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Health Care |
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Harris to go after Trump on Dobbs anniversary |
Vice President Harris is set mark the second anniversary of the Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade by concentrating the blame on former President Trump. |
The Biden-Harris campaign said Wednesday that Harris will travel to Maryland to mark the anniversary of the 2022 Supreme Court ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization. "The Vice President will remind voters that Donald Trump is responsible for overturning Roe and the chaos that has followed, and she will highlight the threat a second Trump presidency would pose to reproductive freedom nationwide," the campaign said in a statement. This course of action falls closely in line with how Harris has used the issue of abortion access to hit at Trump. She reiterated her blame of Trump for the Dobbs decision last month, saying, "Donald Trump did this. He handpicked three members of the United States Supreme Court because he intended for them to overturn Roe, and they did as intended." Republican candidates, Trump especially, have had to move delicately when it comes to talking about abortion on the campaign trail. The former president has avoided endorsing a national abortion ban, repeatedly saying he believes the issue should be left up to states. But that doesn't mean he's avoiding the issue either. According to Axios, Trump told House Republicans during his visit to the Capitol last week that while abortion has "cost" the GOP politically, it is still "too important to ignore." And last week Trump reportedly vowed to walk "side by side" with a Christian group, the Danbury Institute, that opposes abortion even in instances of rape or incest. |
Welcome to The Hill's Health Care newsletter, we're Nathaniel Weixel and Joseph Choi — every week we follow the latest moves on how Washington impacts your health. |
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How policy will be impacting the health care sector this week and beyond: |
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Breastfeeding parents are now required to receive paid breaks in New York, due to a new law that went into effect Wednesday. It requires Empire State employers to provide half-hour paid breaks to working parents who need to pump breast milk for the first three years of their child's life. "As New York's first mom Governor, I am fighting every day to give working parents the protections they need to keep their families strong … |
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| Former White House chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci says that he still fears someone may murder him one day. "I still think, deep down, that there’s a possibility that somebody’s gonna kill me," Fauci said in an interview with USA Today released Wednesday. "So, that's a possibility I wish I didn't have to think about, but it’s true." Fauci noted that he has "become the target of people with extremist views." … |
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White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre halted a press briefing Tuesday after someone fainted, according to a pool report. In the middle of taking a question from a reporter during the briefing, another person in the room can be heard stating that there was "an emergency." "Oh, hold on," Jean-Pierre said in response as she stepped away from the podium in a clip highlighted by Mediaite. "Did somebody pass out?" Jean-Pierre … |
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Keeping Pharmacy Shelves Filled: Solutions to Address Drug Shortages | June 25 in Washington, D.C. | In person & streaming Join The Hill for a special discussion on the pharmaceutical supply chain as we discuss the collective goal of preventing drug shortages and, when they are unavoidable, mitigating their impact on patients. Speakers include: - Dr. Mark McClellan, director, Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy
- Dr. Marta Wosińska, senior fellow, Center on Health Policy, The Brookings Institution
- Michael Kleinrock, lead research director, IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science.
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Branch out with a different read: |
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Colombian family's genes offer new clue to delaying onset of Alzheimer's |
WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists studying a family plagued by early-in-life Alzheimer's found some carry a genetic oddity that delays their initial symptoms by five years. The finding points to novel ways of fighting the mind-robbing disease – if researchers can unravel how a single copy of that very rare gene variant offers at least a little … | |
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Local and state headlines on health care: |
- Michigan health officials warn against eating Diamond Shruumz products amid FDA investigation (CBS News)
- As WA emergency rooms overflow, here's one possible fix (The Seattle Times)
- Maryland's marijuana pardons reflect uneven shift in U.S. drug policy (The Washington Post)
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A MESSAGE FROM GUARDANT HEALTH & THE UNDERSIGNED |
Don't Let Perfect Be The Enemy of Good in Colorectal Cancer Screening |
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Health news we've flagged from other outlets: |
- Boosting hepatitis C treatment would save money, CBO says (Axios)
- Japan reports record spike in potentially deadly bacterial infection (CNN)
- How a Baltimore neuroscience study is rewriting Black America's relationship with medical research (Stat)
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Most read stories on The Hill right now: |
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The source of the structural imbalances in our electoral system isn't Congress. It's the conservatives on the court. Read more |
| A stunningly tight race in Virginia was among the highlights of Tuesday night's elections, which also included contests in Georgia and Oklahoma. Observers … Read more |
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