'This might be the point of no return': Experts on the current measles outbreak and where we go from here
livescience - Live Science spoke with two authors of a "progress report" detailing America's ongoing measles outbreak.
AI Summary: Public-health experts are sounding the alarm as measles cases surge across the U.S., spotlighting a severe Utah outbreak and emergency-department strains tied to rising case counts. Officials warn vaccination gaps and crowded events could fuel further spread, with hospitals grappling with surges and unpaid bills — a reminder that preventable disease still knows how to cause maximum chaos.
- Hospitals and World Cup: surge pressure and wastewater surveillance (3)
- Is the U.S. measles outbreak at a tipping point? (3)
- Vaccination politics, hesitancy and conflict fueling spread (3)
Hospitals and World Cup: surge pressure and wastewater surveillance
Is the U.S. measles outbreak at a tipping point?
Vaccination politics, hesitancy and conflict fueling spread
CMS creates Office of Health Technology and Products
Naomi Diaz / beckershospitalreview - The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has established a new Office of Health Technology and Products to oversee healthcare technology modernization, digital products and platform transformation across the agency’s programs. The organizational chang…
AI Summary: CMS has created a dedicated Office of Health Technology and Products to centralize oversight of digital health tools, including AI and emerging medical technologies. The new office will coordinate evaluation, guidance and implementation policies across CMS programs to speed safe adoption, improve interoperability and provide clearer regulatory expectations for health systems and vendors.
UPMC to lay off 200 employees, cut 300 open positions
Sydney Halleman / healthcaredive - A spokesperson said the layoffs were primarily in non-clinical or member facing roles.
AI Summary: UPMC disclosed a workforce reduction that includes laying off 200 staff and eliminating roughly 300 open positions as part of broader cost-control measures. The move is aimed at reshaping operations and reducing expenses amid financial pressures, while leaders promise transition support even as employees and communities brace for service and morale impacts.
E. Anders Kolb: Blood Cancer United Preserves Access to Luveltamab Tazevibulin for Children with AML
oncodaily - E. Anders Kolb, Chief Executive Officer of Blood Cancer United, shared a post on LinkedIn: “Today we announced a first‑of‑its‑kind intervention from a nonprofit. Blood Cancer United has stepped up […]
AI Summary: A nonprofit stepped into a supply crisis and purchased the remaining stock of an experimental agent to preserve access for children with acute myeloid leukemia. The emergency buy protects current patients from treatment interruption while stakeholders scramble for a durable manufacturing or regulatory fix, illustrating how charities sometimes act like pharma’s safety net.
VA deploys Oracle EHR to four medical centers in Ohio, Kentucky
Emily Olsen / healthcaredive - The rollout marks the second wave of deployments in 2026 after the VA largely paused the project for years to fix technical issues and errors.
AI Summary: The Department of Veterans Affairs extended its Oracle Health electronic health record deployment to four additional medical centers in Ohio and Kentucky. The expansion continues the VA’s multi‑site migration to a modernized EHR, bringing new interoperability promises, training needs and the usual teething problems as clinicians and IT teams adjust.
Stanford’s AI discharge summary tool cuts physician burnout
Giles Bruce / beckershospitalreview - Palo Alto, Calif.-based Stanford Health Care piloted an in-house AI agent that generates hospital discharge summaries, finding it reduced physician burnout. Researchers at Stanford (Calif.) Medicine built the tool, calling it MedAgentBrief, and deployed i…
AI Summary: A Stanford-developed AI system for generating hospital discharge summaries significantly reduced clinician workload and improved efficiency in pilot testing. The tool automates routine documentation, freeing physicians from time‑sapping paperwork — a welcome relief for burned‑out clinicians — while prompting careful questions about validation, accuracy and oversight as adoption scales.
FDA approves first new sunscreen ingredient in two decades
medicalxpress - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved bemotrizinol (BEMT) for use in over-the-counter sunscreen products.
AI Summary: The FDA approved a new sunscreen ingredient, the first addition to the U.S. roster in twenty years, opening the door to revamped formulations and potentially better sun protection. Regulators framed the move as modernizing dermatologic options and bolstering consumer confidence, while manufacturers eye reformulation and marketing opportunities.
Cleveland Clinic agrees to 'decades-long' halt on gender-affirming care for minors in DOJ settlement
fiercehealthcare - A deal with the DOJ and Ohio Attorney General's Office settles improper billing allegations, and includes a $2 million commitment to pay for detransitioning services.
AI Summary: Cleveland Clinic agreed, under a Justice Department settlement, to cease providing pediatric gender‑affirming care to minors, effectively imposing a long‑term halt to those services. The settlement changes care access for affected youth, draws mixed reactions from clinicians and advocates, and underscores the legal and policy tensions surrounding transgender health services.