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November 2025
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Medicaid data shared with DHS to aid immigration enforcement

Editor's Note The Trump administration ordered federal health officials this week to share personal data from Medicaid enrollees with deportation authorities, the Associated Press (AP) reported June 14. According to the report, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) was given just 54 minutes on Tuesday to transfer enrollee…

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By: Matt Danford
June 16, 2025
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Global growth stalls as tariffs, debt, policy shifts throttle recovery, World Bank warns

Editor's Note The global economy is losing steam, with the World Bank forecasting the weakest growth in a non-recession year since 2008—citing protectionist trade policies, stubborn debt, and rising interest rates as key drivers of the downturn. According to the Axios June 9 article, the World Bank’s latest economic outlook…

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By: Tarsilla Moura
June 12, 2025
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NIH staff revolt, new analysis affirm the critical role and vulnerability of US academic science

Editor's Note Several hundred National Institutes of Health (NIH) employees have issued a rare internal rebuke of the agency’s current leadership under Director Jay Bhattacharya, STAT June 9 reports. The open letter, dubbed the “Bethesda Declaration,” criticizes abrupt Trump-era policy changes, including the cancellation of health equity and LGBTQ+ research,…

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By: Tarsilla Moura
June 11, 2025
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CNOs urged to ready nurses for ICE encounters under new hospital enforcement rules

Editor's Note Hospitals are no longer protected from immigration enforcement, placing a new burden on chief nursing officers (CNOs) to ensure their teams are prepared, HealthLeaders June 2 reports. As of January 20, the Trump Administration revoked prior federal guidance that designated hospitals as “sensitive locations,” allowing Immigration and Customs…

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By: Tarsilla Moura
June 9, 2025
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GAO calls for stronger national testing strategy in public health emergencies

Editor's Note The US Government Accountability Office (GAO) is urging the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to strengthen its approach to diagnostic testing during a pandemic or other public health crisis, citing ongoing gaps in leadership, coordination, and readiness, according to a June 5 report from the Center…

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By: Matt Danford
June 9, 2025
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Study: 3D-printed models improve shared decision-making in colorectal surgery

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Editor's Note Research shows using 3D-printed anatomical models during preoperative counseling can improve patients’ involvement in shared decision-making (SDM) and reduced anxiety ahead of colorectal surgery, although only the improvement in SDM met the study’s threshold for clinical significance. Published June 3 in JAMA Network Open, the single-center trial included…

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By: Matt Danford
June 6, 2025
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Study: Pneumonia risk lower for COVID-19 than influenza, RSV

Editor's Note Influenza and RSV infections more than double the risk of secondary Streptococcus pneumoniae infection, while COVID-19 is associated with a significantly reduced risk, according to a June 2 news brief from the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP). The findings stem from a retrospective study of…

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By: Matt Danford
June 5, 2025
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Significant CMS moves include withdrawal of emergency abortion care guidance

Editor's Note CMS has rescinded a 2022 guidance that protected clinicians providing emergency abortion care under the Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act (EMTALA), removing a key federal safeguard for providers in states with abortion restrictions, according to a June 2 article in Becker’s Hospital Review. The guidance, originally issued…

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By: Matt Danford
June 5, 2025
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Study: Blood test detects colorectal cancer but misses most precancerous polyps

Editor's Note A new blood test shows promise in detecting colorectal cancer—the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the US—but was less effective at identifying precancerous polyps, according to a June 2 announcement from Kaiser Permanente. Not yet approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, the test is…

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By: Matt Danford
June 4, 2025
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Study: OR waste training boosts recycling, but impact fades with time

Editor's Note A single training session on waste segregation significantly increased recycling rates among OR staff, but gains began to erode within two months, according to a study published May 26 in Nature: Scientific Reports. Conducted at Ankara University Cebeci Hospital, the quasi-experimental study assessed the impact of a single-session,…

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By: Matt Danford
June 4, 2025
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