• Florida's KidCare expansion remains stalled in legal limbo since February 2024, preventing coverage for more children.
• Uninsured children in the state have risen to 400,000, one of the highest tallies nationwide.
• Delay exacerbates access issues as federal funds await resolution, impacting low-income families significantly.
• East Bay man in Contra Costa County died after consuming toxic wild mushrooms amid statewide spike.
• California recorded 35 mushroom poisoning cases from Nov. 18 to Jan. 4, far above average of under five yearly.
• Surge prompts health warnings on foraging risks during wet weather conditions.
• Months after restoring federal family planning funding, Missouri's only Title X grantee program now confronts fresh challenges from U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley.
• The program provides essential reproductive health services amid ongoing political debates over federal support for family planning initiatives.
• This development underscores persistent tensions in U.S. public health policy regarding access to contraception and reproductive care funding.
• Nearly 1,300 people in Pittsburgh learned Hands-Only CPR during day two of the NFL Draft on April 24, 2026, at Acrisure Stadium, setting a Guinness World Record for the largest such training session in one hour.
• The event, organized by the American Heart Association, NFL, Damar Hamlin, and Doctor Mike, supports the Nation of Lifesavers movement aiming to double sudden cardiac arrest survival rates by 2030.
• More than half of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest victims do not receive CPR before emergency responders arrive, highlighting the critical need for widespread bystander training to improve survival odds.
• The Alabama Department of Corrections terminated its $1 billion health care contract with Tennessee-based YesCare for failure to adequately fulfill contractual duties.
• The contract, awarded in 2023 as a 5-year agreement, was dissolved due to the company's inability to meet performance standards for prison health services.
• The termination raises questions about oversight of private contractors providing essential health care services within the correctional system.
• The Snohomish County Board of Health approved new protections mandating septic system inspections prior to any home sale.
• Ordinance aims to prevent buyer exposure to faulty systems, promoting public health and property safety.
• Impacts thousands of rural Washington homes reliant on septic over municipal sewer.
• As of April 25, 2026, Medicaid/CHIP enrollment exceeds pre-pandemic levels in 32 states, totaling 68 million Medicaid and 7.2 million CHIP enrollees nationwide.
• The unwinding process disenrolled 25.2 million since September 2024, yet 69% of renewals—56.4 million—were approved in reporting states.
• Elevated enrollment supports ongoing public health efforts but strains budgets amid procedural disenrollments in states like Florida and Texas.
• A new clinical trial launched April 24, 2026 (NCT07549529), examines postural motor activation deficits following mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in US patients.
• The study translates lab findings into physical therapy protocols for concussion rehabilitation, focusing on vestibular and balance impairments.
• Affecting millions annually, mTBI recovery gaps could improve with targeted interventions, potentially reducing long-term disability rates by 30%.
• American Medical Association warns that $100,000 H-1B visa application fees jeopardize physician recruitment for rural and underserved U.S. areas.
• Costs deter international doctors, who fill 25% of rural positions, exacerbating provider shortages affecting 60 million Americans.
• AMA urges policy reform to maintain care access amid growing demand.
• Health officials confirmed the first case of mpox clade I in New York City on Friday, a strain known to cause more severe disease and higher mortality than clade II.
• Clade I mpox leads to greater illness severity, prompting heightened vigilance in the densely populated urban area amid the ongoing national mpox situation.
• Detection underscores risks in international travel hubs, as clade I has driven recent African outbreaks with fatality rates exceeding 3% in some regions.
• The CDC reported six more US children died from influenza last week, bringing the season's pediatric flu deaths to 149 as respiratory virus activity slows nationwide.
• About 85% of deceased children with known vaccination status were unvaccinated, with flu positivity in labs dropping to 4.7% and hospitalizations falling to 1.3 per 100,000 people.
• Influenza B now predominates after surpassing A viruses, with high wastewater levels of RSV, influenza B, rotavirus, and norovirus signaling ongoing risks.