Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
From Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News - Latest Stories:
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News Original Stories
A Trump Stronghold Grapples With Health Risks of ICE Detention Sites
Several rural communities were thrust into a charged national debate over the Trump administrationâs mass deportation strategy when federal officials sought to place new detention centers in them. In Social Circle, Georgia, locals fear the effort will overburden its modest healthcare infrastructure.
After Her Bout of Amnesia, a $59,000 Billing Dispute Wouldnât Go Away
Last spring, a woman started exhibiting unusual memory problems after a hike in Arizona. It turns out she was experiencing a disorder called transient global amnesia. She has fully recovered, but a dispute over nearly $60,000 in hospital charges has been a source of stress for over a year.
What the Health? From Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: More Kids Without Coverage
When Republicans passed their big budget bill in 2025, they thought the effects of cuts to health programs wouldnât show up until after the 2026 midterms. They were wrong. Meanwhile, the party is trumpeting its efforts to lower drug prices. Maya Goldman of Axios, Shefali Luthra of The 19th, and Lauren Weber of The Washington Post join Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health Newsâ Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more. Also this week, Rovner discusses Ebola with Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health Newsâ CĂŠline Gounder.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
BEEN THERE, DONE THAT
Closing the border
â Barbara Pease
doesnât work for viruses.
Here we go again.
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 Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News or KFF.
Note To Readers
In a story in the May 28 Morning Briefing about a functional cure for chronic hepatitis B, The New York Times misidentified the company that is applying to the FDA for approval to market the drug. It is GlaxoSmithKline. The story and our headline have been updated with the correct information.
Summaries Of The News:
Healthcare Costs
Uninsured Rate Remained Hovering Around 8% In 2025, CDC Says
The share of Americans lacking health insurance has held steady for the past few years â but the percentage is expected to rise. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report released Thursday shows 8.3% of Americans, or 28 million people, lacked health insurance in 2025. In comparison, 8.2% of residents lacked coverage in 2024. (Tepper, 5/28)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health Newsâ âWhat The Health?â: More Kids Without Coverage
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, passed by congressional Republicans in 2025, was supposed to backload cuts to health programs so they wouldnât take effect until after the 2026 midterm elections. Thatâs not how things are working out, with numerous analyses showing insurance coverage is already starting to drop. Meanwhile, the Trump administration claims that the coverage reductions prove its anti-fraud efforts are working. But those efforts are likely to affect far more people than just those who commit fraud against federal health programs. (Rovner, 5/28)
More on the high cost of healthcare â
After more than two years of delay, the federal government issued a regulation Thursday implementing major updates to the No Surprises Act. The final rule from the Health and Human Services, Labor, and Treasury departments and the Office of Personnel Management overhauls the lawâs Independent Dispute Resolution process, which health insurance companies and out-of-network providers use to reconcile claims covered under the No Surprises Act, which is intended to protect patients against surprise bills. (Early, 5/28)
Dozens of doctors are routinely performing risky vascular procedures in medical offices, generating tens of millions of dollars in Medicare payments for potentially unnecessary procedures, according to a federal report released earlier this month. The review, completed by the Office of the Inspector General at the Department of Health and Human Services, flagged nearly 140 doctors across the country as having âconcerningâ billing patterns. (Waldman, 5/29)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: After Her Bout Of Amnesia, A $59,000 Billing Dispute Wouldnât Go Away
On April 10, 2025, several hours after finishing a hike in Sedona, Arizona, Jan Anderson started repeating herself. âDid we hike this morning?â she asked. âYes, we hiked,â said her husband, Steve Francks. âAnd you did really well.â But 15 seconds later, she asked the same question: âDid we hike today?â Anderson, 65, a retired finance executive, doesnât remember any of it. She can recall what happened that afternoon only because her husband started recording her on his cellphone. âI was just on this nonstop loop,â she said. Almost immediately, Francks knew something was wrong. âJan was out of it,â he said. (Sausser, 5/29)
In other healthcare industry developments â
For-profit hospital chain HCA Healthcare announced a deal to acquire The College of Health Care Professions, an in-person and online educator that prepares more than 8,000 students per year for non-physician healthcare positions. Terms for the deal announced Wednesday afternoon were not disclosed. A letter to students from the schoolâs chancellor and CEO, Eric Bing, said the acquisition would close âin the coming months, subject to customary regulatory approvals.â (Muoio, 5/28)
Teladoc Health launched several services on Walmartâs virtual health hub. The company said in a Thursday news release it will offer virtual urgent care, dermatology and nutrition services through Walmartâs platform for $89 per visit. Walmart created its Better Care Services hub in January to connect users to third-party digital health providers such as Teladoc. (DeSilva, 5/28)
Clover Health is in line for a boost to its Medicare Advantage star ratings under a court ruling that could embolden other health insurance companies. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia ruled Wednesday that 20 measures the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services uses to assess quality are improper. The court ordered CMS to recalculate Clover Healthâs 2026 scores. (Tepper, 5/28)
The University of the Pacific plans to open a medical school at its main campus in Stockton, one of the only institutions to issue a doctor of medicine (M.D.) degree in Californiaâs Central Valley. The school is slated to open in the fall of 2030, according to Thursdayâs announcement. University officials hope it will help address the growing shortage of physicians in the Central Valley. UOP is the second major university in California to announce plans to open a medical school in recent weeks, after Santa Clara University with Sutter Health. (Ho, 5/28)
Broadlawns Medical Center in Des Moines launched a new mobile memory unit that will offer mobile care services for dementia. The Mobile Memory and Wellness Clinic will serve as an extension of Broadlawnsâ Memory Center and will travel to different neighborhoods and community centers in Polk County. (Curran, 5/28)
Harford County began construction this week on a new Emergency Services Special Operations facility in Hickory, meant to centralize all emergency response teams. (Foster, 5/27)
Vaccines
FDA Panel Recommends Updating Covid Vaccine To Target XFG Strain
The FDA's vaccine advisors voted 8 to 0, with one abstention, in favor of a monovalent XFG vaccine for COVID-19 shots for the 2026-2027 season. The Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) also discussed the need to target the long-simmering BA.3.2 variant, also known as "cicada," though most expressed confidence that targeting XFG was the right way to go. (Fiore, 5/28)
In other news about vaccines â
The families of two Black infants who were unknowingly enrolled as test subjects in a mid-1960s vaccine trial for a respiratory virus and died shortly afterward have sued the United States government. Ross Otto Hambrick and Victor Marcellus King were just a few months old when they were administered a vaccine for respiratory syncytial virus, or R.S.V., at a childrenâs clinic in Washington, D.C., between 1965 and 1966 without their familiesâ knowledge or consent, according to a lawsuit filed on May 22. Both died from the disease, coupled with bacterial pneumonia, about a year later, when Ross Otto was 14 months old and Victor 16 months. (Tumin, 5/28)
On weight loss â
CVS Caremark will resume covering the weight loss drug Zepbound this year after it removed it from its list of covered medications last year, drugmaker Eli Lilly said Thursday. CVS Caremark is one of the countryâs largest pharmacy benefit managers, deciding which medications millions of people in the U.S. can get through insurance and how much they pay out of pocket. (Lovelace Jr., 5/28)
In interviews, doctors warned that using a drug to shrink your body that much will require close medical management â much more than the level of monitoring many people are now getting when taking drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy and Zepbound. (Rowland, 5/29)
More pharma and tech news â
An already-approved MS drug can significantly slow progression in people with primary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS), according to a new study. Patients treated with an IV infusion of ocrelizumab (Ocrevus) were less likely to have progression of their disability, researchers report in The Lancet. Specifically, they had better hand function and arm dexterity, and they were less likely to need a wheelchair, researchers found. (Thompson, 5/29)
US surveillance data show a dramatic rise in the incidence of a particularly worrisome form of multidrug-resistant bacteria in hospital patients, researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported yesterday in Emerging Infectious Diseases. (Dall, 5/28)
Early results from a controversial pilot program testing the use of artificial intelligence to automate some prescriptions refills are in and being viewed as a promising test case for how AI may next be used in healthcare. In January, the state of Utah launched the pilot with artificial intelligence platform Doctronic. The state allowed the company to use its AI chatbot to manage prescription renewals for 192 drugs used to treat chronic conditions such as diabetes, depression and high blood pressure. The 12-month pilot is being widely watched within the industry, and there have been questions raised about its safety, legality and the broader use of AI in healthcare. (Famakinwa, 5/28)
An investigation into unregulated weight-loss products found widespread contamination with a toxic plant and a regulatory system struggling to keep them off the market. (Yasinski, 5/28)
After reopening an investigation into a Salmonella outbreak tied to moringa leaf powder, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) yesterday confirmed 22 new cases in four newly affected states and implicated another product. The new cases and states increase the outbreak total to 119 infections in 36 states. The CDC also confirmed six new outbreak-related hospitalizations, bringing hospital cases to 32. No deaths have been reported, however. (Wappes, 5/28)
Outbreaks and Health Threats
US Cannot Open Ebola Quarantine Quarters In Kenya Just Yet, African Court Rules
A Kenyan high court has temporarily blocked the government from approving a deal with the US to establish an Ebola quarantine facility in the East African nation. It also stopped Kenyan authorities âfrom admitting into, transferring to, receiving within, or facilitating the entry into Kenya of persons exposed to or infected with Ebola,â pursuant to the arrangement with the US, judge Patricia Nyaundi said. Parties will make oral arguments before the judge in the case on June 2, according to the order. (Herbling, 5/29)
The plan to launch this week a health facility in Kenya for Americans who may have been exposed to the Ebola virus has received widespread criticism â from both Kenyan doctors and US officials working at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). (Madowo, Kent and Princewill, 5/28)
However â
If more Americans contract Ebola and need advanced medical care, they will be sent to Europe rather than brought to the U.S., senior administration officials said Thursday. The announcement is the latest in a series of moves Trump administration officials have made to keep Americans exposed to or infected with Ebola out of the country amid the ongoing outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Already, the U.S. has set up a facility in Kenya for any Americans exposed. It is set to open Friday with 50 quarantine beds. (Miller, 5/28)
More on the spread of Ebola â
When Craig Spencer contracted Ebola while working in Guinea during the West African outbreak in 2014, he was already back in the United States when he first developed symptoms. He credits the treatment he got at New Yorkâs Bellevue Hospital for his survival. If Spencer, an emergency medicine physician and an associate professor in Brown Universityâs School of Public Health, were to contract Ebola in the current outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda â if heâd even had high-risk exposures to Ebola patients â he wouldnât be allowed back into the U.S. for care or quarantine. (Branswell, 5/28)
The U.S., Mexico and Canada â the three countries hosting this yearâs FIFA World Cup beginning in June â announced public health travel measures for people coming from parts of Africa that are at greatest risk from Ebola. âThis coordinated approach aims to protect our citizens and the millions of visitors, fans, athletes, and tourists expected during the FIFA World Cup 2026, while maintaining travel and commerce across our borders,â the nations said in a joint statement Thursday. âThe health and safety of every person in the region remains our highest priority as we welcome the world to North America.â (Swai, 5/28)
Congoâs health minister pushed back against claims the countryâs Ebola outbreak was spiraling out of control, even as World Health Organization officials warned insecurity and population displacement were preventing responders from tracing most suspected contacts. âIâve heard in the press that the epidemic is âout of control,ââ Roger Kamba, the Democratic Republic of Congoâs Minister of Public Health, Hygiene, and Social Welfare, told reporters Thursday in Bunia, the outbreakâs epicenter. âWe need to put into perspective the alarmist cries.â (Kavanagh and Gale, 5/29)
Drugs in development to treat and prevent infections caused by the Ebola virus thatâs circulating in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda should be given only as part of clinical trials, advisers to the World Health Organization said. That means people who are sick now, or are at risk of becoming sick after being exposed to them, may not get access. It has been extraordinarily difficult to develop Ebola drugs, given that the outbreaks emerge sporadically, often in remote areas, and kill patients so quickly. (Fay Cortez and Smith, 5/28)
Global Watch
Europe Deploys Experimental Antiviral To Treat Hantavirus Patients
An experimental antiviral scientists hope will be effective in treating patients who were sickened by a hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship has been sent to âFrance, Spain and the Netherlandsâwhere a handful of patients are being treatedâthe European âCommission said Thursday. A total of 1,400 tablets of an experimental treatment called favipiravir was reportedly made available to EU member states by Fujifilm Pharmaceuticals in Japan, and individual countries will decide on a case-by-case basis whether or not to use the medicine, which has not been approved by the European Medicines Agency. (Roeloffs and PequeĂąo IV, 5/28)
The US government is prepared to allow American passengers who were exposed to a unique strain of hantavirus to return home as early as Monday, provided their states post a monitor outside their homes 24/7 for the remaining three weeks of their six-week quarantine. (Goodman, 5/28)
More news from around the globe â
A Canadian man accused of selling lethal substances online to people who took them to end their own lives is expected to plead guilty Friday to 14 counts of counseling or aiding suicide, his lawyer said. Kenneth Law is scheduled to appear in a Newmarket, Ontario, court to enter the plea and sentencing is expected to take place later. Canadian prosecutors will withdraw 14 murder charges in exchange for Lawâs plea, his lawyer Matthew Gourlay said. (Gillies, 5/29)
A reproductive health nonprofit is seeking to raise $1.2 million to book space travel with Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. and research menstruation in weightless conditions. The group, called Operation Period, will study the impacts of space on menstrual physiology â a key consideration for female astronauts during long-duration space travel. The research, which is slated to take place during a 90-minute suborbital flight next year, will also study the performance of menstrual products, according to a statement from the group and Virgin Galactic. (Pashankar, 5/28)
Floodwater stagnates in parts of Matola near Mozambiqueâs capital of Maputo, where clinics treat a familiar post-disaster mix: malaria, suspected cholera and children at risk from unsafe water. At the Matola II health center, staff are racing to contain outbreaks while catching up on tuberculosis and HIV treatments after months of flood disruption. The clinic, which sees roughly 400 patients a day, is also still reeling from last yearâs abrupt US aid cuts that forced layoffs of community-health workers and disrupted disease-surveillance programs. (Kew and Cebola, 5/29)
State Watch
Judge Bans Manhattan Project Waste At Michigan Landfill
A Van Buren Township landfill is barred from accepting shipments of radioactive waste from Manhattan Project-era sites, a Wayne County Circuit Court judge ruled Wednesday. Judge Kevin Coxâs order, issued following a February bench trial, sides with Wayne County and communities that sued Wayne Disposal by making an Aug. 6, 2025 preliminary injunction permanent. (Allnutt, 5/28)
More health news from Michigan â
Laws that would allow doctors to prescribe life-ending medication to terminally ill patients are being considered once again in Michigan. House Democrats unveiled a package of bills last month to create a âDeath with Dignity Act,â following a similar effort in the previous term by Senate Democrats to legalize physician-assisted death in the state. Similar laws cover more than 100 million Americans in 14 states. (Newman, 5/28)
From Maryland â
Maryland has launched a public dashboard to track how opioid settlement dollars are received, distributed and spent across the state. (5/28)
The state agency responsible for overseeing Medicaid payments and services lacked âeffective processesâ to identify millions in questionable payments made to dead or incarcerated people, according to an audit released this week. (Brown, 5/28)
The Maryland Department of Health on Thursday reported the stateâs first heat-related death of 2026. State health officials said the victim was a man in his 70s or 80s from Calvert County but declined to release additional details about the death. (Karpovich, 5/28)
From North Carolina, Louisiana, and Georgia â
As 90-degree days begin to show up in the spring, protecting migrant farmworkers from heat stress is a top priority for farmworker advocacy groups heading into what many expect will be a long, hot summer. (Atwater, 5/27)
Hailey Yentz was lifting weights with her track and field team in February 2025, when she started to feel dizzy. Without knowing why, she collapsed in a teammateâs arms and for 10 minutes, she had no pulse. The college senior was having a heart attack. (Crawford, 5/29)Â
Jeffrey Alford had been living in active addiction for five years when, in August 2020, he was arrested on a felony charge of possession of a Schedule II drug and booked at the Jefferson Parish jail. Like many others who struggle with opioid use disorder, Alford started with prescription pain pills, then he moved on to heroin and methamphetamines. When powerful synthetic opioids like fentanyl flooded the market, he started using them too â whether he realized it or not. âYou didnât know what you were getting,â Alford said. âYou thought you were getting heroin, but youâre actually getting fentanyl.â (Fernelius and Hawkins, 5/28)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: A Trump Stronghold Grapples With Health Risks Of ICE Detention Sites
Until recently, this rural city about 45 minutes east of Atlanta was best known for its Blue Willow Inn cookbooks featuring recipes for Southern dishes such as baked pineapple casserole and kudzu blossom jelly. Lately, however, the community has been trying to stave off a new identity of âprison townâ as it fights the opening of what could become the nationâs largest immigration detention center, holding up to 10,000 people. (Rayasam, 5/29)
From California, Colorado, and Texas â
When Jazelle Eastman was 16 she was shot in the face by a boy she thought was a friend. She doesnât remember feeling much, but next thing she knew there was blood dripping from her chin. That was two years ago. She still has a hard time trusting people. âPTSD is so real, I feel like Iâm always looking over my shoulder,â she said. (Ibarra, 5/28)
Californiaâs attorney general sued the genetic testing company formerly known as 23andMe on Thursday, alleging it failed to protect sensitive user data in a 2023 breach that affected nearly 7 million people across the country. Attorney General Rob Bonta filed the lawsuit against Chrome Holding Co., which 23andMe rebranded under after filing for bankruptcy last March. 23andme is known for its direct-to-consumer DNA test kits that provided customers information on their ancestry and genetic predispositions for certain health conditions. (Ding, 5/28)
The Trump administration has launched a baseless and intrusive criminal investigation into hospitals that treat transgender youths after judges refused to identify them or release their medical records, six California families alleged in a lawsuit this week. After a year of rejections by federal courts nationwide of Justice Department subpoenas seeking information on the hospitalsâ patients, the department âhas now decided to sidestep those ordersâ with a criminal investigation demanding some of âthe most sensitive information a medical provider can possess,â lawyers for the families said in a suit filed late Wednesday in federal court in San Jose. (Egelko, 5/28)
Kalie Caler was 8 years old when she decided that she wanted to deliver babies for a living. Born and raised in Pagosa Springs, she completed midwifery school in Florida before moving home to start Mountain Roots Midwifery in 2019. (Singer, 5/28)
Texasâ law requiring app marketplace operators like Google and Apple to verify all usersâ ages and seek parental permission before minors can download apps or make in-app purchases can go into effect for now, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday. (Cobler, 5/28)
Aging
Study: Alzheimer's Signs Detected In Midlife
Alzheimer's disease pathology was detected in midlife and was tied to minor changes in cognitive performance in people without dementia, data from a prospective cohort study showed. This pathology, measured by amyloid and tau blood biomarkers, was uncommon in middle age, and was associated with a higher likelihood of cognitive decline over 5 years, reported Kristine Yaffe, MD, of the University of California San Francisco, and co-authors in The Lancet. (George, 5/28)
Difficulty understanding speech in background noise was tied to brain changes in speech-processing networks and may be an early behavioral marker of neural vulnerability before cognitive decline, a study of older adults suggested. (George, 5/28)
In other health and wellness news â
In early January, the Food and Drug Administration delivered on the Trump administrationâs deregulatory promises by allowing more wellness products to be marketed without the agencyâs authorization. Leaders at smart ring maker Oura swiftly planted the pivot foot. (Aguilar, 5/28)
Oura is taking another step in its move from wellness to healthcare by giving users direct access to a physician. The company on Thursday announced a partnership with artificial intelligence-enabled virtual care company Counsel Health. Oura users will be able to connect with Counsel Health physicians and ask health-related questions after receiving alerts from the deviceâs symptom radar feature. The partnership was announced as part of the companyâs introduction of Oura Ring 5. (Famakinwa, 5/28)
Imagine this scenario: At a routine visit, your doctor administers a new genetic test that shows you have a hugely elevated risk of a heart attack in the future. Youâre in shape; you feel fine. But the prediction is in your DNA. The next day, you tell your employer that your doctor wants you to make some adjustments â switch to a less physically taxing role, or maybe lower your stress levels in an effort to save your life. Can your boss legally deny you these accommodations? Under current law, yes. (Baumgaertner Nunn, 5/28)
Yoselin Sanchez has been in chronic pain since she was born with cervical scoliosis. While little eases the discomfort, sheâs found ways to distract herself from hurting. She practices yoga. She performs free flow dance. And while she works, she frequently listens to house music tuned to 432 hertz, a frequency lower than typical concert pitch. (Bussewitz, 5/28)
Weekend Reading
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
Americaâs 911 dispatchers are straining under pressure, leaving thousands of callers waiting during emergencies. (Duncan, 5/23)
A new survey on sun habits from the American Academy of Dermatology found that only 25 percent of Gen Z respondents (ages 18 to 29) reported concern about developing skin cancer in their lifetime, compared with 39 percent of the general population. Whatâs more, 20 percent said that getting a tan was more important than preventing skin cancer, compared with 14 percent of the overall group. (Alpert, 5/25)
Deamonte Driver was just 12 years old in February 2007 when he died from a brain infection. The cause? An untreated tooth abscess that could have been prevented had his mother not encountered so many barriers to getting her son dental care. (Blythe, 5/28)
At a longevity festival, founders and biohackers swap blood tests, brain scans, and plans to live forever: How cheating death became big business. (Todd, 5/27)
From mini-pigs and organ printing to cryotherapy and genetics, Russiaâs president has turned antiaging research into a Kremlin priority. (Pancevski, 5/28)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Alaska Makes Right Call On Pharmacist Prescribing; Will Science Move Faster Than Ebola?
States are increasingly expanding pharmacistsâ ability to prescribe medications without a doctor. (5/28)
Amid a fast-moving Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the scientific community has mobilized with breakneck speed to find ways to stamp out the virus. (Lisa Jarvis, 5/29)
The Trump administrationâs withdrawal from the WHO and its cuts to foreign aid have put us and the world at far greater risk during this latest Ebola outbreak. (Elizabeth Shackelford, 5/29)
As the FIFA World Cup approaches, speculation on social media and cable news has already begun: Could Ebola spread at the tournament? The short answer is that it is extremely unlikely. (Krutika Kuppalli, 5/28)
Synthetic opioids can kill long before they're detected in the community. (Shravani Durbhakula and Jeremy C. Kourvelas, 5/27)