- Journalists Highlight Medical Neglect in ICE Detention, RFK Jr. Antidepressant Comments
- 18 new behavioral health study findings to know
- How 5 systems are embedding behavioral health into clinical care
- ‘Who watches the watchmen?’ CMS tightens oversight of accrediting bodies — 8 things to know
- 8 hospital projects worth $1B+ in 2026
- UnitedHealth, FTC near insulin rebates settlement
- The hidden disparity built into healthcare interoperability
- Christus consolidates inpatient services at Texas hospital
- Health AI regulation gaps span scribes, prior authorization: 5 notes
- Is cardiac catheterization the new cataract surgery?
- CMS floats permanent status for Medicare drug price negotiations: 5 things to know
- 13 cybersecurity updates for ASC leaders to know
- The safety issue hiding in ASC staffing
- Elevance sues former chief execution officer over noncompete agreement
- 15% of pregnant women report current alcohol use: CDC
- 15% of pregnant women report current alcohol use: CDC
- California healthcare district board member resigns to apply for CEO role
- Vermont regulators greenlight new ASC
- What surgeons don’t understand about anesthesia
- National Real Estate Advisors acquires Montana medical campus with ASC, MOB
- 5 ASC, ambulatory leaders from the biggest health systems
- Ohio dentist to retire after 34 years, close practice
- Good news, bad news for DSOs
- California Health Worker Union, Hospital Association Tout Dueling Ballot Initiatives
- Nearly 13,000 dental professionals needed to fill shortage areas: HRSA
- The states with the widest anesthesiologist salary spreads
- Optum Rx, FTC posed for settlement in insulin pricing case
- 7 new behavioral health projects representing nearly $1B in investment
- How the fastest-growing DSO is expanding its network
- Program closures, practice openings & more: 5 oral surgery updates 30 days
- CMS proposes permanent framework for Medicare drug price negotiations
- CMS proposes permanent framework for Medicare drug price negotiations
- Dental hygienist pay up 21% since 2021
- ‘Making a bad situation worse’: 15% of psych beds lost in 4 California counties after staffing rule
- How dentist pay has evolved over the last 5 years
- Nearly 30% of Massachusetts residents filled behavioral health prescriptions
- Rhode Island Senate advances bill creating licensure pathway for foreign-trained dentists, hygienists
- The 10 states where physician assistant pay jumped the most
- Anesthesia stipends by the numbers
- SAMHSA unveils $40M behavioral health grant funding: 5 things to know
- Best, worst states for child well-being
- 5 dental school updates to know
- 7 DSOs making headlines
- Influencers, Booze And Teens: What's Showing Up In Their Feeds?
- Health 'War Room,' Digital Tools Are Tracking Disease Risks During World Cup
- Mercer survey: Employers eye cost-shifting strategies as health benefit spend rises
- Nvidia, Abridge collaborate to develop healthcare-specific AI model
- EHA: J&J sharpens myeloma edge as Talvey, Darzalex Faspro combo proves its worth in earlier disease stage
- Industry Voices—Why health systems need physicians engaged in IT leadership
- FDA hearing on Amgen's Tavneos will include findings from an independent review
- In latest twist in Zepzelca saga, Jazz and PharmaMar lung cancer drug fails phase 3 test
- Food Labels and Restrictions Can Lower Childhood Obesity Rates, Study Finds
- Tourette Patients Face High Suicide Risk, Pain And Discrimination
- Have A Risk-Taking Teen? This Brain Chemical Might Be Responsible, Researchers Say
- Sepsis, Lung Infection Patients See No Benefit From Remote Monitoring
- Overlooked Social Connections Can Prevent Suicide
- Final Rules for Medicaid Work Requirements Are Out. Here’s What You Need To Know.
- 1 in 4 Covered California Enrollees Could Get State Aid Under Newsom Proposal
- Lilly, Biogen, Eisai and Genentech sponsor new ‘Let’s Talk Alzheimer’s’ podcast
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Astellas CEO’s 5-year plan; Takeda’s psoriasis win; RA’s China bridge program
- Why this behavioral health provider just bought a pharmacy
- Statement Regarding Minimum Pricing Increments and Access Fee Caps
- North Carolina awards $10M to expand rural behavioral healthcare access
- Healthcare costs poised to jump 9% in 2027 as health plans blame AI adoption, drug prices
- Provider groups file lawsuit against HHS over anti-trans Ryan White funding rules
- Genentech executes another round of layoffs, with 3 VPs axed
- Humana to sell off minority stake in end-of-life care provider Gentiva
- Vitamin C May Be Key To A Healthier Brain As You Age
- New Vaccine Schedule Released By American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists
- AI use is surging across HHS, jumping 148% at the FDA in 2025, Bipartisan Policy Center data finds
- AI use is surging across HHS, jumping 148% at the FDA in 2025, Bipartisan Policy Center data finds
- Statement at the SEC Open Meeting on the Trade-Through Rule and Locked and Crossed Markets Provisions of Regulation NMS
- Disorder Protection Rule: Statement on the Proposed Amendments to Rule 611 and Other Provisions of Regulation NMS
- Statement on the Proposed Amendments to Regulation NMS
- Novo reports data breach, tells clinical trial patients to 'remain vigilant'
- ‘Not simply saving cost’: Inside Astellas CEO’s 5-year strategy to counter Xtandi’s patent cliff
- OIG: Frequent MA prior authorization denials for long-term care hospitals, inpatient rehab
- From Medicaid work requirement exemptions to AI safeguards in coverage: New AMA policies from annual meeting
- Joint initiative of 5 EU countries calls for 'unified approach' to pharma framework amid US drug pricing pressure
- J&J eyes rare disease expansion for blockbuster-to-be Imaavy with trial win
- Virtual care tech companies launch 'out-of-the-box' RPM tool for pharmacies
- Can Fasting Treat Gum Disease? Study Finds Reduced Inflammation
- Living With Cats Not Linked To Worse Asthma in Children
- Few Stroke, Brain Injury Survivors Get Top-Quality Hospital Rehab
- Popular Joint Pain Supplement, Glucosamine, Might Increase Alzheimer's Risk, Study Says
- Anguished Parents. Doctors In Tears. Utah's Long Measles Outbreak Takes A Toll.
- Madrigal takes giant inflatable liver on US tour in disease awareness push
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- Trump Bought Tobacco Stocks and Raked In Industry Donations as FDA Eased Standards
- Olixir NY teams with Crohn's & Colitis Foundation for ‘Spill Your Guts’ campaign
- Takeda’s TYK2 inhibitor beats Bristol Myers’ Sotyktu in phase 3 psoriasis showdown
- Hospital associations push CMS for higher 2027 pay bump, softer ramp-up for mandatory model
- AHIP 2026: Why Ascendiun CEO Paul Markovich is bullish on building out a digital health record for patients
- FDA’s Greenlight of Old Chemical Offers Chance To Restore Faith in Sunscreen
- Abridge picks up strategic investment from Eli Lilly, expands payer, research workflows
- Weekly Rundown: Karias Health launches AI companion; Mount Sinai, Wisp partner to expand PrEP access in NY
- Sugary Beverages May Raise Your Risk of Liver Cancer
- This Old House: Improving and Remodeling Our Registered Offering and Filer Status Regimes
- Ardent Health's surprise CEO change reflected need for margin focus amid headwinds, CFO says
- FDA Approves First New Sunscreen Ingredient, Bemotrizinol, in Two Decades
- Trustees expect Medicare Trust Fund's reserves to run out in 2033
- Vega Health licenses AI models from Parkland Center for Clinical Innovation to predict patient risks
- Eli Lilly yells ‘action’ on authentic patient portrayals at Tribeca Festival
- Teen Recovering From Concussion? A 'Sweet Spot' For Screen Time Could Speed Up Their Recovery
- AMA issues policy urging exemptions in upcoming Medicaid work requirements
- Pfizer CEO Bourla reconsiders German investments as industry takes aim at healthcare reform plan: Reuters
- Big Pharma-backed SonoThera sounds off with $125M series B for bubble-based genetic delivery
- Teva to lay off 250 at API unit as search for new owner drags on: report
- Women Hit Harder By Sleep Apnea Than Men, Study Finds
- Retro Video Game Aids Stroke Recovery, Improves Arm Function
- Experimental, Once-Daily GLP-1 Pill, Elecoglipron, May Offer New Option for Weight Loss, Diabetes
- Anguished Parents. Doctors in Tears. Utah’s Long Measles Outbreak Takes a Toll.
- Looming Medicaid Cuts Supercharge California’s Latest Labor-Industry Fight
- Genentech and Novartis dish up food allergy microdrama series
- ‘I’m a lot more optimistic today’: Mike Doustdar tells Fierce about pivotal first year as Novo Nordisk CEO
- Peirce Out: Remarks at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Capital Markets Summit
- How Much Alcohol Is Actually Safe? A New Study Challenges Old Advice
- AbbVie’s Skyrizi narrowly slides ahead of J&J’s Tremfya in May drug ad spending rankings
- Air Pollution Might Contribute To Clogged Arteries, Heart Disease Risk
- New Study Suggests No Major Adverse Outcomes With Early GLP-1 Exposure During Pregnancy
- Feeding Babies Eggs Sooner May Cut Allergy Risk, Study Suggests
- At A Tennessee Hospital, Nurse Stole Fentanyl And AI Missed It, State Records Say
- Infections A ‘Major Health Hazard’ For People With Diabetes, Large Study Warns
- MAHA's Treatments For Autism: Camel's Milk, Stem Cell Injections — And Spelling Therapy
- Trivia Nights, Valentine’s Cards: Overlooked Social Connections Can Prevent Suicide
- AI medical advice changes care decisions of most users: survey
- FDA Expands Sunscreen Options for the First Time in 20 Years
- Children's Well-Being Plummets Across 29 States, Report Finds
- Just 5 Minutes Of Prayer Helps Reduce Pain and Anxiety, Study Finds
- Medtronic Advances Hugo Robotic Surgery Platform with Key FDA Filings and Product Approvals
- Medtronic Posts Strongest Revenue Growth in a Decade, Driven by Cardiovascular and Surgical Businesses
- Boston Scientific Plans Indiana Distribution Center, 300 New Jobs
- Irregular Sleep Risks Preschool Kids' Brain Power
- Why Alcohol Makes You Crave Salty Snacks — And How Protein-Rich Foods Can Help Prevent Weight Gain
- ADHD ‘Masking’ May Help People Blend In But Harms Mental Health
- Getting The RSV Shot, Abrysvo, While Pregnant Could Protect Your Baby After Birth
- Upcoming Billing Change Could Make Pregnancy Pricier
- Dengue Is No Longer Just A Travel Risk — What Google’s Mosquito Plan Could Mean For Your Summer
- Brain Surgery For Pituitary Tumor Helps Illinois Mom Have Second Baby
- Popular Blood Pressure Meds, Dihydropyridine Calcium-Channel Blockers, Linked To Kidney Damage Risk In Type 2 Diabetes
- Too Much Sitting In Pregnancy Doubles Risk Of Complications
- Spinal Cord Stimulation May Restore Arm Strength After Stroke
- “Harmonization: We’ll Have Lots to Talk About”
- Remarks at the Investor Advisory Committee Meeting
- A Quarter for Your Thoughts: Remarks at the Meeting of the SEC Investor Advisory Committee
- Remarks at the Investor Advisory Committee Meeting
- Base Case: Remarks at the IC3 Blockchain Camp
- Commission Statement on the Passing of Former General Counsel David Becker
- MedTech In Focus: AI impact in healthcare
- If Your AI Can’t Explain Itself, Can FDA Authorize It?
Michigan healthcare freedom community forum
The FY 2026 Michigan school aid package, PA 15 of 2025, offered public school districts $ 374 per pupil for mental health and other safety services, but they had to promise to bare their souls in the event of a mass casualty event (school shootings, etc.). A lot of school districts signed up, but have now rescinded their agreement:
Hundreds of Michigan districts, schools reject safety and mental health funds
By Lori Higgins, Chalkbeat Detroit - January 22, 2026
- The state offered districts $321 million in safety and mental health funds
- To get the money, districts had to agree to waive attorney-client privilege and agree to state investigations if a mass casualty event occurs
- Nearly half the districts and schools that previously signed off rescinded those agreements. Some said wording was unclear
This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters. Sign up for Chalkbeat Detroit’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system and Michigan education policy.
Hundreds of Michigan school districts rejected school safety and mental health funding from the state after agreeing to new conditions for receiving the money.
In early December, 974 district and school leaders signed agreements saying they would waive privilege and agree to state investigations if a mass casualty event, like a school shooting, occurs. There previously had not been conditions for districts to receive the funding.
The funding is distributed to traditional school districts, intermediate school districts, charter schools, private schools, and the Michigan School for the Deaf. Public schools will receive funding in the amount of $374 per pupil, while private schools will receive $236 per student.
Data from the Michigan Department of Education shows that by the end of 2025, nearly half — or 462 that previously signed off — had rescinded those agreements. About 70% of the traditional school districts that agreed to the conditions, and 39% of the charter schools, changed their minds.
Many district leaders who signed the agreements did so reluctantly, in part because they said there was a lack of clarity in the wording. Some were even part of a lawsuit, involving dozens of school districts and officials, that sought to have the language struck from the budget. The plaintiff’s attorney, during a December court hearing, said the language is “exceedingly vague” and overly broad, and he said the budget doesn’t define what it means to waive any privilege.
The state budget Michigan lawmakers approved in October requires school districts to agree that if there is a mass casualty event in their schools, they will disclose information that would otherwise be legally protected in deadly emergencies. Districts must also agree to comprehensive state investigations.
A mass casualty event is defined in the state budget, in part, as an incident “resulting in significant injuries to not fewer than 3 individuals” or an incident resulting in fatalities.
The agreements were required this year in order to share in $321 million in funding that school districts can use for various functions, including hiring mental health professionals, training school staff on threat assessment and crisis communication, and purchasing safety infrastructure, such as cameras, door blocks, hardened vestibules, and window screening.
Michigan Judge Sima Patel upheld the language in the budget in a December ruling. The plaintiffs have since appealed, and the lawsuit is before the Michigan Court of Appeals.
The Woodhaven-Brownstown School District in Wayne County is one of the districts that rescinded the agreement.
“The reasons for this are consistent with the concerns presented in the lawsuit: the requirements … were overly vague, not clearly defined, and presented legal uncertainty that we didn’t feel we could responsibly accept,” Superintendent Mark Greathead wrote in an email to Chalkbeat.
“We look forward to the outcome in the Court of Appeals,” Greathead said. “In the meantime, we continue to provide a comprehensive approach to school safety and student mental health.”
Now, 512 districts and schools will share in the school safety and mental health funding. Bob Wheaton, spokesman for the MDE, told Chalkbeat Wednesday that the funding will be included in February state aid payments to schools.
Nikolai Vitti, superintendent of the Detroit Public Schools Community District, said the district had not rescinded the agreement the board approved in November.
“The district needs that funding for our student mental health support and additional security strategies,” Vitti said in an emailed response.
That sentiment was echoed in Dearborn Public Schools, which stuck with the original agreement.
“For Dearborn the funds were over $3 million and that supports not only safety and security but also social and emotional well being and school culture and climate,” said district spokesperson David Mustonen.
Michigan’s FY 2026 school aid package offered about $374 per student for safety and mental health services, but districts had to agree to waive attorney client privilege and allow state investigations if a mass casualty event occurred. Many districts first signed, then nearly half withdrew, saying the language was vague and created legal risk, even though the funding could be used for counselors, training, and security upgrades.
As a result, only about 512 districts are accepting the money while others wait for the court appeal or choose to fund safety efforts on their own. The situation shows how conditions tied to funding can create hesitation even when schools need the resources.
Tying conditions to sought after funding is the now standard legislative technique to command units of government and private organizations not overtly subject to the authority of the legislators. This form of blackmail was devised during the New Deal and honed into an art form during the Great Society.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.





















