Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
From 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News - Latest Stories:
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News Original Stories
States Eye Aid To Prop Up Distressed Hospitals Amid Federal Medicaid Cuts
Hundreds of hospitals nationwide are bracing for Medicaid cuts as a result of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Some state lawmakers are eyeing loans and other forms of financial aid to distressed hospitals in rural and urban areas, as healthcare providers warn of cuts to critical services and scramble for funding.
An Arm and a Leg: The Supreme Court Case That Could Slow Generic Drugs
In 鈥淗ikma v. Amarin,鈥 the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision could affect how quickly generic versions of brand-name medicines come to market.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
'EAT MORE FIBER' IS ALL THEY SAY
鈥 Anonymous
diverticulitis, too!
Why so few answers?
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:
Reproductive Health
Mail-Order Mifepristone Access Restored For A Week, Sowing Confusion
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito on Monday put a one-week hold on major changes to how the abortion pill mifepristone can be prescribed. The ruling temporarily restores nationwide access to a drug used for most medication abortions in the U.S. On Friday, an appeals court had said the Food and Drug Administration needed to revert to rules that the pills, part of a two-drug regimen for medication abortion, must be prescribed only in-person. The change was effective immediately for the whole country. (Godoy and Simmons-Duffin, 5/4)
Nationwide access to abortion pills is again in legal limbo, almost two years after the Supreme Court threw out a case challenging mail-order prescribing of the widely used drug mifepristone. A circuit court ruling on Friday that dramatically dialed back access to the drug has caused confusion for pharmacies, telehealth companies and other clinicians, even in states where abortion is legal. (Goldman and Sullivan, 5/5)
In other reproductive health news 鈥
Maternal health is a known crisis in the U.S., where pregnant women and new mothers die at a rate several times higher than in comparable countries. In recent years, increased awareness of the problem has led to interventions at the federal and state level and a strengthening of surveillance and data collection. Even as sizable improvements continue to be elusive, the picture of how many new mothers are dying, and why, is becoming clearer.聽A research letter published on Monday in JAMA Pediatrics argues fathers deserve similar attention. (Merelli, 5/4)
Prenatal exposure to sedative drugs used for anxiety and insomnia was not associated with an increased risk of psychiatric or neurodevelopmental conditions in children when accounting for familial factors, a large population-based cohort study from South Korea indicated. (Monaco, 5/1)
A large Canadian study suggests that nirsevimab, a long-acting monoclonal antibody used to prevent respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), is well tolerated in infants, with mostly mild, temporary symptoms following immunization. The聽study, led by researchers at the University of British Columbia and published in the most recent issue of Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, used parent-completed questionnaires to assess safety data from 1,559 infants during the 2024鈥25 RSV season. The questionnaires were completed in the week following immunization.聽(Bergeson, 5/4)
An analysis of invasive Escherichia coli samples from newborns at a US pediatric hospital found rising rates of resistance to recommended antibiotics, researchers reported today in Open Forum Infectious Diseases. (Dall, 5/4)
Healthcare Costs
UnitedHealth Group Says It Will Slash Pre-Authorizations By 30%
UnitedHealth Group plans to stop requiring doctors to get approvals for an array of procedures, tests and services, cutting back on a process that has long been detested by physicians and patients. UnitedHealth, parent of the biggest U.S. health insurer, said the changes will slash the number of reviews by nearly a third starting later this year. Doctors have long complained about the paperwork they must complete to get insurers鈥 permission for care, which can lead to delays and denials. (Wilde Mathews, 5/5)
More news about the high cost of health care 鈥
The warning signs were visible for months. Enhanced ACA premium tax credits expired at the end of 2025, and insurers are pulling back from the ACA marketplace while enrollment composition shifts toward high-deductible bronze plans. Now, the knock-on effects of these moves are beginning to emerge as leaders from the largest for-profit health systems elaborated on first-quarter results. (Condon, 5/4)
The sector recorded 12 bankruptcy filings in the first quarter, up 33% from the fourth quarter of 2025, according to the analysis by Gibbins Advisors. (Olsen, 5/4)
A flurry of strategic decisions by Medicare Advantage insurers to exit underperforming geographic markets, mostly in rural areas, left Humana as the last company standing in dozens of counties this year. When the 2026 annual enrollment period closed, Humana had gained more than 1 million new Medicare Advantage members. That was more than it bargained for and the most in the industry. (Tepper and Broderick, 5/4)
As healthcare costs soar, it鈥檚 not only individual Americans feeling the financial pain and looking to make trade-offs. Employers are scouring for ways to cut back and generous paid parental leave is among the employee benefits on the chopping block. (Munk, 5/3)
For decades, politicians have blamed the country鈥檚 biggest doctor lobby for some of the health care systems problems. Now it faces a new line of attack as Republicans portray their health care cuts as fraud-fighting policies. (Wilkerson, 5/5)
Congress struck a deal last week on the homeland security budget that doesn鈥檛 contain any more healthcare cuts, but the sector鈥檚 respite could prove brief. Those in the Republican majority who want to dig deeper into federal healthcare spending after enacting more than $1 trillion in cuts last year see more opportunities to press their case this year. (McAuliff, 5/4)
On Medicaid 鈥
Most states are planning to adopt less restrictive policies to verify compliance with work requirements mandated by the 鈥淏ig Beautiful Bill,鈥 but some are implementing the policies early or checking eligibility more frequently. (Olsen, 5/4)
Based on prior history, cuts to federal healthcare programs as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) and the expiration of Affordable Care Act (ACA) enhanced premium subsidies will result in big drops in public coverage that will worsen existing problems in the health insurance marketplace, authors of a study found. (Frieden, 5/4)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: States Eye Aid To Prop Up Distressed Hospitals Amid Federal Medicaid Cuts
At Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital, patients on gurneys line the hallways of the emergency department waiting for care, and overflow mental health patients are consigned to outdoor tents. The 152-bed hospital, which sits on a sprawling medical campus close to the predominantly Latino and Black neighborhood of Watts, is struggling for financial stability. Its patients are poorer and sicker than average, many of them are uninsured, and three-quarters of MLK鈥檚 patient care revenue comes from Medi-Cal, the state鈥檚 version of the Medicaid program, which pays low rates. For hospitals statewide, by comparison, less than one-third of patient revenue comes from Medi-Cal. (Wolfson, 5/5)
In other healthcare industry updates 鈥
CommonSpirit Health and University of Pittsburgh Medical Center have signed a definitive agreement to transfer Steubenville, Ohio-based Trinity Health System to UPMC. The proposed deal includes Trinity Medical Center West, Trinity Medical Center East, Trinity St. Clairsville Neighborhood Hospital, Trinity Twin City Medical Center and associated clinics, according to a Monday news release. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. The deal is expected to close in the fall, pending regulatory review and customary closing conditions. (Eastabrook, 5/4)
Masimo Corp. shareholders have approved its proposed $9.9 billion acquisition by life sciences company Danaher Corp. Stockholders voted on the decision at a May 1 special meeting, the patient monitoring company said Monday. The deal is subject to regulatory approvals and other closing conditions. Masimo said it expects the acquisition to close this year. (Dubinsky, 5/4)
ASG Hospital Pvt., an Indian eye-care chain backed by General Atlantic, is planning to file for an initial public offering as early as this month that could raise up to $500 million, according to people familiar with the matter. The company is considering selling roughly 15% of fresh equity in the offering, which is expected to also include stock sold by existing investors, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. (Mascarenhas and Sanjay, 5/5)
Administration News
Feds Investigate Mass. Women's College For Allowing 'Biological Men'
In the Trump administration鈥檚 latest move to limit trans rights, the Department of Education has launched a Title IX investigation into Smith College, an all-women鈥檚 college in western Massachusetts, for admitting trans women. (Sottlle, 5/4)
More health news about the Trump administration 鈥
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Monday announced several initiatives intended to rein in the prescription of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, the most widely prescribed class of antidepressants, which he has described as exceptionally difficult to quit. Mr. Kennedy has long signaled that reducing the use of psychiatric drugs would be an aim of his tenure, but Monday鈥檚 announcements were the first significant step in that direction. (Barry, 5/4)
Soil at a public golf course in Washington where the Trump administration dumped debris from the demolition of the White House East Wing has tested positive for lead, chromium and other toxic metals, according to data released by the National Park Service. The data, which the Park Service published on its website last week, showed relatively low levels of these contaminants in the soil at East Potomac Golf Links. (Joselow, 5/4)
The last words Joshua Orta heard his childhood best friend utter were 鈥淚鈥檓 sorry.鈥 Then Ruben Ray Martinez, a slender 23-year-old, slumped back in the driver鈥檚 seat. An officer had fired repeatedly through the open window, at least one bullet piercing Ruben鈥檚 heart. (Kriel, 5/4)
Zambia鈥檚 talks with the US over a new $2 billion health-aid deal stalled because the proposed agreement included data sharing that would violate citizens鈥 privacy rights and was conditional on first agreeing to preferential access to mineral resources, the nation鈥檚 foreign minister said. The inclusion of the terms related to data sharing were unacceptable and 鈥渦nconscionable,鈥 Mulambo Haimbe said in a statement Monday. He also said it was concerning that the health pact depended on the governments signing a critical minerals agreement favoring US companies. (Hill and Mitimingi, 5/4)
Before the 2024 election, federal prosecutors were "full steam ahead" looking into how a prison gang in Puerto Rico gave drugs to inmates if they voted for a GOP gubernatorial candidate. After Trump鈥檚 election, the investigation evaporated. (Rutledge, 5/5)
On the gun violence epidemic 鈥
The White House was briefly locked down Monday afternoon after a U.S. Secret Service officer exchanged gunfire with an armed individual nearby, the agency said. The person, whose identity was unknown, was shot about 3:30 p.m. at 15th Street SW and Independence Avenue SW near the Washington Monument shortly after Vice President JD Vance passed by in a motorcade, according to the Secret Service. Uniformed officers approached the individual, who tried to flee on foot before firing at the agents, Secret Service Deputy Director Matthew C. Quinn said at a news conference. They fired back, and the person was struck and taken to a hospital. Gunfire from the person struck a nearby juvenile, who did not sustain life-threatening injuries, Quinn said. He said it wasn鈥檛 clear whom the person may have been targeting. (Solano, Thompson and Wang, 5/4)
Pharma and Tech
FDA Allows Early Access To Experimental Pancreatic Cancer Drug
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted expanded access for the use of an experimental pancreatic cancer drug, daraxonrasib. This means the drug will be available for early access to those who previously received conventional treatment for metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). A healthcare provider must request access to the medication for their patient, according to an FDA statement. (Huynh, 5/4)
More pharma and tech news 鈥
A closely watched therapy developed by Johnson & Johnson failed to show a statistically meaningful improvement for patients with inflammatory bowel disease. But the company plans to advance the drug into late-stage testing, focusing on a growing subgroup of patients. (DeAngelis, 5/5)
For Indian billionaire Dilip Shanghvi, who made his fortune selling cheap generic drugs to the world, it was clear at least more than a decade ago that a shift toward specialty treatments would be key to success in the crowded local market. Last week, his firm Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. announced a $12 billion deal that could be the biggest test yet in the company鈥檚 long-brewing bid to transform into an international giant. The company agreed to acquire New Jersey-based Organon & Co. in an all-cash deal that marks one of India鈥檚 largest global takeovers and challenges Shanghvi to merge a large, complex business. (Sanjay and Kalesh, 5/5)
Mayo Clinic research published April 28 showed an AI model could detect pancreatic cancer up to three years before clinical diagnosis. Projected to be the second-leading cause of cancer-related death in the U.S. by 2030, early diagnosis has a significant effect on survival outcomes for pancreatic cancer patients. The study from Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic adds to the larger evidence of AI鈥檚 value for cancer detection, but are health systems willing and able to scale these tools? (Gregerson, 5/4)
A common side effect of many GLP-1 drugs is hair loss. It's creating a formerly untapped but growing market for hair treatment products. (Neelakandan, 5/2)
Two years ago, Jennifer Kirtley looked down at the scale and saw 328 pounds. Today, she鈥檚 looking in the mirror at a size 6. After a transformative 180-pound weight loss from weekly Wegovy shots, Kirtley says she is happy with her overall weight and health. (Goodman, 5/4)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News鈥 鈥楢n Arm and a Leg鈥: The Supreme Court Case That Could Slow Generic Drugs
The Supreme Court has heard a big case about 鈥渟kinny labels鈥 on generic drugs. It could shape the future of affordable prescriptions in America. The same medication can be used to treat many conditions. And each use can have its own patent, even though the drug itself never changes. When patents expire, companies can make their own generic versions 鈥 but only so long as they make it clear that it can鈥檛 be used for anything else that still has a patent. This is what鈥檚 called a 鈥渟kinny label.鈥 (Weissmann, 5/5)
Also 鈥
About 1,500 beagles in Wisconsin that have been at the center of a fierce fight waged by animal rights activists are moving to new homes. The state-licensed facility, Ridglan Farms, outside Madison, breeds the beagles for biomedical research aimed at improving veterinary medicine. Last fall, a special prosecutor found that Ridglan had performed procedures on the beagles that constituted animal mistreatment. The company has denied that it abuses animals. (Fortin, 5/4)
State Watch
Two Measles Cases Emerge In South Carolina After Outbreak Ends
Two cases of the measles have been reported in Saluda County, South Carolina, about a week after the state's outbreak was declared over. The South Carolina Department of Public Health (DPH) said the first case was the result of international travel, and the second case was a known exposure of that case, who had been in quarantine since April 17. (Moore, 5/4)
Wyoming is reporting its first measles case of 2026. A news release from the Wyoming Department of Health on Friday reported a confirmed case of measles in an adult from Fremont County with an unconfirmed vaccination status. (Erickson, 5/4)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
The past couple years have been challenging for Minnesota farmers, prompting many to seek help navigating their mental health. When Denise Reeser isn't surrounded by horses at her New Prague farm, she's surrounded by numbers and finances. That's because so much of what she does these days involves helping farmers with cash flow problems. (Lauritsen, 5/4)
A former pharmacy technician working in Metro Detroit pleaded guilty to federal charges related to a $5.6 million scheme to defraud health care insurance programs. Ali Naserdean, 32, of Dearborn Heights, entered his plea on Thursday to one charge each of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and possession with intent to illegally distribute oxycodone, according to the U.S. Attorney's office for the Eastern District of Michigan.聽He will be sentenced on Sept. 1 and faces up to 20 years in prison. (Wethington, 5/4)
In Guilford County, having an orange card means an uninsured dad who breaks his hand working around the house can get medical care. It means a self-employed mom who no longer qualifies for Medicaid and can鈥檛 afford other insurance can get a mammogram. Having one of those orange cards means that someone who鈥檚 living in a tent can see a dentist about an abscessed tooth. (Fernandez, 5/5)
Mount Airy officials are moving forward with an estimated $8 million plan to remove 鈥渇orever chemicals,鈥 known as PFAS, from the town鈥檚 drinking water system after several wells exceeded federal and state limits. (Yelenik, 5/4)
Local school districts say it鈥檚 not 鈥渇inancially feasible鈥 to install three-point seat belts on all school buses, even though the state expects them to by the 2029-30 school year. (Garcia, 5/4)
Health news from California 鈥
Scientists, doctors, students and patients from across California rallied in Sacramento Monday, calling on state lawmakers to support a $23 billion bond聽鈥 the largest ever of its kind聽鈥 to fund life-saving research facing insurmountable instability during the Trump administration. The $23 billion general obligation bond introduced by Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco has a long road to approval: It must be OK鈥檇 by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom in order to appear on the ballot this November, where it would then need a majority of voters鈥 support. (DiNatale, 5/4)
Democrat Xavier Becerra is getting serious about tech policy after catapulting into the upper echelon of California鈥檚 gubernatorial field. The former Health and Human Services secretary on Monday unveiled an 11-point plan, shared first with POLITICO, that calls for harnessing artificial intelligence in education and government, while implementing guardrails for workers and kids. (Katzenberger and Mui, 5/4)
Coronado was "heaven on earth." Then as much as 30 million gallons a day of Tijuana waste turned its legendary beaches into a no-go zone. (Carlton, 5/4)
The man accused of starting the Palisades fire, one of the costliest disasters in U.S. history, was motivated by a resentment for the rich and viewed Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare鈥檚 chief executive, as a Robin Hood-like figure, according to court documents detailing evidence gathered by federal prosecutors. (Winton, 5/4)
Public Health
Social Media Videos Are Exposing Teens To Inhalant Use, Study Shows
New research is raising alarms about inhalants, which are often portrayed online as harmless while putting teens at real risk. Two new studies point to a troubling pattern: Younger teens, especially girls, may be more vulnerable 鈥 and social media is a major source of exposure. In one study, recently published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, researchers reviewed 30 videos about nitrous oxide 鈥 often called "laughing gas" 鈥 posted in early 2025. Those videos averaged 23 million views. Some showed how to use it, with no age restrictions or health warnings. (5/4)
On the drug overdose crisis 鈥
The chief medical examiner was not satisfied. The toxicology report on the dead man鈥檚 blood samples made no sense, given what her investigator had noted at the death scene: Oct. 26, 2025, 2:43 a.m. Apartment, South Knoxville, Tenn. Decedent: white man, 52, supine on bed, in T-shirt, pants, belt, socks. In the bathroom: thumbnail-size baggies, cut straws, dollar bill, hollow pen, white powder. But the only substances a lab found in his blood were nicotine and caffeine. (Hoffman, 5/4)
Since last fall, new and deadly synthetic opioids called orphines have begun appearing in street drugs in the United States. They are far more potent than fentanyl but cannot be detected by standard toxicology tests. Orphines are still much less common than fentanyl, but they are proliferating quickly. As of last month, they have been found in 14 states, mostly in the South and the Midwest. Law enforcement officials and public health officials are trying to assess the gravity and endurance of the threat they pose. (Hoffman, 5/4)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
A cruise ship struck by a deadly outbreak of hantavirus, a rare pathogen carried by rodents, remained moored in the Atlantic Ocean on Tuesday as government and health authorities scrambled to find a way to evacuate sick people onboard. The three people who died were a Dutch couple and a German national, according to Oceanwide Expeditions, the vessel鈥檚 operator. (Kim, 5/5)
Jordan Herbst was 14 years old when he came down with what he thought was the flu. After a few days of aches and chills, though, he started having trouble breathing. The doctors who first saw him in Bishop, Calif., suspected it was pneumonia. But his breathing quickly worsened and his lungs began to fail. He was rushed by air to a larger hospital, where he was put on a machine that took over for his heart and lungs. 鈥淚 imagine it鈥檚 what drowning feels like,鈥 said Mr. Herbst, who is now 26. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e trying to breathe, and you just can鈥檛 get the air in.鈥 (Bajaj and Agrawal, 5/4)
A raft of research is recasting the thymus from a bit player to a potent regulator of aging and immune health. (Johnson, 5/3)
When a 24-year-old woman took a dietary supplement called "raiz de tejocote," she encountered some dangerous and unpleasant side effects. On arrival to the emergency department, she was experiencing confusion, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, whole-body numbness, pain in her abdomen, and generalized malaise. She had taken four tejocote root pills 14 hours earlier to help trigger a bowel movement. She had never tried the pills before and had not eaten anything else with tejocote, reported Catherine Kiruthi, PharmD, of Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center in Baltimore, and co-authors in Annals of Internal Medicine Clinical Cases. (Firth, 5/4)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Mifepristone Ruling Makes Drug Development Tricky; Hantavirus Outbreak Shows Risk Of WHO Absence
The biotech industry has long operated on a simple premise: FDA-regulated, evidence-based science determines how medicines reach patients, not litigation. That premise was already tested in an earlier Texas case challenging mifepristone鈥檚 Food and Drug Administration approval 鈥 an unprecedented effort to unwind decades of scientific review through the courts. It is now, once again, under strain. (Grace Colon, 5/4)
Three passengers are dead. Seven people are ill. The ship is anchored off Cape Verde, passengers cannot disembark, and the World Health Organization is coordinating the response. (Krutika Kuppalli, 5/5)
George H.W. Bush showed how Republicans can be disabled Americans鈥 greatest allies. Why isn鈥檛 Donald Trump honoring his legacy? (Laurence Jurdem, 5/4)
About 10 years after a breast surgeon we interviewed returned to Dubai to practice, a colleague stopped her in a hospital corridor to tell her: 鈥淚t鈥檚 great 鈥 since you came back I no longer see those advanced cases of breast cancer.鈥 (Maia Chankseliani, 5/5)
Prices at hospitals have grown faster than prices in virtually any other sector of the economy. (Zack Cooper, 5/4)