- HCA Florida hospital names CEO
- How Surgery Partners has grown since 2022: 11 notes
- How eliminating noncompetes could upend the physician power dynamic
- 43.5% of family physicians report burnout as turnover risk rises
- FDA approves Eli Lilly’s GLP-1 pill for weight loss
- CMS requests ACOs apply for LEAD model
- CMS requests ACOs apply for LEAD model
- Henry Ford Health adds medical group
- CMS pilot allows hemp products in care plans: 5 notes
- Closed Illinois hospital owner eyes July reopening
- Closed Illinois hospital owner eyes July reopening
- North Dakota expands medical cache to stabilize supply chain
- Hospitals and gender care for minors: Where things stand
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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
- Hennepin Healthcare warns of closure without legislative funding
- 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
- 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
- Honey Almond Cream Cheese, Sold at Einstein Bros. Bagels, Recalled Due To Undeclared Nuts
- Trump Supports Surgeon General Pick Despite Senate Concerns
- 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
- Study Shows BMI Often Gets Your Weight Category Wrong
- Antidepressant, Fluvoxamine, Might Help Long COVID Fatigue, Study Says
- Kinesio Taping’s Benefits in Doubt, Major Evidence Review Finds
- High Sodium Intake May Trigger New Heart Failure
- Home-Delivered Groceries Boost Heart Health In Food Deserts, Study Says
- Nicotine E-Cigarettes Help Smokers Quit, Review Concludes
- Clinicians are burnt out. Peer support can help
- Novo's Wegovy nets cardio nod from UK cost gatekeeper, adding 1M+ eligible patients
- Readers Sound Off on Wage Garnishment, Work Requirements, and More
- Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act Darkens Outlook for Government-Backed Clinics
- 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
- 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
- Sex Enhancement Chocolates Recalled Over Hidden Drug Ingredients
- 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
- Biogen, eyeing swift commercial tailwind, ponies up $5.6B for Apellis and its 2 approved meds
- 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
- Dental Care Can Help Cirrhosis Patients Avoid Liver Cancer, Hospitalization
- Folks With Clogged Arteries Benefit From Aggressively Lower Cholesterol Goal
- Intermittent Fasting Might Help Manage Female Hormone Imbalance, Trial Shows
- Trump’s Hunt for Undocumented Medicaid Enrollees Yields Few Violators
- States Pay Deloitte, Others Millions To Comply With Trump Law To Cut Medicaid Rolls
- States pay Deloitte, others millions to comply with Trump law to cut Medicaid rolls
- Employer telehealth company eMed raises $200M at $2B valuation
- 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
- Medical Schools No Longer Required To Teach Health Inequities
- 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
- Fluoride Quietly Removed From Birmingham Water Years Ago, Officials Face Backlash
- FDA Weighs Expanding What Can Go Into Supplements
- 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
- Nearly half of US hospital markets entirely controlled by 1 or 2 health systems: KFF
- Mental health provider platform Headway acquires team behind AI company Tezi
- Idorsia eyes pediatric insomnia use with midstage trial win for sleep med Quviviq
- Electronic Paperwork Increasing Burnout Risk Among Young Doctors
- Kratom Cases Surging In U.S.
- What Makes Play Fun For Children? Seven Factors Stand Out, Study Says
- Night Shifts Are Tough On People With Type 2 Diabetes, Study Says
- Women's Bone Loss Tied To Heart Health, Study Finds
- Want To Lose Weight? Eat A Boring, Repetitive Diet, Researchers Suggest
- Samsung Biologics union gathers votes to strike as tension over wage, governance mounts
- Takeda begins US layoffs as part of massive $1.3B restructuring
- Biogen looks to shake up SMA status quo with FDA nod for high-dose version of Spinraza
- Inside the High-Stakes Corporate Fight Over Feeding Preterm Babies
- She Owed Her Insurer a Nickel, So It Canceled Her Coverage
- 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
- Even Mild Oxygen Loss in Preemies' First Hours Poses Lifelong Brain Risks: Study
- How the Trump Administration Uses Migrant Kids To Find and Detain Family Members
- Oral GLP-1s, COVID preventatives: 3 more drugs in the pipeline, Optum says payers should watch
- 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
It ain't over till it's over. - Yogi Berra
True, it's not over till it's over. And even then, it just begins again. - Kate McGahan
There are no permanent wins (or losses) in politics.
Maryland seemed poised this year to legalize medical aid in dying. What happened?
For advocates of medical aid in dying, it seemed like the political stars were finally aligning in Maryland.Many predicted the legislature had enough votes in the 2024 session to finally legalize the practice, after years of failed attempts and near misses.
This story was produced in partnership with KFF Health News.
State Senate President Bill Ferguson felt like the bill had a good chance.
“I believe it will pass the Senate,” Ferguson said in January, at the start of the legislative session. “I expect it to be a topic of important conversation this year.”
Most Americans support it, but it’s still legal in just 10 states and D.C.
In the most recent survey, 74% of Americans believe terminal patients should have the right to painlessly end their lives. A majority of Americans have supported that right in every Gallup poll since 1996.
Oregon first legalized the practice in 1994. Since then nine other states and the District of Columbia have followed suit with similar laws.
Technically, medical aid in dying is “the act of prescribing lethal medications to a consenting patient who can self-ingest them with the intent of hastening their death,” according to the Journal of the Advanced Practitioner in Oncology. (Most patients who have used the process have cancer.)
The current state laws lay down similar regulatory guardrails to ensure a patient are making an informed, voluntary decision and are mentally competent to oversee their own medical care.
For example, the Maryland bill required the patient to navigate multiple requests and waiting periods before obtaining the legal medications. The patient must have a prognosis of six months or less to live, and must be physically able to take the medication themselves.
In Maryland, a 2024 poll found 70% of Marylanders support medical aid in dying.
In 2019, a Maryland bill stalled after a tie vote. In 2024, the opportunity seemed ripe for supporters and allied legislators to try again.
Was this the year?
Support or opposition to medical aid in dying does not always break along traditional partisan lines. Still, the practice does tend to garner more support from Democrats.
In Maryland, Democrats hold a comfortable majority in both houses of the General Assembly. In 2022, a Democrat, Wes Moore, won the governorship after eight years under Republican Larry Hogan. Moore had indicated he’d sign a bill, if it made it to his desk.
“I think there is a slight partisan element to it,” said Peg Sandeen, the CEO of Death with Dignity, an organization that advocates for medical aid in dying. “But, that's not the dominant breakdown here of the vote. We will have Republicans who are voting for this bill in the end, and some Democrats who vote against it.”
In the end, the bill failed by a single vote. The failure shows how controversial medical aid in dying remains, and how Democrats are by no means united around the issue.
Why the Maryland bill failed, again
Although party affiliation plays a role, cultural and religious beliefs can split and fragment the vote on this issue.
“The Catholics are very much against the bill. Also, a lot of the African Americans don't like it. It seems they feel it's against their religion,” said Ron Young, a former Democratic state senator, who had previously sponsored and supported medical aid in dying bills.
“Maryland is progressive, but it’s also very diverse,” said Donna Smith, an advocate with Compassion and Choices, which lobbies for aid in dying. “The African American legislators represent about 30% of the legislators in Maryland. And so it's very hard to get anything passed without some of their support.”
The Black community in Maryland is a formidable voting bloc and one that legislators listen to closely, according to former state senator Ron Young. And a large percentage of Black voters oppose medical aid in dying, Young said.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Maryland is 32% Black, making it the state with the sixth highest Black population in the nation.
While the Black community isn’t a monolith, there are enough who balk at the idea of medical aid in dying.
“I'm a Baptist. I don’t believe in people killing themselves. Number one rule,” said Reggie Carter, a Black voter in Maryland.
But other Black voters are open to the idea. Gee Blue, who is Muslim, said he had complicated feelings about the issue.
“It does go against a lot of religion, but I feel like personal choice is beyond religion sometimes,” Blue said.
Democrats walk a delicate line
State Senator Malcom Augustine, a Democrat, represents Prince George’s County, which has the highest Black population in Maryland. He voted against the bill in 2019 and continues to oppose it.
“What I was hearing from constituents was that this was a very, very personal and very difficult policy decision,” he said.
Augustine said his concerns are based in fears that nursing homes might coerce people into making a decision they hadn’t thought through.
Then, there is the Catholic Church, an entity that has fought for what it calls the “sanctity of life.”
“There's people with a lot of money and a lot of power that oppose it,” said Thaddeus Pope, a clinical ethicist at the Mitchell Hamline School of Law in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
“Traditionally, the Catholic Church has been one of the biggest opponents. And, they have spent a lot of money in many states opposing this. It's sort of the same parties that are involved with abortion. It's not just the Catholic Church, but it's pro-life advocacy organizations.”
Pope added that after the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade, some of those organizations had more time and resources available to lobby against medical aid in dying.
Narrow paths to passage
Political observers and advocates agree that Maryland has a patchwork of cultures and constituencies that legislators still must cater to in their local districts.
Given those nuances, a few “no” votes can block any piece of legislation, despite the legislators’ shared party affiliation.
“The thing about the legislative process is there's so many little gates a bill has to pass through,” Pope said. “The opposition doesn't need all the votes, they just need to be able to block any one of those gates that it needs to pass through and they win.”
In Maryland, the gate shut in the General Assembly when one senator changed her mind.
In neighboring Delaware, which also has a majority Democratic government, a similar aid in dying bill passed the Delaware House and then squeaked through the state Senate with an 11-10 vote on June 25.
But on Sept. 20, Delaware Governor John Carney vetoed it. Carney, a Catholic, said he is “fundamentally and morally opposed to state law enabling someone, even under tragic and painful circumstances, to take their own life.”
Supporters in both states say they’ll keep talking and lobbying, hoping that both voters and their representatives gradually become more comfortable with the issue.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.

















