March 20, 2026
sarah-m-avatar-teal
Director of Editorial Operations

Happy Sunday and happy spring! Sarah here, filling in for Torie. I was struck this week by an essay from longtime contributor Jay Baruch, an emergency medicine professor at Brown University. As ERs face continued bed shortages, some patients are parked in corners and hallways, feeling both invisible as staff rush by while they wait and exposed when they finally get a chance to be examined. It also takes a toll on doctors like Baruch, who detailed his experience treating several patients in “today’s diluted version of health care.”

Recommendation of the week: “60 Songs that Explain the ’90s: the 2000s.” Podcast host and music critic Rob Harvilla recorded a series on the defining songs of one decade, and now he’s back tackling the early aughts. As a big music fan raised on VH1’s “Behind the Music,” I always enjoy how Harvilla kicks off each episode by spinning a yarn that winds its way to a lively exploration of some of the iPod era’s biggest hits.



APU GOMES/AFP via Getty Images

Exposed and invisible in an ER hallway bed

Emergency department hallway beds have transformed the patient examination into a moral dilemma, leaving people exposed physically and emotionally.

By Jay Baruch


I have a genetic mutation linked to ALS. The Trump administration terrifies me

For people with genetic mutations linked to ALS, like this author, government cuts to research funds have been devastating.

By Mindy Uhrlaub


I was a surgeon. The hardest part of leaving medicine was believing that I could

Frances Mei Hardin, author of “Surgeon on the Edge,” on realizing how many options there are for physicians leaving medicine.

By Frances Mei Hardin


LOU BENOIST/AFP via Getty Images

How OB-GYNs like me are increasingly able to treat pain from IUDs and other gynecologic procedures

Social media’s emphasis on IUD insertion pain often misses what can go right with this procedure.

By Maryl Sackeim


Congress must fix the No Surprises Act before it bankrupts patients and employers

The No Surprises Act’s independent dispute resolution process is being exploited, leading to inflated arbitration awards.

By James Gelfand and Patricia Kelmar


Congress must pass legislation to ensure Medicare covers breakthrough medical technologies

Congress can accelerate patient access to breakthrough medical technologies that come to market without existing Medicare coverage.

By Josh Makower


NARINDER NANU/AFP via Getty Images

Semaglutide is going off-patent in India. But will people who need it be able to get it?

South Asians face greater cardiometabolic risk at lower BMI than the largely white Americans considered when determining eligibility.

By Aditi Kantipuly and Peter Singer


The greatest threat to federally qualified health centers may not be federal funding cuts

Safety-het hospitals have been hit hard by federal funding cuts. But their problems go much deeper than that.

By Courtney McFarland


There is a successor to 340B lurking on the horizon

The closer we get to 2028, the more likely it is that the U.S. may settle for short-term solutions that do not meaningfully reform the health care system.

By Sujith Ramachandran


More around STAT
Check out more exclusive coverage with a STAT+ subscription
Read premium in-depth biotech, pharma, policy, and life science coverage and analysis with all of our STAT+ articles.

Enjoying First Opinion? Tell us about your experience
Continue reading the latest health & science news with the STAT app
Download on the App Store or get it on Google Play
STAT
STAT, 1 Exchange Place, Boston, MA
©2026, All Rights Reserved.