White House Expands Medicaid Fraud Probe, Turns Spotlight To New York
The look at New York's program comes a week after the Trump administration froze nearly $260 million of Minnesota's Medicaid funding. Also in the news: the impact of the Medicaid work mandate on homeless Californians; the rate of Tylenol use by pregnant women in ERs after President Donald Trump's September autism comments; and more.
President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration is expanding its crackdown on state Medicaid programs to New York, launching a fraud probe in the state a week after it said it was freezing nearly $260 million in Medicaid funding in Minnesota over similar accusations. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz announced Tuesday that the Trump administration identified concerning trends in New York鈥檚 Medicaid program and demanded that state officials provide details about their handling of fraud, waste and abuse within 30 days or risk deferred payments. (Swenson and Izaguirre, 3/5)
On a brisk January morning, physician assistant Brett Feldman searched the streets of Los Angeles for patients, knocking on car windows and peering into tents. It was the day after a winter storm had doused the city, and many of the unhoused people Feldman usually treats had moved to find somewhere dry. Feldman leads the street medicine team at the USC Keck School of Medicine, providing primary care to thousands of L.A.鈥檚 homeless individuals. Many have chronic conditions, mental health disorders, wounds or other medical issues; they need health care desperately. (Hwang, 3/5)
Social workers are scrambling to alert recipients and help them find jobs before their aid is eliminated under President Trump鈥檚 sweeping domestic policy law. (Haag, 3/6)
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杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News鈥 鈥榃hat The Health?鈥: 40 Years Of Health Policy
This month marks host Julie Rovner鈥檚 40th anniversary reporting on health policy in Washington. Over that time, she鈥檚 covered a vast range of topics, from the response to the AIDS epidemic, to Medicare and Medicaid changes, to the fight over the 鈥淧atients鈥 Bill of Rights鈥 鈥 and a half-dozen major reform fights, including the introduction of the Affordable Care Act and the efforts to repeal it. (Rovner, 3/5)
In other health news about the Trump administration 鈥
President Trump told pregnant women in September 2025 to avoid Tylenol because taking it would increase their babies' risk of autism: "Taking Tylenol is not good 鈥 I'll say it: It's not good." Doctors and scientists quickly said the data didn't support the president's claim, but emergency room orders for Tylenol, or acetaminophen, for pregnant patients went down 10% in the months that followed, according to a new study in The Lancet. There was no change in the acetaminophen orders for comparable women who weren't pregnant. (Lupkin, 3/5)
A group of 53 medical schools pledged to increase the amount of time spent on medical students' nutrition education starting this fall, HHS announced Thursday. "I'm pleased to announce a transformative breakthrough in medical education," HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said at a press conference at the department's headquarters. "It will reshape the way that we train doctors in our country and deliver on President Trump's promise to end the chronic disease epidemic in America." (Frieden, 3/5)
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Six Federal Scientists Run Out By Trump Talk About The Work Left Undone
Marc Ernstoff, a physician who has pioneered immunotherapy research and treatments for cancer patients, said his work as a federal scientist proved untenable under the Trump administration. Philip Stewart, a Rocky Mountain Laboratories researcher focused on tick-borne diseases, said he retired two years earlier than planned because of hurdles that made it too challenging to do his job well. (Pradhan and Houghton, 3/6)
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The People 鈥 And Research 鈥 Lost In The NIH Exodus
Sylvia Chou specializes in communication between patients and their health care providers, and social media鈥檚 role in public health. She joined the federal government in 2007 as a fellow and became a civil servant in 2010. She left her National Cancer Institute job in January, she said, because the 鈥渨ork is no longer based on facts or truth.鈥 After President Donald Trump returned to office, Chou said, health communication scientists like her were falsely accused of 鈥渆ssentially doing propaganda work.鈥 (Pradhan and Houghton, 3/6)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. eats steak for breakfast, and has been accused by family members of blending up mice and chickens to feed his hawks and cutting off a dead whale鈥檚 head to bring it home. But he has nonetheless found common cause with one of America鈥檚 most uncompromising animal rights groups. The health secretary鈥檚 kinship with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals 鈥 which has reported popping champagne at its Virginia headquarters to celebrate 鈥 stems from Kennedy鈥檚 determination to end animal testing. (Gardner, 3/5)
In news about HHS chief RFK Jr. 鈥
Americans are losing confidence in the nation鈥檚 public health agencies, according to a survey from the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania. The survey of 1,650 adults, conducted last month, found that on matters of health, a majority of Americans say they have far more confidence in their own doctors, pediatricians and career scientists at federal agencies than the political appointees charged with overseeing those scientists. (Edwards, 3/5)
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This Doctor-Senator Who Backed RFK Jr. Now Faces A Fight For His Job 鈥 And His Legacy
The ambitious liver doctor would go just about anywhere in his home state to give people the hepatitis B vaccine. Bill Cassidy offered jabs to thousands of inmates at Louisiana鈥檚 maximum-security prison in the early 2000s. A decade before that, he set up vaccine clinics in middle schools, a model hailed nationally as a success. 鈥淗e got that whole generation immunized in East Baton Rouge,鈥 said Holley Galland, a retired doctor who worked with Cassidy vaccinating schoolchildren. (Seitz, 3/6)
Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) Robert F. Kennedy Jr has responded to public backlash about his announcement that Dunkin' Donuts will be asked to hand over "safety data," in a call to review the health impact of its beverages. Last week, the health secretary said at a rally in Austin: "We鈥檙e going to ask Dunkin鈥 Donuts and Starbucks, 鈥楽how us the safety data that show that it鈥檚 okay for a teenage girl to drink an iced coffee with 115 grams of sugar in it.'" He added: "I don鈥檛 think they鈥檙e going to be able to do it." (Laws, 3/6)