closer look
A medical journal receives a troubling missive
The editor in chief of CHEST, the official journal of the American College of Chest Physicians, received an unusual letter this week. It came not from a scientist or physician but from Edward R. Martin Jr, interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.
"It has been brought to my attention that more and more journals and publications like CHEST Journal are conceding that they are partisans in various scientific debates," he wrote, before going on to ask six questions, largely about alleged bias in publishing decisions.
It's unclear how many other medical journals received this impromptu correspondence from the Justice Department, although MedScape reported on at least two others. One feared these letters could have a chilling effect on scientific debate, while violating the First Amendment. But another argued the effort was so brazen and ham-handed "that I can't believe anyone's going to be intimidated." Read more from Anil.
mental health
Trump cuts threaten crisis services
When Paolo del Vecchio was 23 and on the brink of suicide, he found help thanks to a small, little-known federal agency called the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, or SAMSHA. He got treatment, peer and family support, and a reason to live: Helping others recover, too. Eventually, he became a SAMSHA employee and worked at the center for thirty years.
Now, del Vecchio writes in an opinion piece, he's concerned others who are in a similar place he was won't be able to access that same lifeline. The Trump Administration has gutted the agency, originally founded under President George H. W. Bush. It reportedly fired half of its staff and cut $1 billion in funding. A recently leaked White House budget proposal would zero out the agency and cut more than 40 programs.
These enacted and proposed cuts jeopardize critical mental health and addiction efforts, including crisis services for mothers with children and youth programs, along with efforts to help tribes, the unhoused, and people in the criminal justice system. "We continue to face a mental health and addictions crisis, and the need for effective federal leadership is more important than ever," del Vecchio writes. Read more.
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