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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Jun 23 2026 UPDATED 9:04 AM

Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News Original Stories 2

  • Medicare’s AI Push Snarls Patients and Doctors in Errors and Delays
  • Worried About Your Aging Parents? Welcome to the Caregiving Club

Administration News 1

  • USDA Overstepped When It Banned SNAP Recipients' Sugary Purchases, Judge Rules

Outbreaks and Health Threats 1

  • Construction Of Ebola Quarantine Center In Kenya Brought To Standstill

State Watch 1

  • Woman Says 2 Texas Hospitals Denied Care For Miscarriage Despite Recent Law Meant To Clarify Rules

Health Industry 1

  • 'Huge Implications For Healthcare': Patient Portal Messages Have Surged More Than 150% Since 2020, Analysis Shows

Pharmaceuticals 1

  • Weight Loss Drugs Liraglutide, Semaglutide Appear To Improve Men's Fertility, Study Finds

Public Health 1

  • Study Finds Protein Structure Linked To Alzheimer's, Parkinson's

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Public Health Figures In Political Arena Signal A Healthy Change; Should US Births Be Free?

From Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News - Latest Stories:

Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News Original Stories

Medicare’s AI Push Snarls Patients and Doctors in Errors and Delays

Medicare is testing the use of artificial intelligence to preapprove several healthcare services. Federal health officials say prior authorization can help reduce fraud and contain costs. But doctors and patients describe the trial as ā€œhorrendousā€ and full of red tape so far. ( Darius Tahir , 6/23 )

Worried About Your Aging Parents? Welcome to the Caregiving Club

Being a caregiver can start long before you go to a doctor appointment with a loved one or move your parents into your house. The HealthQ team explores how embracing the role matters — and how the recognition and support that come next can ease a difficult season of life. ( Emily Siner, Nashville Public Radio and Cara Anthony and Blake Farmer, Nashville Public Radio , 6/23 )

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THE TRIPLE-DECKER CLUB

The 90-year-olds,
the kids, and the grandkids all
count on us for help.

— Angela Gyurko

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Summaries Of The News:

Administration News

USDA Overstepped When It Banned SNAP Recipients' Sugary Purchases, Judge Rules

The Agriculture Department does not have the authority to redefine "food," as determined by Congress, nor to alter policy established by lawmakers, U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled.

A federal judge has blocked bans on the usage of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) for soda enacted by the Trump administration. ā€œCongress defined what ā€˜food’ is supposed to be, and it did not authorize the agency to amend or waive the definition it enacted. It did not authorize the agency to cut types of food out of SNAP entirely,ā€ U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson wrote in a Monday filing, referencing the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). (Suter, 6/22)

More from the Trump administration —

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Monday launched a new initiative to speed up early-stage clinical trials as part of an effort to reduce development timelines and reverse a growing trend of companies moving overseas, primarily to China.Ā The pilot program, part of a broader initiative across the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) known as ā€œOperation Trailblazer,ā€ could reduce early trial timelines by six to 12 months, officials said. The FDA also issued guidance clarifying that one high-quality late-stage clinical trial with confirmatory evidence will be sufficient to support approval in many cases. (Weixel, 6/22)

The Trump administration released a memo last week that seeks to upend landmark disability laws and court rulings that prioritize people with disabilities receiving care while living in their community instead of at institutions like nursing homes. (Broderick, 6/22)

Over the next two weeks, the justices will release more than a dozen final opinions, including high-profile decisions on birthright citizenship and transgender athletes. (Marimow, 6/23)

Health news from Capitol Hill —

Senate Republicans’ farm bill proposal rejects Democrats’ demands to delay a planned shift of some food aid costs to states, according to three people familiar with the plans — jeopardizing hopes of winning bipartisan support for the package. Democrats say they will oppose a farm bill that doesn’t push back a requirement that will soon force some states to pay for some Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, a provision included in the domestic policy megalaw Republicans passed last year. (Yarrow, 6/22)

The bipartisan deal on kids’ online safety that the House Energy and Commerce Committee rolled out Monday threatens to derail hopes of passing major tech and AI legislation this year. A major reason: key differences from a kids’ safety and AI package that Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) is negotiating with the Trump administration. The White House is working to shore up support for a Blackburn-led kids’ safety package that could ultimately block or replace some state AI laws. (Miller, Dahlkamp, Wendler and Ng, 6/22)

Majorities of Americans say they're more likely to vote for candidates in November who support ideas to lower their health costs, according to the latest Axios-Ipsos American Health Index. Their support for ideas across the political spectrum — from renewing Affordable Care Act subsidies to expanding direct sales of prescription drugs — shows the power of voters' demands for relief. (Bettelheim and Talev, 6/22)

Outbreaks and Health Threats

Construction Of Ebola Quarantine Center In Kenya Brought To Standstill

All work at the U.S.-backed, 50-bed unit at a military air base in the East African nation has been stopped amid an outbreak that has already outpaced previous epidemics. More than 1,000 people have been infected and 267 have died, the World ā€ŒHealth Organization has confirmed.

Kenyan Health Secretary Aden Duale has frozen the construction of an Ebola isolation facility for US citizens, after he was found guilty of contempt for ignoring a court directive to halt the work. ā€œI have directed the immediate and complete cessation of any intended construction site preparations or related activities concerning the Laikipia air base facilities,ā€ Duale told the High court in Nairobi. ā€œIt was never the intention of the ministry or myself as the cabinet secretary to disregard, undermine, or act in defiance of the orders.ā€ (Herbling, 6/23)

Congo's Ebola ⁠outbreak ⁠has the largest number ⁠of confirmed cases in the first month ​of any Ebola outbreak in Africa, a senior World ā€ŒHealth Organization official told ā€Œa briefing on Tuesday. (6/23)

As Uganda battles a deadly outbreak of the Ebola virus, conservationists are increasing efforts to protect the country's mountain gorillas. (6/22)

Teo Wild traveled to Sierra Leone in 2014 during what is still considered the deadliest Ebola outbreak in history. Wild was a nurse in Colorado at the time, and said the decision to go was simple. "It just seemed like an opportunity to do something good and was something that I was willing to do," Wild said. During that first trip, a piece of broken glass from a medication bottle cut Wild's glove and thumb. Health officials feared possible exposure and flew Wild back to the United States, where they were quarantined for 21 days. Wild said the experience came with many emotions. (Irizarry, 6/22)

On measles, tetanus, and covid —

A person who doesn’t know they are infected with measles may enter a business in Utah and unknowingly expose people they pass by or sit near — yet that business may never appear in public health alerts. County health departments across the state routinely publish lists of these potential exposure sites. But not every location is included. That’s because, state health officials say, a public notification may not be as efficient as reaching people directly, when possible. (Moilanen, 6/22)

Tetanus may sound like a disease from another era, but experts are warning that it remains a serious threat. Two recent reports from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found hundreds of tetanus cases and dozens of deaths over 15 years, along with four cases in children in 2024 alone. At the same time, vaccination rates have declined, worrying experts that more people could become vulnerable to this potentially deadly but preventable infection. (Chiu, 6/23)

A bench trial began Monday for a South Florida woman accused of drowning her 15-month-old daughter, with her defense team arguing she was temporarily insane due to a psychotic episode linked to COVID-19. ... The state challenged the defense's argument that COVID-19 caused the child's death. "COVID is not the issue in this case. There will be no clear and convincing evidence that COVID made this defendant drown her 1-year-old daughter," the prosecutor said. (Maugeri, 6/22)

State Watch

Woman Says 2 Texas Hospitals Denied Care For Miscarriage Despite Recent Law Meant To Clarify Rules

Her complaint alleges that Baylor Scott and White Medical Center in Round Rock and St. David’s Round Rock Medical Center violated the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act, The Texas Tribune reported. Also making news: Oregon, Florida, Michigan, California, and Utah.

Four years after Texas banned nearly all abortions, Lynn Callaway is among women who say they are still being denied the full range of miscarriage care by doctors fearful of being accused of performing a prohibited abortion and spending life in prison or losing their medical licenses. Last year, lawmakers passed a bill aimed at assuring doctors they wouldn’t be punished for treating miscarriages. The law went into effect last June. But months later, in October, Callaway found herself facing the same fear and uncertainty that has restricted pregnancy care in Texas since 2022. (Klibanoff, 6/22)

Nearly two dozen Oregon rural hospitals will receive $37.5 million in state and federal funds to shore up labor and delivery care ahead of Medicaid cuts going into effect next year, though state and hospital officials say the one-time funds are likely a limited solution. The program, which was greenlit by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services last month, combines $15 million in state dollars with more than $22 million in federal matching funds. The money will be distributed to the state’s 21 rural hospitals that provide maternity care, most of which are more than 50 miles from the next closest birth center. (Dawson, 6/22)

More health news from across the U.S. —

Florida is expanding its crackdown on a byproduct of kratom, known as 7-OH, which can be stronger than morphine, highly addictive and even deadly, officials said Monday. The state limited sales of 7-OH last year, in an emergency rule that outlawed the sale of 7-OH over 0.04% concentrate, but new products emerged that skirt the emergency rule. The state's attorney general James Uthmeier announced a new series of restrictions Monday. (Sheridan, 6/23)

Parents of a 2-year-old girl involved in a drowning incident on Memorial Day have sued to stop Texas Children’s Hospital from testing if she’s brain dead, testing a new strategy in Texas’ ā€œright to lifeā€ movement aimed at giving people as much access to life-supporting services as possible. (Ma, 6/22)

The embattled director of the Michigan Department of Corrections is defending conditions inside the state prisons. Heidi Washington, who is facing calls for removal over treatment of female prisoners, on Thursday wrote a letter to US Rep. Debbie Dingell claiming that her department ā€œhas established itself as a national leaderā€ and ā€œprisoner grievancesā€ are common. ā€œWe recognize that prison remains a complicated and at times challenging environment, particularly as many in the population we serve have increasingly complex needs,ā€ Washington wrote. (James, 6/22)

The smoke over Los Angeles has ebbed over the past five days as firefighters battle flare-ups at a fire at a cold-storage facility. East of the downtown skyline, what was a thick, black plume is now a diluted gray haze. But neighbors near the blaze, in the city’s Boyle Heights area, could pay attention to little else. They struggled to breathe. They endured headaches and burning eyes, even indoors. During intense periods of smoke, residents described a dystopian scene, with streets shrouded in darkness and visibility no further than a couple of car lengths. (Mayorquin and Spoto, 6/22)

Billboards flank the freeway, encouraging you to ā€œlove thy selfie.ā€ On television and social media,Ā ā€œThe Secret Lives of Mormon Wivesā€ star Jessi Draper openly discussesĀ the work she’s had done: four breast procedures, a labiaplasty, a nostril reduction, and several other facial surgeries, one of which she isĀ not happy with. Heather Gay, one of ā€œThe Real Housewives of Salt Lake,ā€Ā estimates she’s spent $200,000 on cosmetic procedures. Everywhere you look, it seems there are fuller lips, lifted faces and madeover mommies. Yes, Utah has become a hot spot for plastic surgery. (6/22)

Health Industry

'Huge Implications For Healthcare': Patient Portal Messages Have Surged More Than 150% Since 2020, Analysis Shows

Meanwhile, telephone calls fell slightly during the same time, a study published in JAMA found. An accompanying editorial to the study asserted that the increase in patient portal messages has prompted a "substantial increase in ... clinician workload."

Patient portal messaging has surged in recent years, signaling a significant change in the way physicians deliver care, a cross-sectional analysis of electronic health record data showed. (Fiore, 6/22)

Smart technology has emerged as a new standard of care among hospitals that can afford the investment. Many health systems, including AdventHealth, MetroHealth and Houston Methodist, are making steep investments, partnering with technology vendors to install smart room capabilities at care sites. Systems say the technology helps them provide more personalized care, expand access to off-site clinicians, improve patient safety and increase capacity amid workforce shortages. (Hudson, 6/22)

Health systems are investing in at-home monitoring programs, even though many aren’t making money on the initiatives in the short run. Stanford Health Care, UMass Memorial Health, OSF HealthCare and others are using technology to keep an eye on patients outside hospital walls. Reimbursement doesn’t always cover the cost of the technology and staffing for the services. But providers are banking on remote monitoring programs’ long-term, less easily quantified benefits such as freeing up hospital beds, keeping patients from flooding emergency departments and connecting people to other services. (Eastabrook, 6/22)

The troubled U.S. organ donation system is set for a pivotal series of changes as administrators begin overhauling the process for deciding which organizations work with hospitals to facilitate donations. More than 100,000 Americans are waiting for transplants, and the system has been dogged by patient safety concerns, instances of inappropriate conduct and conflicts of interest among organ procurement groups. (Goldman, 6/23)

On the use of AI in healthcare —

Artificial intelligence most likely saved Louie Quiros’s life. Mr. Quiros, a 45-year-old caregiver and security guard, showed up at a Queens emergency room in February 2025. For the past four days, he said, he had been coughing up blood and finding it harder and harder to breathe. (Kolata, 6/22)

Doctors using OpenEvidence will soon be able to upload an image of an electrocardiogram to get an algorithmic prediction of whether a patient has structural heart disease.Ā (Aguilar, 6/23)

Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News: Medicare’s AI Push Snarls Patients And Doctors In Errors And Delays

Bill Curry, 65, raises cattle on the same land in rural Oklahoma once owned by his father and generations before him. Each quarter, for several years, he has made the 2½-hour drive to Oklahoma City for an epidural in his spine to treat his back pain. But this year, because of a new Medicare program, Curry has traveled a little more often. (Tahir, 6/23)

Chatbots fueled by artificial intelligence bear disclaimers saying they cannot dispense medical advice or diagnose conditions, but they still field millions of queries from users who are sick, trying to decipher medical records or understand their treatment options. Nearly 1 in 3 Americans have turned to the bots for health information, according to a recent survey by KFF, a nonpartisan health policy and education organization. (Nirappil, 6/22)

Pharmaceuticals

Weight Loss Drugs Liraglutide, Semaglutide Appear To Improve Men's Fertility, Study Finds

Liraglutide — an injectable drug from Novo Nordisk that is sold under the brand names Victoza and Saxenda — appeared to increase testosterone, as well as luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone levels, in men aged 18-65 over 24 weeks, The Hill reported. Researchers also found that semaglutide — such as Wegovy or Ozempic — improved sperm morphology.

New research suggests GLP-1 drugs may help address fertility issues in men. Scientists at University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire and Warwick Medical School found improvements in testosterone levels, sperm count, and sperm size and shape. Warwick Medical School’s Dr. Pratibha Natesh said the findings support treating underlying conditions rather than relying on hormone therapy. (Taub, 6/22)

As the federal government expands access to weight-loss drugs for Medicare patients, Walmart and its Sam’s Club subsidiary are ramping up support services for beneficiaries who may be seeking the medications. The Medicare GLP-1 Bridge program, which the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is launching July 1, will allow eligible Part D beneficiaries access to certain GLP-1 drugs often used for weight management. (DeSilva, 6/22)

Millions of Americans with obesity are eagerly awaiting a powerful new drug from Eli Lilly called retatrutide, which has demonstrated bariatric-surgery levels of weight loss. Some aren’t even waiting for approval from the Food and Drug Administration, instead racing to acquire it through sketchy means. But STAT has learned that Eli Lilly and the FDA have allowed one person to gain access to the drug through the FDA’s ā€œcompassionate useā€ program, a pathway that gives patients with serious and immediately life-threatening medical issues access to experimental treatments.Ā (Lawrence, 6/23)

A recent trial suggests apitegromab, when used alongside tirzepatide, may help preserve lean body mass while supporting overall weight loss. The analysis, published in Nature, found apitegromab — a monoclonal antibody — targets myostatin to help maintain muscle mass when combined with the GLP-1 medication. Apitegromab works by inhibiting the activation of myostatin, a protein that limits skeletal muscle growth, according to Medscape. (Taub, 6/22)

The GLP-1 medication tirzepatide may change how the body uses energy, according to new research. The study, presented at the Endocrine Society’s ENDO 2026 meeting, found tirzepatide activates brown adipose tissue. The drug is also sold under the brand names Zepbound and Mounjaro. (Taub, 6/22)

In other pharmaceutical developments —

Pfizer said Monday that an experimental drug it hoped could replace a widely used chemotherapy in one of the most common forms of lung cancer fell short in a clinical trial. (Herper, 6/22)

Josua Lottering stepped out the airport doors in the Bangladesh capital, Dhaka, and doubled over in coughing spasms. Cystic fibrosis has sharply reduced his lung capacity, and the humid, smoggy air hit him hard. Yet even as coughs shook his body, he was delighted. Josua, 18, had made the long journey from the Western Cape in South Africa, to Dhaka, with his mother to purchase a year’s supply of a new generic version of a drug that has transformed the lives of cystic fibrosis patients in North America and Europe but that he and his family cannot afford back home. (Nolen, 6/22)

Public Health

Study Finds Protein Structure Linked To Alzheimer's, Parkinson's

Newsweek reports that experts have uncovered a way to help stop brain changes linked to Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease by manipulating rather than eliminating a protein linked to cognitive decline. Other news is on aging, the gut microbiome, heat, and more.

Scientists have identified a protein that may help stop the brain changes linked to Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. In a study published in Nature Communications, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine found that tubulin—a protein best known for building the cell’s internal "railway tracks"—can prevent harmful protein clumps from forming in brain cells. (Gray, 6/23)

In other news about aging —

Super movers -- adults 80 and older who walk as fast as people 30 years younger -- had lower risks of cognitive impairment, data from multiple cohorts suggested. (George, 6/22)

Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News: Worried About Your Aging Parents? Welcome To The Caregiving Club

Cara Anthony tries to convince her HealthQ co-host Blake Farmer that there are benefits to embracing the caregiver identity when helping an aging parent. When his father was diagnosed with gallbladder cancer in 2025, William Morrison immediately went into caregiving mode. (Siner, Anthony and Farmer, 6/23)

More health and wellness news —

Shopify Inc will ban all vapes from its platform as soon as this week following pressure from a group ​of U.S. state attorneys general aiming to curb sales of illegal e-cigarettes online, according to two sources familiar with its plans. The Ottawa-based company provides the ā€Œunderlying infrastructure that lets millions of merchants operate and scale e-commerce channels. It has been in talks since last year with a bipartisan coalition of 25 state attorneys general, who have been pushing Shopify to do more to clamp down on a booming market for vapes that lack the legally required license for U.S. sales, or violate other laws. (Rumney, 6/23)

That juice box you hand your child as a daily treat could be setting them up for poor heart health later on, a new study says. Drinking fruit juice or sugary sodas throughout childhood may be linked to an increased risk of high blood pressure in adulthood, researchers reported June 22 in the journal Circulation. (Thompson, 6/23)

In the world of wellness and health content, few areas of our anatomy attract more interest lately — and specious claims — than the gut microbiome. This vast ecosystem of bacteria and microorganisms within our intestines shapes our health in profound ways that go well beyond digesting food — our immune system, mood, cognition, metabolism and much more. (Stone, 6/22)

In global health news —

A strengthening heat wave is threatening to break temperature records from France and the UK to Spain and Germany, posing risks to transport, power systems and public health. On Monday, a temperature of 43.3C (110F) was recorded at Chateaumeillant in France, according to government forecaster MƩtƩo-France. Daytime highs are forecast to climb as high as 42C in parts of western France through Thursday. (Wertz, 6/23)

A deadly and record-breaking heat dome has scorched France, where officials and local reports have said at least 45 people have died amid the heat, including 40 by drowning. (Noll and Francis, 6/23)

Pakistan wants to abolish a sales tax on menstrual pads and tampons starting in July, a move that is aimed at making the products more affordable in a country where access to and knowledge about menstrual hygiene remains low. Pakistan’s finance minister, Muhammad Aurangzeb, announced a plan to remove the 18 percent sales tax this month, saying that pads and tampons were ā€œindispensable for women’s health, dignity and full participation in social activities.ā€ (Peltier and Shabir, 6/22)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Public Health Figures In Political Arena Signal A Healthy Change; Should US Births Be Free?

Opinion writers examine these public health topics.

The public health field has spent the past several years wringing its hands about how it has been outcommunicated by its critics, fretting that it needs new strategies and trusted messengers to connect with people in our fractious information environment. ā€œWhat went wrongā€ has become the dominant lens through which we consider the pandemic. (Rachael Bedard, 6/23)

Second lady Usha Vance’s due date is rapidly approaching. I have no idea how healthcare expenses are treated for the vice president’s family. But JD Vance has long been an advocate for $0 out-of-pocket costs for giving birth. He is not alone. A bicameral, bipartisan group in Congress is working to make free birth a reality for all Americans. (Abby McCloskey, 6/22)

There’s a particular cruelty buried in the new Medicaid work requirement rules recently proposed by the administration, and it’s received almost no attention. It’s not just the law itself, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which cut Medicaid by nearly $1 trillion last summer. The problem is the regulation implementing those cuts, which goes further than the law requires. (Maria Town and Nicole Jorwic, 6/23)

A National Institutes of Health study will evaluate whether to screen tens of thousands of healthy infants for genetic diseases. (Daniela J. Lamas, M.D., 6/22)

Sometime before the end of June, the Supreme Court is expected to deliver its opinion in Trump v. Barbara, the case challenging President Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship in the United States. At stake is the long-standing interpretation of the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment, which for more than a century has been understood and affirmed to mean that any child born in the United States, regardless of their parents’ citizenship status, is a U.S. citizen (with a remarkably narrow exception carved out for the children of diplomats). (Rachel E. Fabi, 6/23)

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