Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
With Pricier Meds Front And Center, 340B Drug Program Sales Hit $100B In 2025
Prescription medicines purchased in the U.S. under a controversial government discount program amounted to $100 billion in 2025, a 22.8% increase from the previous year, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration, which oversees the program. (Silverman, 7/14)
The Federal Trade Commission settled a聽lawsuit聽against CVS Caremark, one of the largest pharmacy benefit managers in the U.S., over allegations that the company artificially inflated the price of insulin and impeded access to the lifesaving diabetes treatment. (Silverman, 7/14)
More on the Trump administration 鈥
HHS has denied a report that the agency is planning to abandon the proposed rule to block Medicaid and Medicare funding for hospitals that provide gender-affirming care to pediatric patients.聽NPR reported July 13 the news agency had obtained an official document showing details of the reversal.聽(Gregerson, 7/14)
An analysis of a torrent of public comments submitted on a White House proposal to change the way federal contracts and grants are doled out shows a widespread rebuke of the potential change by scientists and others.聽(Oza and Parker, 7/15)
The Departments of Veterans Affairs and Health and Human Services signed an agreement Monday to increase coordination on research into psychedelic drugs for treating veterans鈥 mental health disorders. Under the new memorandum of understanding, VA and HHS plan to increase clinical trial participation, train therapists, nurses and doctors to administer psychedelic medications if they receive federal approval and collect data and evidence to support patients, physicians and federal regulators in considering such treatments. (Kime, 7/14)
A coalition of public health groups sued the Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday, seeking to block a new policy that could allow a wave of new flavored e-cigarettes and nicotine pouches to enter the market without completing the required scientific review. The lawsuit asks for a judge to set aside a policy that was announced in May and finalized just days after executives of companies pushing for it dined with President Trump at his golf club in Florida. Two days before the lunch, Reynolds American, which sent top staff members to the meeting, donated $5 million to a super PAC backed by the president, campaign finance records show. (Jewett, 7/14)
In a recent town hall meeting, Karim Mikhail told Food and Drug Administration staff that he was normal.聽鈥淚 am with you on planet Earth,鈥 he said in June. 鈥淚 understand very well what everybody is going through.鈥澛燭ypically, such an acknowledgment would be unremarkable. But Mikhail is acting director of the FDA鈥檚 Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, where the previous leader, Vinay Prasad, was decidedly outside the norm. (Lawrence, 7/15)
The Trump administration has launched a national crackdown on how school districts handle accusations of sexual misconduct by teachers, following a KQED-ProPublica investigation into California鈥檚 teacher disciplinary system. (Jan and McDede, 7/14)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Facing Funding Losses, States Call Out Big Businesses With Employees On Medicaid
As the Trump administration鈥檚 January deadline looms for states to enforce new Medicaid work requirements, some state lawmakers are turning the tables by pushing to publicly name the largest companies that have employees enrolled in the government program covering low-income and disabled people. California lawmakers seek to revive an expired law that would require the state to identify companies that employ 100 or more people and have employees enrolled in Medi-Cal, the state鈥檚 Medicaid program. (Orozco Rodriguez, 7/15)