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Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
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窪蹋勛圖厙 News Original Stories
They Dont Return Home: Cities Across US Fail To Curb Traffic Deaths
Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Houston reported more traffic fatalities than homicides last year. Despite local, state, and federal safety initiatives, such as Vision Zero, traffic deaths across the U.S. are higher than they were a decade ago.
ICE Crackdown Heightens Barriers for Immigrant Domestic Violence Victims
Immigrant victims of domestic violence have long encountered hurdles when seeking help from police and courts. The Trump administrations immigration crackdown has made victims without legal status even more afraid to report abuse, advocacy groups say.
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Political Cartoon: 'iPad Baby?'
窪蹋勛圖厙 News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'iPad Baby?'" by Jerry King.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
HUNGER ISN'T HEALTHY, EVER
Benefits delayed.
Danny Mintz
In the fridge: cold light, spare scraps.
Parents' shoulders slump.
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of 窪蹋勛圖厙 News or KFF.
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Summaries Of The News:
Spending And Fiscal Battles
With Shutdown In Rearview Mirror, ACA Subsidies Are A Priority. Or Not.
President Donald Trump signed a government funding bill Wednesday night, ending a record 43-day shutdown that caused financial stress for federal workers who went without paychecks, stranded scores of travelers at airports and generated long lines at some food banks. The shutdown magnified partisan divisions in Washington as Trump took unprecedented unilateral actions including canceling projects and trying to fire federal workers to pressure Democrats into relenting on their demands. (Freking, Cappelletti and Brown, 11/13)
What happens next?
Popular THC-infused drinks and edibles may disappear from store shelves in the next year as Congress is on the verge of passing a ban on nearly all hemp-derived THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, products. Tucked into the Senate-passed government funding bill is a provision that would recriminalize many of the intoxicating hemp-derived products that were legalized by the 2018 farm bill.(Weixel, 11/12)
House Democratic leaders introduceda discharge petitionWednesday designed to force consideration of legislation to extend expiring ObamaCare subsidies for another three years. Behind House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), the Democrats are hoping to entice a handful of moderate Republicans to endorse the petition, which will require 218 signatures to force a floor vote on the legislation over the objections of Republican leaders. (Lillis, 11/12)
President Donald Trumps Domestic Policy Council and senior health officials have been meeting privately for preliminary conversations on how to address the expiration of health insurance tax credits, according to a White House official and another person familiar with the talks. (Haslett, Messerly and Ward, 11/13)
Republicans are proposing a substitute to the enhanced Affordable Care Act premium tax credits that Democrats want to extend, taking their cue from President Trumps demands. But even some opponents to the Democrats plan are wary of what Republicans are working on.(Wilkerson, 11/13)
On SNAP and hunger
A spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which runs the program, said in an email Wednesday that funds could be available upon the government reopening, within 24 hours for most states. The department didnt immediately answer questions about where it might take longer or whether the 24-hour timeline applies to when money would be available to states or loaded onto debit cards used by beneficiaries. (Mulvihill, 11/12)
Food assistance workers said the restoration of food assistance can't come soon enough as they struggle to fill in the gap left behind by SNAP. Cyndi Kirkhart, executive director at Facing Hunger Food Bank, said she's been working at the food bank for 11 years and has never seen the surge in people she is seeing now, and that it is higher than what she saw during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Kekatos, 11/13)
On the open plains of the Fort Peck Reservation, Robert Magnan leaned out the window of his truck, set a rifle against the door frame and then pop! a bison tumbled dead in its tracks. Magnan and a co-worker shot two more bison, also known as buffalo, and quickly field dressed the animals before carting them off for processing into ground beef and cuts of meat for distribution to members of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes in northern Montana. (Brown, Lee Brewer and Schafer, 11/13)
Administration News
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)
Pharmaceuticals
FDA Unveils Blueprint For Custom Gene-Editing Treatments
Top Food and Drug Administration officials on Wednesday detailed a roadmap for approving the worlds first personalized gene-editing treatments.(Mast, 11/12)
More pharmaceutical developments
Patients experiencing major heart attacks had a lower risk of serious complications if they received a single injection of the investigational drug zalunfiban at first medical contact, a randomized placebo-controlled trial showed. (Susman, 11/12)
An experimental drug has shown promise in fighting a hard-to-treat form of bladder cancer known as BCG-unresponsive high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Gu矇rin) is an immunotherapy drug that is often the first-line treatment for certain early-stage bladder cancers. The new drug, TAR-200 which was evaluated in a trial sponsored and conducted by Janssen Research & Development, LLC, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson may offer a less invasive alternative to bladder removal surgery. (Quill, 11/12)
At the turn of the millennium, a new class of drugs derived from ancient Chinese herbal medicine revolutionized malaria care. Artemisinin's, as they're called, are based on extracts from the sweet wormwood plant. They arrived just as the drugs used since the 1970s were becoming useless for many, as the parasite that causes malaria evolved resistance. "The deaths we saw in the late 1990s, the early 2000s like 2 million a year that was a direct result of drug failure," says George Jagoe, executive vice president of access and product management at Medicines for Malaria Venture, a non-profit. "No one ever wants to be behind the 8-ball again." (Lambert, 11/12)
Updates from the health care industry
Home health companies say they are winning the tug of war with Medicare Advantage insurers over higher rates that ensure better member access to in-home services. Executives from Enhabit Home Health, Aveanna Healthcare and the Pennant Group told investor analysts during third-quarter earnings calls last week they have been more successful signing contracts with insurers that pay them higher fees per patient visit or for 60-day episodes of care. In return, members get priority access to services as demand for home healthcare from an aging population outpaces the supply of available providers. (Eastabrook, 11/12)
Washington University physicians will accept health insurance sold by UnitedHealthcare on the Affordable Care Act individual marketplace even though the systems doctors are not currently listed on the ACA website as being in network for 2026. But they are in network, said Abeeha Shamshad, spokesperson for WashU Medicine. (Suntrup, 11/12)
The furor over accusations that health insurance companies are automatically downcoding medical claims has reached state capitals. Arkansas and Virginia adopted new laws this year to address downcoding, which is often conducted using artificial intelligence and other digital tools. Physician societies such as the American Medical Association are gathering allies in several state legislatures. The AMA expects more progress in 2026, according to a spokesperson. (Tong, 11/12)
The University of Minnesota is raising concerns about an agreement between Minneapolis-based Fairview Health Services and a group of physicians at the University of Minnesota Medical School. On Wednesday, Fairview and University of Minnesota Physicians, a nonprofit clinical practice, announced they had reached a deal slated to begin on Jan. 1, 2027, to support physician training and fund the medical school for the next 10 years. (Zurek, 11/12)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: Listen To The Latest '窪蹋勛圖厙 News Minute'
Nov. 6: Zach Dyer reads the weeks news: What to do when your health insurer stops covering your medical provider, and the Republican budget law will make it harder for some people to pay for medical school. (Cook, 11/12)
Reproductive Health
Medicaid Cuts Lead To Closure Of 20 More Planned Parenthood Locations
Planned Parenthood has spent tens of millions of dollars providing health care to low-income patients and has closed 20 clinics in the months since the Trump administration blocked the group from billing Medicaid but weathering the funding cut on its own will soon become untenable, its leaders say. ... The 20 clinics the group has closed since the Medicaid ban became law are in addition to more than two dozen Planned Parenthood clinics that shut down earlier this year because of other federal funding cuts. Those that remain open are being pushed to the brink, the report said. (Somasundaram, 11/12)
Other news about reproductive and sexual health
Research on adults who take S.S.R.I.s shows they tamp down sexual desire. Why arent we studying what that could mean for adolescents who take them? (Bergner, 11/12)
There is basically no research that looks at the impact of antidepressants on emerging sexuality. Here are the key things we do know. (Bergner, 11/12)
On Monday, US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and US Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary announced that after 20 years, they were righting a medical wrong what Makary has called maybe one of the greatest screw-ups of modern medicine by pushing to remove the black box warning on hormone therapy for menopause symptoms. (Goodman, 11/12)
On April 9, 2020, after Shirley Scarborough made her daily call to a prayer line, she went to work and got another call: from the police department in Richmond, Virginia. Her youngest daughter, Francesca Harris-Scarborough, had been killed the night before. (Christensen, 11/10)
If you need help
More health news from across the U.S.
Officials in Tiburon, California, have moved to prohibit the sale of all tobacco. On Wednesday, the town council unanimously passed an ordinance that would ban the sale of cigarettes, cigars, vapes, e-cigarettes and all other nicotine products. Tiburon Mayor Holli Thier told Fox News Digital in a statement that she is "pleased to have sponsored" and "voted to save lives and save our environment." (DiMella, 11/11)
A former top aide to California Gov. Gavin Newsom has been indicted on federal charges alleging her involvement in a scheme to steal campaign money from former federal Health Secretary Xavier Becerra. Dana Williamson was arrested and appeared in court Wednesday in Sacramento. She pleaded not guilty to all charges, and a judge ordered her released from custody. (Nguy廙n and Ding, 11/13)
Those with epidermolysis bullosa can tear their fragile skin by brushing their teeth, eating or partaking in other everyday acts. The rare genetic disease leaves skin as fragile as butterly wings, forcing patients to wear and change bandages multiple times a day. (Fentem, 11/13)
Doctors told her parents she wasn't expected to survive past age 4, but a Nebraska woman born without cerebral hemispheres celebrated her 20th birthday last week. Alex Simpson was diagnosed with hydranencephaly, a rare congenital malformation, when she was 2 months old. "Technically, she has about half the size of my pinky finger of her cerebellum in the back part of her brain, but that's all that's there," Alex's father, Shawn Simpson, told KETV in Omaha. (George, 11/12)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: They Dont Return Home: Cities Across US Fail To Curb Traffic Deaths
Kris Edwards waited at home with friends for his wife, Erika Tilly Edwards, to go out to dinner, but she never made it back to the house they had purchased only four days earlier. Around 9 p.m. on June 29, a hit-and-run driver killed Tilly as she walked to her car after a fundraiser performance in Hollywood. "Ive just got to figure out how to keep living. And the hard part with that is not knowing why, Edwards said of his wifes death. (Giles, 11/13)
LGBTQ+ Health
After Bishops' Vote, Catholic Hospitals Ban Gender-Affirming Care Across US
U.S. Catholic bishops voted Wednesday to make official a ban on gender-affirming care for transgender patients at Catholic hospitals. The step formalizes a yearslong process for the U.S. church to address transgender health care. From a Baltimore hotel ballroom, the bishops overwhelmingly approved revisions to their ethical and religious directives that guide the nations thousands of Catholic health care institutions and providers. (Stanley, 11/12)
A group of 17 transgender members of the Air Force are suing the U.S. government over what they say is the militarys unlawful revocation of their early retirement pensions and benefits. The lawsuit, filed in federal court Monday, comes several months after the Air Force confirmed that it would deny all transgender service members who have served between 15 and 18 years the option to retire early and would instead separate them without retirement benefits. (Toropin, 11/12)
For some people, gender shifts over time, often through changes in ones sense of self. A transgender man may realize they are nonbinary and stop hormone replacement therapy. A trans woman may face so much discrimination that she represses her identity. And some trans people medically reverse their transition to live as their sex assigned at birth.(Rummler, 11/12)
For Ara Kareis, the Trump administrations rhetoric about detransitioners and transgender people is not just wrong its scary.The whole administration is scaring me right now, said Kareis, a 22-year-old North Carolina resident who detransitioned a few years ago. To her, the rhetoric shared by the president and the vice president that portrays gender transition as a form of mutilationis deeply harmful. (Rummler, 11/12)
Also
The number of married same-sex couples in the United States doubled in the last decade to 774,000, according to government data. The possibility of a reversal on Obergefell led some same-sex couples to speed up their marriage plans, advocates said, and added fuel to state campaigns to repeal old statutes and constitutional amendments prohibiting same-sex marriage. In Virginia, L.G.B.T.Q. advocates are hoping legislators will approve a state constitutional amendment in 2026 enshrining a right to marry, regardless of race, sex and gender. (Harmon, 11/10)
Lifestyle and Health
New Flu Strain H3N2 Causes Alarm As Some Nations Are Swamped With Cases
As flu season gets underway, global health experts are increasingly worried about a new strain of the virus that popped up in June four months after the makeup of this years flu shots had been decided. The new strain, a version of H3N2, is causing outbreaks in Canada and the U.K., where health officials are warning about the early wave thats sending people to the hospital. (Edwards, 11/12)
As flu season begins in the US, following the deadliest flu outbreak in children outside of a pandemic since record-keeping began in 2004, pediatricians are taking the lead on vaccine messaging. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) does not plan to resume its wild to mild flu vaccination campaign, which was halted in the midst of the record-breaking flu season. (Schreiber, 11/11)
More health and wellness news
The rate of children and teenagers living with high blood pressure globally has nearly doubled because of a toxic combination of unhealthy diets, mass inactivity and soaring levels of obesity, according to the largest review of its kind. Experts said 114 million children who have developed hypertension even before reaching adulthood were facing potentially deadly and lifelong harm, including cardiovascular disease, kidney disease and a myriad of serious health complications. (Gregory, 11/12)
Food, stress, sleep and weather may not be the only triggers to consider when preventing migraineshow stable your daily routine is could play an important role too. Harvard and Massachusetts General Hospital researchers used a total surprisal score to measure the unexpectedness of a participants daily experiences, revealing it was associated with risk of an upcoming migraine attack. (Millington, 11/12)
At an international conference, researchers at the forefront of animal-human transplantation compared notes and allowed themselves the first real optimism in decades. (Rabin, 11/12)
On the use of ChatGPT
The latest AI models powering ChatGPT just learned to be friendlier, improving the experience for people who use chatbots responsibly. It could be a problem for those who don't or can't. As chatbots become more human-like in their behavior, it could increase the risks of unhealthy attachments, or a kind of trust that goes beyond what the products are built to handle. (Morrone, 11/13)
What do people ask the popular chatbot? We analyzed thousands of chats to identify common topics discussed by users and patterns in ChatGPTs responses. (De Vynck and Merrill, 11/12)
Health Policy Research
Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs
The Epstein-Barr virus virus appears to be the trigger for the autoimmune disease lupus, according to groundbreaking research. (Devlin, 11/12)
Children with the skin condition atopic dermatitis (AD, or eczema) who are vaccinated against COVID-19 may experience fewer related infections and allergic complications, according to new research presented at the recent American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology Annual Scientific Meeting in Florida. (Van Beusekom, 11/12)
The results of multicenter trial indicate the antiparasitic drug ivermectin can be safely used in small children. ... Although ivermectin is widely used in mass drug administration campaigns for diseases such as onchocerciasis (river blindness), intestinal worms, and scabies, children under 15 kg (kilograms, or 33 pounds) have been excluded because of limited safety information. (Dall, 11/10)
Evidence of bidirectional associations between incident late-onset epilepsy and incident myocardial infarction (MI) emerged in a cohort of stroke-free middle-age and older adults. ... "Our findings highlight the interconnectedness of heart and vascular health with brain health in middle-aged and older adults," the authors wrote. (Lou, 11/5)
Regular use of pharmaceutical opioids was associated with elevated risk for cancers caused by opium, but not other cancers. (Sheikh et al, 11/11)
The BMJ has slapped an "expression of concern" on a much-publicized stem cell trial it published just 2 weeks ago. (Lou, 11/12)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Expiring ACA Tax Credits Will Devastate Livelihoods; GLP-1s Don't Cure Every Ailment
Since 2021, enhanced premium tax credits have been the difference between having health insurance and going without for more than 350,000 people in Illinois. Over 105,000 of them are like me entrepreneurs and self-employed workers trying to build something. But these tax credits expire at the end of the year, and Congress is stuck in gridlock while the clock runs out.(Juan Ochoa, 11/13)
The medications arent just for diabetes and obesity, but they also arent for every ailment. (Leana S. Wen, 11/11)
Nearly four years ago, I learned that there was fetal tissue stuck in my cervix. It had been there for nine days. This news came a few weeks after an ultrasound confirmed an eight-week pregnancy but failed to detect a fetal heartbeat, meaning I was experiencing a miscarriage. To help expel the tissue, my doctor prescribed the drug misoprostol, and that night, I inserted the four white hexagonal pills and spent the next 12 hours writhing in pain. (Melanie Benesh, 11/13)
As the government shutdown ends, SNAPs status remains complicated. Even if and when things return to normal, many people who are entitled to benefits will continue to be locked out. The digital divide is keeping eligible seniors out of SNAP. (Javaid Iqbal Sofi, 11/13)
Two weeks before his election as mayor, Zohran Mamdani held about the cutest press conference you can imagine: Surrounded by babies, and backed by a blue climbing structure, he announced that he would launch citywide baby baskets, welcoming the 125,000 babies born in New York City each year with a free collection of essential supplies. Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, who sponsored a pilot program of 500 Born in Brooklyn baby boxes in 2022, introduced Mamdani, saying, This is a sacred act to have a baby We want to make sure the last thing you are thinking about is a box of diapers. (Alexandra Lange, 11/12)