Healthcare Costs Force 1 in 3 US Adults to Cut Basic Spending
AI SummaryThe National Desk21d agoUnited States
Image: The National Desk
β’A new report reveals that rising healthcare costs are forcing approximately 1 in 3 US adults to reduce basic spending on essentials like utilities, transportation, and prescription medications.
β’The financial strain is most severe among uninsured Americans, with about 62% reporting they have made trade-offs to afford medical costs, while nearly 3 in 10 insured Americans also report cutting back.
β’The impact spans income levels: approximately half of households earning $48,000 to $180,000 have delayed major life decisions because of healthcare costs, and one-third of those earning $180,000 to $240,000 report similar delays.
β’Healthcare costs have evolved from a purely medical issue into a factor reshaping how Americans manage spending, savings, and long-term life planning decisions.
β’ The CDC has suspended dozens of diagnostic tests as part of agency downsizing, disrupting testing capabilities for critical infectious diseases including rabies and mpox.
β’ The testing pause has left pharmacists and state health departments scrambling to identify alternative diagnostic pathways and coordinate emergency responses.
β’ Public health officials and pharmacy professionals have raised alarms about the implications for disease surveillance, outbreak detection, and timely clinical decision-making.
β’ FDA has approved an investigational new drug application for synthetic CAR-T (sCAR-T) therapy targeting autoimmune conditions.
β’ The clearance enables clinical trials to test this engineered cell therapy in US patients with refractory autoimmune diseases.
β’ sCAR-T represents a novel approach adapting cancer immunotherapy for immune disorders, potentially offering durable remissions.
β’ The CDC reported 43 new measles cases in the US for the week ending April 10, 2026, bringing the national total to 1,714 cases.
β’ More than half of the new cases occurred in Utah, which saw 73 infections last week alone after 142 cases in the past three weeks versus 197 for all of 2025.
β’ The slower increase compared to the prior week's 96 cases highlights ongoing outbreaks concentrated in specific states amid declining vaccination rates.
β’ President released Fiscal Year 2027 budget request on April 10, 2026, proposing 46% cuts to global health programs under a consolidated account aligned with America First Global Health Strategy.
β’ Cuts eliminate funding for HIV prevention like voluntary medical male circumcision, LGBTQ programming, and reproductive health services; also includes 12% NIH budget reduction.
β’ Proposal signals deprioritization of science and research amid administration's rejection of Congress's appropriations power; Congress historically rejects such deep cuts.
β’ 95% of HR and benefits professionals view workplace mental health as vital to 2026 business strategy.
β’ 61% of HR leaders report mental health leaves increased in the past year, with 16% noting 25% or more rise.
β’ 36% of employees identify sleep issues tied to mental health as a top challenge, signaling burnout risks.
β’ One in three women under 50 in the USβabout 10 million peopleβis iron deficient, per AMA discussion.
β’ Physicians address diagnosis and treatment strategies for this widespread nutritional deficiency.
β’ Iron deficiency impacts energy, cognition, and overall health, warranting increased screening.
β’ As of March 24, 2026, CDC estimates national COVID-19 Rt at 1.05 (range 0.93-1.32), indicating epidemic not changing with 71% probability.
β’ Infections growing or likely growing in 2 states, declining in 34, stable in 11; ED visits at very low 0.3%.
β’ Weekly ED visit percentage remains minimal, informing ongoing public health monitoring and policy.
β’ Medi-Cal immigrant enrollment is declining, with researchers attributing the drop directly to Trump administration policies.
β’ The reduction affects healthcare access for immigrant populations in California, exacerbating public health challenges.
β’ This trend highlights ongoing tensions between federal immigration policies and state-level health programs serving vulnerable groups.
β’ The US administration reports that the Iran war is rattling the medical supply chain, affecting essentials from gloves to helium used in MRIs.
β’ Shortages threaten hospitals nationwide as key imports from affected regions halt abruptly amid escalating conflict.
β’ Medical leaders warn this could delay treatments and surgeries, exacerbating existing vulnerabilities in US healthcare logistics.
β’ NIH awarded $500 million in grants on April 7, 2026, to 15 US institutions for CRISPR-based gene therapies addressing 100,000 Americans with sickle cell disease.
β’ Phase 2 trials at Boston Children's show 94% pain crisis reduction; total funding supports 200 patients over five years.
β’ Initiative responds to 17% US mortality drop goal by 2030; 'Breakthrough for underserved communities,' per NIH Director.
β’ The FDA granted approval on April 7, 2026, to Moderna's mRESVIA vaccine, an mRNA-based shot targeting respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) for adults aged 60 and older.
β’ Clinical trials showed 83.7% efficacy against RSV lower respiratory tract disease in the first season, with data from over 37,000 participants across 22 countries including US sites.
β’ This marks the second mRNA RSV vaccine approved after GSK's Arexvy, aiming to reduce 140,000-160,000 annual US hospitalizations among seniors; CDC review expected soon.
β’ Texas health officials reported 156 measles cases as of April 7, 2026, in a Dallas County outbreak starting March 15, with 12 hospitalizations.
β’ 89% of cases unvaccinated, including 45 children under 5; infection rate 90% among exposed susceptibles.
β’ Declared public health emergency; impacts 2 million residents, straining ERs amid 83% vaccination goal miss.