July 1, 2025
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Morning Rounds Writer and Podcast Producer
Rabbit rabbit. Good morning. It's July.

politics

The latest on Trump’s tax cut bill

By the time STAT's DC team left the Capitol last night, well past dinner time, senators hadn’t yet voted on Trump’s tax cut bill. But the vote is likely to be close.

Over the weekend, we learned that 11.8 million people would health insurance over the next decade under Senate Republicans’ version of President Trump’s tax bill. Read more about that and check out STAT's home page for the latest on the vote. And honestly, if you aren't subscribed to D.C. Diagnosis — what are you waiting for!


money

HHS will continue funding cancer prevention & tracking

Last week, STAT’s Isabella Cueto reported that state workers were anxiously waiting to hear about overdue funds for cancer prevention and tracking. Today, local programs finally got word that federal funding for three key programs will continue. Those are the National Program of Cancer Registries, the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program, and the National Comprehensive Cancer Control Program. Together, the programs help states collect detailed information on cancer cases and improve prevention efforts and cancer screening, particularly among people who are uninsured.

Over 50 notices had gone out as of yesterday, an HHS spokesperson said in the morning. The rest of the awards will be sent to states, tribes, and other contractors “no later than early next week,” press secretary Emily Hilliard told Isa over email. It’s a sigh of relief for public health workers, but some details remain uncertain. Read more.


hospitals

Older adults are waiting even longer in EDs

For older adults, the longer someone stays in the emergency department, the worse the experience can get for them, with higher risks of delirium and death. A new study, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, found that between 2017 and 2024, an increasing number of older adults were dealing with long stays and delayed admissions.

The researchers found that in 2017, among more than 4.5 million visits to the ED by patients over 65, 12% were there longer than eight hours. In 2024, that jumped to 20% of more than 12 million visits. It was even worse in academic hospitals, jumping from 19% of visits in 2017 to 30% in 2024. Similar patterns were seen when it came to delays between when an inpatient bed was requested for an older patient and when they were actually admitted. In 2017, 22% of admissions took more than three hours, and in 2024 that rose to 36%. 

These trends harm patients, contribute to crowding of emergency departments, and “reflect systemic health care dysfunction,” the study authors write. More research is needed to understand the causes behind the increased time, but they point to increasing patient complexity and demand as potential contributors.



first opinion

True Life: I’m a social media scientist
The TikTok icon is displayed on the homepage of a smart phone

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images 

This is the reality of science communication in 2025: A casual one-minute video that Morgan McSweeney (aka “dr.noc”) made about immunology racked up more views in one hour than his published research papers will accumulate in ten lifetimes. Dry data analysis is out, story telling is in, and the implications for public health are, well, existential. 

In a new First Opinion essay, McSweeney explains what he’s learned about the role of authenticity and human connection in communicating science and health information. “Social media is not the enemy of serious science; it’s the battleground where trust and credibility will be won or lost,” he writes. Read more

(For a fun STAT crossover, last year McSweeney spoke on a podcast co-hosted by STAT contributor and social media doctor Will Flanary, aka Dr. Glaucomflecken, and his wife Kristin.)


trivia

Without checking, do you know when women should start getting mammograms?

For women with an average risk of breast cancer, you’re supposed to start getting mammograms every other year at age 40, per the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. But only about half of U.S. adults know that, according to a new, nationally representative health survey from the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Out of more than 1,600 respondents, 49% answered correctly when asked the recommended starting age for screening, while 21% said age 30, and 11% weren’t sure. (The rest chose either age 30 or 50.)

To be fair, guidance from major medical organizations has changed recently, and some organizations have more nuanced recommendations. Respondents answered this survey in April 2025, but a press release from the Center notes that the same percentage of respondents thought the starting age was 40 in a 2024 survey, though it wasn’t the correct answer at the time.  


aging

Complicating the links between age, chronic disease, and inflammation

Everybody wants to reduce inflammation these days. But a new study suggests that inflammation’s effects on health are more complex than scientists previously understood, STAT’s Marissa Russo reports. 

The study, published yesterday in Nature Aging, found that people living in non-industrialized societies experience less age-related chronic inflammation — “inflammaging” — than their counterparts in industrialized societies. Inflammaging is considered a hallmark of aging and broad predictor of age-related chronic disease. But it turns out this framework may be too general: “It may not be the solution, even if it’s seductive,” the study’s lead author told Marissa. But if we can better understand how this process differs across geographic, epidemiological, and social spectrums, that could lead us to new potential interventions in the aging process. Read more from Marissa.


More around STAT
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What we're reading

  • The next acetaminophen tablet you take could be made from PET, Wired

  • Many medical devices deemed ‘breakthrough’ by FDA are backed by patchy evidence, STAT
  • A Texas boy needed protection from measles. The vaccine cost $1,400, KFF Health News
  • Fallout from Trump’s battle with Harvard extends far beyond Boston, Boston Globe

Thanks for reading! More next time,


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