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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jun 17 2026 UPDATED 9:16 AM

Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ň•îl Health News Original Stories 3

  • Tennessee Pharmacies Sell Potent Ivermectin, Led by Anti-Vaccine Doctor Who’s Taken ‘Bucketloads’
  • Democrats Seek To Spotlight Rising Health Costs by Forcing Vote on Trump Regulation
  • More Americans Are Surviving Cancer. But the Mental Health Challenges Can Persist.

Healthcare Costs 1

  • States Scrambling To Prep For Biggest Medicaid Change Since ACA: Work Requirements

Vaccines 1

  • A 'Lawful ACIP' Can Meet At Any Time, AAP Contends, Countering RFK Jr.'s Claim

Administration News 1

  • HHS To Oversee Special Education Under Trump's Plan To Dismantle Education Department

Health Industry 1

  • Hospitals Look To Training Programs In Effort To Fill Workforce Gaps

State Watch 1

  • Colorado Docs Won't Provide Youth Gender Care For Fear Of Retribution

Outbreaks and Health Threats 1

  • This Ebola Outbreak Could Become Worst Ever, Head Of Africa CDC Warns

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Cholesterol Guidelines Are Welcome Approach To Assessing Heart Health, But Insurance Is A Sticking Point; Ebola Crisis Needs Global Action

From Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ň•îl Health News - Latest Stories:

Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ň•îl Health News Original Stories

Tennessee Pharmacies Sell Potent Ivermectin, Led by Anti-Vaccine Doctor Who’s Taken ‘Bucketloads’

Four years after the Volunteer State enacted the nation’s first law allowing drugstores to sell ivermectin without patient-specific prescriptions, dozens of pharmacies dispense the drug in highly concentrated pills — many with the help of one anti-vaccine physician. ( Brett Kelman and Rachana Pradhan , 6/17 )

Democrats Seek To Spotlight Rising Health Costs by Forcing Vote on Trump Regulation

Congressional Democrats are seeking to overturn a Trump administration rule they say will hamper Obamacare coverage. Whether they win or lose any floor vote, they’ll likely use it in campaign messaging ahead of the midterms. ( Julie Appleby , 6/17 )

More Americans Are Surviving Cancer. But the Mental Health Challenges Can Persist.

Amid advancements in treatment and screening, more Americans are surviving the disease. But many are left with psychological scars, such as lingering anxiety and depression. ( Natalie Krebs, Iowa Public Radio , 6/17 )

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Summaries Of The News:

Healthcare Costs

States Scrambling To Prep For Biggest Medicaid Change Since ACA: Work Requirements

This month, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services laid out regulations and federal standards for work requirements, which will go live Jan. 1, 2027, Modern Healthcare reports. States claim the newly released CMS guidance differs significantly from the previous general guidance and "will create significant administrative and resource burdens."

The race is on for states to iron out their Medicaid work requirement plans and tie up loose ends for providers, insurers and beneficiaries. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a long-awaited regulation this month laying out federal standards for work requirements. But states facing down a Jan. 1, 2027, deadline to have the system running will have to quickly rethink their strategies because CMS caught them by surprise on key issues. States, health insurance companies, providers, enrollees and other stakeholders have less than six months to implement the biggest change to Medicaid since the Affordable Care Act of 2010 expansion. For policies this complex, that’s no time at all. (Early, 6/16)

In other Medicaid and Medicare news —

Florida’s Medicaid shows the country's fourth largest decline since 2025, and advocates say that means more uninsured children. Meantime, the state prepares for a lawsuit over its stalled KidCare expansion. (Pedersen, 6/17)

With about 110,000 poor adults at risk of losing Medicaid coverage under new federal work rules this January, officials are scrambling to avert a swell in uninsured patients forced to seek care through hospital emergency departments. (Phaneuf and Golvala, 6/17)

Shanna Western still remembers seeing her grandfather waving both hands in unison through a hospital window. He called it his “twin wave,” a greeting and a goodbye to Western and her twin sister. In the 1980s, hospitals generally discouraged children from visiting patients in the hospital rooms. Her grandfather died that night. Western never got the chance to say goodbye in person. (Schabacker, 6/17)

Beneficiaries face a series of complex decisions in enrolling in Medicare coverage, and a key federal panel outlines some of the pain points. The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) released its June report to Congress on Monday, where it notes that when an individual becomes Medicare eligible, they have to immediately make a series of decisions about coverage that may be confusing. (Minemyer and Muoio, 6/16)

Scammers have gotten crafty about tricking people out of their money, and often they use purported Medicare concerns as a way into the wallets of older people. (Neumann, 6/16)

Pushback on ACA regulation —

Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ň•îl Health News: Democrats Seek To Spotlight Rising Health Costs By Forcing Vote On Trump Regulation

In a move that mixes pure politics with weedy congressional procedures, Senate Democrats are seeking to force a vote to overturn a Trump administration rule that they say will make it harder to enroll in Affordable Care Act health plans and sharply raise out-of-pocket costs for those who do. The measure is unlikely to pass in the Republican-controlled Congress, but Democrats could use the vote against their opponents on the campaign trail. When the ACA rule was released in May, the Trump administration touted it as a means to combat enrollment fraud, lower premiums for some people, and offer a wider range of insurance plans, including ones with no set network of doctors or hospitals. (Appleby, 6/17)

Vaccines

A 'Lawful ACIP' Can Meet At Any Time, AAP Contends, Countering RFK Jr.'s Claim

MedPage Today reports on HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s claim that the CDC's vaccine panel is unable to meet ahead of the fall flu season while a lawsuit is pending. The American Academy of Pediatrics pushed back, stating that the federal government has the power to install lawful panelists with the specialized knowledge to make evidence-based vaccine recommendations.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) pushed back on HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s claims that the CDC's vaccine panel is unable to meet due to a recent ruling in a lawsuit challenging changes to the U.S. childhood immunization schedule. On June 12, Kennedy took to X to announce the filing of a motion asking the First Circuit Court of Appeals to expedite an appeal of the district court's order that he contended left the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) "without a quorum." The AAP rebuffed this claim. (Henderson, 6/16)

Legal and public health experts expressed concern about HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s scrutiny of a medical journal's decision to remove a study that purportedly suggested an increased incidence of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) within a few days after vaccination. (Frieden, 6/16)

Ahead of an advisory committee meeting this week, FDA reviewers raised no serious efficacy or safety concerns about Moderna's mRNA flu vaccine candidate for adults 50 and older, which has the potential to become the first such product approved by the agency. (Rudd, 6/16)

Parents were more willing to allow their children to receive a vaccine against human papillomavirus (HPV) if they interacted with a chatbot powered by artificial intelligence (AI) compared with parents who received no information about the vaccine. The chatbot’s effects faded after 45 days, suggesting the benefits were short-lived, according to a randomized controlled trial of 1,297 parents of children not yet immunized against HPV. The results were published last week in JAMA Network Open. (Szabo, 6/16)

The latest in science and innovations —

A Boston company treated its first patient with a therapy intended to allow aging optic nerve cells to behave as though they were young again. (Hille, 6/16)

A multidisciplinary group of menopause experts developed new comorbidity-specific guidance on non-hormone therapy for moderate-to-severe vasomotor symptoms. (Robertson, 6/16)

Adults with prediabetes randomized to a lifestyle intervention had a significantly lower risk of developing multiple chronic conditions over time compared with a placebo group, a benefit not seen among those assigned to metformin, long-term data from the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) trial showed. (Monaco, 6/16)

Administration News

HHS To Oversee Special Education Under Trump's Plan To Dismantle Education Department

The Trump administration plans to move the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services — which currently manages billions of dollars in grants and oversees state compliance with the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act — to the Department of Health and Human Services, the AP reports.

President Donald Trump’s administration on Tuesday accelerated its dismantling of the Education Department, delegating much of its work to protect the nation’s at-risk students. The Department of Justice will take on enforcement of civil rights in education, while the Department of Health and Human Services will oversee special education, administration officials announced. With those moves, the Education Department has now carved away the vast majority of its functions for other agencies to handle. (Ma, 6/17)

The Trump administration’s sweeping federal spending reviews slowed government efforts to contain the New World screwworm, according to three former Agriculture Department officials and a fourth person with knowledge of the matter. USDA reviews held up funding for the construction of one facility that is crucial to slowing the flesh-eating pest’s threat to the U.S. cattle supply, according to the three former officials, who like the fourth person were granted anonymity to discuss internal decision-making. A $100 million research initiative designed to create new tools to slow the screwworm’s advance was also delayed, two of the former officials said. (Brown, 6/17)

Updates from the FDA and the CDC —

The FDA informed healthcare providers about disruptions in the supply of stereotactic breast biopsy needles that will likely persist through March 2027. According to the agency, the disruption is expected to impact patient care and "may require adjustments to the clinical management of patients indicated to undergo a breast biopsy." (Bassett, 6/16)

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a third over-the-counter version of naloxone nasal spray Tuesday, in a move the agency said could save lives and reduce costs. The agency approved another Rextovy, a 4 milligram naloxone nasal spray for the emergency treatment of opioid overdose. FDA said consumers may directly buy it in pharmacies, convenience stores and online. Naloxone is a medicine that can help reduce opioid overdose deaths and when administered in time, usually within minutes of the first signs of an opioid overdose, can counter the overdose effects. (Weixel, 6/16)

Infant mortality in the U.S. dropped to a new all-time low in 2025, according to preliminary government data. There were slightly fewer than 5.4 infant deaths per 1,000 live births in 2025, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While that appears to be a small decline from about 5.5 in 2024 and 5.6 in the two years preceding, researchers say it is statistically meaningful and translates to hundreds of fewer infant deaths per year. (Stobbe, 6/16)

In other administration news —

The U.S. Justice Department accused New York state officials Tuesday of facilitating fraud, saying they let a Georgia company use a sham bidding process to gain control of and then abuse a $10 billion program to provide home care to disabled Medicaid patients. Federal lawyers made the claims in a civil lawsuit in Brooklyn federal court, naming the state’s Department of Health, its Medicaid director and the Alpharetta, Georgia-based company Public Partnerships LLC, as defendants. (Izaguirre and Neumeister, 6/16)

The Trump administration is helping one of Elon Musk’s companies fight a civil rights lawsuit that alleges it is illegally running dozens of natural gas turbines to power a $20 billion AI data center in Mississippi. The NAACP and other groups say Musk’s xAI subsidiary failed to get a permit for its power plant — which is located near homes, schools and churches — creating health risks for families in North Mississippi and nearby Memphis and violating the federal Clean Air Act. (Daly and Condon, 6/17)

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) on Monday announced the launch of a new office aimed at reducing the use of animal-based research testing and boosting the use of testing methods that “better reflect human biology.” NIH’s new office will be named the Office of Research Innovation, Validation, and Application (ORIVA). Reducing animal testing has been among the primary goals within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s tenure. (Choi, 6/16)

Contractors running Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities can rely more heavily on artificial intelligence tools to communicate with detainees while continuing to pay people they hold $1 per day for “voluntary work,” under relaxed detention standards released Monday. ICE said the standards, which apply to for-profit contractors and jails that hold detainees, were revised with input from partners to “reduce the burden on our detention operators.” Experts said the changes would help contractors limit legal liability, reduce costs and get more operational flexibility while doing little, if anything, to improve conditions for roughly 60,000 people currently detained. (Foley, 6/16)

Also —

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is turning up with regularity in the House districts that will decide the midterms. With his visit to Charlotte, Michigan, on Tuesday to discuss his Make America Healthy Again agenda with freshman GOP Rep. Tom Barrett, Kennedy will have been in four in the last six weeks. Last week, he toured an elder care program in Thornton, Colorado, outside Denver in the district of Republican Gabe Evans. The week before he spoke at a dairy farm in western Wisconsin about the benefits of drinking whole milk alongside Republican Derrick Van Orden. (Paun, 6/16)

Health Industry

Hospitals Look To Training Programs In Effort To Fill Workforce Gaps

Modern Healthcare reports that health systems are increasingly paying to train and educate workers to fill chronically short-staffed positions, as well as seeking higher-education partnerships. Other industry news is on mental health via telehealth, AI, and more.

Health systems are stepping up efforts to increase the skills of clinicians and support staff, seeking to blunt the effects of limits on student loans, high workforce expenses and reimbursement pressures. More than ever, they are paying for workers’ training and certifications to fill chronically short-staffed positions including respiratory therapists, medical assistants, certified registered nurse anesthetists, radiology technicians, physical therapists and pharmacy technicians. Subsidizing their education helps not only with recruitment but also with retention. (Kacik and DeSilva, 6/16)

Telehealth utilization increased 10.1% across the U.S. from the fourth quarter of 2025 to the first three months of 2026, a new report from Fair Health found. Telehealth utilization, measured as a percentage of medical claim lines, increased from 5.01% of medical claim lines in the fourth quarter of 2025 to 5.51% in Q1 2026. The relative increase was 12% in the Midwest, 11.8% in the Northeast, 9% in the South and 8.1% in the West, Fair Health data indicated. (Gleeson, 6/16)

Epic Staffing Group will rebrand as part of a settlement agreement with Epic Systems. The electronic health record giant filed a trademark infringement lawsuit against the staffing company in 2024. The two companies entered into a settlement agreement last month, according to documents filed with the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. Under the terms of the agreement, the claims against Epic Staffing Group will be dismissed without prejudice. (Famakinwa, 6/16)

Health systems dove headfirst into artificial intelligence to discover new ways to address clinical and operational challenges. Now they’re taking steps to ensure they aren’t in over their heads, testing too many ideas simultaneously. To avoid AI pilot proliferation, providers are taking a disciplined approach, which has allowed them to move past the hype and find out what actually works. (Famakinwa, 6/16)

The foundation of Chicago philanthropists John and Kathy Schreiber is donating $35 million to Northwestern Medicine to create a new institute to support healthcare for vulnerable patients and communities. (Schencker, 6/16)

State Watch

Colorado Docs Won't Provide Youth Gender Care For Fear Of Retribution

A court order is forcing Children’s Hospital Colorado to resume gender-affirming care for trans youth, the Colorado Sun reports, but doctors at the hospital have refused to provide the care over fear of losing their licenses or facing criminal charges.

Children’s Hospital Colorado said Monday that it was resuming gender-affirming care for transgender youth after it was forced to do so by a court order but that none of its doctors are willing to actually provide the care. (Brown, 6/16)

After struggling with a history of mental illness, including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, a 44-year-old woman was admitted to Albany Care psychiatric facility in Evanston in 2023 for her own health and safety. However, in October of that year, the woman was left alone and unsupervised when a man who also lived at the facility entered her room and raped her, according to a lawsuit filed last year in Cook County on the woman’s behalf, charging negligence by Albany Care. (McCoppin, 6/16)

After two weeks of damning government evidence at trial, a former Florida nursing school operator pleaded guilty on Monday to running a diploma mill for thousands of nurses rather than present a defense and let a jury decide her fate in federal court. Prosecutors linked the diploma mill to the death of a patient in a St. Louis hospital. (Weaver, 6/16)

Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ň•îl Health News: Tennessee Pharmacies Sell Potent Ivermectin, Led By Anti-Vaccine Doctor Who’s Taken ‘Bucketloads’

Four years ago, Tennessee became the first state to allow adults to buy the antiparasitic drug ivermectin from a pharmacy without first seeing a doctor. Pharmacies can use a pre-written, blanket prescription to sell to just about anyone who walks through their doors. The drug is now marketed and sold across the state in roadside shops and small-town strip malls with little oversight from health authorities. Highway billboards advertise ivermectin as “Available Without a Prescription in Tennessee!” while dozens of pharmacies offer highly concentrated pills, sometimes at 10 or 20 times the potency of a standard tablet. (Kelman and Pradhan, 6/17)

At North Carolina schools that provide behavioral health care remotely, teachers and school staff say they’re seeing an impact on students’ behavioral challenges. (Fernandez, 6/17)

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine, who has repeatedly postponed executions over the past seven years, said Tuesday that Ohio should abolish the death penalty, confirming his change of heart on the policy he helped write as a state legislator 45 years ago. DeWine, 79, said during a news conference that data indicates the death penalty is not serving as a deterrent to violent crime, which he had always believed was its moral imperative. “I do not believe that argument today can be successfully made, nor do I believe that there’s any chance in the future the facts that I’ve cited to support that belief will change,” he said. “Therefore, I believe Ohio should abolish the death penalty.” (Carr Smyth and Aftoora-Orsagos, 6/16)

Outbreaks and Health Threats

This Ebola Outbreak Could Become Worst Ever, Head Of Africa CDC Warns

With lagging contact tracing, the head of Africa's Centres for Disease Control and Prevention worries that the latest outbreak of the Ebola virus in the Democratic Republic of the Congo could become the worst on record.

Today the head of Africa's Centres for Disease Control and Prevention warned that thousands of case contacts have not been traced in the ongoing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). “If we don't stop the outbreak very soon, it will be worse than what we had in West Africa and eastern ‌DRC,” Africa CDC Director-General Jean Kaseya, MD, MPH, said during a virtual meeting of African heads of state in Burundi. Kaseya was referring to an outbreak in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone in 2014 to 2016 that killed more than 11,000 people. (Soucheray, 6/16)

Whenever Ebola comes, some of the afflicted choose the road to the nearest hospital. Others take the path to the shrine of a traditional healer, often with devastating consequences. Many view the onset of hemorrhagic fever as a spiritual affliction and seek out herbs and prayers instead of going to the hospital. This is the case now in Congo, which is suffering its seventeenth outbreak of Ebola since 1976, when the virus was first identified in the rich Congo Basin ecosystem. (Muhumuza, 6/17)

The latest on measles, Rickettsia lanei, covid, and New World screwworm —

The County of Santa Clara Public Health Department is warning of a public measles exposure in San Francisco International Airport (SFO) and Santa Clara County. Santa Clara Public Health said the person visited public places while contagious with measles, traveling through SFO and other several San Jose locations on June 8. “The person with measles is an adult believed to be exposed to measles during international travel. Further information about the individual will not be released for reasons of medical privacy,” according to Santa Clara Public Health. (Smith, 6/16)

A California resident was hospitalized this spring with an extremely rare tick-borne illness documented in only four known human infections worldwide, according to the California Department of Public Health. The patient was diagnosed in April with an infection involving Rickettsia lanei, a newly recognized bacterium in the spotted fever group of Rickettsia. The public health department said the infection was likely acquired in Northern California. (Vaziri, 6/16)

Children diagnosed as having multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) following COVID-19 infection are more likely to have new and lingering health conditions than those not diagnosed with MIS-C, according to study published last week in Pediatrics. MIS-C, a rare but potentially deadly post-viral hyperinflammatory condition that often requires hospitalization, occurs in some children following COVID-19. While previous research indicated that some symptoms waned two years after infection, this new paper is the first to show that health complications can persist up to 4.5 years after COVID-19. (Holohan, 6/16)

The New World screwworm (NWS), a parasitic fly that had been eliminated from the United States for 60 years before reappearing in Texas earlier this month, has traditionally been considered a threat to livestock and wild animals. But a report of screwworm in a New Mexico dog last week highlights the insect’s danger to pets. (Szabo, 6/15)

Cancer updates —

Erika Nyhus thought she was done having children. The mother of two had required medical intervention to become pregnant in the past, and she’d been told that the breast cancer treatment she’d completed would further diminish her fertility. Then two-and-a-half years ago, feeling rundown after returning home from a family trip, she took a pregnancy test out of an abundance of caution. She assumed it would be negative. (Luthra, 6/16)

Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ň•îl Health News: More Americans Are Surviving Cancer. But The Mental Health Challenges Can Persist

The cancer diagnosis came as a shock, disrupting Morgan Newman’s plans for launching her life. It was 2015, and she was working as a dental assistant in Des Moines, Iowa, while studying to become a social worker. After an abnormal result on her Pap smear, her doctor brought her back in to check the tissue for signs of cancer. Newman wasn’t that concerned at first. She was only 24 years old. (Krebs, 6/17)

A daily pill doubled patients’ survival in metastatic pancreatic cancer treatment by blocking one of the primary drivers of the tumor, researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles reported. (Hille, 6/16)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Cholesterol Guidelines Are Welcome Approach To Assessing Heart Health, But Insurance Is A Sticking Point; Ebola Crisis Needs Global Action

Opinion writers tackle these public health topics.

Last week, I found myself in a situation that could soon be familiar to a lot more Americans: sliding into a CT scanner with a smattering of electrodes attached to my chest and ribs, my arms raised over my head. A serene voice asked me to take a small breath and hold it. A loudish whirring from the machine, a few shifts of the table, and another request for a small breath later, and suddenly I was sliding back out. (Lisa Jarvis, 6/16)

Ebola, a deadly virus, is spreading rapidly through parts of central Africa. By the time the outbreak was confirmed in mid-May, hundreds of potential cases had been identified, suggesting the strain had been circulating for months undetected. Although the US’s retreat from global health initiatives isn’t directly to blame for this crisis, depleted resources are making things worse. (6/16)

Polycystic ovary syndrome was always a misnomer. Its new name will help women get proper treatment. (Leana S. Wen, 6/16)

I knock on the door and open it. Before I say anything, there is silence. My patient had been through more than someone in his 30s ever should: a transplant, post-transplant lymphoma, chemotherapy, a relapse in the central nervous system, months of treatment that had taken apart the life he once knew, and then another auto transplant. His entire family was there, sitting close together, bracing for what I might say. (Khushali Jhaveri, 6/17)

For years, my family noticed my father making small mistakes. We did what most families do: We explained it away. The stress of his schedule, we said — he was working constantly, under real pressure. But when he came to meet my second daughter the week after she was born, I could no longer explain it away. (Elizabeth Bevins, 6/16)

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