health

Trump's latest remark shows he's 'well aware of the woefulness of his condition': comedian

President Donald Trump — who turned 79 years old in June — has lately appeared more aware of his mortality, according to actor and comedian Michael Ian Black.

In a Wednesday essay for the Daily Beast, Black opined that Trump's more recent public statements responding to speculation about his health suggest that the president may be attempting to grapple with the aging process. He began his op-ed by quoting from an interview Trump gave to Fox News last month in which he openly wondered if he could "get to heaven."

"I wanna try and get to heaven if possible. I’m hearing I’m not doing well. I am really at the bottom of the totem pole. But if I can get to heaven, this will be one of the reasons," Trump said of his efforts to end the war between Russia and Ukraine.

READ MORE: Economist Paul Krugman says Trump 'telling the truth' on this issue – but there's a catch

Black regarded that comment as "the most self-reflective thing I’ve ever heard from the president," adding that it was proof that "something human still beats in that Grinchian heart." But he went on to argue that no amends Trump may be attempting to make are enough to atone for a life spent "doing the wrong things."

Trump's health has lately dominated the news cycle, as the president was seen with swollen ankles that are characteristic of people who have chronic venous insufficiency, and bruising on his hands that the White House attributed to excessive hand-shaking and aspirin use. The president also went several days without being seen on camera over the recent Labor Day weekend, which prompted speculation online that he may have passed away.

Michael Ian Black emphasized that while he doesn't personally wish a "difficult diagnosis" on the president, he simply hoped that Trump "reap exactly what he sowed" throughout his life. He went on to write: "It gives me so much joy to know that Trump is well aware of the woefulness of his own condition."

"When we are faced with our imminent deaths—or even ‘just’ reminded of our mortality—I can only imagine the thoughts running through most people’s minds have to do with the love they shared and the desire to make amends with those we believe we have wronged," Black wrote. "Is that what Trump is trying to do? If so, he’s doing about as good a job of it as he does with everything else. Even if he lives another eighty years, there isn’t enough time for him right his wrongs."

READ MORE: 'Fire her': Trump AG slammed as 'compulsive liar' after 'missing' Epstein footage emerges

Click here to read Black's full column in the Daily Beast (subscription required).

'Hard disagree': Lauren Boebert torched after saying constituents' health is 'not' her job

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) was recently seen in a video plainly saying that safeguarding the health of her Eastern Colorado constituents wasn't her priority, sparking outrage on social media.

In the video, which was posted to X on Monday by the account @PatriotTakes, Boebert is speaking on a Zoom broadcast from her office. While the context of the video is unclear, she appears to have been speaking to constituents, given that she spoke in the second person while describing her role as an elected official (Boebert is also currently back home in Colorado's 4th Congressional District for a month-long recess).

"My job as your representative, as a congresswoman, is not to make sure that you are healthy and safe in every aspect of your life," Boebert said. "I'd probably send you a Peloton and a gym membership and then make sure you're buckling your seatbelt every time you get in a car, maybe [unintelligible] be in a car. My job is to keep you free."

READ MORE: 'Wildcard': GOP rep's plan to rename Kennedy Center after Trump would violate federal law

Boebert's comments were met with a barrage of criticism on social media, prompting responses from both Coloradans and others. Trisha Calavarese, who is running against Boebert in 2026, wrote "hard disagree" in response to Boebert's claim that she wasn't responsible for constituents' health.

"Think the largest federal rollback of health insurance in history is SICK coming from someone who enjoys the best possible health care in the country courtesy [of] the US taxpayers," Calavarese said. "You can't make up for collapsing rural hospitals with some Pelotons. Freedom also means where you live doesn't determine if you live, that's why we need care on the Eastern Plains, and why I'm running."

Others also blasted the Colorado Republican, with author Jason Cole tweeting: "If the forefathers were alive to see what happened to the system they created..." And writer Aly Sebastian referenced an incident in which Boebert's son allegedly attacked her grandson writing: "She can't even keep her grandkid safe."

"I am kindly asking that people elect representatives who understand what the f------ job is," marketing consultant Nikki Kanter tweeted.

READ MORE: 'A horrendous situation': Key Epstein reporter reveals threats, feuds — and Trump's silence

'Covering for him': MAGA ignites new 'scandal' as it ignores Trump’s 'bizarre' behavior

New Republic editor Michael Tomasky says he doubts the motive behind a new House Republican investigation of President Joe Biden’s use of the autopen.

“The House Oversight Committee, led by that sea-green incorruptible James Comer, is preparing to subpoena some top Biden administration officials to get to the bottom of this ‘scandal,’ which Donald Trump has been braying about for months,” said Tomasky.

Congressional Republicans, who are taking their cues from President Donald Trump, according to NBC News, see the use of autopens as a key line of attack on Democrats who allegedly withheld the truth of Biden’s mental fitness.

READ MORE: Behind Trump's grotesque and obvious racist dog whistle to the right

“Comer, you’ll recall, had spent $20 million taxpayer dollars investigating the ‘Biden Crime Family’ last summer and turned up nothing, which naturally never stopped him from going on Fox News to announce that a new devastating revelation was just around the corner,” Tomasky said, adding that he wasn’t sure what Comer was trying to prove considering the use of an autopen to sign legally binding documents appears to be within the parameters of the Constitution.

“Joe Biden’s mental acuity will hardly be an issue at the top of voters’ minds come 2028. However, someone else’s mental acuity might be,” Tomasky added, referencing what Mother Jones called a “bizarre” Memorial Day commencement speech at West Point.

“And we are buying you new airplanes, brand-new, beautiful planes, redesigned planes, brand-new planes, totally stealth planes,” Trump told the 2025 West Point graduating class. “I hope they’re stealth. I don’t know, that whole stealth thing, I’m sorta wondering. You mean if we shape a wing this way, they don’t see it, but the other way they see it? I’m not so sure.”

The speech that included Trump proclaiming God intended for him to be president at this point in time while advising the graduating class to avoid ‘trophy wives,’ was “no more bizarre than most Trump speeches,” Tomasky said. He added that he is not the only person to suggest Trump’s behavior “could be a sign of mental illness, or it could be a sign of early-stage dementia in a 78-year-old man,” as MSNBC host Lawrence O’Donnell recently suggested

READ MORE: 'That's propaganda': Parents fight back against new religious MAGA curriculum in OK schools

Tomasky said Trump is only president again thanks to a cadre of supporters “lying and covering for him,” including “Fox News hosts. The Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro types. Aileen Cannon, notably. Nearly every Republican office holder, either by commission or omission.”

“Comer, in his odd way, is proof of this,” Tomasky said. “…. He’s bumbled his way through these investigations telling lie after lie and blooper after blooper. But by cracky, he’s still the chairman of the powerful House Oversight Committee.”

“The Biden autopen is the new ‘but her emails,’ And when it runs its course, they’ll find a new pseudo-scandal to pursue. I suppose we can take comfort in the fact that they keep getting dumber,” he said.

Read the full TNR report at this link.

A mom’s $97,000 question: How was her baby’s air-ambulance ride not medically necessary?

Sara England was putting together Ghostbusters costumes for Halloween when she noticed her baby wasn’t doing well.

Her 3-month-old son, Amari Vaca, had undergone open-heart surgery two months before, so she called his cardiologist, who recommended getting him checked out. England assigned Amari’s grandparents to trick-or-treat duty with his three older siblings and headed to the local emergency room.

Once England and the baby arrived at Natividad Medical Center in Salinas, California, she said, doctors could see Amari was struggling to breathe and told her that he needed specialized care immediately, from whichever of two major hospitals in the region had an opening first.

Even as they talked, Amari was declining rapidly, his mother said. Doctors put a tube down his throat and used a bag to manually push air into his lungs for over an hour to keep his oxygen levels up until he was stable enough to switch to a ventilator.

According to England, late that night, when doctors said the baby was stable enough to travel, his medical team told her that a bed had opened up at the University of California-San Francisco Medical Center and that staffers there were ready to receive him.

She, her son, and an EMT boarded a small plane around midnight. Ground ambulances carried them between the hospitals and airports.

Amari was diagnosed with respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, and spent three weeks in the hospital before recovering and returning home.

Then the bill came.

The Patient: Amari Vaca, now 1, who was covered by a Cigna policy sponsored by his father’s employer at the time.

Medical Services: An 86-mile air-ambulance flight from Salinas to San Francisco.

Service Provider: Reach Medical Holdings, which is part of Global Medical Response, an industry giant backed by private equity investors. Global Medical Response operates in all 50 states and has said it has a total of 498 helicopters and airplanes. It is out-of-network with Amari’s Cigna plan.

Total Bill: $97,599. Cigna declined to cover any part of the bill.

What Gives: Legal safeguards are in place to protect patients from big bills for some out-of-network care, including air-ambulance rides.

Medical billing experts said the No Surprises Act, a federal law enacted in 2022, could have protected Amari’s family from receiving the $97,000 “balance bill,” leaving the insurer and the air-ambulance provider to determine fair payment according to the law. But the protections apply only to care that health plans determine is “medically necessary” — and insurers get to define what that means in each case.

According to its coverage denial letter, Cigna determined that Amari’s air-ambulance ride was not medically necessary. The insurer cited its reasoning: He could have taken a ground ambulance instead of a plane to cover the nearly 100 roadway miles between Salinas and San Francisco.

“I thought there must have been a mistake,” England said. “There’s no way we can pay this. Is this a real thing?”

In the letter, Cigna said Amari’s records did not show that other methods of transportation were “medically contraindicated or not feasible.” The health plan also noted the absence of documentation that he could not be reached by a ground ambulance for pickup or that a ground ambulance would be unfeasible because of “great distances or other obstacles.”

Lastly, it said records did not show a ground ambulance “would impede timely and appropriate medical care.”

When KFF Health News asked Cigna what records were referenced when making this decision, a spokesperson declined to respond.

Caitlin Donovan, a spokesperson for the National Patient Advocate Foundation, said that even though Amari’s bill isn’t technically in violation of the No Surprises Act, the situation is exactly what the law was designed to avoid.

“What they’re basically saying is that the parents should have opted against the advice of the physician,” Donovan said. “That’s insane. I know ‘medical necessity’ is this nebulous term, but it seems like it’s becoming a catch-all for turning down patients.”

On Feb. 5, the National Association of Emergency Medical Services Physicians said that since the No Surprises Act was enacted two years ago, it has seen a jump in claim denials based on “lack of medical necessity,” predominantly for air-ambulance transports between facilities.

In a letter to federal health officials, the group cited reasons commonly given for inappropriate medical-necessity denials observed by some of its 2,000 members, such as “the patient should have been taken elsewhere” or “the patient could have been transported by ground ambulance.”

The association urged the government to require that health plans presume medical necessity for inter-facility air transports ordered by a physician at a hospital, subject to a retrospective review.

Such decisions are often “made under dire circumstances — when a hospital is not capable of caring for or stabilizing a particular patient or lacks the clinical resources to stabilize a patient with a certain clinical diagnosis,” the group’s president, José Cabañas, wrote in the letter. “Clinical determinations made by a referring physician (or another qualified medical professional) should not be second-guessed by a plan.”

Patricia Kelmar, a health policy expert and senior director with the U.S. Public Interest Research Groups, noted, however, that hospitals could familiarize themselves with local health plans, for example, and establish protocol, so that before they call an air ambulance, they know if there are in-network alternatives and, if not, what items the plan needs to justify the claim and provide payment.

“The hospitals who live and breathe and work in our communities should be considering the individuals who come to them every day,” Kelmar said. “I understand in emergency situations you generally have a limited amount of time, but, in most situations, you should be familiar with the plans so you can work within the confines of the patient’s health insurance.”

England said Cigna’s denial particularly upset her.

“As parents, we did not make any of the decisions other than to say, yes, we’ll do that,” she said. “I don’t know how else it could have gone.”

The Resolution: England twice appealed the air-ambulance charge to the insurer, but both times Cigna rejected the claim, maintaining that “medical necessity” had not been established.

The final step of the appeals process is an external review, in which a third party evaluates the case. England said staff members at Natividad Medical Center in Salinas — which arranged Amari’s transport — declined to write an appeal letter on his behalf, explaining to her that doing so is against the facility’s policy.

Using her son’s medical records, which the Natividad staff provided, England said she is writing a letter herself to assert why the air ambulance was medically necessary.

Andrea Rosenberg, a spokesperson for Natividad Medical Center, said the hospital focuses on “maintaining the highest standards of health care and patient well-being.”

Despite receiving a waiver from England authorizing the medical center to discuss Amari’s case, Rosenberg did not respond to questions from KFF Health News, citing privacy issues. A Cigna spokesperson told KFF Health News that the insurer has in-network alternatives to the out-of-network ambulance provider, but — despite receiving a waiver authorizing Cigna to discuss Amari’s case — declined to answer other questions.

“It is disappointing that CALSTAR/REACH is attempting to collect this egregious balance from the patient’s family,” the Cigna spokesperson, Justine Sessions, said in an email, referring to the air-ambulance provider. “We are working diligently to try to resolve this for the family.”

On March 13, weeks after being contacted by KFF Health News, England said, a Cigna representative contacted her and offered assistance with her final appeal, the one reviewed by a third party. The representative also told her the insurer had attempted to contact the ambulance provider but had been unable to resolve the bill with them.

Global Medical Response, the ambulance provider, declined to comment.

England said she and her husband have set aside two hours each week for him to take care of their four kids while she shuts herself in her room and makes calls about their medical bills.

“It’s just another stress,” she said. “Another thing to get in the way of us being able to enjoy our family.”

The Takeaway: Kelmar said she encourages patients to appeal bills that seem inaccurate. Even if the plan denies it internally, push forward to an external review so someone outside the company has a chance to review, she said.

In the case of “medical necessity” denials, Kelmar recommended patients work with the medical provider to provide more information to the insurance company to underscore why an emergency transport was required.

More from Bill of the Month

Doctors who write a letter or make a call to a patient’s insurer explaining a decision can also ask for a “peer-to-peer review,” meaning they would discuss the case with a medical expert in their field.

Kelmar said patients with employer-sponsored health plans can ask their employer’s human resources department to advocate for them with the health plan. It’s in the employers’ best interest since they often pay a lot for these health plans, she said.

No matter what, Kelmar said, patients shouldn’t let fear stop them from appealing a medical bill. Patients who appeal have a high likelihood of winning, she said.

Patients with government health coverage can further appeal insurance denials by filing a complaint with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Those who believe they have received an inappropriate bill from an out-of-network provider can call the No Surprises Act help desk at 1-800-985-3059.

Bill of the Month is a crowdsourced investigation by KFF Health News and NPR that dissects and explains medical bills. Do you have an interesting medical bill you want to share with us? Tell us about it!

This article was produced by KFF Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

Subscribe to KFF Health News' free Morning Briefing.

This article first appeared on KFF Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

The 8-hour sleep myth: How I learned that everything I knew about sleep was wrong

I’ve always been at odds with sleep. Starting around adolescence, morning became a special form of hell. Long school commutes meant rising in 6am darkness, then huddling miserably near the bathroom heating vent as I struggled to wrest myself from near-paralysis. The sight of eggs turned my not-yet-wakened stomach, so I scuttled off without breakfast. In fourth grade, my mother noticed that instead of playing outside after school with the other kids, I lay zonked in front of the TV, dozing until dinner. “Lethargy of unknown cause,” pronounced the doctor.

High school trigonometry commenced at 7:50am. I flunked, stupefied with sleepiness. Only when college allowed me to schedule courses in the afternoon did the joy of learning return. My decision to opt for grad school was partly traceable to a horror of returning to the treadmill of too little sleep and exhaustion, which a 9-to-5 job would surely bring.

In my late 20s, I began to wake up often for a couple of hours in the middle of the night – a phenomenon linked to female hormonal shifts. I’ve met these vigils with dread, obsessed with lost sleep and the next day’s dysfunction. Beside my bed I stashed an arsenal of weapons against insomnia: lavender sachets, sleep CDs, and even a stuffed sheep that makes muffled ocean noises. I collected drugstore remedies -- valerian, melatonin, Nytol -- which caused me "rebound insomnia" the moment I stop taking them.

The Sleep Fairy continued to elude me.

I confessed my problem to the doctor, ashamed to fail at something so simple that babies and rodents can do it on a dime. When I asked for Ambien, she cut me a glance that made me feel like a heroin addict and lectured me on the dangers of “controlled substances.” Her offering of “sleep hygiene” bromides like reserving my bedroom solely for sleep was useless to a studio apartment-dweller.

Conventional medical wisdom dropped me at a dead end. Why did I need to use a bedroom for nothing but sleeping when no other mammal had such a requirement? When for most of history, humans didn’t either? Our ancestors crashed with beasties large and small roaming about, bodies tossing and snoring nearby, and temperatures fluctuating wildly. And yet they slept. How on earth did they do it?

A lot differently than we do, it turns out.

The 8-Hour Sleep Myth

Pursuing the truth about sleep means winding your way through a labyrinth of science, consumerism and myth. Researchers have had barely a clue about what constitutes “normal” sleep. Is it how many hours you sleep? A certain amount of time in a particular phase? The pharmaceutical industry recommends drug-induced oblivion, which, it turns out, doesn’t even work. The average time spent sleeping increases by only a few minutes with the use of prescription sleep aids. And -- surprise! -- doctors have linked sleeping pills to cancer. We have memory foam mattresses, sleep clinics, hotel pillow concierges, and countless others strategies to put us to bed. And yet we complain about sleep more than ever.

The blame for modern sleep disorders is usually laid at the doorstep of Thomas Edison, whose electric light bulb turned the night from a time of rest to one of potentially endless activity and work. Proponents of the rising industrial culture further pushed the emphasis of work over rest, and the sense of sleep as lazy indulgence.

But there’s something else, which I learned while engaged in a bout of insomnia-driven Googling. A Feb. 12, 2012 article on the BBC Web site, “The Myth of the 8-Hour Sleep,” has permanently altered the way I think about sleep. It proclaimed something that the body had always intuited, even as the mind floundered helplessly.

Turns out that psychiatrist Thomas Wehr ran an experiment back in the ‘90s in which people were thrust into darkness for 14 hours every day for a month. When their sleep regulated, a strange pattern emerged. They slept first for four hours, then woke for one or two hours before drifting off again into a second four-hour sleep.

Historian Roger Ekirch of Virginia Tech would not have been surprised by this pattern. In 2001, he published a groundbreaking paper based on 16 years of research, which revealed something quite amazing: humans did not evolve to sleep through the night in one solid chunk. Until very recently, they slept in two stages. Shazam.

In his book At Day's Close: Night in Times Past, Ekrich presents over 500 references to these two distinct sleep periods, known as the “first sleep” and the “second sleep,” culled from diaries, court records, medical manuals, anthropological studies, and literature, including The Odyssey. Like an astrolabe pointing to some forgotten star, these accounts referenced a first sleep that began two hours after dusk, followed by waking period of one or two hours and then a second sleep.

This waking period, known in some cultures as the “watch," was filled with everything from bringing in the animals to prayer. Some folks visited neighbors. Others smoked a pipe or analyzed their dreams. Often they lounged in bed to read, chat with bedfellows, or have much more refreshing sex than we modern humans have at bedtime. A 16th-century doctor’s manual prescribed sex after the first sleep as the most enjoyable variety.

But these two sleeps and their magical interim were swept away so completely that by the 20th century, they were all but forgotten.

Historian Craig Koslofsky delves into the causes of this massive shift in human behavior in his new book, Evening's Empire. He points out that before the 17th century, you’d have to be a fool to go wandering around at night, where ne’er-do-wells and cutthroats lurked on pitch-black streets. Only the wealthy had candles, and even they had little need or desire to venture from home at night. Street lighting and other trends gradually changed this, and eventually nighttime became fashionable and hanging out in bed a mark of indolence. The industrial revolution put the exclamation point on this sentence of wakefulness. By the 19th century, health pundits argued in favor of a single, uninterrupted sleep.

We have been told over and over that the eight-hour sleep is ideal. But in many cases, our bodies have been telling us something else. Since our collective memory has been erased, anxiety about nighttime wakefulness has kept us up even longer, and our eight-hour sleep mandate may have made us more prone to stress. The long period of relaxation we used to get after a hard day’s work may have been better for our peace of mind than all the yoga in Manhattan.

After learning this, I went in search of lost sleep.

Past Life Regression

“Even a soul submerged in sleep
is hard at work and helps
make something of the world.”
― Heraclitus, Fragments

What intrigued me most about the sleep research was a feeling of connection to ancient humans and to a realm beyond clock-driven, electrified industrial life, whose endless demands are more punishing than ever. Much as Werner Herzog’s documentary Cave of Forgotten Dreams pulls the viewer into the lives of ancient cave dwellers in southern France who painted the walls with marvelous images, reading about how our ancestors filled their nights with dream reflection, lovemaking and 10-to-12 hour stretches of down-time produced a strange sense of intimacy and wonder.

I’m a writer and editor who works from home, without children, so I’ve had the luxury, for the last couple of weeks, of completely relinquishing myself to a new (or quite old) way of sleeping. I’ve been working at a cognitive shift – looking upon early evening sleepiness as a gift, and plopping into bed if I feel like it. I try to view the wakeful period, if it should come, as a magical, blessed time when my email box stops flooding and the screeching horns outside my New York window subside.

Instead of heading to bed with anxiety, I’ve tried to dive in like a voluptuary, pushing away my guilt about the list of things I could be doing and letting myself become beautifully suspended between worlds. I’ve started dimming the lights a couple of hours after dusk and looking at the nighttime not as a time to pursue endless work, but to daydream, drift, putter about, and enter an almost meditative state.

The books I’ve been reading in the evening hours have been specially chosen as a link to dreamy ruminations of our ancestor’s “watch” period. Volumes like Norman O. Brown’s Love’s Body or Eduardo Galeano’s Mirrors provide the kind of reflective, incantatory experience the nighttime seems made for. Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams would be another excellent choice, and I know from experience that reading it before bedtime triggers the most vivid mental journeys.

In sleep, we slip back to a more primitive state. We go on a psychic archaeological dig. This is part of the reason that Freud proclaimed dreams to be the royal road to the unconscious and lifted his metaphors from the researchers who were sifting through the layers of ancient history on Egyptian digs, uncovering relics and forgotten memories. Ghosts flutter about us when we lie down to rest. Our waking identities dissolve, and we become creatures whose rhythms derive from the moon and the seas much more than the clock and the computer.

As we learn more, we may realize that giving sleep and rest the center stage in our lives may be as fundamental to our well-being as the way we eat and the medicines that cure us. And if we come to treasure this time of splendid relaxation, we may have much more to offer in the daytime hours.

NOW READ: Why are we so sleep deprived — and why does it matter?

'A lot of deaths': Health experts say RFK Jr. at HHS is 'a disaster waiting to happen'

President-elect Donald Trump has announced that conspiracy theorist and anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be his nominee to helm the Department of Heath and Human Services (HHS).

Kennedy — who ran as an independent in the 2024 presidential election before dropping out and endorsing Trump — was one of Trump's most visible surrogates in the final months of the campaign cycle, and Trump promised repeatedly to put him in a high-ranking role in his Cabinet overseeing public health. Scientists, health experts and journalists are all warning that putting Kennedy in charge of all U.S. health agencies will be harmful in myriad ways.

"RFK Jr. is one of the most dangerous, misguided, and hypocritical figures in the global 'wellness" movement,'" journalist Mike Rothschild wrote in a post to the social media platform Bluesky. "He has said that "there’s no vaccine that is safe and effective." He has no idea how science or chemistry work. This is a disaster waiting to happen."

READ MORE: (Opinion) If Trump puts RFK Jr. in charge of health, get ready for a distorted reality where global health suffers

Former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich observed that RFK Jr. — the nephew of former President John F. Kennedy — is likely to undermine his uncle's legacy, as he signed the Vaccination Assistance Act in 1962. And University of Michigan health professor Pam Herd warned that RFK Jr.'s documented opposition to childhood vaccines will create a significant risk to public health, and that future generations of children could be at risk of contracting diseases they would otherwise be protected from due to vaccines.

"The one part of the pandemic that Trump handled well was fast tracking the vaccine development," Herd wrote. "We now have someone in charge who's likely to generate new outbreaks (e.g. measles) and controls all the agencies (NIH, CDC, FDA) that are needed to address old and new outbreaks."

If he is confirmed, RFK Jr. would oversee agencies in charge of researching and developing new medicines and cures to disease. Northwestern University law professor Paul Gowder opined that there would be "a lot of deaths" if RFK Jr. was able to enact his agenda at HHS. Pulaski Institution CEO Alan Elrod lamented that all of that research may be at risk if Trump is successful in elevating RFK Jr.

"Truly remarkable what we are potentially set to squander as a nation," he wrote on Bluesky. "RFK will gut and degrade the most sophisticated public health research bodies in the world."

READ MORE: Experts worry RFK Jr's role in a Trump administration will 'erode' the 'nation's health'

Author Faine Greenwood — a researcher at the Signal Program at the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative — wasn't as convinced that RFK Jr. would be effective in dismantling public health institutions. Greenwood noted that the pharmaceutical industry has been "bathing in vast seas of money thanks to the MRNA revolution, and I do not see them letting Captain Brain Worms light that all on fire without a face-eating fight."

RFK Jr.'s nomination is jus the latest in a tumultuous week of announcements from the President-elect as he names his choices for his second term Cabinet. Dartmouth College political scientist Brendan Nyhan commented on the flurry of controversial nominations, like former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) for Attorney General, Fox News host Pete Hegseth for Secretary of Defense and former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) for Director of National Intelligence.

"Just so we're clear on where we are: The President: an authoritarian who attempted a coup. A Secretary of Defense who defends war crimes. [An] Attorney General credibly accused of sex crimes A Director of National Intelligence who defends Putin and Assad. An HHS director who opposes vaccines," Nyhan wrote.

READ MORE: Veteran journalist blames Harris’ failure on 'corporate puppets' who 'stand for nothing'

Trump's health questioned by expert after his latest doctor refuses to reveal details

The most recent report on Donald Trump's health is being questioned by an expert on aging who would like to provide the public with answers about the "projected life span and health" of President Joe Biden and the former president who is making a third run for the Oval Office.

In a deep dive into the background of Trump's new doctor, Dr. Bruce A. Aronwald, a 64-year-old osteopathic physician, the Washington Post is reporting the New Jersey physician is a longtime member of the former president's Bedminster golf club who specializes in wealthy clients serving as a "concierge" doctor.

As the report from the Post's Michael Kranish notes, a central focus of the 2024 presidential election is the health of the 81-year-old Biden and the 77-year-old Trump, and details about Trump's health are severely lacking.

ALSO READ: A neuroscientist reveals how Trump and Biden's cognitive impairments are different

A November letter about Trump's health, written by Aronwald and released by the former president's campaign, stood in stark contrast to a White House report on Biden's health, with the Post reporting it lacked "specifics like blood pressure and medications, the letter had just three paragraphswithout specific numbers proclaiming that Trump was in 'excellent health' and had 'exceptional' cognitive ability. It did not disclose Trump’s weight."

An attempt by the Post to ask for more specifics was rebuffed after a visit to the doctor's office, with the doctor explaining, "There is no need for President Trump to release another medical report in addition to the one he recently made public. The President is strong physically and sharp cognitively, and he’s in excellent health overall.”

According to S. Jay Olshansky, "the lead author of a 2020 report in the journal Active Aging" on the relative health of Biden and Trump, there is not enough information to adequately address the former president's health status four years later.

"In his Nov. 23 letter about Trump’s health, Aronwald said he had conducted the most recent examination of Trump on Sept. 13, 2023. While not providing any specific numbers or names of prescription medication, Aronwald wrote that Trump’s 'overall health is excellent,' that his physical exams were 'well within the normal range and his cognitive exams were exceptional.' The letter also said that Trump’s cardiovascular studies were normal and cancer tests were negative," the report states.

According to aging expert Olshansky, "the full medical records are extraordinarily valuable. They tell a story about health prospects for survival going forward. You can’t really do a thorough assessment of life span and health span without the medical records.”

As for Aronwald, Ira Monka, the president of the American Osteopathic Association, stated he is well regarded in his field, telling the Post, his colleague is a "top concierge doctor," adding, "You get to that point, you could not get there if you were not a solid fundamentally strong primary care doctor.”

You can read more here.

Mary Lou Retton’s explanation of health insurance takes some somersaults

Former Olympic gymnast Mary Lou Retton spoke out last week on the NBC “Today” show about what she said was a rare pneumonia that almost killed her and resulted in an expensive, monthlong hospital stay. It was a shocking reveal. One key comment jumped out for those who follow health policy: Retton said she was uninsured, blaming that lack of coverage on 30 orthopedic surgeries that count as “preexisting conditions,” a divorce, and her poor finances. “I just couldn’t afford it,” Retton told host Hoda Kotb, who did not challenge the assertion. Retton, who after winning the gold medal in 1984 beca...

‘I am just waiting to die’: Social Security clawbacks drive some into homelessness

More than a year after the federal government first cut off her disability benefits, Denise Woods drives nightly to strip malls, truck stops, and parking lots around Savannah, Georgia, looking for a safe place to sleep in her Chevy. Woods, 51, said she had rented a three-bedroom house she shared with her adult son and grandson until March 2022, when the government terminated her disability payments without notice. According to letters sent by the Social Security Administration, the agency determined it had been overpaying Woods and demanded she send back nearly $58,000. Woods couldn’t come up ...

Why the CDC has recommended new Covid boosters for all

Everyone over the age of 6 months should get the latest covid-19 booster, a federal expert panel recommended Tuesday after hearing an estimate that universal vaccination could prevent 100,000 more hospitalizations each year than if only the elderly were vaccinated. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted 13-1 for the motion after months of debate about whether to limit its recommendation to high-risk groups. A day earlier, the FDA approved the new booster, stating it was safe and effective at protecting against the covid variants curr...

Artificial intelligence may influence whether you can get pain medication

Elizabeth Amirault had never heard of a Narx Score. But she said she learned last year the tool had been used to track her medication use. During an August 2022 visit to a hospital in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Amirault told a nurse practitioner she was in severe pain, she said. She received a puzzling response. “Your Narx Score is so high, I can’t give you any narcotics,” she recalled the man saying, as she waited for an MRI before a hip replacement. Tools like Narx Scores are used to help medical providers review controlled substance prescriptions. They influence, and can limit, the prescribing of...

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