Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
ARPA-H To Spend $160M On Gene Editing Drug Development
ARPA-H, the U.S.â âmoonshotâ agency for health research, announced Thursday that it will spend up to $160 million to push forward custom gene editing treatments for a spate of rare diseases. The program, called THRIVE, will back seven different teams pursuing various groups of conditions affecting different organ systems. (Mast, 7/9)
In other Trump administration developments â
The Trump administrationâs proposed overhaul of federal grantmaking has drawn nearly 99,000 public comments, with the July 13 deadline to submit comments now days away. The Office of Management and Budgetâs proposal, published in the Federal Register on May 29, would update how the federal government awards and manages grants across more than 40 agencies, including HHS, the National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation. The proposal includes more than 320 changes to the governmentâs existing grant guidance, according to the Association of American Universities. (Bean, 7/9)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had big plans for his much touted âTake Back Your Healthâ campaign last year. The Health Department he leads requested bids for âbold, edgyâ pitches for TV and digital ads warning about the dangers of processed foods. Kennedy wanted to appear in ads wearing a device used by diabetics to track blood sugar. None of it ever came together. Former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had rained on Kennedyâs parade. (Winfield Cunningham, 7/9)
In a call with disability rights advocates Thursday, officials from the U.S. Department of Education tried to ease concerns about plans to move the agency's special education offices to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The effort seemed to fail. (Mehta, 7/9)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: They Harvest The Nationâs Food, But A New Rule May Strip Them Of Health Insurance
Seasonal work. Inconsistent hours. Frequent moves. Cash payments and informal jobs. For farmworkers who rely on Medicaid, these common employment patterns could put their health coverage at risk. Itâs a heightened concern for the estimated million-plus farmworkers who are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents, as new work requirements kick in for the federal-state healthcare program that serves low-income and disabled Americans. (Andalo, 7/10)
The US Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday proposed rolling back emission standards for new heavy-duty trucks, including buses, garbage trucks and semis. Under the proposal, EPA is looking to scale back future warranty mandates from 10 years to 5 and to delay requirements to extend the period in which the vehicles are subject to pollution limits. If finalized, this action could result in lower costs for truck manufacturers while potentially also boosting air pollution. (Hirji, 7/9)
The latest from Capitol Hill â
A bipartisan group of lawmakers is urging Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to set up new monitoring rules for hospices to root out discrimination against vulnerable populations in the provision of medically assisted suicide. In a letter sent to Kennedy on Thursday, Sens. James Lankford (R-Okla.) and Tim Kaine (D-Va.) and Reps. Greg Murphy (R-N.C.) and Luis Correa (D-Calif.) recommended that Kennedyâs HHS establish reporting requirements in the hospice program to better monitor the provision of medically assisted suicide for discrimination against people with disabilities, older adults and other vulnerable populations. (Huiskes, 7/9)
Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie (R) on Wednesday said ObamaCare might as well be renamed âTrumpcareâ as premiums increase and Republicans havenât moved to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA). âMight as well call it Trumpcare now. Our party has made no serious effort to repeal Obamacare and legalize affordable health insurance after taking control of the House, Senate & White House,â Massie wrote Wednesday on the social platform X. âWhy? Because the current system enriches insurance and hospital companies,â he added. (Fields, 7/9)
Gearing up for the midterm elections â
Planned Parenthood is investing a near-record $47 million into the November midterm elections aiming to unseat the Republicans who voted to cut off the organization from federal funding last year. The âWe Decideâ campaign from Planned Parenthood Votes â an independent Super PAC affiliated with Planned Parenthood â will target ads and voter outreach in battleground House races in Arizona, California, Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. (Weixel, 7/9)
A year ago, abortion opponents were celebrating one of their biggest victories under the Trump administration: Planned Parenthood, the movementâs arch-villain, had been temporarily kicked out of Medicaid, one of the nationâs largest health insurance programs. (Luthra, 7/9)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health Newsâ âWhat The Health?â: The Politics Of Health At Midyear
As health costs rise and insurance coverage falls, Democrats appear to be doubling down on the healthcare issue as they press their case to take control of Congress in Novemberâs midterm elections. Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, Republicans â and some Democrats â are taking aim at nonprofit hospitals and whether they are delivering enough âcommunity benefitâ to justify not having to pay taxes. (Rovner, 7/9)
The latest about the Mitch McConnell mystery â
Emergency responders took Sen. Mitch McConnell to an ambulance on a stretcher after being called to his home last month for a report of an unconscious person, according to new video of the incident and an eyewitness account. (Grayer, 7/10)