- From clinician to leader: Building confidence, capability and leadership in dentistry
- Operationalizing AI at scale: A practical framework for enterprise-scale success
- 3 key stats on the orthodontist workforce
- Meet the COOs of 10 specialty DSOs
- Data, cross-training, and pipeline development: How health systems are rethinking OR staffing
- How top health systems are redefining the digital patient experience
- ‘The most significant change in 20 years’: Cancer centers prepare for daraxonrasib demand
- A Smooth Handoff From Decision to Dollars: Connecting the Last Mile in Healthcare Payments
- Budget-Strapped Montana Will Stress-Test Trump’s Medicaid Work Rules
- How CEOs actually use hospital rankings — and when they don’t
- What OU Health’s founding CEO learned building a new health system
- Arkansas hospital CEO to step down after 11 years for new role
- The behavioral health workforce pipeline: Where it stands and where it’s headed
- 6 major investments in youth behavioral health
- Coalition for Health AI unveils governance playbook for systems
- 66 health systems ranked by long-term debt
- UnitedHealthcare drops some prior auth requirements for cardiology, orthopedic services
- 8 No Surprises Act shake-ups physicians need to know
- The ASC independence playbook: 3 leaders’ thoughts
- Dr. Rahimah Maina opens new dental practice
- GWU offloaded its $450M physician group problem — why the industry watching
- The gastroenterologist pay gap
- Texas surgery center to double in size, add 2 ORs
- What dental leaders told us in May
- Climate Change: Statement on Proposed Rescission of Climate-Related Disclosure Rules
- Kenyan Court Blocks Trump's Plan To Quarantine Ebola Patients
- What’s going on at the FTC? 3 notes for ASC leaders
- 8 DSOs making headlines
- The physician red flags that can predict a bad ASC partner
- The physician noncompete battle in 5 key figures
- Patient death draws renewed CMS scrutiny at HCA’s Mission Hospital
- Nearly 70% of US counties lack a GI: 13 concerning workforce stats
- Statement of Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda on the Rescission of Climate-Related Disclosure Rules
- A new behavioral health profession is born
- Keynote Remarks at the 2026 Reagan National Economic Forum
- Statement on Proposing Release for Rescission of Climate-Related Disclosure Rules
- Dentists’ pay climbed the most in these 10 states
- Mental Health Disorders Now No. 1 Cause of Disability Worldwide
- Massachusetts AG sues UnitedHealthcare over alleged Medicaid fraud
- UnitedHealthcare to nix nearly two thirds of pediatric prior auths
- Industry Voices—Patients are building a new healthcare system. The industry is finally catching up
- Weekly Rundown—Moffitt Cancer Center expands Reimagine Care's virtual oncology model; Tanner Health deploys AI workforce solution
- Study: LA Canine Outbreak Caused By Low Vaccination Rates, Crowded Boarding
- Ocrelizumab Effective In Slowing Progressive MS, Trial Shows
- Long COVID Might Be Twice As Common As Previously Thought
- In Vaccine-Skeptical California County, A Potential Playbook To Contain Measles
- Heavy Drinking Harms College Students' Brain Power, Study Finds
- A Trump Stronghold Grapples With Health Risks of ICE Detention Sites
- After Her Bout of Amnesia, a $59,000 Billing Dispute Wouldn’t Go Away
- Pharma urged to modernize patient support as young adult cancer rates rise
- Philips adds a spoonful of Disney sugar to ease kids’ MRI anxieties
- MannKind seeks long-awaited sales boost with inhaled insulin approval for kids
- Aetna to launch ‘on demand’ virtual mental health services in 2027
- U of Connecticut dental school reappoints dean for 2nd term
- Michigan dentist charged with Medicaid fraud
- What’s fueling optimism for dentistry’s future
- Brand-name drug prices climb after launch in US, fall abroad amid MFN push: report
- ASCO: After Takeda’s defeat, Dizal picks up baton to take on J&J in EGFR lung cancer subtype
- Acadia in the headlines: 6 things to know
- 26 behavioral health executive moves to know
- AstraZeneca gains 2nd bladder cancer nod in key expansion for Imfinzi
- Advocate Health grows Q1 revenue by 10.8% amid higher volumes, greater efficiency
- Behavioral health hospital operator to pay $32M in Medicare fraud settlement
- Bangladesh Measles Surge Kills 500+ Children; Vaccine Delays Blamed
- Care navigation startup Garner Health banks $100M series E at $2.74B valuation
- HCA bolsters workforce pipeline with healthcare professional college acquisition
- Plant-Based Diet May Cut Obesity Risk For Women In Menopause
- Pharma leaders meet with PM Takaichi in push for Japan to retain R&D edge
- Penn Medicine, K Health partner to deploy AI clinical agents
- CVS restores coverage of Eli Lilly obesity med Zepbound, adds new pill Foundayo
- CVS restores coverage of Eli Lilly obesity med Zepbound, adds new pill Foundayo
- CMS finalizes changes to No Surprises Act dispute resolution process
- Smartwatch App Accurately Detects Major Epileptic Seizures
- Racial Gap Exists For Asthma Inhaler Use
- New Colon Cancer Screening Guidelines Add Blood And At-Home Tests
- Fierce Pharma Asia—More China biotech hawkishness; Pfizer’s $10B Innovent deal; Astellas’ roadmap
- CVS expands partnership with Salesforce for greater call center personalization
- Nurse Convicted In Patient's Death Turns Fatal Drug Error Into Cautionary Tale
- Wearable Ultrasound Patch Monitors High-Risk Pregnancies In Real Time
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- In a Vaccine-Skeptical California County, a Potential Playbook To Contain Measles
- Teladoc Health inks partnership with Walmart to expand virtual care services
- PharmaEssentia taps Incyte alum Eric Vogel as it eyes Besremi expansion
- Kaléo speaks up on allergy awareness to amplify patient stories
- Privacy and PetShops: Remarks at the Regulatory PETshop Series: Cryptographic Technologies and Financial Services Regulation
- NYC Health + Hospitals adds 2nd behavioral health housing site
- Mindfulness isn’t a perk anymore — it’s a workforce strategy
- With Elahere building steam, AbbVie nets FDA nod for another ImmunoGen cancer asset
- Hospitals again ask FTC, DOJ for exemption from expanded premerger notification filings
- Coalition for Health AI unveils governance playbooks for responsible AI adoption
- Amazon taps Roy Schoenberg to lead healthcare business as Neil Lindsay plans to step down
- Viridian, awaiting FDA decision, taps WuXi Bio in eye drug supply deal
- U.S. To Keep Ebola-Exposed Citizens In Kenya Under New Policy
- CAT on a Hot Tin Roof
- GLP-1 Meds May Help Slow the Spread of Certain Obesity-Related Cancers
- GoodRx launches subscription program for low-cost generic medications, telehealth services
- George Washington University locks deal to hand off debt-ridden physician practice to UHS
- Humana invests $83M in new Florida pharmacy distribution center
- As J&J separates from its orthopedics business, it's laying off 56 employees in New Jersey
- ASCO preview: With expectations jacked up, Akeso's ivonescimab to face scrutiny in high-stakes plenary
- An insider’s look at LillyDirect
- GLP-1 manufacturer CordenPharma strikes deal for peptide CDMO, lining up new production sites in US and China
- Weight-Loss Program Helps Women Battling Breast Cancer
- Younger U.S. Women of Color Face Rising Breast Cancer Deaths
- High Fitness Doesn’t Raise A-fib Risk In Young Men, Study Finds
- Cheaper, Alternative Health Plans Are Having A Moment, But Critics Urge Caution
- Ultrafine Wildfire Smoke Particles May Pose Serious Health Risks
- Nurse Convicted in Patient’s Death Turns Fatal Drug Error Into a Cautionary Tale
- Montana Hurries To Adopt Trump’s Medicaid Work Rules Amid Budget Woes
- Readers Address Drugged Driving, Suicide Prevention, Worker Shortages
- Amid policy and pricing headwinds, US healthcare and life sci faces 'vast field of opportunity': survey
- Amid policy and pricing headwinds, US healthcare and life sci faces 'vast field of opportunity': survey
- Biogen investigated by Italian regulator over multiple sclerosis ‘market abuse’ claims
- FDA delays ruling on AstraZeneca’s breast cancer drug after negative adcomm vote
- Eli Lilly wins argument over Noom’s GLP-1 dosing claims
- Remarks at the Stanford Rock Center for Corporate Governance
- Smart ring maker Oura files confidentially for IPO as consumer demand propels revenue growth
- Outlook moves toward potential US nod for thrice-snubbed eye drug with FDA appeal win
- JD Power: Cost pressures worsen member experience with commercial plans
- Trinity Health credits pay rates, cost management for its steady 1% operating margin
- Trump Admin Bars Key U.S. Researchers From Global Virus Response Talk
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- As calls for COINS Act expansion grow, will new rules sweep up China biotech licensing?
- Radiopharmaceutical outfit Lantheus mulls potential $7B takeover by Curium: Bloomberg
- Everyone Has A Family Doc, But Can You Get An Appointment?
- Many U.S. College Students With Psychosis Are Not Receiving Treatment
- Antibiotics Won't Help Ease Asthma-Linked Wheezing in Kids
- Yoga Eases Insomnia And Anxiety In Cancer Survivors, Study Finds
- SK bioscience links up with Colombia to enable local production of varicella vaccine
- Dust Yields Clues to Viral Outbreaks, Study Finds
- 3 Medical Routines That Older People May Not Need
- Cheaper, Alternative Health Plans Are Having a Moment, but Critics Urge Caution
- Acting NIAID Chief Steps Down Amid Ebola, Hantavirus Concerns
- Sunscreen Confusion Puts More Americans At Risk For Melanoma
- 1 In 10 U.S. Surgeons Quit Practice, Study Warns Of Shortage
- Video Game Can Detect Depression In Minutes, Study Says
- Quitting Smoking Might Lower Your Dementia Risk
- Severe Asthma Often Comes With Other Serious Health Problems
- Efforts To Understand The Nation's Drugged Driving Problem Stall Under Trump
- RFK Jr. Fires Two Leaders Of Major U.S. Health Task Force
- Common Food Preservatives Linked to Major Heart Problems
- Migraine With Aura Linked To Middle-Age Stroke Risk
- Nicotine Vapes Triple Smokers' Odds Of Quitting Tobacco
- Fatty Liver Disease Increases Heart Attack Risk, Study Says
- Fixing Eligibility at the Point of Care: The Missing Link in Medical Device Reimbursement Integrity
- Fixing Eligibility at the Point of Care: The Missing Link in Medical Device Reimbursement Integrity
- The failure of the ‘usual suspects’ approach to life science recruitment
- The failure of the ‘usual suspects’ approach to life science recruitment
- Statement on Novel Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs)
- Value, Focus, and the Future of MedTech: M&A and Divestitures are Rewriting the Strategic Playbook.
The U.S. Supreme Court just hammered the Second Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals over their decision in Miller v. McDonald, in light of Mahmoud v. Taylor. The Miller case is a response to the campaign by New York state officials to bankrupt Amish schools, intimidate Amish parents, and shut down Amish religious education entirely because they refuse to administer COVID and other vaccines.
Despite admitting that the Amish families were sincere in their religious beliefs, the New York Department of Health slapped three one-room Amish schools with devastating penalties:
- $ 52,000 against Dygert Road School
- $ 46,000 against Twin Mountains School
- $ 20,000 against Shady Lane School
These fines were issued for a single day of alleged “noncompliance,” and the NY DoH openly bragged in its filings that it was being “generous,” warning that future fines would be even more severe.
The department declared that each unvaccinated child attending school constituted a separate violation with $ 2,000 per day penalties.
The SCOTUS story:
https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/25/25-133/355533/20250414152523344_Exhibit%20A.pdf
‘Checkmate’: U.S. Supreme Court Delivers Huge Win for Religious Exemptions
The U.S. Supreme Court today reversed a lower court decision against a group of Amish parents and school leaders who challenged the state of New York’s vaccine mandates for schools, ruling that the appeals court must reconsider the case. Today’s ruling could have implications for other states that don’t allow religious exemptions, attorneys said.By Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D. • December 9, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court today [08 December 2025] reversed a lower court decision against a group of Amish parents and school leaders who challenged the state of New York’s vaccine mandates for schools, ruling that the appeals court must reconsider the case.
Today’s ruling is a win for health and religious freedom advocates — one that could have implications for other states that don’t allow religious exemptions from school vaccine mandates, attorneys said.
Attorney Sujata Gibson told The Defender today’s Supreme Court decision is “checkmate” for states that refuse to accept religious exemptions. “It means we’re almost certainly getting the religious exemption back, not only in New York, but across the country,” Gibson said.
Today’s decision stems from a lawsuit filed on June 2, 2023, against the New York State Department of Health and New York State Education Department, alleging they violated the U.S. Constitution by preventing the plaintiffs from exercising their religion.
Attorney Aaron Siri filed the suit on June 2, 2023, seeking injunctive relief.
On July 31, lawyers, including Siri, asked the Supreme Court to hear the case, Miller v. McDonald, after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit dismissed the suit in March.
Not only did the Supreme Court today announce that it would hear the case — which is rare, Gibson said — but it handed down its decision on the spot via a “summary disposition” in which it vacated the 2nd Circuit’s judgment.
“The case is remanded to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit for further consideration in light of Mahmoud v. Taylor,” the summary disposition stated.
“This is huge,” Gibson said, because Mahmoud v. Taylor — a Supreme Court decision released in June — negated the 2nd Circuit’s legal arguments for denying the Miller plaintiffs the right to a religious exemption.
“All of the reasons, basically, that the 2nd Circuit cited to say they weren’t giving relief were overturned in Mahmud v. Taylor,” Gibson explained.
“I don’t see any way that the 2nd Circuit could uphold its dismissal,” in light of the Supreme Court’s instructions, she said. “By vacating the dismissal, the Supreme Court signaled that Mahmoud applies to vaccine cases. Mahmoud provides incredibly broad protection to parental religious rights infringed by school policies.”
The 2nd Circuit will likely have to issue a decision that restores religious exemptions in New York, Gibson said.
Today’s Supreme Court decision will also likely affect other states that deny religious exemptions, said Children’s Health Defense (CHD) General Counsel Kim Mack Rosenberg. She told The Defender:
“While the Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. McDonald directly relates to the religious exemption to vaccine mandates in New York state, it will have broader implications in other states that have stripped citizens of religious exemptions.
“As Supreme Court precedent, Mahmoud v. Taylor applies in all those states, not only New York, and should be considered by any court taking up these questions.”
Supreme Court paves way for constitutional protection of religious exemptions
Gibson broke down how and why the Supreme Court’s decision dramatically changes the legal landscape for religious exemptions to school-based vaccine mandates. She said:
“For decades, the problem with religious protection has been a case called Smith, where the Supreme Court said that you don’t actually get First Amendment protection for the exercise of religion until you can prove that the law that’s burdening your religion is either not neutral or not generally applicable.”
Since vaccine mandates apply to everyone and aren’t issued against a specific religion, it’s been challenging for those seeking religious exemptions to obtain protection. Lawyers have had to argue that there are certain exceptions to that rule, Gibson said.
One exception that the Supreme Court noted in its Smith decision involved Wisconsin v. Yoder, in which Amish families didn’t send their kids to high school because it violated their religious beliefs. “Even though the high school requirement is also neutral and generally applicable, the parents were still able to get strict scrutiny of that and get constitutional protection,” Gibson said.
Siri cited the Wisconsin v. Yoder case as justification for the 2nd Circuit to grant the New York Amish parents and school leaders relief from the state’s vaccine mandate for school entry.
The 2nd Circuit disagreed, arguing that the Yoder exception applied only to the exact situation detailed in that case.
However, this summer, the Supreme Court ruled in Mahmud v. Taylor that the Yoder exception applies more broadly.
For instance, the Mahmud v. Taylor case was about how public schools must offer opt-outs for parents who object to LGBTQ-themed elementary school books due to their religious beliefs.
The Yoder exception “basically applies any time parents have a religious objection to a school policy, even if that school policy is neutral and generally applicable,” she said.
That means the Yoder case can be used as a potent legal argument in vaccination contexts. “That’s what the Supreme Court did today by vacating (nullifying) the 2nd Circuit’s decision in Miller and ruling that the 2nd Circuit must redo its decision in light of Mahmud v. Taylor,” Gibson said.
The Supreme Court’s decision comes amid a litany of lawsuits seeking to restore religious exemption rights. Gibson said those lawsuits will continue “just to make sure” the law is applied correctly.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced last week that it is investigating a complaint that a Midwestern school disregarded a valid religious exemption and failed to obtain parental consent when vaccinating a student.
“Today, we are putting pediatric medical professionals on notice: you cannot sideline parents,” HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a statement. “When providers ignore parental consent, violate exemptions to vaccine mandates, or keep parents in the dark about their children’s care, we will act decisively. We will use every tool at our disposal to protect families and restore accountability.”
HHS did not disclose the name of the school under investigation or the student who was vaccinated.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.















