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November 6, 2024

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The nation — and its health care decisions — are entering an unprecedented political era. No matter what lies ahead, STAT is here to break down the biggest stories in health and medicine. If you value research-backed, science journalism, consider supporting our newsroom and becoming a STAT+ subscriber.

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Photo illustration: Christine Kao/STAT; Photos: AP, Getty, Adobe

Donald Trump returns to the presidency with big ambitions to shake up health care

Trump promised to shake up public health institutions, reshape federal health programs, and slash costs

By Sarah Owermohle


STAT+ | Biotech and pharma executives on what Trump and RFK Jr. could mean for the industry

How Trump's presidency will shape the biotech and pharma outlook, according to CEOs of Teva, Bausch + Lomb, GSK, Novo Nordisk, and more.

By Allison DeAngelis, Matthew Herper, Andrew Joseph, Jason Mast, and Ed Silverman


Six GOP lawmakers poised for power on health care as the Senate flips Republican

GOP control of U.S. Senate puts a spotlight on key players: Bill Cassidy, Mike Crapo, John Thune, John Cornyn, Roger Marshall, Marsha Blackburn.

By Rachel Cohrs Zhang



Alex Wong/Getty Images

STAT+ | What letting RFK Jr. 'go wild' might mean for Trump's FDA

Experts say Donald Trump and RFK Jr. could radically alter the Food and Drug Administration, the nation's top regulator of vaccines, drugs, and food.

By Lizzy Lawrence


Medicaid could be targeted for spending cuts under Trump

Trump promised to leave Medicare and Social Security untouched, and wants to increase defense spending. He's been silent about Medicaid, though.

By John Wilkerson


STAT+ | How will Trump's election change the FDA? History yields some clues

During Trump's first term, the most radical potential changes were generally averted because of institutional forces. This time could be different.

By Matthew Herper


A recovery room at a reproductive health clinic.
Matt York/AP

The post-Roe effort to protect abortion rights hits its limit, for now

After losses in 3 of 10 states where abortion was on the ballot, advocates for abortion rights have limited options.

By Sarah Owermohle


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