May 1, 2026
avatar-torie-bosch
First Opinion editor

Did you hear the news? The Associated Press has updated its style guide — which STAT roughly follows — to change “health care” to “healthcare.” STAT’s director of editorial operations, Sarah Mupo, is still trying to decide whether to follow the AP’s new guidance or to stick with two words. So she’s polling readers — you can weigh in here.

My two cents: I started my career in journalism as a copy editor, and I’m emotionally attached to “health care.” But First Opinion authors almost always use one word instead of two, and my life will be a lot easier if I don’t have to keep changing it in editing and then explaining it when the author tries to revert to one word.

This week on the “First Opinion Podcast”: We’ve gone video! You can still listen to audio-only wherever you get your podcasts, of course, but if you’re into this newfangled video podcasting thing, you can watch me talk to two medical students about how to foster a preventive-care mindset in future physicians.

Recommendation of the week: In the Atlantic, Daniel Engber writes about an autistic young man with minimal ability to speak who allegedly wrote a book by pointing out letters and punctuation on a board to his mother. Engber takes a critical approach to a feel-good story that might just feel a little too good.



STAT, Adobe

STAT+ | Did Kennedy just stack the deck on FDA oversight of peptides?

RFK Jr.'s push to revisit peptide restrictions could reopen access to unproven compounds, raising concerns about safety, data gaps, and FDA oversight.

By Paul Knoepfler


America is worrying about fertility again. But it’s not really about families

When fertility becomes a patriotic duty or an economic imperative, the line between support and pressure blurs quickly.

By Sonya Borrero, Christine Dehlendorf, and Rachel Logan


The psychedelic revolution is leaving behind people of color

Psychedelics’ benefits for mental health, substance use, and more could particularly help racial minorities — if they can get access.

By Jerel Ezell and Sugy Choi


Adobe

Are international medical graduates taking residency spots from Americans? We did the math

In the wake of the 2026 residency match, some claim that international medical graduates are displacing Americans.

By Manal Khan, Abishek Bala, and Sarah Mohiuddin


Congress must hold RFK Jr. accountable after hearings

Kennedy will bear much of the public responsibility for the direction of America’s vaccine system. But Congress shares that responsibility.

By Michael C. Burgess and Larry Bucshon


Why alternative medicine can feel so much better than mainstream health care

Choosing alternative therapies like ozone with a known risk of death is hard to fathom, but wanting control and to be symptom-free is not.

By Hannah Kerman


Camille MacMillin/STAT

Healthcare or health care? Help STAT decide

AP style has been the final arbiter of journalistic English since 1953. We're taking a poll: How does the industry feel about health care versus healthcare?

By Sarah Mupo


FDA commissioner: ‘Smarter,’ real-time clinical trials could transform drug development

FDA Commissioner Marty Makary announces AstraZeneca proof-of-concept real-time clinical trial.

By Marty Makary


It’s time to seize the rare bipartisan opening to address microplastics

Passing a serious agenda on plastics would do massive good for the natural world as well as for public health.

By Tim Ryan and Justin Zorn


A photo of some of the participants of the Tuskegee study, an infamous experiment conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service. Learning about Tuskegee is important, but the "instinct to reference Tuskegee can obscure a more uncomfortable truth: These injustices are not relics of the past," this First Opinion author writes.
National Archives

I’m a fourth-year med student, but I only learned one historical example of medical racism

Modern randomized controlled trials often rely on marginalized populations abroad.

By Uzma Rentia


Why do discussions about ‘brain health’ ignore mental illness?

The artificial divide between mental illness and neurodegenerative and other neurological disorders is a scientific and strategic error.

By Husseini K. Manji, Eric J. Nestler, and Patrick J. Kennedy


Patients seeking mental health treatment are not commodities

Legal agreements that directly shape access to care to remain invisible to the very people whose lives they govern.

By Sarah Cady


The medical school nutrition blues

Two medical students on finding the right way for med school to tackle preventive health, on the ‘First Opinion Podcast.’

By Torie Bosch


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