Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Parsing Policy: How One Jurist's Death Can Upend Health Care; Personalized Medicine, Abortion Rights At Risk
Ruth Bader Ginsburg鈥檚 death last week was undoubtedly a loss for those who loved and admired her. It also may have dealt a devastating blow to the entire U.S. health-care system and nearly every American who interacts with it 鈥 young and old, Republican and Democrat, healthy and sick alike. The week after Election Day, the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments in a case seeking to strike down the Affordable Care Act. The case, filed by 20聽red states and supported by the Trump administration, rests on a convoluted legal argument: When Congress reduced the penalty for not having health insurance to zero dollars, the individual mandate ceased to be an exercise of Congress鈥檚 taxing power and became unconstitutional. (Catherine Rampell, 9/24)
The death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has dramatically affected the future of our nation's health care. The fate of Obamacare could very well be decided mere days after the election, when the Supreme Court hears arguments about its validity on Nov. 10. And without Ginsburg on the court, the conservative wing may finally have the votes to declare the landmark law unconstitutional. (Laura Packard, 9/24)
鈥淚t is more important to know what kind of patient the disease has than to know what kind of disease the patient has.鈥 Although Hippocrates made this keen observation more than 2,400 years ago, physicians did not have the tools to decipher the biological and environmental factors influencing an individual鈥檚 health and well-being until recently. (Edward Abrahams, 9/25)
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg鈥檚 death has amplified a classic Democratic election argument: that a Republican victory could lead to the end of legal abortion. The rhetoric obscures a question that Democratic voters might want to ask themselves: Why didn鈥檛 Democrats enact a federal law legalizing the termination of a pregnancy nationwide when they controlled Congress and the White House after the 1992 or 2008 election? A partial answer is that the parties were less polarized on the issue in the 1990s, when Bill Clinton, trying to appeal to the center, said abortion should be 鈥渟afe, legal and rare.鈥 Democrats have since evolved closer to the absolutist position that Kimberly Inez McGuire of Unite for Reproductive and Gender Equity calls 鈥渁bortion positive.鈥 As she told Vox in 2019: 鈥淔or us that means, not only do we think abortion should be legal, but we think it鈥檚 a really good thing when people can get abortion care who need it.鈥 (Ted Rall, 9/24)
Mr. Trump should order that federal science initiatives return to a color- and sex-blind basis. All NIH, NSF and CDC projects targeted at alleged systemic inequities in STEM should be eliminated. Advancing knowledge, not the pursuit of diversity, should be the goal of federal science funding. America鈥檚 scientific competitiveness depends on supporting our most talented scientists, regardless of their race and sex. (Heather Mac Donald, 9/24)