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A week into the reorganization of the Department of Health and Human Services announced by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the scope of the staff cuts and program cutbacks is starting to become clear. Among the biggest targets for reductions were the nation鈥檚 premier public health agencies: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and the FDA.
Meanwhile, Kennedy did not show up as invited to testify before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, known as HELP, but he did visit families in Texas whose unvaccinated children died of measles in the current outbreak and called for an end to water fluoridation during a stop in Utah.
This week鈥檚 panelists are Julie Rovner of 国产麻豆精品Health News, Victoria Knight of Axios, Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, and Sandhya Raman of CQ Roll Call.
Panelists
Among the takeaways from this week鈥檚 episode:
- Amid a dearth of public information about federal health cutbacks, HHS employees currently on administrative leave report they were given no opportunity to hand off their responsibilities, suggesting important work will simply be discontinued. Critical staff members have been cut from the FDA offices funded by user fees, for instance 鈥 affecting the drugmakers that pay the fees in exchange for timely evaluation of their products, as well as the patients hoping for access to those drugs. Even if the cuts were reversed, the damage could linger, especially in areas where there will be gaps in data such as disease surveillance.
- Meanwhile, the temporary public communications freeze implemented in the Trump administration鈥檚 early days apparently has not ended. State officials, desperate for information from federal health officials about ongoing programs, are receiving no response as they seek guidance from offices in which most or all staffers were laid off.
- President Donald Trump issued an executive order this week that instructs federal department heads to summarily repeal any regulation they deem 鈥渦nlawful.鈥 The order threatens to effectively short-circuit the federal regulatory process, which involves public notices and opportunities to comment. Businesses rely on that process to make decisions, and Trump鈥檚 order could create further instability for health care and other industries.
- And Kennedy traveled West this week, using his public appearances to call for removing fluoride from the water supply and to discuss the measles outbreak. He issued his strongest endorsement of the measles vaccine yet, but he also praised doctors who have used alternative and unapproved remedies to treat measles patients. Senators had called him to testify before Congress this week about the ongoing upheaval at HHS, but the hearing was canceled.
- Legislators in a growing number of states are introducing abortion bans that would punish women seeking abortions as well as abortion providers, suggesting a long game for abortion opponents that goes well beyond overturning a nationwide right to the procedure.
Also this week, Rovner interviews Georgetown Law School professor Stephen Vladeck about the limits of presidential power.
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Plus, for 鈥渆xtra credit鈥 the panelists suggest health policy stories they read (or wrote) this week that they think you should read, too:
Julie Rovner: The New York Times鈥 鈥,鈥 by Richard Fausset.
Victoria Knight: Wired鈥檚 鈥,鈥 by Leah Feiger and Steven Levy.
Alice Miranda Ollstein: The Guardian鈥檚 鈥,鈥 by Carter Sherman.
Sandhya Raman: CQ Roll Call鈥檚 鈥,鈥 by Sandhya Raman.
Also mentioned in this week鈥檚 podcast:
- The New York Times鈥 鈥,鈥 by Sarah Kliff and Margot Sanger-Katz.
- The AP鈥檚 鈥,鈥 by Matthew Perrone.
[Editor鈥檚 note: This transcript was generated using both transcription software and a human鈥檚 light touch. It has been edited for style and clarity.]
Julie Rovner: Hello, and welcome back to 鈥淲hat the Health?鈥 I鈥檓 Julie Rovner, chief Washington correspondent for 国产麻豆精品Health News, and I鈥檓 joined by some of the best and smartest health reporters in Washington. We鈥檙e taping this week on Thursday, April 10, at 10 a.m. As always, news happens fast and things might have changed by the time you hear this. So, here we go.
Today we are joined via videoconference by Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico.
Alice Miranda Ollstein: Hello.
Rovner: Sandhya Raman of CQ Roll Call.
Sandhya Raman: Good morning, everyone.
Rovner: And Victoria Knight of Axios news.
Victoria Knight: Hello, everyone.
Rovner: Later in this episode we鈥檒l have my interview with Georgetown University law professor Stephen Vladeck, who will talk about the limits of presidential power 鈥 if there are any left. But first, this week鈥檚 news.
So the dust is starting to settle, sort of, in that ginormous reorganization of the Department of Health and Human Services launched by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. last week, which I am now calling 鈥淭he Great Dismantling.鈥 Here鈥檚 some of what we know about the casualties at the CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]. Offices that worked on sexually transmitted disease prevention, injury prevention, lead poisoning surveillance, and tobacco were basically gutted. At NIH [the National Institutes of Health], the chronic pain division was eliminated, as was the Office of Long Covid. And at the FDA [Food and Drug Administration], offices handling veterinary medicine, generic drugs, and food safety were dramatically reduced. Now that we鈥檝e had a week to absorb what鈥檚 been done and, despite claims of the contrary from Secretary Kennedy, we are told there is no plan to hire back some of those workers who were apparently let go in error, what are you guys hearing about where we are?
Ollstein: Yeah, there鈥檚 a lot of people who were put on administrative leave, which is going to run out in a few weeks. By and large, they are not expecting to be called back. They are holding out hope. They would love to be called back. They keep telling me that they would love to get back to the work they were doing. They鈥檙e really worried about it not continuing without them, but they鈥檙e mostly assuming that these cuts are permanent for now. And contrary to claims from HHS that work isn鈥檛 being eliminated, it鈥檚 just being consolidated or folded in or there鈥檚 different words they鈥檙e using, all of these different laid-off workers told me from different divisions that they were basically given no opportunity to hand over their ongoing projects to anyone else, to train anyone else, to make sure it keeps going. So as far as they know, a lot of this surveillance work, research work, coordination work is just not going to be happening going forward.
Rovner: As far as I can tell, money that鈥檚 supposed to be going out the door from places like the NIH isn鈥檛.
Knight: Yeah, you hit some of the offices, programs that have been cut, but also I think at FDA, we did some reporting this week on the user drug fee program and how staff that do the evaluating drugs and things like that have been cut. And it鈥檚 interesting because pharmaceutical companies pay these fees hoping that they鈥檒l get timely evaluations of their drugs, and also鈥
Rovner: They pay these fees and are told they will get timely evaluation of these drugs in exchange. That鈥檚 the deal.
Knight: Exactly. And I know pharmaceutical companies are definitely concerned about this, and it鈥檚 also concerning for patients who may be waiting for certain drugs to be approved and things like that. And I think it鈥檚 interesting, also, Republicans like to talk a lot about innovation and getting new drugs approved and things like that, and this would harm that process if the staff are not rehired. I haven鈥檛 really heard an update on that, so鈥
Raman: I would also add that part of it is that we just don鈥檛 have a lot of information, right? We had Secretary Kennedy invited to come testify before the Senate HELP Committee this week and go through some of these things and explain the rationale and get into that, and that did not happen.
Rovner: Yeah, we鈥檒l get to that.
Raman: Yes, and I think, at the same time, a lot of those cuts were also to the communications folks within those agencies that could be disseminating this information to external folks, to internal folks to provide more clarity about where things would be going. And we don鈥檛 have those there now, so it will take some time to kind of see where things are going, and even when there鈥檚 going to be a delay in some of that stuff, getting that information out is going to be difficult.
Ollstein: Sandhya is absolutely right about the communications issue here, and I鈥檓 just hearing that on so many fronts. States are desperate to get in contact with someone in the federal government to understand what鈥檚 going on. Do they have to keep collecting data and sending it to the federal government even though there鈥檚 no one left to compile and process it? They鈥檙e reaching out asking: Are certain grants going to continue or not? What should we do? Are we going to be in legal trouble if we continue some of this work? And there鈥檚 just no one answering, sometimes because all the people that would鈥檝e answered have been let go. But also the communications freeze that was supposed to be temporary at the very beginning of the administration, a lot of federal workers told me that never really ended.
So there are these email accounts that they were ordered to stop checking and responding to. So one example is the entire team that worked on IVF [in vitro fertilization], evaluating which IVF clinics had the best pregnancy success rates, monitoring safety, all of that 鈥 they were all eliminated. And one consequence of that is that there was this email account that doctors, patients, anybody could reach out to for information and to ask questions, and no one鈥檚 checking it, no one鈥檚 responding.
Rovner: I don鈥檛 know about you guys. I am starting to hear from health care stakeholders. The federal government is so intertwined in, basically it鈥檚 a fifth of the economy, what we spend on health care, and it鈥檚 creating so much uncertainty. As you were saying, people don鈥檛 know if they鈥檙e going to get in trouble for not doing things or for doing things. But we do know, as we said, we talked about last week, FDA missed a deadline to rule on a Novavax vaccine. This is going to have ramifications way beyond just the people who are losing their jobs in the federal government, right?
Raman: There鈥檚 so many people that receive the services that we contract out, that we put grants through across the country. And I think that even in speaking to some of these employees that have lost their jobs, one of the top concerns is not even for their own job but that no one else can do the work that they did. Or in some cases, the only person that could have done that work has also already been let go. And just that those things are going to fall through the cracks for a lot of vulnerable communities.
Ollstein: Some of the folks also told me that even if this is reversed in the future, the damage will just be there for a very long time, especially on things like surveillance and data collection. If you have a gap in there, that skews things. That messes things up for the future. It makes it harder to make comparisons. It makes it harder to know if things are getting better or worse on, like, asthma rates and levels of lead in people鈥檚 blood, all kinds of things, things that are not politically controversial or partisan. And so it鈥檒l just be really difficult going forward to know which programs are working, which interventions are working or not working.
Rovner: So things are happening almost too fast to keep track of. But in his latest round of executive orders on Wednesday, President [Donald] Trump signed one called Directing the Repeal of Unlawful Regulations, in which he basically instructs the heads of all departments to repeal rules they consider unlawful, without notice or comment, which is not how this is supposed to work. I鈥檓 not sure even, though, quite what to make of all this. And it seems to be going mostly unnoticed in all of the attention, deservedly, to the other news that鈥檚 happening, some of which we鈥檒l get to. But repealing rules basically on a whim could be as important to how the federal government functions as firing all these people, right?
Raman: Yeah, there鈥檚 a reason that the rulemaking process is the way it is, that it takes a certain amount of time. You allow stakeholders to weigh in, to meet, to revise, and that the things aren鈥檛 changing too drastically. And there are some rules that go back and forth between the administrations, but a lot of things last over time, and the process is the way it is to make sure that you get the best possible result for whatever you鈥檙e changing and鈥
Rovner: That you get stability.
Raman: Yes.
Rovner: I think that鈥檚 the theme here, is that that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e lacking right now. Nobody can count on what the rules are.
Knight: And I was going to say, from an industry perspective, industries make decisions based on these rules and knowing when they鈥檙e going to come out and when they might change. Think about the insurance industry, physicians, people within the health care industry. And so that could really impact those groups as well a lot. So, and exactly, going back to what you said about stability, so it鈥檒l make it really hard to make business decisions.
Rovner: Right. So this goes along with the stuff with the tariffs, is that we have no idea what the rules of the road are going to be going forward if rules can be sort of disappeared in a matter of days the way staff is being. Well, let鈥檚 move to Congress. Remember Congress? Late last Friday, or I guess it was technically early Saturday, the Senate passed what was supposed to be a compromise Republican budget resolution between the House and the Senate. For those who have forgotten, while the House passed a resolution that would lead to a single gigantic budget reconciliation bill, including tax cuts and likely big cuts to Medicaid, the Senate鈥檚 original budget resolution would only have led to a bill on immigration and energy, saving the tax and health fights for later in the year.
Well, it seems like the compromise, which is kind of a vaguer version of the House blueprint, didn鈥檛 go over so well in the House, where Speaker Mike Johnson had hoped to push it through this week. A vote was scheduled for Wednesday, then it got delayed, then it got shelved, at least for the night. They鈥檙e apparently trying to regroup and do this this morning. Where are we in this?
Knight: Yeah, so you gave a pretty good rundown. I was here late last night talking to Freedom Caucus members, the House Freedom Caucus, the hard-liners. Their concerns with, this is basically a Senate amendment to the House鈥檚 resolution. And so what the Senate passed was an amendment, and it technically really just gives instructions for the Senate. It didn鈥檛 touch the House鈥檚 resolution. So the House鈥檚 budget resolution they passed is the same thing, but House Freedom Caucus members had issue that the Senate ceilings for cuts is much lower than the House鈥檚. And so they鈥檙e saying鈥
Rovner: It鈥檚 in the billions instead of trillions.
Knight: Exactly. Exactly. So coming out, they holed up with Speaker Johnson last night and House GOP leadership and were saying, We need more binding cuts on the Senate side, and were like: We need you guys to commit to this, otherwise we鈥檙e unhappy with this amount of cuts. This is going to increase spending. There鈥檚 been a lot of discussion on how to do the budget math for these things, but it鈥檚 pretty clear the Senate鈥檚 resolution would not cut spending as much as the House鈥檚. So that was what they came out demanding last night. This morning, Speaker Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune came out, did a press conference, and said: We鈥檙e going to proceed with this. We鈥檒l see if that changes. But it was interesting to note that Thune said, he noted that there are Senate Republicans that do want cuts that may be up to the $1.5 trillion, but he did not commit to making cuts on his side. So we鈥檒l see how this goes. That seems to be the state of play. It鈥檚 very in flux. That could change over time. So if anyone has anything to add, I think that鈥檚 a rundown.
Rovner: Yeah, it feels like they鈥檙e kind of buying time to see if they can keep together what鈥檚 clearly a very fractious group here.
Knight: Yeah, and jet fumes are always a good motivator, and also holidays. So there鈥檚 supposed to be a two-week recess right after this, and Passover starts this weekend and Easter next weekend, so we鈥檒l see if that motivates people to vote for it. I will say, an argument that we鈥檝e heard from a lot of the moderates that are concerned about the Medicaid cuts, when they voted for these, they鈥檝e said: This is just an outline. It鈥檚 just a blueprint. It鈥檚 not committing us to anything. But hard-liners don鈥檛 seem to like that argument as much. So can they convince them that way? I don鈥檛 know.
Rovner: Well, let鈥檚 talk about those Medicaid cuts for a minute, which, by the way, as you pointed out, Victoria, is not really what鈥檚 holding up the vote in the House. Our New York Times podcast pals Sarah Kliff and Margot Sanger-Katz had over the weekend about three red states that would really be stuck if Medicaid gets cut. Oklahoma, Missouri, and South Dakota all passed their Medicaid expansions by ballot measure, including it as part of their state constitutions. Now this is exactly the opposite of those states that would immediately cancel their expansions if Congress cuts the Medicaid match. These three states would be totally stuck, unless they could have another ballot measure that would then eliminate what they added. I guess that helps explain why very conservative Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley says he is so opposed to reducing the Medicaid match. But he seems OK with Medicaid work requirements that would also cut people off the rolls, just not necessarily in a way that would cost the state so much money, right?
Ollstein: Yeah, I think we鈥檙e going to see a lot of interesting semantic games going forward. I think we鈥檙e going to see a lot of different interpretations of what a cut is. We鈥檙e going to see a lot of claims made about who does and doesn鈥檛 deserve Medicaid coverage. We鈥檝e been seeing this for a long time, but as these tough decisions have to be made on the Hill, I think a lot of that is going to come to a head. And so I think you see a lot of conservatives wrestling with believing very strongly in cutting government spending but also recognizing that a lot of their constituents could be harmed by these policies and they would be very angry with their members if that happened.
And so trying to thread that needle, we鈥檒l see how they do it, whether they can do it successfully without getting a lot of political blowback. Even though there has been a lot of turnover in Congress, you have a decent number of folks who were there last time Congress tried to take a big whack at Medicaid in the Affordable Care Act repeal fight.
Rovner: In 2017.
Ollstein: Exactly. Exactly. And the impact on Medicaid is one of the biggest things that garnered a backlash. And Capitol Hill was covered in folks with disabilities protesting, and it was a really bad look, and it contributed to that effort failing.
Knight: And I think interesting talking about Hawley, but also the Republican Governors Association joined up with some other conservative groups this week to start an ad saying, Don鈥檛 cut Medicaid, basically. And so we鈥檙e starting to hear that from the states. States are really concerned how this could affect their budgets. They鈥檝e already expanded the program. It would be really hard for them to have to make up in the state that amount of money if the federal government takes away money from the Medicaid program for them or caps it or whatever. It鈥檚 interesting to see people walk that line. And House GOP moderates, they are more likely to fold, I think, than hard-liners, but they keep telling me when I talk to them, We鈥檙e OK with work requirements, but anything past that might be really hard for us to vote for. But who knows? They could fold if they have enough pressure, but they鈥檙e trying to walk the line at this moment.
Rovner: This is going to be a very different Medicaid fight than it was in 2017. Well, turning to this week in 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again,鈥 I think we mentioned last week that HHS Secretary RFK Jr. had been invited to testify before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee today. Well, as Sandhya pointed out, that did not happen. We鈥檙e not entirely sure why, but the secretary continues to do things, well, things he kind of promised senators that he wouldn鈥檛, like saying that he鈥檚 going to order the CDC to stop recommending adding fluoride to public water supplies, which he did on a trip to Utah this week. Once more for those in the back, why do most public health professionals support water fluoridation?
Raman: It really reduces dental decay, by like 25%. ADA [the American Dental Association] has been recommending fluoride for years. So it鈥檚 a big proponent of that.
Rovner: And as someone pointed out, it鈥檚 against dentists鈥 interests to be recommending something that gives them less work and yet they鈥檙e still recommending it.
Ollstein: And even though we have a very silly system in the U.S. where dental care is siloed off from the rest of health care, it does impact your overall health a lot. So it could lead to lung issues, heart issues, all kinds of things if you have dental issues. So it鈥檚 not just a cosmetic problem, it can be a very serious health problem. And I will say, too, people should keep in mind that there鈥檚 a lot of pointing at studies about negative health impacts from excessive consumption of fluoride, but those studies have a level that is much, much higher than what鈥檚 in the U.S. tap water right now. So anything in excess can be bad for you 鈥 even just plain water can kill you if you have too much of it. And so I think that people should keep that in mind and remain skeptical about claims being made.
Rovner: Well, RFK Jr. also continues to make news in his handling of the measles outbreak in Texas, which is now the largest in the nation in the past 30 years, having sickened nearly 600 people, mostly unvaccinated children. Kennedy traveled to the heart of the outbreak last week and visited with the families of the two children that we know have died so far of the virus. He also praised the measles vaccine, but then just hours later posed with and praised two doctors who are using unapproved treatments for measles, including one who was disciplined by Texas medical regulators. Meanwhile, Peter Marks, the FDA vaccine official forced to resign last month, is speaking out, calling Kennedy鈥檚 actions thus far, quote, 鈥渧ery scary鈥 in an interview with and telling [Associated Press] that he got fired for trying to keep Kennedy鈥檚 team from editing or possibly erasing the very sensitive Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System kept by the FDA. Is there any way we didn鈥檛 see all of this coming?
Knight: Well, going back to the congressional aspect. The HELP chair, [Sen.] Bill Cassidy, he had both the HELP hearing and the Senate Finance hearing where he questioned Kennedy repeatedly about his views on vaccines, his views on the link between vaccines and autism, I think also measles and autism. And he didn鈥檛 really ever get a super substantial answer from Kennedy. And yet the compromise was somewhat that Cassidy said, You鈥檒l have to come quarterly before the HELP Committee and testify about what鈥檚 going on, what your views are. And we saw Cassidy try to do that last week. And Kennedy has, as far as I know, the latest is that he received the request but he hasn鈥檛 accepted it yet, and unclear if he will.
So that congressional oversight was supposed to be the way to keep him in check, somewhat. And that鈥檚 not happening. It鈥檚 not really that enforceable. So I think it鈥檚 pretty predictable what鈥檚 happening. I think what will be interesting is if the White House gets unhappy with some of Kennedy鈥檚 things that he鈥檚 doing. There鈥檚 been some stories of how they鈥檙e having to take over his communications because there鈥檚 been no communications from HHS on it, and so they鈥檙e kind of unhappy with that. We鈥檒l see if that reaches to a level where they could change leadership or something. But, not there yet, certainly, but something to watch.
Rovner: Again, so much going on. I think this would normally rise to a higher level than it has given all of the other news that鈥檚 happening. Moving on to abortion. We talked last week, or maybe it was the week before, about the Overton window moving towards criminalizing women who have or even seek abortions. That鈥檚 apparently the point of a bill introduced in the Alabama Legislature. In North Carolina, a new bill could subject anyone convicted of performing or receiving an abortion to life in prison. We talked a few weeks ago about a similar bill in Georgia that got a legislative hearing. Even if none of these bills pass 鈥 and it seems that none of them will pass, at least this year 鈥 it certainly seems that claims by the anti-abortion movement that they don鈥檛 want to punish women are either not true or falling on deaf ears.
Ollstein: So the anti-abortion movement, just like the pro-abortion-rights movement, is not a monolith. And just like the political parties, there are moderates and hard-liners. There are people who disagree on tactics. And so I think for so long the movement appeared united because their main goal was just overturning Roe v. Wade. And they were able to paper over other divisions by focusing pretty exclusively on that, or not exclusively but that being the overriding goal. And now that they鈥檝e accomplished that and now that there are a lot more opportunities for them, you鈥檙e seeing these divisions. And we鈥檝e seen that over the past few years. There were people who said, OK, a 15-week ban is better than nothing, and we can build on it. And there are people who say: No, that鈥檚 an unacceptable compromise, and it has to be a total ban or nothing. And if you do a 15-week ban, you鈥檙e endorsing the murder of most babies, because most abortions happen before 15 weeks of pregnancy.
So I think this is a continuation of that. And it鈥檚 also a reflection that there is a lot of frustration in the anti-abortion movement that not only have abortions not ceased when states enact bans, in some cases they鈥檝e gone up, nationally. And that鈥檚 a combination of people traveling, that鈥檚 a combination of people using telehealth and getting pills mailed to them. That鈥檚 become a huge thing that people rely on. And so looking at ways to crack down on those things, including this kind of criminalization of the pregnant patient that鈥檚 been sort of a third rail that is now more in the conversation. Of course, people have been proposing such things for a while now, but it鈥檚 getting more prominent attention than before.
Rovner: Yeah. And that was my question, is it used to be a real outlier, and now we鈥檝e seen legislation introduced in 10 states that would criminalize the woman in some way, shape, or form. Sandhya, you wanted to add something.
Raman: I was going to say it鈥檚 also a long game. There are things that we鈥檝e had proposed years ago that I think garnered attention then as being very outside the realm of something that people would consider. And then a few years later, when we first saw some of these personhood bills years ago, I think those got attention as being a little different than some of the other things that were being considered. And now that has become more mainstream. We see that in a lot of states now. And I think that something like this, even though it is very different than the messaging we鈥檝e seen in the past, it doesn鈥檛 mean that, down the line, a greater portion of the movement pivots toward this. Because we鈥檝e seen so much of this throw the spaghetti at the wall with seeing different things that they can see, what can pass, what doesn鈥檛 get litigated, that kind of thing. So a lot of this is kind of a long game.
Ollstein: Yeah. And there is an imbalance between the two sides where the right is much more willing to throw spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks, much more willing to throw out things that could anger people, could generate controversy, could generate backlash, but they do believe will advance the goal. And you鈥檙e not really seeing the same willingness on the left. You鈥檙e not really seeing states propose, Let鈥檚 get rid of all abortion restrictions in total. And so you have this imbalance of what each side is willing to even consider, where the left has been, overall, not exclusively, but overall much more cautious and much more consensus-seeking.
Rovner: Well, meanwhile, in Texas, where over the past few years we鈥檝e had story after story about women with wanted pregnancies nearly dying from complications, the legislature finally has before it a compromise bill that would better define when doctors can end a doomed pregnancy without risking going to prison, except it鈥檚 turning out to be not as much of a compromise as its backers had hoped. Is there any way to actually find a compromise on what is a necessary abortion and what is saving the woman鈥檚 life? They write these things and they say: Well, look. Here are the exceptions, and they should work. But now they鈥檙e trying to spell out the exceptions and they can鈥檛 seem to agree on those, either.
Ollstein: So it鈥檚 really a catch-22. And I was just in Texas. I was interviewing OB-GYNs, and they were explaining 鈥 and those in other states with bans have said the same thing 鈥 that, look, it鈥檚 really tough, because if a law is too broad and too vague, then doctors don鈥檛 feel comfortable doing even things they feel are absolutely medically necessary. But if a law is too prescriptive 鈥 if, for example, it tries to list every single possible condition that would necessitate an emergency abortion or an abortion to save someone鈥檚 life for health 鈥 you鈥檙e never going to be able to list everything. So many things can go wrong during a pregnancy, and so any attempt to be comprehensive will inevitably leave something out. And so if you go the route of listing specific conditions and someone comes in with a condition that鈥檚 not on the list, doctors won鈥檛 feel comfortable, because they鈥檒l feel that, Oh, well, because the law lists these other conditions, that must mean that anything else is not allowed.
But on the other hand, if it鈥檚 too vague, you have the opposite problem. And so really a lot of mainstream medical groups like ACOG, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, have really come down on, like: Just don鈥檛 legislate this at all. Just let us do our jobs. Because they are in this conundrum. I will say, there are divides within the medical community despite that, where some feel like, OK, well, if we can add a few more exceptions and that can even help a few more people, that鈥檚 at least something to consider, where others think, OK, no, if we endorse these quote-unquote 鈥渇ixes,鈥 that kind of in a way is endorsing the underlying ban, and we don鈥檛 want to do that. And so there鈥檚 some tension there as well.
Rovner: Yeah, this is going to continue to be an issue going forward. All right, well, finally this week there is some other policy news. The Trump administration last week reversed a Biden administration decision to start covering those GLP-1 [glucagon-like peptide 1] drugs for people with obesity as well as those with diabetes. According to , the administration didn鈥檛 attribute the decision to Secretary Kennedy鈥檚 known dislike of the drugs, which he has said are inferior to people just, you know, eating better, and that it may reconsider the decision in the future. But obviously cost is a huge issue here. These drugs are less expensive than they were, but they are still super expensive if they鈥檙e going to be taken by the millions of people who would qualify for an indefinite period of time. Is there any talk of finding a way to bring that cost down? That would obviously be popular and something that President Trump has said he wants to do in terms of drug prices overall.
Raman: I have not heard of anything on bringing the cost down. I think that the only discussions that really come about are really tailoring who would qualify within that bucket, and to narrow that as a piece to bring the cost down rather than the cost of the specific drugs. And we鈥檝e been 鈥 yeah.
Rovner: I would say, I know that Ozempic is on the list of Medicare drugs to be negotiated this year, but I think that鈥檚 only for the diabetic indication. So on the one hand, that could bring down the cost for鈥
Ollstein: And that wouldn鈥檛 help people for years and years. Yeah.
Rovner: Exactly. So I mean we might 鈥 if you have diabetes, Medicare could start saving money on one of the GLP drugs, but I guess it鈥檚 going to be a while before we see the cost fall. And of course, we didn鈥檛 even talk about the potential tariffs on prescription drugs, because we鈥檙e not going to talk about that this week.
That is this week鈥檚 news. Now we will play my interview with law professor Stephen Vladeck, then we will come back and do our extra credits.
I am so pleased to welcome to the podcast Stephen Vladeck, professor at Georgetown University Law School and author of the invaluable Substack 鈥淥ne First,鈥 which helps explain the workings of the Supreme Court to us lay folks. Steve Vladeck, welcome to 鈥淲hat the Health?鈥
Stephen Vladeck: Thanks, Julie. Great to be with you.
Rovner: So I鈥檝e asked you to help us with the next in a series I鈥檓 calling 鈥淗ow Things Are Supposed to Work in Health Policy.鈥 And I鈥檓 particularly interested in how much power the president has vis-脿-vis Congress and the courts. Is there kind of a 30-second law school description of who has the power to do what?
Vladeck: It鈥檚 a little longer than 30 seconds, but to make the long version shorter: Congress makes laws, the president carries those laws into effect, and the courts decide whether everyone鈥檚 playing by the rules and abiding by those laws. That鈥檚 how it鈥檚 supposed to go 鈥 and if only that were how it actually was.
Rovner: Now, I鈥檓 not a lawyer, but I have been at this for a long time, and I always understood that executive orders from presidents were mostly for show. They were expressions of intent that needed to be carried out by someone else in the executive branch most of the time, usually using the formal regulatory process. But that is not at all what this administration is doing with its executive orders, right?
Vladeck: So, Julie, I think part of the problem is that we really are at the apex of something that鈥檚 been building for a while, which is that as Congress has stopped doing its job, as Congress has stopped passing statutes to respond to our pressing issues of the day, presidents of both parties have been left to govern more and more aggressively based on increasingly, for lack of a better word, creative interpretations of old statutes and constitutional authorities. And so, yes, I think we鈥檙e seeing differences in both degree and kind from President Trump, but some of this has been building for a while where, we haven鈥檛 had meaningful immigration reform since 1986. We haven鈥檛 had meaningful financial systems reform in 25 years. And so in those spaces, presidents are going to do what they can to try to accomplish their policy goals, which means more and more executive orders where the presidents are at least purporting to interpret authorities that they鈥檝e been given, either by statute or the Constitution, as we get further and further away from those authorities themselves.
Rovner: So this is the unitary executive theory that we鈥檝e, those of us who play to be lawyers sometimes, have heard about. But how abnormal is what Trump is doing now? Is this even legal, a lot of what he鈥檚 doing?
Vladeck: So a lot of what he鈥檚 doing is not legal, but some of it is legal. And one of the complications is that the illegalities are at scales and in ways that we haven鈥檛 really seen before and that therefore our existing legal processes aren鈥檛 necessarily well set up to respond to. I would break Trump鈥檚 behavior into a couple of categories. So I think there鈥檚 the internal stuff, which is firing tons of people, hollowing out the bureaucracy, demanding political fealty from even those who are civil servants. And we鈥檝e seen, Julie, I think, flash points of those before. What鈥檚 novel about what鈥檚 happening now is just the sheer scale on which it鈥檚 happening. I think the biggest area of real novel action is the effort by Trump really to sort of change how all federal money is spent, right? Money is supposed to be Congress鈥檚, like, superpower. Not only is appropriations Congress鈥 most important function, but it鈥檚 actually the only thing that the Constitution specifically says only Congress can do.
And yet we鈥檙e seeing really novel assertions by the president of the power to not spend money Congress has appropriated, of the power to stop paying for contracts where the work has already been performed, of the power to threaten Maine and other jurisdictions with the withholding of federal funds if they don鈥檛 just bend the knee to Trump. And that is really, I think, both shocking and dangerous because it basically means that the president鈥檚 trying to seize unilateral control over what has historically been Congress鈥 principal vehicle for doing policy. And at that point, you don鈥檛 really have much of a separation of powers anymore. You鈥檝e just got a president.
Rovner: Could Congress take back this authority if it wanted to?
Vladeck: Sure. But just before letting folks get too optimistic, one of the problems is that taking back this authority probably means, at the very least, passing new statutes, and Trump鈥檚 not going to sign those statutes. So one of the things that has been a fear of separation-of-power scholars for a long time is that when Congress delegates authority to the president, or when Congress acquiesces in the drift of power to the president, it鈥檚 actually really hard for Congress to get that power back, because it鈥檚 usually going to require veto-proof supermajorities, and really hard to see in our current political climate a veto-proof supermajority agreeing even to the fact that today is Tuesday, let alone that we should take back power from the president. So Congress could do tons of things. The problem is that assuming Congress won鈥檛, we really are left to these series of confrontations between the president and the courts, because the courts are all that鈥檚 left.
Rovner: Which brings me to something that I think most people would think would be not really health-policy-related but really is, which are all these threats against these big law firms. How does that play into this whole thing?
Vladeck: So I think it鈥檚 a big piece of the puzzle because what the threats, I think, are really intended to do is to cow law firms into submission, to try to increase the cost both economically and politically of bringing lawsuits challenging what the federal government鈥檚 doing. And Julie, I think that the long-term idea is to chill people from suing the federal government, to chill people from hiring folks who worked in administrations from the wrong party in ways that I think are really disruptive not just to the economics of law firms but to the courts. The courts depend upon a strong, robust, and independent bar that is able to actually move freely when it comes to challenging the government. Courts can鈥檛 go out and find cases. Lawyers bring the cases to them. And if the lawyers are for some reason disincentivized from bringing those cases, part of the separation of powers breaks down even further.
Rovner: Or basically, in this case, I guess they鈥檙e promising not to bring cases that the administration doesn鈥檛 like.
Vladeck: Exactly. We should be terrified. No matter what you think of lawyers, no matter what you think of the administration, we should want a world in which there鈥檚 no disincentive to challenge what the government鈥檚 doing in court. We should want a world, as James Madison put it, where ambition is counteracting ambition, where the branches are pushing up against each other, not where they are stunned into submission.
Rovner: And finally, you鈥檙e an expert in the Supreme Court. Is there any chance that the Supreme Court鈥檚 going to rescue us here?
Vladeck: No, but I think what I would say 鈥 to try to both be a little more optimistic and to try to put a little more depth into my one-word answer 鈥 it鈥檚 not the Supreme Court鈥檚 job to rescue us. It鈥檚 the Supreme Court鈥檚 job to protect the separation of powers. And as you and I are sitting here, we鈥檝e seen a couple of early rulings from the court that have kind of sided with Trump in these sort of very, very fleeting technical emergency postures without actually saying anything about what he鈥檚 doing is legal. I have at least a modicum of faith, Julie, that when the courts get to the legality questions, they鈥檙e going to find that most of this stuff actually is illegal.
I think the question is, what happens then? And this is why, although I鈥檓 as big a believer in a powerful and independent judiciary as anyone, the courts alone can鈥檛 save us, right? What we need is we need the courts backed by Congress, by the people, by our other institutions, universities, law firms. I mean it should be all of the institutions of our civil society, not opposing Trump to oppose Trump but standing up for the notion that our institutions matter and that the way that we can be confident that the government is working the way it鈥檚 supposed to is when the institutions are pushing up against each other with all their might and without the fear of what鈥檚 going to happen to them if they lose.
Rovner: I feel like one of the bright spots out of this is that finally the nation is getting the lesson in civics that it鈥檚 needed for a while.
Vladeck: I couldn鈥檛 agree more. I think we are seeing the very, very real costs of generations of insufficient civics education, but I also think this opens the door to real conversation about how to fix this. And in the short term, some of it is about stopping a lot of what Trump is doing, and that鈥檚 what a lot of these lawsuits are about. When we talk about, Julie, building back institutions, whether it鈥檚 in the public health space or more broadly, I hope that we keep having the civics lesson, and I hope that we don鈥檛 forget that it鈥檚 actually really important to have independent agencies, and it鈥檚 important to have a civil service, and it鈥檚 important to have institutions that are actually not just subject to the whims of whoever happens to be the current president. And the more that we can build off of that going forward, maybe the more that we can prevent what has happened already over the first 11 weeks of the second Trump administration from becoming a permanent feature of our constitutional system.
Rovner: Well, we will keep at it. I hope you鈥檒l come back and join us again.
Vladeck: I鈥檇 love to. Thanks for having me.
Rovner: OK, we鈥檙e back. Now it鈥檚 time for our extra-credit segment. That鈥檚 where we each recognize the story we read this week we think you should read, too. Don鈥檛 worry if you miss it. We鈥檒l put the links in our show notes on your phone or other mobile device. Sandhya, why don鈥檛 you go first this week?
Raman: So my piece for extra credit is from me, on Roll Call. It鈥檚 called 鈥,鈥 and it鈥檚 the first in my series I鈥檓 doing through the Association of Health Care Journalists, where I went to Sweden to learn about smoking cessation and public health between Sweden and what we can learn in the U.S. And the story looks at the different political factions of the Parliament over there and how they found some common ground in areas to become hopefully the first country in Europe below 5% daily smokers, and just what lessons the U.S. can learn as they鈥檙e trying to reduce smoking here as well.
Rovner: So jealous that you got to do this. Alice, why don鈥檛 you go next?
Ollstein: I chose a piece from The Guardian by Carter Sherman [鈥溾漖 on an issue that has interested me for a long time, which is how U.S. residents are learning how to provide abortions when their training opportunities have been eliminated in so many states. I鈥檝e been covering those who have been traveling to different U.S. states, but this piece is about a small but growing number who are traveling to Mexico for this training. Mexico, like many countries in Latin America and really around the world over the last few years, has moved in the direction of decriminalizing abortion as the U.S. has moved in the opposite direction and is very eager to help train more people.
But the article stresses that this is not a solution for everyone in the U.S. who needs this training, because you have to be able to speak fluent Spanish in order to do it. You have to already have some abortion experience, which not every medical resident has. And it鈥檚 also expensive. There are fellowships, but the trip and the training and everything costs thousands of dollars. And so I think it鈥檚 a very interesting opportunity for some people. And the article also talks about folks who are doing some training in the U.K., as well. And so I wonder if these international opportunities will become more of a piece of the puzzle in the future.
Rovner: Victoria.
Knight: OK, my extra credit for this week is an article in Wired called 鈥.鈥 So basically this was Dr. [Mehmet] Oz鈥檚 first town hall talking to CMS [Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services] staff, and he talked about a lot of his personal story and not as much of the goals of the agency, seemed to be the vibe of the meeting. But also, interestingly, he talked about using AI avatars instead of actual people. So that鈥檚 like people that do simple health diagnoses using AI instead to diagnose people, is kind of what it sounded like. And that鈥檚 in part because鈥
Rovner: My comment to this story was: Not at all creepy. Sorry.
Knight: Right. And鈥
Rovner: I interrupted you, Victoria.
Knight: No, no, that鈥檚 OK. But he was saying the benefit of this is that it could cost less because it could only cost maybe like $2 an hour versus a doctor could be a hundred dollars for a consult. And so people interviewed in the story were CMS employees that felt very concerned about that and also felt like it could come off a bit tone-deaf when there have been a bunch of CMS staff also just recently let go. And CMS was actually on the agencies that was hit with less workforce cuts. But even so, people are still upset about it. And so, it was like, Why are you replacing great people that worked here with AI? It was just an interesting look at his first week at the agency
Rovner: Yeah. And it鈥檚 a big agency with a lot of money. All right, my extra credit this week is from The New York Times. It鈥檚 called 鈥,鈥 by Richard Fausset. And it鈥檚 a pretty hair-raising story of medical malfeasance, foisted on people by those seeking political or financial gain or both. Quoting from the story: 鈥淚vermectin has become a sort of enduring pharmacological MAGA hat: a symbol of resistance to what some of the movement described as an elitist and corrupt cabal of politicians, scientists and medical experts.鈥 This is another in a long list of unproven remedies people take just to thumb their noses at treatments that have, you know, actual scientific evidence behind them. It鈥檚 a really interesting read.
OK, that is this week鈥檚 show. As always, if you enjoy the podcast, you can subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. We鈥檇 appreciate it if you left us a review. That helps other people find us, too. Thanks as always to our producer, Francis Ying, and our editor, Emmarie Huetteman. As always, you can email us your comments or questions. We鈥檙e at whatthehealth@kff.org. Or you can still find me at X, , and at Bluesky, . Where are you folks these days? Alice, you鈥檙e the birthday girl. Where can we all wish you a happy birthday?
Ollstein: Mainly on Bluesky, , but still hanging on X, .
Rovner: Sandhya.
Raman: and , @sandhyawrites.
Rovner: Victoria.
Knight: I鈥檓 just on X, .
Rovner: We will be back in your feed next week. Until then, be healthy.
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