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鈥楾hey Tricked Me鈥: A Father Was Chained After He Went to ICE To Reunite With His Kids
The administration has largely converted the HHS Office of Refugee Resettlement into an arm of immigration enforcement, detaining children longer while helping immigration officers arrest their parents or other family members. One father was chained when he went to an ICE office to discuss being reunited with his son and daughter. (Claudia Boyd-Barrett and Renuka Rayasam and Amanda Seitz, 3/24)
Political Cartoon: 'Husband Swap?'
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Husband Swap?'" by Dave Coverly.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
IN THE IN-BETWEEN
I've a rare disease.
They tell me to watch and wait.
Why am I waiting?
- Valerie Madison
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 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Despite Restrictive State Laws, Number Of Abortions In US Remains Consistent
An estimated 1,126,000 people ended pregnancies in 2025, roughly the same number as in 2024, according to a Guttmacher Institute report. More people relied on telemedicine and fewer people were forced to travel to obtain abortions, the report suggests.
Since the reversal of Roe v. Wade in 2022, anti-abortion rights advocates have continuously pursued laws and court cases to make access to abortion more difficult. A report published Tuesday finds those efforts haven't worked in one basic way: the number of abortions in the country hasn't budged. (Simmons-Duffin, 3/24)
Also 鈥
Dr. Kermit Gosnell, an abortion clinic doctor sentenced to life for killing three babies who had been delivered alive, died earlier this month at a Pennsylvania hospital, prison officials said Monday. Gosnell鈥檚 grimy West Philadelphia clinic became known as the 鈥渉ouse of horrors.鈥 Former employees testified he routinely performed illegal abortions past Pennsylvania鈥檚 24-week limit, that he delivered babies who were still moving, whimpering or breathing, and that he and his assistants dispatched the newborns by 鈥渟nipping鈥 their spines, as he referred to it. (3/23)
A woman who took medication to induce an abortion, and then delivered the baby, was arrested on a murder charge. But on Monday, a state judge expressed deep skepticism about the case. (Rojas, Belluck and Cooper Eastman, 3/23)
As states that already ban abortion look to further restrict access this year, much of the focus is on pills sent by out-of-state providers. A survey released Tuesday helps explain the emphasis. It suggests that more women in states with bans obtained abortions last year using the pills prescribed via telehealth than by traveling to places where it鈥檚 legal. (Mulvihill, 3/24)
CMS Ditching Antiquated Fax Machines For Claims-Related Documentation
With the exception of prior authorization, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is shifting to electronic submission standards for attachments and digital signatures. The agency expects to save $781 million annually with the change. Plus, the challenge of finding a new CDC director.
The rule officially takes effect on May 26 but has a 2-year timeline for implementation. The standards will apply to Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)-covered entities, including Medicare, Medicaid, and private health plans; healthcare clearinghouses; and healthcare providers that conduct electronic transactions. (Frieden, 3/23)
More health news from the Trump administration 鈥
The Federal Trade Commission is forming a new healthcare task force as regulators double down on combating anticompetitive behavior in the sector.聽On Friday,聽Commissioner Andrew Ferguson directed FTC staff to create a new group to lead healthcare enforcement, create agency-wide investigation strategies, better identify legal cases where regulators can get involved and find new areas to crack down in the sector. (Parduhn, 3/23)
Comments from a top Trump administration health official add to signs of a major flaw in the president鈥檚 most-favored nation drug pricing plans. The official, Chris Klomp, said last week that the most-favored nation deals aim to increase the prices of new drugs in peer countries, not lower U.S. prices. But by the time companies launch those drugs abroad, the deals might be over and Trump might be out of office. (Wilkerson, 3/24)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News:
鈥楾hey Tricked Me鈥: A Father Was Chained After He Went To ICE To Reunite With His Kids
Carlos arrived at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in New Mexico in December, believing he was one step closer to reuniting with his children. By that point, his 14-year-old son and 16-year-old daughter had been in a federal shelter in Texas for nearly a year after crossing the border to be with him. 鈥淚 feel like I鈥檓 suffocating inside this shelter, trapped with no way out,鈥 Carlos鈥 son said, according to one of the teens鈥 attorneys, when asked to describe how he felt after months at the Houston-area facility. 鈥淓very day, the same routine. Every day, feeling stuck. It makes me feel hopeless and terrified.鈥 (Boyd-Barrett and Rayasam and Seitz, 3/24)
On changes at the CDC and NIH 鈥
As a deadline arrives this week to nominate a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, some Republicans are skeptical the administration will find someone who can check all the boxes necessary for confirmation. The candidate will need the 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 mindset of Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 Health and Human Services Department, while also appeasing a set of stick-to-science senators increasingly unhappy with Kennedy鈥檚 direction. (Cohen, 3/24)
Forty-three current and former C.D.C. employees on the changes they say are replacing science with ideology 鈥 and making Americans more vulnerable. (Interlandi, 3/23)
When Donald J. Trump announced that he was choosing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, he promised to let Kennedy, who had amassed a large following while spreading falsehoods about vaccines, 鈥済o wild on health.鈥 Since his confirmation in February 2025, Kennedy has tried to do exactly that. He has taken particular aim at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, calling it 鈥渢he most corrupt agency at H.H.S. and maybe the government.鈥 (Interlandi, 3/23)
Academics have long referred to their field as a leaky pipeline 鈥斅爂radually bleeding researchers from marginalized communities as they progress through their careers.聽A new paper, published Monday, suggests that grant terminations from the National Institutes of Health over the past year may have further punctured that pipeline. (Oza, 3/23)
Congress Will Open Inquiry Into Alleged Hospice Fraud In California
In an announcement Monday, House Republicans alleged "rampant hospice fraud" in Southern California that is costing taxpayers tens of millions of dollars. Other states making news: Minnesota, Nebraska, Florida, North Carolina, Missouri, and more.
House Republicans announced Monday that Congress will mount an investigation into "rampant hospice fraud," alleging that potentially tens of millions in taxpayer funds may have been lost in improper payments to Southern California companies.聽The Republican-led House Oversight Committee, which has the authority to investigate, has sent a letter to California's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, asking for documents related to the state's "oversight and internal controls to detect and prevent fraud for its federally funded hospice programs."聽(Geller, Yamaguchi and Gold, 3/23)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Medicare payment problems are generating steep financial hardships for some of Minnesota鈥檚 rural hospitals at a time when many are struggling to stay afloat. State hospital leaders and officials at several rural hospitals say they have been vexed by a recent payment processing change by the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that is effectively holding back millions of dollars needed to pay the bills. (Zurek, 3/24)
From her post in the neonatal intensive care unit at Children鈥檚 Nebraska, Dr. Ann Anderson-Berry sees some of Nebraska鈥檚 sickest and smallest patients. It鈥檚 a devastating and unexpected end to a pregnancy, where the baby鈥檚 survival is often in question. For parents who rely on Medicaid, the government insurance program for low-income and disabled Americans, filling out the pages of paperwork to get their newborn covered is rarely top of mind. (Herbers, 3/23)
Oakland County is erasing $6 million in medical debt for 6,300 county residents. "This initiative is about giving people a second chance," said Oakland County Executive Dave Coulter in a statement. "By eliminating this burden for thousands more residents, we're helping people regain their financial footing." The county is working with the national nonprofit Undue Medical Debt, which acquires the medical debts of those who are least able to pay. To qualify for debt relief, you must be an Oakland County resident and earn at or below four times the federal poverty level or have medical debt that equals 5% or more of your annual income.聽(Buczek, 3/23)
A bill that would help the HIV community is on the desk of Gov. Ron DeSantis. The measure (HB 697) would temporarily reverse an emergency rule made by the Florida Department of Health that blocks access to HIV medication for many in need. (Pedersen, 3/23)
A 60-bed acute long-term care unit in the Central Prison Healthcare Complex houses some of the most medically fragile 鈥 and staff-intensive 鈥 men in state custody. All require help with many activities of daily living such as feeding, toileting, walking, bathing and dressing. (Crumpler, 3/24)
The doctors tested Lyla for lupus. Then leukemia. The 10-year-old was put on migraine medication, but she continued to get headaches. Sometimes, she broke out in painful rashes that turned her skin red. 鈥淪he had crazy symptoms that just didn鈥檛 make sense,鈥 said her father, Matthew Overcast, a Republican state lawmaker from Ava representing the Missouri House district south of Springfield. (Friedheim, 3/23)
When Marcy Smith鈥檚 oncologist told her she needed radiation treatment for breast cancer, her first response was no. She鈥檇 already had a lumpectomy and four rounds of chemotherapy. The radiation would require six weeks of treatment in Billings, Montana 鈥 220 miles from her Glendive home. It was too far away to drive there each day, and she couldn鈥檛 miss work or leave her foster children to relocate. (Gose, 3/24)
18% Of Deaths Among Hospitalized Kids In US Linked To Sepsis: Study
The study was based on electronic health records and included data from nearly 4 million admissions from 2016 through 2023. Also: Axios looks at how the Trump administration's visa policy may be sidelining possibly thousands of foreign-born doctors.
Sepsis is a fast-moving, life-threatening condition that occurs when the body overreacts to an infection, sometimes causing permanent organ damage and death. A new study, published yesterday in JAMA, identified sepsis in 1.3% of hospitalized US children ages one month to 17 years old. The study, which included data from nearly four million admissions from 2016 through 2023, found that 10% of children with sepsis died while in the hospital.聽(Szabo, 3/23)
Health systems are managing more of their scheduling, coding and billing operations internally as they look to reduce costs and boost revenue. Many providers aim to use artificial intelligence and electronic health record technology to manage more revenue cycle functions themselves. Health system financial leaders expect long-term cost savings and revenue gains will more than cover the upfront capital required for that transition. If they prove successful, it could undercut vendors and the private equity firms backing them. (Kacik, 3/23)
The Trump administration's suspension of certain immigrants' work authorization renewals is sidelining possibly thousands of foreign-born doctors, some of the affected physicians tell Axios. The policy could worsen access to care in a health system already facing physician shortages. (Goldman, 3/24)
In news from the pharmaceutical industry 鈥
The US Supreme Court cleared the way for a multibillion-dollar racketeering lawsuit that accuses Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. and Eli Lilly & Co. of marketing the Actos diabetes drug without disclosing its link to bladder cancer. In a one-line order Monday, the high court refused to consider the companies鈥 contention that the case shouldn鈥檛 go forward as a class action on behalf of tens of thousands of insurers and other so-called third-party payers who covered the cost of Actos prescriptions. (Stohr, 2/23)
The Supreme Court will soon hear a case that could restrict which legal claims people can bring against chemical companies like Bayer, which produces the popular weedkiller Roundup. Bayer purchased Roundup鈥檚 previous manufacturer, St. Louis-based Monsanto, in 2018. The companies have paid out billions of dollars to settle lawsuits that claim exposure to glyphosate, a key ingredient in Roundup, led to plaintiffs鈥 cancer. Earlier this year, the Supreme Court agreed to take up an appeal of one such case: Monsanto v. Durnell. (Marks, 3/23)
A nationwide shortage of stimulant medications used to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may be rooted less in prescribing practices or federal production quotas than in global supply chain disruptions, according to an聽analysis published late last week in JAMA Health Forum. The study, led by researchers from Yale University, examined potential causes of the US stimulant shortage in 2022 and 2023, when many patients reported difficulty filling their prescriptions.聽(Bergeson, 3/23)
An experimental Lyme disease vaccine from Pfizer didn鈥檛 conclusively succeed in a large study, raising questions about the shot鈥檚 prospects. While the shot was more than 70% effective at preventing the tick-borne disease in the trial, not enough people contracted the disease for the findings to be conclusive. Pfizer is pushing ahead with its plans to seek regulatory approval anyway, saying the study hit a different statistical measure and the shot showed 鈥渕eaningful efficacy.鈥 (Loftus and Cheah, 3/23)
Whether they鈥檙e using weekly shots or daily pills, more Americans than ever are turning to anti-obesity drugs to lose weight and boost health. About 1 in 8 U.S. adults say they are taking a GLP-1 drug, according to a recent survey by the health research group KFF. (Aleccia, 3/23)
Highly Mutated Covid Strain That's Lurking In US Could Cause Trouble
The BA.3.2 variant has been detected in wastewater samples from 25 states. The strain is "genetically distinct from the JN.1 lineages that have circulated in the United States since January 2024,鈥 CDC researchers said. The current formulation of the 2025-26 covid vaccine targets the JN.1 subvariants 鈥 which means BA.3.2 might have the ability to evade protection from vaccines.
The highly mutated SARS-CoV-2 BA.3.2 variant, which has been reported by at least 23 countries as of February 11, has been detected in nasal swabs collected from four US travelers, clinical samples from five patients, three airplane wastewater samples, and 132 wastewater surveillance samples from 25 states, per a聽study published last week in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. (Van Beusekom, 3/23)
More covid updates 鈥
After five years of research, scientists identified an important role for Dolosigranulum pigrum, a bacterium that naturally lives in the respiratory microbiome. Higher levels of this bacterium were associated with a lower likelihood that long Covid symptoms would persist. (3/21)
Data show that young, healthy people have no additional risk of sudden death if they are vaccinated against COVID-19, contrary to myths that continue to circulate widely on social media. In fact, healthy adolescents and young adults vaccinated against COVID-19 were 43% less likely to experience sudden death than non-vaccinated people, according to a Canadian case-control study published last week in PLOS Medicine. (Szabo, 3/23)
Global immunity to Covid-19 is likely to offer protection against other SARS-type viruses, ultimately lowering the risk of a future coronavirus pandemic, scientists have found. (Forbes, 3/24)
In the early days, the virus posed a graver threat to people and the health care system, Trump embraced lockdowns he now blasts, and the benefits of vaccines were oversold. (Nirappil, 3/22)
Eating Disorder Hospitalizations Fall To Pre-Pandemic Levels
Starting in October 2024, eating disorder-related hospitalizations among 8- to 25-year-olds dropped to about 350 per month, which is on par with the pre-pandemic period. Also: the impact of exercise on Alzheimer's risk; sleep EEGs to predict dementia; and more.
A sharp increase in the number of young people hospitalized with eating disorders immediately after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic had returned to pre-pandemic levels, a cross-sectional study of U.S. pediatric hospitals showed. (Henderson, 3/23)
On Alzheimer's and dementia 鈥
Exercise can strengthen a leaky blood-brain barrier, which may improve brain health and potentially fight dementia, according to an ambitious new mouse study of exercise and neurodegeneration published this month in Cell. (Reynolds, 3/24)
A brain age index based on microstructures of sleep electroencephalography (EEG) data predicted dementia risk, a meta-analysis showed. (George, 3/23)
More health and wellness news 鈥
A new study published in Annals of Neurology found that people with chronic back pain process sounds, especially ones that are unpleasant, more intensely than people without pain. (Bever, 3/24)
Leafy greens such as spinach and perennial kid favorites such as strawberries and grapes held the highest levels of potentially harmful pesticide residues based on government tests, according to the 2026 Shopper鈥檚 Guide to Pesticides in Produce. (LaMotte, 3/24)
Opinion writers tackle these public health problems.
Six years after the Covid shutdown of March 2020, the nation is still struggling to recover from a trauma that has become deeply politicized. Despite a powerful urge to forget, the pandemic remains a constant influence on the American psyche and American policy. (David Blumenthal and James A. Morone, 3/24)
A look at Casey Means shows the weakness of her nomination and the surgeon general position itself. (Marc Short, 3/20)
Last fall, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the expiration of the Affordable Care Act subsidies at the end of 2025 would leave millions more Americans without health care coverage and force many families to pay thousands more each year just to keep their current coverage. (Anahita Dua, 3/23)
鈥淧eople with mental health disabilities are entitled to a safe, appropriate and non-discriminatory emergency response in the same way and to the same extent that the general public receives,鈥 the suit charges. 鈥淲hen armed law enforcement officers are the sole or primary responders to mental health emergencies, there is an increased risk of escalation, trauma and injuries, as well as increased likelihood of arrest, incarceration and death, with even higher risks for people of color.鈥 (3/22)
The insurance plan for state and some municipal employees will stop covering GLP-1 drugs for weight loss July 1. Most major commercial insurers in Massachusetts, including Blue Cross Blue Shield and Point32Health, already eliminated coverage in their standard plan offerings. (3/20)