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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Sep 16 2025

Full Issue

Tyson Foods Announces It Will Remove Corn Syrup From Foods By End Of Year

Also, the USDA reinstates a farm-to-school program; Pennsylvania farmers struggle to find workers to harvest crops; cancer research is in peril from government funding cuts; and more.

Tyson Foods Inc. said it plans to eliminate corn syrup and other ingredients from its products by the end of the year, echoing calls by the Trump administration for changes in the US food supply. The meat producers goal is to stop using high fructose corn syrup, sucralose, BHA/BHT and titanium dioxide in the production of products sold under brands including Tyson, Jimmy Dean and Hillshire Farm, the Springdale-Arkansas company said in Monday a statement. (Freitas Jr, 9/15)

On the nation's food supply

The USDA will award up to $18 million through a program that connects schools with local farmers. Projects approved under the Patrick Leahy Farm to School Grant Program could include purchases of local food, school gardens, agricultural education and food safety training for producers. U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins made the announcement alongside the release of the Make America Healthy Again report. (Cramer, 9/15)

The U.S. agricultural workforce fell by 155,000 about 7 percent between March and July, according to an analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That tracks with Pew Research Center data that shows total immigrant labor fell by 750,000 from January through July. The labor shortage piles onto an ongoing economic crisis for farmers exacerbated by dwindling export markets that could leave them with crop surpluses. People dont understand that if we dont get more labor, our cows dont get milked and our crops dont get picked, said Tim Wood, a dairy farmer and a member of the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau board of directors. ... The whole thing is screwed up, said John Painter, a three-time Trump voter who runs an organic dairy farm in Westfield. We need people to do the jobs Americans are too spoiled to do. (Benson, 9/15)

On climate, pesticides, and the war on cancer

Young climate activists and their attorneys who won a landmark global warming trial against the state of Montana are trying to convince a federal judge to block President Donald Trumps executive orders promoting fossil fuels. During a two-day hearing starting Tuesday in Missoula, Montana, the activists and their experts plan to describe Trumps actions to boost drilling and mining and discourage renewable energy as a growing danger to children and the planet. They say the Republicans stoking of global warming violates their constitutional rights. (Brown, 9/15)

For years, the pesticide manufacturer Bayer has battled thousands of lawsuits claiming that its weed killer Roundup causes cancer in people who use it frequently. Now, the Republican-controlled Congress could deliver the company a crucial victory. A provision tucked into a government spending bill could shield Bayer and other pesticides makers from billions of dollars in payouts to plaintiffs. (Joselow and Tabuchi, 9/15)

Rachael Sirianni first learned her lab might be in trouble just a few weeks into the new year. A professor at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, in Worcester, Sirianni focuses primarily on an aggressive form of pediatric brain cancer known as medulloblastoma. Researchers have made great strides in treating these tumors, but they are still often fatal, and even successful treatments can come with devastating side effects. Sirianni had spent the last several years working on a potentially transformative approach to treating the most malignant type of medulloblastoma and was making real progress. (Mahler, 9/14)

On research cuts and DEI

The University of Californias top leader warned Monday that the federal governments $1.2-billion fine and sweeping proposals to remake UCLA are minor in comparison to what could hit the entirety of the nations premier university system of campuses, hospitals and clinics. As we consider the unprecedented action against UCLA, it is important to keep in mind that the federal government is also pursuing investigations and actions in various stages against all 10 UC campuses, UC President James B. Milliken said in a Monday letter. (Kaleem, 9/15)

For more than a century, the humble fruit fly has paved the way for many critical scientific breakthroughs. This tiny insect helped researchers figure out that X-rays can cause genetic mutations. That genes are passed on from parent to child through chromosomes. That a gene called period helps our bodies keep time and that disruptions to that internal clock can lead to jet lag and increased risk for neurological and metabolic diseases. (Bush, 9/15)

More on the Trump administration

President Donald Trump nominated Casey Means four months ago for US surgeon general, a post that still remains open. Now Means, a Stanford University-trained physician and wellness influencer who focuses on functional medicine, is disclosing steps that I will take to avoid any actual or apparent conflict of interest. (Cohrs Zhang, 9/16)

窪蹋勛圖厙 News: An HIV Outbreak In Maine Shows The Risk Of Trumps Crackdown On Homelessness And Drug Use

Penobscot County, Maine, is grappling with the largest HIV outbreak in the states history. Home to Bangor, a city of roughly 32,000, the county has identified 28 new cases over nearly two years. Thats seven times the typical number for that length of time. Nearly all cases are among people who use drugs and are homeless. (Pattani, 9/16)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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