Host
On Thursday afternoon, the House of Representatives not only created Donald Trump’s 2017 tax reduction, but also approved a budget adjustment bill that imposes deep cuts on Medicaid, Affordable Care Act and indirectly to Medicare.
Meanwhile, those who appointed the major vaccine advisory panels by the Minister of Health and Human Service of Robert F. Kennedy JR. have been suspected of preservatives used in the flu vaccine for decades using the first official meeting.
This week’s panelist is Julie Rovner of KFF Health News, Alice Miranda Ollstein, Politico’s Maya Goldman and Pink Sheet Sarah Karlin-SMITH.
Take out this week’s episode:
- This week, GOP rolled to the main contraction of the national social safety net, urging Trump’s tax and promoting expenditure bills. This law includes significant changes in the way Medicaid raises and delivers funds. Especially by imposing the first federal work requirements for many registrants. The hospital says that changes will be fatal and can potentially lead to loss of services and facilities that can be contacted not only in patients in Medicaid but also in all patients.
- Some of the proposals for the Trump’s bill were withdrawn, including the ban on federal funds for the state using the state Medicaid funds that covered the treatment of treatments on the treatment that depended on gender during the Senate’s consideration. And for all stories that do not touch Medicare, the impact of the law on the deficit is expected to reduce spending on a program dealing with a program with a 65 -year -old program and a disability.
- Advisory Committee on the newly reconstructed vaccination practices met last week and seemed quite different from the previous meeting. In addition to the new members, there were fewer employees in the disease control and prevention center and the notable being of the vaccine critic. The voting of the panel suggests that the voting for the flu prevention (a plan to review the childhood vaccine schedule) containing mercury -based preservatives suggests:
In addition, for “additional credit”, a panelist suggests a health policy story read this week.
Julie Rofner: Lancet’s “Expect the impact assessment of USAID mediation for 20 years and the impact of defense on mortality by 2030: Subsequent impact assessment and prediction analysisDaniella Medeiros Cavalcanti, et al.
Alice Miranda ollstein: New York Times’ ”‘I feel like I lied’ELI SASLOW.
Maya Goldman: AXIOS ‘“The new document is attending school with old diseases as the gospel falls.Tina reed.
Sarakarin Smith: Wired “Snake poisoning, urine and quest to live forever: Inner bio hacking conference bold by Maha”Will bahr.
Revelation in this week’s episode:
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