October 10, 2025
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Disability in Health Care Reporting Fellow

A big round of applause to STAT's Lev Facher, who won a Loeb Award last night for his series, The War on Recovery! If you’ve never read these brilliant stories about how the U.S. denies lifesaving medications to people with opioid addiction, here's the first installment.

AI

Trump administration escalates assault on AI coalition pushing for more regulation

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

A tech-backed group trying to shape the use of AI in health care is losing support and key members while also facing increasing attacks by the Trump administration and Republican politicians. 

Amazon, one of four industry founding partners of the Coalition of Health AI, has not renewed its membership to the group and another founding partner, Microsoft, is conducting an assessment of its membership. Neither company indicated that there was a connection between these decisions and the Trump administration’s actions.

The Coalition for Health AI boasts 3,000 members, with some of the country’s biggest names in health care and technology, including Google, OpenAI, Microsoft, and Mayo Clinic. It is also one of the biggest players in health care pushing for increased regulation and more transparency into organizations’ testing and training of AI tools. But Trump administration officials have increasingly argued that industry players should not be allowed to act as a “regulatory cartel.” 

Who called CHAI a cartel? Why does the administration want to break up the regulatory body? Read STAT's Mario Aguilar's story.


AI, AGAIN

Top Democrat pushing Medicare Advantage insurers for more AI transparency

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) wants the country’s largest Medicare Advantage insurers to provide more detail about their use of artificial intelligence tools, according to a copy of a letter sent to UnitedHealth Group and obtained by STAT. 

The letter follows a Senate subcommittee report that found payment denials for care of seriously ill patients increased significantly after UnitedHealth and other large Medicare Advantage insurers began using AI and other predictive tools to help make coverage decisions. Similar letters were sent to executives at Humana and CVS Health, which owns Aetna.

If you want to know what Blumenthal asked these companies to do in the letter, read STAT’s Casey Ross’ scoop. 


WELLNESS

Jay Shetty built his brand as a health influencer. But his relationship to science is murky.

Jay Shetty’s influence is remarkable. On the 38-year-old’s podcast, “On Purpose,” he interviews a bevy of doctors, psychologists, and A-list celebrities on their best practices for healthy living; he also has nearly 4.5 million subscribers on YouTube. His numerous public appearances and connections have fashioned Shetty into a figure of health and spirituality for a fast-paced, modern world.

But what has Shetty done with his platform? His health guidance is often stripped of context, designed to prop up his own business interests, or is downright unsubstantiated by science. The show has shared vague advice on how to “cancer proof” your body and offered misleading claims about inflammation and Covid-19 deaths in the U.S. 

STAT’s Alexa Lee has a deep dive into Shetty, exploring why he's compelling to millions worldwide, and what his popularity says about the loss of trust in U.S. health institutions. Read more here. 



MAHA

Ultra-processed food gets its first legal definition

A lot of Americans are concerned about how ultra-processed food affects their health — but there’s still debate about exactly what ultra-processed food is, which tends to muddy the conversation about a category that could include everything from canned beans to Skittles. A new California law aimed at making school lunches healthier is particularly noteworthy for providing a legal definition. (STAT covered the bill when it was first proposed in March.)

The bill, signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday, defines ultra-processed foods as those that contain both high levels of sodium, added sugar, or saturated fat as well as additives like stabilizers, emulsifiers, and artificial flavors. California’s health department will further narrow down the definition for “ultra-processed foods of concern” based on factors like peer-reviewed scientific evidence and other state, federal, and international restrictions, with schools phasing out products that fall in the latter category over the next 10 years. 

Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and agriculture secretary Brooke Rollins announced plans this summer to provide a federal definition of ultra-processed foods, though there’s not yet a timeline for when that might be rolled out. — Sarah Todd 


FACT CHECK

No, circumcision doesn’t cause autism

Kennedy made a wild claim during Thursday’s Cabinet meeting: “Children who were circumcised early have double the rates of autism.” He then said it’s “highly likely” that these findings are linked to Tylenol use, before adding “none of this is positive.” 

It is unclear where the secretary’s information is coming from. There are two studies that look at autism and circumcision, and neither of the investigations establish a robust association between the two, much less a causal relationship that would “double the rates of autism.” 

Kennedy also talked during the meeting about being shown a TikTok video where a pregnant woman was “gobbling Tylenol” and saying “F Trump,” asserting that every study investigating a link between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and autism showed “profound neurological and behavioral changes.” The science doesn’t back the secretary’s words up, as STAT’s Matt Herper has written.

The Trump administration churns out a lot of baseless claims about health, especially autism. It would be impossible to fact check it all here, but it appears that Kennedy’s reshuffling of American healthcare policy is losing support from the public. To reiterate what Theresa wrote yesterday, 62% of Americans disapprove of how the secretary is handling vaccine policy, according to a recent KFF poll.


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What we're reading

  • She left the medical mainstream and rose to be RFK Jr.’s surgeon general pick, Washington Post
  • The hand-wringing over antidepressants during pregnancy is harming women, Scientific American
  • Blue Cross of Mass. offers buyouts to hundreds of employees amid financial struggles, STAT
  • Deafening quiet from the scientific establishment, Can We Still Govern?
  • Sugar: How bad is it really?, Science Vs

Thanks for reading! 
Rose

Timmy