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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Oct 27 2025

Full Issue

Texas Doctor Gives Up License After Being Sued For Providing Gender Care

Pediatrician May Lau has decided to move her practice from Dallas to Oregon after being sued last year by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and accused of prescribing testosterone to at least 21 patients, which she denies. More news is from Virginia, California, New Mexico, Maryland, Arizona, South Carolina, Massachusetts, Utah, and Florida.

A Dallas pediatrician has surrendered her medical license, a year after becoming the first target of a law that banned providing gender-transitioning hormones to minors. Last October, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against adolescent medicine physician May Lau for prescribing testosterone to at least 21 patients. Her license was cancelled by her request early this month, according to the Texas Medical Board. (Byman, 10/24)

Ren茅 Harvey and her wife arrived at a Roanoke Valley pride celebration in October carrying deep-seated worries about all that could go wrong. The couple had been to the region鈥檚 annual pride festival before, but this year felt different. Harvey keeps up with the news, and the headlines describing political violence and LGBTQ+ hate linger with her. She鈥檚 been following Virginia鈥檚 statewide elections, including a race for governor that has heavily focused on trans youth. 鈥淚t鈥檚 scary, the way things are heading,鈥 said Harvey, sitting at a booth for her LGBTQ-friendly parish. 鈥淲e had a fear coming here today.鈥 (Diaz, 10/26)

More health news from across the U.S. 鈥

Luca-Amine Hadir was 4 days old when his parents raced him to the ER. His mother, Jill McDonald, had wanted her child to have a gentle transition into the world, and Luca鈥檚 first four days were just that. He was born at home in San Francisco鈥檚 Bernal Heights neighborhood, in spring 2020 鈥 Jill, now 46, described his birth as 鈥渦nremarkable.鈥 She and Luca鈥檚 father, Najib Hadir, basked in the glow of newfound parenthood, imagining his first words and first steps, high school graduation and world travels. (Allday and Connors, 10/26)

It鈥檚 a name many people have trouble pronouncing, but these synthetic chemicals have been used in everything from fast-food packaging to nonstick cookware, clothing, household cleaning products and even firefighting foam. PFAS 鈥 or perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances 鈥 resist breaking down and as a result have found their way into drinking water, soil, air and the bloodstreams of 99% of Americans. This is certainly true for people who live or work near a plume of contamination that has seeped beyond the boundaries of Cannon Air Force Base, where PFAS-laden firefighting foam was used for years. (Montoya Bryan, 10/24)

A sedan drifts past. The driver鈥檚 window rolls down, unleashing a billowing plume of white smoke into the chill air as they聽light up, driving with one hand on the wheel. It鈥檚 not tobacco, said Bob Reilly, a rideshare driver from Laurel, who described his daily experience working on Maryland鈥檚 highways and neighborhood roads. 鈥淵ou see it all the time,鈥 Reilly said. 鈥淭hey just got off work and they鈥檙e lighting up for the ride home.鈥 (Hille, 10/27)

Carl Steiner walked to the window of a small gray building near downtown Phoenix and gave a worker his name. He stepped away with a box and a cellphone bill. The box is what Steiner had come for: It contained black and red Reebok sneakers to use in his new warehouse job. Steiner doesn鈥檛 have a permanent address. His letters and packages are delivered to a mail room for homeless people in the building at the Keys to Change campus, a collaborative of 15 nonprofit organizations that serve those like him. (Santa Cruz, 10/27)

The NCAA owes a former college football player and his wife $18 million, a South Carolina jury decided while finding college sports鈥 major governing body negligent in failing to warn the player about the long-term effects of concussions. Following a civil trial that wrapped up late last week, Orangeburg County jurors awarded $10 million to 68-year-old Robert Geathers, who played at South Carolina State University from 1977 to 1980 as a defensive end. His wife, Debra, was awarded $8 million, according to a court document. (10/27)

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: As Sports Betting Explodes, States Try To Set Limits To Stop Gambling Addiction

It isn鈥檛 easy to promote moderation and financial discipline from the bowels of a casino. But that鈥檚 what Massachusetts state workers try to do every day, amid the clanging bells and flashing lights of the slot machines. At the MGM Springfield in western Massachusetts, workers wearing green polos stand outside their small office, right off the casino floor. Above them, a sign reads 鈥淕ameSense,鈥 the state鈥檚 signature program to curb problem gambling. A mounted screen cycles through messages such as 鈥淜eep sports betting fun. Set a budget and stick to it.鈥 (Brown, 10/27)

On the spread of mpox, measles, covid, and flu 鈥

More than two years after the mpox outbreak in the U.S. was declared over, a new crop of cases in California has infectious disease experts on edge. The mpox outbreak that spread through men who have sex with men was declared over at the start of 2023, though low-level transmission has persisted since then.聽A collection of three unrelated mpox cases recently detected in California is raising concerns, as they were caused by a more infectious, more dangerous strain of the virus called clade I mpox.聽(Choi, 10/26)

Measles outbreaks have spread across the US to reach 41 states. The largest ongoing cluster in Utah and Arizona has now grown into the second-biggest outbreak of the year. Utah reported a total of 58 infections Thursday, bringing the tally for Utah and Arizona to 142 so far this year. The Arizona Department of Health has reported 84 cases and three hospitalizations. A total of 1,618 infections have been reported nationwide by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this year, the largest outbreak in three decades. (Nix, 10/24)

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Doctors Muffled As Florida Moves To End Decades Of Childhood Vaccination Mandates

Florida plans to end nearly a half-century of required childhood immunizations against diseases that have killed and maimed millions of children. Many critics of the decision, including doctors, are afraid to speak up against it. With the support of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo on Sept. 3 announced his plan to end all school-age vaccination mandates in the state. (Allen, 10/27)

Jeb Teichman鈥檚 phone rang just before midnight. As a pediatrician, he has received many late-night emergency calls. This time, the call was about his 29-year-old son. Brent Teichman had been suffering from the flu for five days. After he began to recover, his symptoms returned with a vengeance, making it difficult to breathe. Teichman, who was out of town, suggested his son visit an urgent care facility. Brent Teichman returned home from the clinic with a prescription for antibiotics and collapsed in bed. When his roommate checked on him a few hours later, Brent Teichman was unconscious. (Szabo, 10/25)

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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