Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Trump Administration Aims To Slash Housing Grants By Two-Thirds In 2026
The Trump administration has developed plans for a wholesale shift in homelessness policy that would slash support for long-term housing programs, according to a confidential grant-making plan, and critics say it could quickly place as many as 170,000 formerly homeless people at risk of returning to the streets. Pivoting from housing aid, the administrations approach would shift billions to short-term programs that impose work rules, help the police dismantle encampments, and require the homeless to accept treatment for mental health or addiction. (DeParle, 11/12)
On prescription prices and immigration policy
File this under unintended consequences. Over the past few months, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has pursued new policies that its officials insist will preserve patents from unnecessary legal challenges and strengthen the system for protecting innovation. (Silverman, 11/13)
The Trump administration directed visa officers to consider obesity and other chronic health conditions such as heart disease, cancer and diabetes as reasons to deny foreigners visas to the United States. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told U.S. consulates and embassies around the world about the changes in a Nov. 6 cable, according to a copy obtained and verified by The Washington Post. The move broadens current medical screening beyond contagious diseases and gives visa officers new justification to reject applicants, in the Trump administrations latest effort to curb the flow of immigration. (Gurley and Natanson, 11/13)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: ICE Crackdown Heightens Barriers For Immigrant Domestic Violence Victims
The immigrant from India believed her husband when he said that if she wasnt gone by the time he got to their Georgia home in 10 minutes, he would kill her. She said her husband and his family, who are also immigrants, abused her throughout their marriage, beating her with a belt, pouring hot water on her, cutting her, and pushing her head through a wall. (Platzman Weinstock, 11/13)
On MAHA
Vice President JD Vance on Wednesday praised Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.s willingness to question established science and embrace nontraditional voices in the health care space, saying that often throughout history, all the experts were wrong. In remarks in a fireside chat between the two men at a Make America Healthy Again summit in the nations capital, Vance also propped up Kennedys MAHA movement, saying it has been a critical part of our success in Washington. (Swenson, 11/12)
The agency announced new recommendations on fluoride supplements, a crucial tool for protecting childrens dental health. (Blum, 11/11)
Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said he does not want to take vaccines away from Americans. But at a closed-door meeting of Food and Drug Administration vaccine scientists in September, a top official suggested doing just that. (Lawrence, 11/12)