- Aspen Dental targets fast-growing Georgia city for new practice
- Michael Dowling: Now is not the time to abandon gun safety efforts
- A new wording test on ‘Medicare for All’
- UCI Health started as 1 hospital. 50 years and 6 hospitals later, CEO charts its future
- Virtua Health names president of 2 New Jersey hospitals
- Colorado wildfires send dozens to UCHealth hospitals
- Northwell appoints chair of surgery
- How 5 health systems are avoiding a repeat of the 2023 chemo shortage
- Nashville General taps CEO
- NewYork-Presbyterian rolls out OpenEvidence AI across its network
- Oswego Health expands surgery, orthopedic services New York
- Vanderbilt professor elected 40th president of bariatric group
- The ASC tax squeeze is gaining momentum
- The private equity race regulators haven’t caught up to
- Weill Cornell taps new chair of surgery, surgeon-in-chief
- The state-by-state battle over anesthesia time caps
- What happens to ASC contracts when a payer gets absorbed
- What will make or break the future of DSO success
- Dentistry reaches inflection point with AI
- Former UPMC cardiologist drops lawsuit over CEO’s device company ties
- Dental assistant pay vs. cost of living by state
- South Carolina cites behavioral health facility over missing correction plan
- Former Mayo Clinic research director sues system over alleged retaliation for raising AI practice concerns
- Senators urge Defense Department to expand autism therapy coverage under Tricare
- GI consolidation’s new era: 5 deals to know
- The GI procedure cuts in CMS’ pay proposal: 5 things to know
- ‘The economics just don’t work’: CMS’ ACCESS model draws scrutiny
- Washington restricts spit hood use in state psychiatric facilities
- Memorial Hermann Health Plan winds down commercial coverage
- Remarks at the Society for Corporate Governance Conference
- Maryland health system receives $10M gift to construct ASC
- 1-800-Dentist faces class-action lawsuit over data breach
- Staten Island hospital debuts mobile behavioral health program for youth
- CVS' Omnicare unit agrees to $440M settlement with DOJ in ongoing fraud case
- GLP-1 Use Hits Record High As Medicare Opens Access To Weight-Loss Drugs
- Founder of telehealth startup Done sentenced to six years in prison for Adderall fraud scheme
- Foundation Fights Medical Errors That Claim 200,000 U.S. Lives A Year
- Former exec alleges Alignment Healthcare leaders juiced profits to boost bonuses
- In compensation push, HHS gears up to draft COVID vaccine injury table
- AZ, Ionis shares tumble on ATTR-CM trial flop, but analyst flags over-reaction
- Frazier Healthcare Partners to acquire MatrixCare in $490M deal
- New, Highly Accurate Brush Test Can Detect Mouth Cancer Within An Hour
- Innovative Hip Replacement Cuts Post-Surgery Risk Of Dislocation By 70%
- Global Study Finds Kids Worldwide Skipping Fruits And Vegetables
- Ipsen’s Botox rival Dysport charts new horizons with dual phase 3 wins in migraine
- Affordable Care Act Insurers Want More Premium Increases As Enrollment Sags
- My Search for a Psychiatric Bed in an Overburdened Health System
- Dr. Reddy's presses pause on generic semaglutide supply after flagging API issue
- OpenEvidence launches medical AI copilot feature that grades medical evidence and unveils NewYork-Presbyterian collaboration
- Novo Nordisk asks public to ‘Meet Me in the Middle’ in new obesity experience installation
- BioNTech plots right-sized HER2 ADC launch to ‘build the muscle’ for BMS-partnered bispecific
- Telehealth ex-CEO sentenced in Adderall fraud case: 5 things to know
- Oklahoma awards 4 behavioral health clinic contracts
- The key to patient trust in dentistry
- Good news, bad news for the dental workforce
- 7 behavioral health layoffs to know | 2026
- 200+ dentists making headlines halfway through 2026
- How students are paying for dental school
- Health tech startup Forus inks partnership with GI medical society to improve medication access
- U of Kentucky dental dean receives top educator award
- UnitedHealthcare unveils Lifestyle Spending Accounts for employer plans
- FDA hits Lundbeck with untitled letter over efficacy claims on migraine drug Vyepti
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- 36 behavioral health executive moves to know
- Delaware establishes statewide opioid treatment guidance for EDs
- Tampa General Hospital sues Eli Lilly over pulled 340B discounts
- Viz.ai expands neurodegenerative disease care in new partnership with Cortechs.ai
- E. Coli Outbreak Prompts Recall Of Frozen Blueberries At Publix
- Drinking Coffee May Lower Your Risk of Liver Disease
- FDA halts release of new drug rejection letters while working to formalize policy
- Mass General Brigham nurses, home care clinicians launch largest healthcare strike in state history
- ACA plans set for another year of premium spikes, preliminary filings show
- AI wearables company Vilo launches Signal OS ahead of upcoming smart ring launch
- CureDuchenne lights the candles with DMD public service campaign highlighting birthdays
- Zimmer Biomet to Hire 500 in India as New Bengaluru Technology Centre Drives AI and MedTech Innovation
- Zimmer Biomet to Hire 500 in India as New Bengaluru Technology Centre Drives AI and MedTech Innovation
- Foreign drugmaker caught faking doctors’ petition to evade China’s price cut scheme
- AdaptHealth Investigates Data Breach After Social Engineering Attack, Possible Link to ShinyHunters Emerges
- AdaptHealth Investigates Data Breach After Social Engineering Attack, Possible Link to ShinyHunters Emerges
- Keenova gets on the good foot with Xiaflex trial win in rare tissue growth condition
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- Rumination Plays Key Role In Caregiver Stress, Study Says
- U.S. Teens Underestimate Risks Of Fentanyl Use, Survey Finds
- Men More Likely To Be Diagnosed With Advanced Cancer
- Primary care’s AI moment
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- Leo Cancer Care secures $65M to advance upright radiotherapy system as company preps for IPO
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Michigan healthcare freedom community forum
The Web-Based Injury and Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) of CDC has reveled in distributing phony statistics to attack the enemy du jour of Deep State bureaucrats. RFK, Jr. and DOGE will probably be countermanded by an Obama judge, but until then a major propaganda tool of the Deep State is no more:
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2025/04/rfk-jr-cdc-layoffs-doge-musk/
DOGE Moves to Gut CDC Work on Gun Injuries, Sexual Assault, Opioid Overdose Data, and More
“It’s a blood bath this morning.”
By Kiera Butler - April 8, 2025On Tuesday, thousands of staffers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta received early morning emails asking them to resign. The centers affected included those working on reproductive health, chronic disease, occupational safety, birth defects, smoking, tuberculosis, asthma and air quality, accidental and intentional injury, and prevention of violence and prevention of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV.
“It’s a blood bath this morning,” one CDC employee messaged me. Several others told me that their entire departments had received the letters. It wasn’t immediately clear whether everyone who had received the notices would ultimately be laid off.
“I regret to inform you that you are being affected by a reduction in force (RIF) action,” the letters stated. “After you receive this notice, you will be placed on administrative leave and will no longer have building access beginning Tuesday, April 1, unless directed otherwise by your leadership.” This action follows the announcement last week, by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. to cut 10,000 employees from the agency. “This overhaul will be a win-win for taxpayers and for those that HHS serves,” Kennedy said in a statement. “That’s the entire American public because our goal is to Make America Healthy Again.”
Yet the staffers I talked to weren’t convinced that the cuts would improve public health or efficiency—on the contrary, they said they worried that government efforts to improve the lives of Americans would be undermined.
An employee I’ll call Amanda (she didn’t want me to use her name for fear of retribution) works in the Web-Based Injury and Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) a team within the Injury Center that is responsible for processing all the data around injuries, including both fatal and nonfatal injuries caused by guns. Her branch of 40 employees all received RIF notices. “The cost analysis, the return on investment, all of the non-fatal and fatal data processing that goes to our lobbyists, our congressmen, our decision-makers, senators—all of that is gone,” she said. Her team also provides data that determine the leading causes of injury-related deaths.
An employee I’ll call Jen is a health scientist in the Division of Violence Prevention, with a specific focus on sexual and intimate partner violence. Jen and her team “had an inkling” that given the Trump administration’s gutting of other programs that prevent sexual violence, their work might be imperiled. In January, the US Department of Education enacted policies that would protect students accused of sexual harassment and assault. In February, the Department of Defense paused its military sexual assault prevention training. That same month, rape crisis centers reported that their scheduled federal funding payments hadn’t arrived.
“All of the actions, including getting rid of my team, is showing sexual violence prevention isn’t a priority,” Jen said, “and in fact, they don’t think it is needed at all.”
Jen noted that the teams in her center that work on opioid overdose prevention and suicide prevention did not appear to be affected by the cuts yet. The fact that those groups were spared may reflect the Trump administration’s focus on the impact of the opioid epidemic, especially on rural communities—yet it’s not clear whether the teams that support this work would remain intact. Amanda, the employee whose data team in the Injury Center all received notices, said that she and her colleagues had been working on machine learning initiatives for opioid overdose and suicide data. That work will cease to exist if her department is laid off.
Another employee, whom I’ll call Emily, told me that her unit, the entire office of public health practice at the Center for Chronic Disease, had also received RIF notices. Many of which, she added, contained factual errors, including misinformation about employees’ previous performance reviews, which are used to calculate their severance pay.
Emily noted that her team’s job is “to work across every programmatic cooperative agreement in the center, across all those staff, and try to create efficiencies in the work that they do, guide them toward measuring the impact and return on investment of our programs.” That mandate seems in line with what the Trump administration through Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has identified as their goal. Nonetheless, they all still received the RIF notices.
“It would be great if there was a plan and then some kind of logic to how people are fired. But that’s not the way this administration is functioning.”
In addition to harming their work, staffers reported that the disorganized nature of the cuts had created an atmosphere of widespread confusion and stress. Until last week, they said, even leadership had been uncertain of what was to come. Colleagues “were telling me that at 2 a.m. they can’t stop checking their computer,” said Jen. “They’re afraid to step away from their computer because they’re afraid they [suddenly] won’t have access.” Emily added, “It would be great if there was a plan and then some kind of logic to how people are fired. But that’s not the way this administration is functioning.”
Several centers convened all-staff meetings on Tuesday morning. In some cases, employees reported, their leaders had to negotiate with security simply to let staffers who had received RIF notices back in the building to attend the meetings. Those who did not receive the notice reported that metal detectors had been set up at the entrances to at least one CDC building—a security measure that had not existed previously. CDC spokespeople did not immediately respond to my request for comment.
The employees I talked to said they worried that given the sweeping nature of the cuts, much of the work the agency does will simply cease to exist. “Where’s the plan to replace this work?” asked Jen. “There is no plan. It is just being removed.”
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