drug pricing
Waiting for MFN
Industry is bracing for details of Trump's plan to administratively carry out his most-favored nation plan, but it's not clear that much will be forthcoming, Daniel Payne and Elaine Chen report.
The administration set a deadline of yesterday to disclose the target prices for drugs. Asked when the "price targets" would be issued, a White House spokesperson said they already had been announced and shared a link to a May 20 announcement in which the administration outlined how it would implement the policy.
But that announcement did not set specific price targets.
"Nothing more from us at the moment," the White House spokesperson said.
Read more about how drugmakers' approach to negotiating with the White House could be further complicated and how the administration's drug pricing agenda might be taking shape via other avenues.
cdc
You're un-fired
The Trump administration is asking more than 450 staffers to return to CDC after firing them, Chelsea reports.
It's not the first time this has happened. For example, HHS last month reinstated hundreds of workers from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. That wave of reinstatements followed pressure from Congress, though Kennedy previously said that DOGE mistakenly fired at least 20% of HHS employees and that it was always part of the plan to rehire some employees.
Read more.
hhs
Good luck with that
The Trump administration infuriated Democrats by firing about 10,000 employees at HHS, and forcing scores to retire early or accept buyouts. Now Kennedy needs their support to create the Administration for a Healthy America, which he envisions as the new crown jewel of HHS, according to Daniel, Isabella Cueto, and Chelsea.
That might be a difficult task. Even some Republicans have expressed concerns about the cuts in the reorganization plan, including Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), the chair of the committee that would fund AHA.
It might be possible for the administration to stand up some version of AHA without Congress, but asking lawmakers to pass a bill authorizing its creation would be the most straightforward approach.
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