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Cancer data in danger as CDC cuts may threaten tracking efforts

June 26, 2025
A cancer clinic in Kentucky. (Jon Cherry/Getty Images)

STAT+ | States anxiously wait to find out if cancer tracking and prevention funding from CDC will be renewed

Cancer registries face funding cuts as CDC decisions near. Experts warn cancer tracking and screening could suffer, emerging threats would remain hidden.

By Isabella Cueto


CDC advisory panel, selected by RFK Jr., recommends thimerosal be dropped from flu vaccines

The preservative, largely considered safe and rarely used anymore, has long been a target of antivax activists. ACIP panel vote seen as a win for Kennedy.

By Helen Branswell


STAT+ | GOP tax bill faces major setback as Senate parliamentarian strikes down key Medicaid measures

GOP regroups after Senate parliamentarian strikes key health care measures from Trump tax bill, complicating negotiations on Medicaid cuts.

By John Wilkerson and Daniel Payne



Eric Green, who was ousted as director of the National Human Genome Research Institute in March.
Courtesy NHGRI

STAT+ | Eric Green was the first institute director forced out of NIH. He still hasn't been told why

Eric Green opens up on his NIH firing, the chaos inside the agency, and what's at stake for U.S. science amid sweeping changes

By Anil Oza


Generic cancer drugs used around the world fail quality tests, investigation shows

Investigation finds too little or too much active ingredient in about a fifth of all chemotherapy samples; patients in 100 countries at risk

By Paul Eccles, Andjela Milivojevic, and and Ramu Sapkota — TBIJ


Black, Hispanic patients significantly less likely to receive key addiction medications, study finds

Study in JAMA Network Open highlights racial gaps in addiction care, showing Black and Hispanic patients face barriers to lifesaving opioid medications.

By Lev Facher


Vaccine policy frays, CDC nominee in the hot seat, & obesity drug side effects

This week on the podcast: What does the fracturing of vaccine policy mean for U.S. health care? And will the potential CDC head stand up to RFK Jr.?

By Allison DeAngelis and Adam Feuerstein


Opinion: We will not stay silent on vaccines, say leaders of five major U.S. medical associations

Presidents of the AAFP, AAP, ACP, ACOG, and IDSA write about their organizations' commitment to vaccines in a time when immunizations are at risk.

By Jen Brull, Susan J. Kressly, Jason Goldman, Steven J. Fleischman, and Tina Q. Tan


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