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Is home health care fraud 'rampant'?

March 27, 2026
Andres Vidal-Gadea, a professor of molecular neuroethology, at his lab at Illinois State University.
Taylor Glascock for STAT

NIH restrictions on foreign research partnerships significantly impacted 1 in 4 U.S. scientists

National survey of NIH grant recipients shows a quarter were significantly affected by a ban on sharing their funding with partners overseas.

By Megan Molteni, Anil Oza, and Jonathan Wosen


STAT+ | Trump administration says home care fraud is 'rampant.' What do the data show?

Home-based care has become a focus area for the Trump administration's fight against health care fraud, but officials haven't offered any evidence.

By O. Rose Broderick


As political pressure mounts, medical school accreditor drops requirement to teach about health equity

School accreditor drops required teaching on health inequities, known as structural competency, as Trump's DOJ probes three medical schools.

By Anil Oza



This 1964 photo captures South Vietnamese troops wading through a rice paddy in Long An province during operations against Viet Cong guerrillas in the Mekong Delta as U.S. helicopters hover overhead.
Horst Faas/AP

Decades after Vietnam War, research links Agent Orange exposure to MDS blood cancer

Q&A with Mikkael Sekeres on his 8-year quest to link myelodysplastic syndromes to herbicide used in Vietnam: "Feel like I'm doing something for my country."

By Angus Chen


STAT+ | In private meetings, White House works to win pharma companies' support for drug pricing bill

White House shares drug pricing legislation with pharma companies for feedback while lobbying a reluctant Congress to turn voluntary price deals into law.

By Daniel Payne


STAT+ | Amid focus on food, FDA leader briefs lawmakers on priorities

The Trump administration's health agenda is increasingly focusing on food issues, an area that's popular with voters.

By Daniel Payne


ADOBE

Opinion: Future physicians need more nutrition education — but not of the MAHA variety

The recent directive to mandate nutrition education in medical training is a good start — if it isn't corrupted by bad food science.

By Christopher Duggan, Marie-France Hivert, and Kevin Klatt


Opinion: Spreading out elective admissions could save lives, strengthen hospitals, and reduce health spending

Research shows that distributing scheduled admissions, mostly surgical, more evenly across the week saves lives, helps health care workers, and reduces spending.

By Eugene Litvak


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