Top Medical News Topics Clinicians Should Know This Week - July 6-12, 2026 GlobalRPH

- GlobalRPH has released a curated summary of top medical news topics for clinicians covering the week of July 6-12, 2026.
- A primary focus of this week's reporting is the shifting geography of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) across the United States.
- These updates provide healthcare providers with essential current data to improve diagnostic accuracy and patient care strategies.
- The publication continues its weekly series of clinical briefings, following previous reports from June 2026.
Sources & Citations
1 sourceMore Stories
‘Lettuce or Salad Greens’ Identified as Potential Source of Cyclospora Outbreak - The New York Times
• Michigan health officials announced on Monday that lettuce or salad greens have been identified as the potential source of a widespread cyclosporiasis outbreak. • The illness, caused by the Cyclospora parasite transmitted via feces-contaminated food or water, has sickened thousands of people across the United States.
Read original · nytimes.comMedical Bulletin 15/July/2026
• A new study from the University of Southern California (USC) is investigating the causes of lung cancer in healthy, young non-smokers, specifically examining if certain healthy foods may carry unexpected risks. • Separate research highlights a critical link between adequate sleep and weight management, suggesting that poor sleep habits increase the risk of obesity-related conditions.
Read original · medicaldialogues.inUS Cyclospora cases mount as CDC lags on tracking
• Clinicians in southeast Michigan and northern Ohio are reporting a surge of gastrointestinal illnesses caused by the parasite Cyclospora cayetanensi. • The outbreak is characterized by sudden, explosive diarrhea, though the CDC is reportedly lagging in its tracking and response efforts.
Read original · cidrap.umn.eduSurveillance of Cyclosporiasis | Cyclosporiasis
• Cyclosporiasis is classified as a nationally notifiable disease, requiring cases to be reported to the CDC to monitor public health trends. • The CDC, in coordination with state and federal regulatory officials, conducts year-round surveillance to identify outbreaks linked to common food sources in the U.S.
Read original · cdc.gov
CDCWhat to know about the parasitic diarrhea outbreak
• Health news reports are highlighting a current outbreak of cyclosporiasis, a parasitic infection that causes severe diarrhea. • The reports also address the consequences following the expiration of Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies and issues involving the FDA CBER acting director.
Read original · statnews.com
StatnewsFDA drug approval affects healthcare around the world, but political shortcuts could hurt the agency’s international reputation | Politics
• The FDA has introduced a new fast-track program for the approval of biologics, including experimental gene therapies for conditions like sickle cell disease and cancer. • Traditionally, the agency requires a rigorous three-phase trial process involving healthy volunteers, dose-finding studies, and large-scale clinical trials to ensure safety.
Read original · kten.comHolland & Knight Health Dose: July 14, 2026 - Healthcare - United States
• Congress has returned from recess to prioritize bipartisan healthcare legislation, specifically targeting prior authorization reform and the expansion of remote patient monitoring. • Key legislative goals include extending Affordable Care Act (ACA) premium tax credits to maintain insurance affordability for millions of Americans.
Read original · mondaq.comFDA Single-Trial Approval Risks Ineffective Drugs
• Leading researchers are warning that a recent FDA policy shift may lead to the approval of ineffective medicines. • In February, the FDA announced that drug sponsors could seek approval based on a single clinical trial and confirmatory evidence, departing from a 1960s-era requirement for two clinical studies.
Read original · bioxconomy.com
BioXconomyThe Blueprint for a Bigger Medical Bureaucracy: News Article - Independent Institute
• The free-market policy group Unleash Prosperity released a report arguing that significant reforms to the FDA could unlock trillions of dollars in economic value. • The report specifically targets the FDA's lengthy approval process, focusing on the excessive years spent proving a drug's efficacy rather than just safety testing.
Read original · independent.orgEBOLA WATCH: Experimental drug trial aims to stop Bundibugyo Ebola after exposure - The Standard Health
• Scientists have launched the EBO-PEP clinical trial to test an experimental antiviral pill designed to prevent the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola after exposure. • The study is being led by the DRC's National Institute for Biomedical Research (INRB), France's ANRS Emerging Infectious Diseases, and the medical organization ALIMA.
Read original · standardmedia.co.keBundibugyo Virus Disease: Diagnostics and Medical Countermeasures for a Neglected Ebolavirus
• A public health emergency occurred in May 2026 across the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda due to an outbreak of Bundibugyo virus disease. • The disease, caused by *Orthoebolavirus bundibugyoense*, is characterized by high mortality rates and a lack of understood reservoir ecology.
Read original · mdpi.com