Untreated Cancer, Festering Infections: Immigrant Detainees Detail Medical Care Lapses
Rae Ellen Bichell / kffhealthnews - Get our weekly newsletter, The Week in Brief, featuring a roundup of our original coverage, Fridays at 2 p.m. ET.
AI Summary: Investigations and interviews reveal immigrant detainees across multiple US facilities endured medical neglect, including untreated cancers and worsening infections. Detainees describe delayed diagnoses, inadequate care and systemic lapses that exacerbated serious conditions, prompting calls for stronger oversight, accountability and immediate reforms to protect vulnerable patients rather than paperwork and excuses.
Curtis Henry: Impact of Weight Loss Drugs on Immune Responses and Anti-Tumor Immunity
oncodaily - Curtis Henry, shared a post on LinkedIn: “I just want to give a huge nod to Claire Pillsbury, a postdoctoral fellow in my laboratory, conducting research on how weight loss […]
AI Summary: Health authorities have put forward proposed plans for Liverpool Women’s Hospital outlining redevelopment and service reconfiguration intended to modernize maternity and women's services. Officials are seeking public feedback while the community and clinicians press for clarity on capacity, timelines and funding — because nothing says progress like blueprints that invite polite panic.
Medically tailored meals produce better health and lower costs, analysis finds
medicalxpress - At least a dozen U.S. states are rolling out medically tailored meals in pilot projects through Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program serving 71 million Americans who qualify based on income or disability status.
AI Summary: Analyses of medically tailored meal programs, including a Massachusetts Medicaid demonstration, show reduced hospital use and lower healthcare costs alongside measurable health benefits. The findings bolster calls to move 'food is medicine' from pilot projects into mainstream policy — because apparently feeding patients the right food is cheaper than fixing the mess afterward.
RFK Jr. seeks access to Americans’ medical records
Naomi Diaz / beckershospitalreview - HHS, under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has sought access to detailed patient records held by state health information exchange systems as part of an effort to research a potential link between vaccines and autism, KFF Health News reported June…
AI Summary: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has requested access to large sets of Americans’ medical records to probe possible links between vaccines and developmental conditions, a move that reignites debates over research transparency, data privacy and the line between investigation and public alarmism. Privacy advocates warn of risks if safeguards are not ironclad.
Flesh-Eating New World Screwworm Confirmed in Texas, Posing Risk to U.S. Cattle for First Time in Decades
discovermagazine - Learn about the New World screwworm, a parasitic fly that has just been confirmed in the U.S., and find out what's being done to stop its spread.
AI Summary: Authorities have confirmed the return of the New World screwworm to Texas, a flesh‑eating fly larva that can devastate livestock. Officials are ramping up surveillance, trapping and containment measures to protect cattle herds and limit economic damage; human infections remain rare but the agricultural hit could be substantial.
In a First, Scientists Precisely Edit Human Embryo Genes
Carl Zimmer / nytimes - Researchers relied on a newer gene-editing technique that may make it possibl to engineer embryos, a prospect that has long alarmed bioethicists.
AI Summary: Researchers report the first precise edits to human embryo genes, demonstrating a technical milestone that immediately reopened the ethical and safety conversation about germline modification. Scientists urge caution, tighter oversight and more study before any clinical application while bioethicists debate whether we’ve crossed a line that’s been long teased in science fiction.
Epic dismisses claims against SelfRx in medical record misuse lawsuit
Emily Olsen / healthcaredive - The EHR vendor accused SelfRx of retrieving over 100,000 records for financial gain in the high-profile lawsuit. Now, the chronic condition management firm said it doesn’t know who took the records.
AI Summary: A judge has dismissed claims against Epic in litigation alleging misuse of patient records involving pharmacy‑linked defendant SelfRx. The ruling narrows the case and leaves ongoing questions about third‑party access to electronic health records, vendor liability and data governance, underscoring persistent tensions in health IT and patient privacy.