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United StatesPolitics4 days ago

Trump administration will bring special ed to HHS

The Trump administration has announced plans to transfer oversight of special education from the Department of Education to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), as outlined in Project 2025, a policy blueprint developed by the Heritage Foundation. This move is part of broader efforts to eliminate the Education Department. Advocates for people with disabilities have expressed concern over the shift, citing potential implications for the management of disability education programs.

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Good morning. The season finale of the “First Opinion Podcast” airs today. Sarah Mupo, STAT’s director of editorial operations and lead gal in charge of the style guide, joined Torie Bosch to discuss the decision to keep “health care” two words. Take a listen .

U.S. infant mortality drops in 2025

Infant mortality dropped to a new all-time low last year, according to preliminary CDC data. It sounds small: There were 5.6 infant deaths per 1,000 in 2022 and 2023, 5.5 in 2024, and slightly fewer than 5.4 in 2025. Still, experts say the results are statistically meaningful, translating to hundreds of fewer annual deaths. Read more from the AP.

Trump administration will bring special ed to HHS

As part of the Trump administration’s continued efforts to close the Department of Education, the oversight of special education will now be the purview of HHS, officials announced yesterday.

Project 2025, a policy blueprint for the administration created by the Heritage Foundation, called for the elimination of the Education Department and for HHS to take over responsibilities for administering grants related to disability education.

People with disabilities have fearfully anticipated this decision, as it hands stewardship of disability education over to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has called autism an “ epidemic ” and historically purported a false link between the condition and vaccines.

FDA approves another OTC nasal naloxone

The FDA yesterday approved Rextovy, a 4-milligram naloxone hydrochloride nasal spray for emergency overdose situations. The move, which the agency touted as part of the president’s Great American Recovery Initiative , comes about three years after the FDA’s first approval of a nasal naloxone over-the-counter.

Adding more over-the-counter options “expands access and market availability, encourages competition that may reduce cost, and offers alternative sourcing options,” an FDA press release stated. But as STAT’s Lev Facher reported back in 2023, over-the-counter status doesn’t automatically ease access . Research shows that in the first year of such availability, over-the-counter sales were limited .

‘I have never been more concerned about those rates of congenital syphilis.’

That’s infectious disease physician and former public health official Jeffrey Klausner, who wrote about his concerns in a new First Opinion essay. He walks through how we got here, beginning with the Great Recession and the defunding of local public health programs. He also recommends a path forward, increasing efforts on already tried-and-true methods.

Read more from Klausner. And if you missed it, revisit Eric Boodman’s story from Monday, which serves as a case study of how even emergency measures to protect babies from congenital syphilis can still fail.

Does alcohol cause pancreatic cancer?

The more alcohol you drink, the higher your risk for pancreatic cancer, according to a review of 37 cohort studies published yesterday in the International Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research . The turning point for significantly increased risk arrives once a person drinks more than 24 grams of alcohol per day — less than two drinks by U.S. standards.

“There has been a growing body of evidence pointing to alcohol consumption as a cause of pancreatic cancer, and this analysis is a significant contribution to that evidence,” Tim Naimi, one of the study authors, said in a press release. (Catch up on STAT’s alcohol series, The Deadliest Drug, here .)

What we’re reading

More sanitation workers are getting pricked by used needles, Curbed

Dutch children are unusually happy and healthy. Is it because of this walking ritual? Guardian

A prominent VC explains why she’s against U.S. restrictions on investment in China’s drug industry, STAT

Children’s Hospital doctors refuse to provide gender-affirming care to trans youth, fearing criminal charges, Colorado Sun

Opinion: The quiet joy of being an oncologist, STAT

Read the full article at STAT News
Source document: CDC Data on Infant Mortality

3 reports

STAT NewsIndependentLeft4 days ago
Trump administration will bring special ed to HHS

The Trump administration has announced plans to transfer oversight of special education from the Department of Education to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), as outlined in Project 2025, a policy blueprint developed by the Heritage Foundation. This move is part of broader efforts to eliminate the Education Department. Advocates for people with disabilities have expressed concern over the shift, citing potential implications for the management of disability education programs.

Bias read (Left): The article frames the transfer of responsibility for special education to HHS as a cause for 'fear' among advocates for people with disabilities, implying negative consequences without providing balanced counterpoints or explanations from supporters of the policy. The tone suggests skepticism or批评t

Official sources cited

Bloomberg NewsParty-aligned🔒Right5 days ago
Education Department Sheds More Programs in Bid to Dismantle Agency

The Department of Education is transferring its civil rights and special education duties to other federal agencies, marking a significant move toward the Trump administration's effort to reduce the size of the department.

Bias read (Right): The article uses the term 'dismantling the agency' which implies a negative view of the Department of Education, aligning with conservative rhetoric that often criticizes the expansion of federal agencies. The framing suggests approval of the Trump administration's actions without presenting counter

NPR NewsIndependentLeft5 days ago
Trump further guts Education Dept. by shifting oversight of special ed, civil rights

The article discusses President Donald Trump's actions to shift oversight responsibilities from the Department of Education to the Departments of Health and Human Services and Justice, which critics argue further undermines the agency Trump has aimed to eliminate.

Bias read (Left): The article uses the term 'guts' to describe Trump's actions, implying negative intent, and refers to the move as 'dismantle an agency,' suggesting criticism of Trump's policies. The framing emphasizes the potential negative impact of these shifts, aligning with a left-leaning perspective.

Official sources cited

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