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Wednesday, Mar 18 2026

Full Issue

Bill Targeting 'Forever Chemicals' Awaits Wisconsin Governor's Signature

On Tuesday, Wisconsin's Legislature sent the $133 million package to Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, who has said he will sign it.

The Wisconsin Legislature sent a $133 million plan to combat contamination from so-called forever chemicals to Gov. Tony Evers for his approval Tuesday, promising an end to years of squabbling between the Democratic governor and Republican lawmakers over the issue. Evers said immediately after the Senate approved the bills Tuesday afternoon that he would sign them into law. The rare bipartisan compromise offers at least some hope for the scores of Wisconsin villages, towns and cities grappling with PFAS pollution in their groundwater. (Richmond, 3/17)

Gov. Tim Walz announced Tuesday that former Minnesota Department of Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm will work with Minnesota hospitals to address financial challenges. (Zurek, 3/17)

By the end of last week, more than 10 patients had been turned away and two scheduled procedures have been cancelled at the state鈥檚 only clinic for medication and procedural abortions. (McMurtry, 3/17)

Rolla is the latest municipality in Missouri to restrict the sale and possession of plant-based supplements including Kratom. The Rolla City Council unanimously approved an ordinance Monday night making synthetic kratom and 7-hydroxymitragynine (also known as 7-OH) illegal to possess or sell. The measure also makes natural kratom, delta-7 THC and delta-8 THC available only to people over 21. (Ahl, 3/17)

Homeless services providers and city officials agree that St. Louis鈥 new protocol to help vulnerable people during the coldest days of winter was an improvement over other years. The city activated its new Code Blue cold-weather plan more than four dozen times this winter to protect homeless residents, according to officials. (Fentem, 3/17)

On the spread of measles and bird flu 鈥

The South Carolina measles outbreak stands at 997 cases after just one new case was reported in recent days, suggesting the outbreak may be nearing containment.聽The outbreak began in the Upstate region last October, and was linked to several private schools with low vaccination rates among the student body. Cases mounted and then soared over the holidays, with multiple exposures at churches noted. (Soucheray, 3/17)

At least 136 measles cases have been reported in Texas this year. The vast majority of them are in federal detention facilities, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services. (Nguyen, 3/17)

New Mexico paired a broad public communications campaign with expanded statewide access to measles vaccination for children and adults to end a 2025 measles outbreak and boost statewide measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination rates. The state's multipronged strategy could offer other states a model as the U.S. grapples with local and regional outbreaks of the highly infectious respiratory virus, said Chad Smelser, MD, of the New Mexico Department of Health (NMDOH) in Santa Fe, and colleagues in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. (Rudd, 3/17)

California officials have聽confirmed that nine more elephant seals, a sea lion, and an otter have died from avian flu H5N1 at Ano Nuevo State Park in San Mateo County. 鈥淎s you probably imagine, this count reflects only the animals that have gone through sampling and confirmatory testing in multiple labs,鈥 Christine Johnson, VMD, PhD, director of the Institute for Pandemic Insights at University of California, Davis told local media. 鈥淪o there are likely more animals that we will be updating on in the coming weeks.鈥 (Soucheray, 3/17)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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