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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Jul 8 2026 8:41 AM

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Should AI Companions Be Used For Dementia Care?; A Peace Prize Starts With Stopping Ebola

Opinion writers discuss these public health topics.

After Doug met Jane, he felt good. So too did Gabriella, his wife. Doug — a retired minister and writer — needed someone to talk to, and in conversation about his many accomplishments, Jane was indefatigable. For at least a few hours, Doug’s boredom vanished, and Gabriella no longer felt like an activities director on a cruise ship. (Jason Karlawish, 7/8)

Winning a Nobel Peace Prize could finally be within reach for President Trump. Quick action to arrest the spread of Ebola through Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, with 1,561 confirmed cases and counting, might be exactly what he needs to persuade the Nobel Committee in his favor.  (Benjamin L. Sievers, 7/7)

A cardiologist reviews an echocardiogram flagged by an algorithm she did not choose, trained on data she has never seen, deployed by a health system that did not ask for her input. The algorithm recommends a diagnosis. She disagrees. She overrides it. The patient does well. (Afnan R. Tariq and Ami Bhatt, 7/8)

Behind closed doors, millions of Americans are stepping into one of the hardest roles they’ll ever take on: caring for their aging parents. (Amada Su and Emily Holzknecht, 7/8)

A secret shopper survey conducted by researchers at Yale University and published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association offers an alarming, if unsurprising, glimpse into the world of telehealth purveyors of GLP-1 medicines. It confirms what doctors have worried about for years: The popular obesity drugs are being cavalierly prescribed. It should be yet another wake-up call for regulators. (Lisa Jarvis, 7/6)

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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