June 12, 2026
avatar-torie-bosch
First Opinion editor

This week, I got to do one of my favorite things: publish a First Opinion on animal health. Researcher Joshua Moen wrote about how American horses are increasingly obese: “The obese horses are not lazy. They are not making poor choices. They do not have complicated relationships with food or sedentary desk jobs. They are large athletic mammals being managed by well-meaning owners on diets their physiology was never designed to handle, and they are getting sick in ways that look remarkably familiar.” And don’t forget to admire the perfectly selected horse photo illustrating the piece.

I’m always looking for op-eds about the parts of the life sciences/health field that are often overlooked. That’s particularly true for veterinary medicine and dentistry, but I’m also open to other jobs that need more attention. What’s the big debate in podiatry right now? I want to know!

This season of the “First Opinion Podcast” is nearly wrapped. Be sure to check out this week’s rollicking interview with Dawn Zuidgeest-Craft, who will turn 73 shortly after beginning her medical residency this summer. She talks about fulfilling her lifelong dream of going to medical school, critics who say she shouldn’t be taking up a residency slot, and much more.

***

If you’re not a STAT+ subscriber, now’s your chance! You can get 25% off STAT+ plus free access to all four STAT Reports from 2026 so far, including the recently released “Dementia care’s radical new era,” which includes compelling pieces from Jason Karlawish’s Neurotransmissions column.

Recommendation of the week: While watching the NBA Finals (not something I normally do, but even I got caught up in the Knicks’ comeback on Wednesday), I kept thinking about a 2011 Sports Illustrated feature on how difficult it is to be 7 feet or taller. In addition to the logistical challenges and the ever-present gawkers, that kind of height comes with serious orthopedic issues, especially for those playing basketball.



Red Cross volunteers carry the body of a 26-year-old woman to a funeral May 31 in Bunia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, as her sister watches.
Michel Lunanga/Getty Images

Ebola outbreak response requires engaging with religious traditions and leaders

Trusted religious and traditional leaders need to be engaged immediately as the Ebola outbreak spreads rapidly in the DRC and Uganda.

By Olivia Wilkinson and Katherine Marshall


I’ve spent 40 years in research. I have never seen a threat to science like the new grantmaking rule

The federal government is now proposing to fundamentally rewire scientific research review for no good reason.

By David J. Skorton


$2 million gene therapy cures require a financing model

Health care needs a financing model to pay for $2 million curative therapies that deliver decades of value with a single intervention.

By William V. Padula


Adobe

We published in Nature Medicine in 2025 for free. In 2026, it cost us $12,850

A new open-access policy has led journals owned by Springer Nature, Wiley, and Elsevier to charge outrageous fees to NIH-funded authors.

By Elizabeth Selvin


How long Covid’s scientific stalemate made it politically erasable

Applying the biomedical paradigm to long Covid, a contested illness, has resulted in a scientific stalemate.

By Steven Phillips


Even in abortion-protecting states, teens face unnecessary barriers to care

Cases in Nevada and Colorado highlight that legal protection for abortion does not mean equitable access for minors.

By Sunaya Krishnapura


‘They all think I’m insane’: What it’s like to start medical residency at 72

On the ‘First Opinion Podcast,’ a 72-year-old incoming resident discusses Caribbean medical school, going from an N.P. to M.D., and more.

By Torie Bosch


Ending animal testing could set back xenotransplantation just as the field is poised for a breakthrough

Xenotransplantation, in which pig organs are transplanted into humans, is on the verge of a breakthrough. New federal policy could set it back.

By Joshua Mezrich


Why STAT is sticking with ‘health care’ as two words

STAT’s director of editorial operations explains why we are sticking with two words for "health care" instead of following the Associated Press.

By Sarah Mupo


David McNew/Getty Images

American horses are obese, too

Obese horses aren’t lazy or making poor choices. They’re victims of a food system — just like humans.

By Joshua Moen


More around STAT

 
STAT
STAT, 1 Exchange Place, Boston, MA
©2026, All Rights Reserved.