotas Democratic governor, Tim Walz, seriously retarded. (Barry and Rao, 1/26)