- Michigan practice to close
- Heartland Dental added 5 de novos, 2 affiliations in March
- Surgeon general nomination stalls with no committee vote in sight
- Regulators zero in on hospital contracting
- Regulators zero in on hospital contracting
- Emergency dental office chain adds VideaHealth AI technology
- ChristianaCare, CHOP collaborate on specialty pediatrics
- Dental Care Alliance’s 3-year growth recap: 30+ moves
- Proposed Maine bill would allow optometrists to perform eye surgeries
- Cardiology’s 2026 Match by the numbers
- PDS Health opens practices in California, Virginia
- OHSU opens $650M cancer pavilion
- Lakeland Regional Health plans 2 freestanding EDs
- Supreme Court backs challenge to Colorado conversion therapy ban
- Virginia behavioral health hospital names president
- After Man’s Death Following Insurance Denials, West Virginia Tackles Prior Authorization
- FTC: Evidence too strong to toss USAP antitrust case
- Average tuition for 12 best dental schools in the US
- Lifepoint Health to acquire 8 ScionHealth hospitals
- The Hospitals Winning on LOS Have Better Technology – and They Know How to Use It.
- New York medical society demands physician privileges be protected in Maimonides merger
- 4 hospital, health system layoffs in March
- Texas to lead ibogaine research after pharma proposals fall short
- Advocate plans largest drone delivery network and 2 more supply chain updates
- AI scribes linked to time savings at 5 health systems
- New Hampshire ASC 1st in US to earn new accreditation
- Amgen drug under FDA review in wake of 8 deaths
- Hennepin Healthcare warns of closure without legislative funding
- Hennepin Healthcare warns of closure without legislative funding
- Visa renewal delays sideline physicians at US hospitals
- Ohio GI practice acquired
- 8 revenue cycle headlines to know from March
- Hundreds of U.S. Hospitals at Risk of Shutting Down From Medicaid Cuts
- Ensemble, Cohere building first RCM-native LLM
- Honey Almond Cream Cheese, Sold at Einstein Bros. Bagels, Recalled Due To Undeclared Nuts
- Trump Supports Surgeon General Pick Despite Senate Concerns
- 4 health systems back in the black in 2025
- ‘Our stockholders are the members of our community’: Inside Carilion Clinic’s mission-driven margin strategy
- Lilly answers Novo's GLP-1 pill with highly anticipated FDA nod for Foundayo
- Supreme Court Blocks Colorado Limits on Therapy for LGBTQ Minors
- Hospital groups call on Congress to refine long-term care hospital payments
- Antidepressant Might Help Long COVID Fatigue, Study Says
- Home-Delivered Groceries Boost Heart Health In Food Deserts, Study Says
- Nicotine E-Cigarettes Help Smokers Quit, Review Concludes
- Kinesio Taping’s Benefits in Doubt, Major Evidence Review Finds
- High Sodium Intake May Trigger New Heart Failure
- Study Shows BMI Often Gets Your Weight Category Wrong
- Clinicians are burnt out. Peer support can help
- Novo's Wegovy nets cardio nod from UK cost gatekeeper, adding 1M+ eligible patients
- Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act Darkens Outlook for Government-Backed Clinics
- Readers Sound Off on Wage Garnishment, Work Requirements, and More
- CVS Health opens pharmacy-only locations as it rightsizes store footprint
- How Rural Health Systems Are Advancing Cardiac Imaging
- How Rural Health Systems Are Advancing Cardiac Imaging
- Beyond Reimbursement: Why Market Access is MedTech’s Strategic North Star
- Beyond Reimbursement: Why Market Access is MedTech’s Strategic North Star
- Evotec hires exec with AI experience to lead rebooted commercial team
- The Human Side of AI Medical Devices: Why Safety Depends on Design, Not Just Algorithms
- The Human Side of AI Medical Devices: Why Safety Depends on Design, Not Just Algorithms
- Whoop raises $575M series G, Abbott comes on board amid hiring spree
- True ROI of health tech, according to finance leaders
- ‘There isn't as much meat left to cut’: Biopharma layoffs maintain slowdown in Q1
- Where 6 specialty DSOs stand in 2026
- Intermountain joins national trauma, grief network
- Practice closures, new dental schools, DLRs & more: 6 dental updates in New York
- Workforce, patient care, private equity & more: 5 statistics scaring dentists
- American Society of Addiction Medicine updates youth treatment standards
- The shifting oral surgery landscape
- Moody’s upgrades UK King’s Daughters’ credit rating
- Private equity in dentistry has gotten smarter
- University Hospitals swings from loss to 2.6% margin in 2025
- Mark Cuban backs bill to break up vertically integrated insurers
- Lawmakers introduce child suicide prevention bill
- Bipartisan bill introduced to stabilize physicians' year-to-year pay changes
- UnitedHealthcare launches Avery, a generative AI companion for members
- 14 behavioral health executive moves to know
- Missouri agencies warn of rising nitazene threat
- Only 44% of SUD treatment facilities accept older patients on Medicare: HHS report
- 7 state behavioral health policy updates
- FDA flags serious liver injury cases, 8 deaths with ‘reasonable’ link to Amgen's Tavneos
- Uninsured patients drive nearly 40% of healthcare collections: Cedar survey
- Novo Nordisk cuts 400 roles at troubled Bloomington site
- Former U.S. Surgeon General Challenges Trump Nominee
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- Iterum initiates wind-down after failure to offload antibiotic with sluggish sales
- Over 10.2 Million Grill Brushes Recalled Over Metal Bristle Risk
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- Short Bursts of Exercise Linked To Lower Risk of Major Diseases
- HHS urges hospitals to align patient menus with updated dietary guidance
- Hartford HealthCare, K Health launch PatientGPT, new AI tool to help patients find health information
- Ensemble partners with Cohere to build first RCM-native large language model
- API supplier BASF raises prices up to 20% in response to rising energy, raw material costs
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- Cold Weather More Deadly For The Heart Than Heat, Study Finds
- Teens' Sleep Patterns Affect Their Diet, Exercise, Study Says
- 'Watch and Wait' Approach Safe For Women With Precancerous Breast Condition, Trial Finds
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- States pay Deloitte, others millions to comply with Trump law to cut Medicaid rolls
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- Insulet hires Stryker vet, reinstating commercial chief role as C-suite overhaul continues
- FDA extends review of Orca Bio’s novel cell therapy for blood cancers
- Nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation sues CMS over AI prior authorization demonstration
- CDRH Guidance: Patient Preference Information (PPI) in Medical Device Decision Making
- CDRH Guidance: Patient Preference Information (PPI) in Medical Device Decision Making
- BSCI’s LAAC CHAMPION-AF study for WATCHMAN FLX meets primary and secondary safety and efficacy endpoints
- BSCI’s LAAC CHAMPION-AF study for WATCHMAN FLX meets primary and secondary safety and efficacy endpoints
- Apple Store to ID Regulated Medical Device Apps
- Apple Store to ID Regulated Medical Device Apps
- CMS: This year's open enrollment brought fewer signups, higher premiums
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- Lilly presses for UK deal that would see higher drug prices in exchange for resumed investments: FT
- United plots Tyvaso FDA filing after ph. 3 win elicits talk of 'new IPF standard' and blockbuster sales
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- 9 Now Sickened in Outbreak Tied To Raw Milk and Cheese
- BMS, Novartis, Gilead, Iovance dinged over biologics promos in rare spate of CBER untitled letters
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- Electronic Paperwork Increasing Burnout Risk Among Young Doctors
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- Study Links High Antioxidant Intake To Changes in Offspring Development
- The Healthcare Burnout Backlash (pt 1): Burnout Reaches Well Beyond Clinicians
- The Healthcare Burnout Backlash (pt 1): Burnout Reaches Well Beyond Clinicians
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- How the Trump Administration Uses Migrant Kids To Find and Detain Family Members
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- Providence trims 2025 operating loss to $132M, notches second consecutive quarter of gains
- $3M Verdict Links Social Media to Anxiety and Depression
- The White House Delays CDC Pick
- New COVID 'Cicada' Variant Is Spreading — What Experts Want You To Know
- Advocate Health to launch ‘nation’s largest’ hospital drone delivery program in Zipline partnership
- Op-ed: Empathy meets efficiency—how the responsible use of AI can transform Medicare
- Family Caregivers Provide $1 Trillion In Annual Labor, AARP Says
- ‘Health Doesn’t Need to Be Ludacris’: Bayer signs rapper-actor to multivitamin campaign
- Rocket plots measured trajectory for new gene therapy Kresladi after clearance to launch from FDA
- Healthy Lab Results May Mask Future Risks for Kids with Obesity
MedPage's republication of AP's report highlights three essential truths.
- If government funds it, bureaucrats will control it.
- Bureaucracies serve their jobs, their budget, and their constituents - in that order.
- The individual's only defense is electing officials and holding them accountable to limit government.
https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/covid19vaccine/112712
Public Health Department Barred From Giving COVID Vaccine
— Experts say it's a firstby Associated Press | November 1, 2024
A regional public health department in Idaho is no longer providing COVID-19 vaccines to residents in six counties after a narrow decision by its board.
Southwest District Health appears to be the first in the nation to be restricted from giving COVID-19 vaccines. Vaccinations are an essential function of a public health department.
While policymakers in Texas banned health departments from promoting COVID vaccines and Florida's surgeon general bucked medical consensus to recommend against the vaccine, governmental bodies across the country haven't blocked the vaccines outright.
"I'm not aware of anything else like this," said Adriane Casalotti, MPH, chief of government and public affairs for the National Association of County and City Health Officials. She said health departments have stopped offering the vaccine because of cost or low demand, but not based on "a judgment of the medical product itself."
The six-county district along the Idaho-Oregon border includes three counties in the Boise metropolitan area. Demand for COVID vaccines in the health district has declined -- with 1,601 given in 2021 to 64 so far in 2024. The same is true for other vaccines: Idaho has the highest childhood vaccination exemption rate in the nation, and last year, the Southwest District Health Department rushed to contain a rare measles outbreak that sickened 10.
On October 22, the health department's board voted 4-3 in favor of the ban -- despite Southwest's medical director testifying to the vaccine's necessity.
"Our request of the board is that we would be able to carry and offer those [vaccines], recognizing that we always have these discussions of risks and benefits," Perry Jansen, MD, said at the meeting. "This is not a blind, everybody-gets-a-shot approach. This is a thoughtful approach."
Opposite Jansen's plea were more than 290 public comments, many of which called for an end to vaccine mandates or taxpayer funding of the vaccines, neither of which are happening in the district. At the meeting, many people who spoke are nationally known for making the rounds to testify against COVID vaccines, including Peter McCullough, MD, a Texas cardiologist who sells "contagion emergency kits" that include ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine.
Board Chairman Kelly Aberasturi was familiar with many of the voices who wanted the ban, especially from earlier local protests of pandemic measures.
Aberasturi, who told the Associated Press that he's skeptical of COVID-19 vaccines and national public health leaders, said in the meeting and in an interview with the AP that he was supportive of but "disappointed" in the board's decision.
He said the board had overstepped the relationship between patients and their doctors -- and possibly opened a door to blocking other vaccines or treatments.
Board members in favor of the decision argued people can get vaccinated elsewhere, and that providing the shots was equivalent to signing off on their safety. (Some people may be reluctant to get vaccinated or boosted because of misinformation about the shots despite evidence that they're safe and have saved millions of lives.)
The people getting vaccinated at the health department -- including people without housing, people who are homebound, and those in long-term care facilities or in the immigration process -- had no other options, Jansen and Aberasturi said.
"I've been homeless in my lifetime, so I understand how difficult it can be when you're ... trying to get by and get ahead," Aberasturi said. "This is where we should be stepping in and helping.
"But we have some board members who have never been there, so they don't understand what it's like."
State health officials have said that they "recommend that people consider the COVID-19 vaccine." Idaho health department spokesperson A.J. McWhorter declined to comment on "public health district business," but noted that COVID-19 vaccines are still available at community health centers for people who are uninsured.
Aberasturi said he plans to ask at the next board meeting if the health department can at least be allowed to vaccinate older patients and residents of long-term care facilities, adding that the board is supposed to be caring for the "health and well-being" of the district's residents. "But I believe the way we went about this thing is we didn't do that due diligence."
In other news -
My local health department has expanded sewage testing from COVID-19 to include five (5) other respiratory viruses:

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