Host
Susan Monarez has been identified as the head of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention this week, and has been found in a dramatic Senate’s hearing this week, and another expelled CDC official and direct health and human service ministers of Robert F. Kennedy I was fired directly with the initial testimony.
Monarez ordered Kennedy to approve the change of vaccine schedules when Kennedy was soon recommended by the CDC advisory panel regardless of scientific evidence, and to launch a senior career scientist who did not share his vaccine views.
Meanwhile, the Republican Party and the Democratic Party played a role in government funding and took less than two weeks before the potential closing. Unless Republicans agree to expand their expansion subsidies for low medical law insurance plans that will expire at the end of the year, the Democratic Party, who has the right to vote to pass the bill, will not vote to open the government. The Republicans are resisting the call, but some are concerned that premium spikes will affect their voters.
This week’s panelist is Julie Rovner of KFF Health News, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health School and Politico’s Alice Margot sanger-katz of Miranda Ollstein and New York Times.
Take out this week’s episode:
- Senator Bill Cassidy Senator (R-LA.) -Help Committe Chairman sang a hearing, and Senator Bill Cassidy, a gastrointestinal specialist, pushes his GOP colleagues in particular about the importance of GOP colleagues, especially the newborn vaccination of newborns for next year’s re-election. Cassidy is experiencing the prevailing status of Trump’s government’s health problems.
- The hearing showed a wide range of passage contracts that had eroded trust in CDC. The Democratic Party pointed out the Kennedy and the Trump administration, and the Republican Party condemned the agency’s handling of Covid-19 Pandemic. Historically, Americans tended to trust public health officials. Now the state has begun to create a policy patch.
- The Congress is struggling to agree with the stop gap measures to maintain the federal funding to increase the possibility of the government closing on October 1. The Democratic Party is expanding the Federal ACA subsidies as part of the contract, but this problem can begin November 1 by injecting uncertainty into this year’s public registration process.
- And for 11 hours, more details on the $ 50 billion rural health fund inserted in Trump’s major domestic policy laws. As the federal government has begun to apply for funding for the state, it is clear that a string is attached, and it is clear that the funds have not been completely designated for rural hospitals.
This week, Lobner interviewed Troyen Brennan, the chief medical officer of AETNA and CVS, with a new book about primary care, “Wonderful and Broken.”
In addition, for “additional credit”, the panelist suggests a health policy story read or written this week.
Julie Rofner: New York Times Magazine “Trump is closing the war.”Of Jonathan Mahler.
Margot sanger-katz: Propublica’s “Programs for students with hearing and vision loss that have been damaged by Trump’s anti -diversity promotionJODI S. Cohen and Jennifer Smith Richards.
Alice Miranda ollstein: New York Times’ ”I have dental insurance. Why do you pay so much for treatment?Erica Sweeney.
Who is Joanne: POLITICO MAGAZINE “Why voters have the impact of GOP health cuts in the middle“About Janake.
It was also mentioned in this podcast this week.
- NBC News’ ”Data Survey: Children’s vaccination rate”,“ Erika Edwards, Jason Kane, Stephanie Gosk, Mustafa Fattah and Joe Murphy.
- Washington Post “Why one in six American parents refuses vaccines”By Lauren Weber, Scott Clement, Emily Guskin and Lena H. Sun.
- Politician’s “Rural health ‘Kia Game’ is in progress”Alice miranda ollstein.
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