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Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Jul 6 2026 UPDATED 9:52 AM

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Frivolous Vaccine Lawsuits Risk Public Health; A Sensible FDA Approach To Peptide Regulation

Opinion writers tackle these public health issues.

Many Americans see headlines and assume there must be some merit to the allegations if a lawsuit was filed. (Jerome Adams, 7/5)

Americans are using peptide compounds (short chains of amino acids promoted for recovery, sleep, performance, metabolic health, and longevity) in large and growing numbers. Many obtain them from unregulated online sellers and informal markets, often without medical supervision, reliable quality controls, or accurate dosing information. Whether we like it or not, this is a mainstream reality, and it creates the very risks regulators seek to avoid. (Jerome Adams, 7/6)

Medicaid exists because access to care should not depend on wealth. Excluding obesity treatment undermines that mission. (Martin Luther King III, 7/3)

American medicine runs more than 14 billion tests a year. While some tests can be lifesaving, many are used at the wrong time or on the wrong patient and are useless or even harmful. (Daniel Morgan, 7/6)

Many patients misunderstand what therapy reliably provides. (Harvey Lieberman, 7/5)

The evidence for needing eight hours of sleep a night is shakier than we might assume. (Ryan McCormick, 7/5)

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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