election 2024
The MAHA characters you need to know
Christine Kao/STAT
While Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has gotten the most attention of anyone in Trumpworld for pushing the ambitious anti-chronic disease campaign "Make America Healthy Again," he's not pushing his agenda alone, my colleague Isabella Cueto writes.
A rotating cast of other characters — old and new; influencers, entrepreneurs, and lawmakers — has amplified Kennedy's arguments, pushing them harder and to more people (including on the most popular podcast in the world).
She has assembled an index to introduce you to nine figures in the MAHA orbit who could be well-positioned to influence a Kennedy-driven Trump administration policy agenda on health care.
business
Tell us what you really think
Pharmaceutical and biotech executives hemmed and hawed before the election about their feelings on a potential Trump administration empowering Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Now that the reality is here, our biotech and pharma reporters canvassed industry leaders for their real-time reactions.
The responses ranged from optimism, to hesitancy around "wacky appointments," to describing Trump's policy positions on health care as "summed up as the shrug emoji."
They acknowledged the warring dynamics that could characterize the incoming populist Republican administration — that tax breaks and lighter oversight of mergers might be good for business, but anti-science sentiment could threaten their bottom lines. Read more here.
reproductive health
Abortion policy has found its ceiling
The seemingly unstoppable momentum for ballot initiatives to protect access to abortion slowed this election cycle, leaving few avenues for reproductive rights advocates to pursue, my co-author Sarah Owermohle writes.
The mixed results leave the nation a patchwork of bans, restrictions, and safe havens for abortion access. This year's results put the nuance in Americans' views on abortion access on full display — support erodes after the first trimester of pregnancy.
The window for taking abortion access straight to voters is narrowing, too, as only three states remain that allow voter-proposed ballot initiatives. More from Sarah.
insurance
Medicaid's industry guardians
While health policy experts warn that President-elect Trump's promises not to cut Medicare or Social Security could leave Medicaid vulnerable, the program's contracts with private insurers have turned them into well-funded defenders of the program, STAT's John Wilkerson writes.
The health care industry's golden child, rural hospitals, could also be hurt if Medicaid is cut, John reports, because many people on Medicaid live predominantly in rural areas and small towns.
The biggest public companies to watch in this space will be Centene, Elevance, UnitedHealth Group, Molina, and CVS Health.
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