U.S. public health officials have been told to stop working with the World Health Organization, effective immediately. The surprise decision is focused on the U.S.
President Donald Trump has decided to put all federal health agencies on hold until his Department of Health and Human Services Secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gets his confirmation hearing. The Washington Post reported that dozens of current staffers have been instructed to halt all external communications,
Trump has frozen all travel and communications at the Department of Health and Human Services, including the CDC and the National Institutes of Health
Federal health agencies were ordered to pause all communications this week, but these Washington health organizations are still running.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order beginning the year-long process to leave the World Health Organization on his first day in office.
Washington state already has some of the nation's strictest gun control laws. But some legislators want to make them even tougher, including by possibly requiring permits to buy firearms. The big picture: Washington's firearm death rate has increased in recent years,
The communications pause, first reported by the Washington Post, has extended to advisory boards ... according to a notice. In a statement, a CDC spokesperson said HHS issued a pause on mass communications and public appearances "not directly related ...
A yearlong outbreak of tuberculosis in the Kansas City, Kansas area has taken local experts aback, even if it does not appear to be the largest outbreak of the disease in U.S. history as a state healt
NEW YORK — U.S. public health officials have been told to stop working with the World Health Organization, effective immediately. A U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention official, John ...
The man who hopes to be President Donald Trump’s health secretary repeatedly asked to see “data” or “science” showing vaccines are safe – but when an influential Republican senator did so, he dismissed it.
An employee at the CDC spoke with Gizmodo about the changes, which they described as “creepy” and “unprecedented,” even compared to Trump’s first term from 2017-2021. The employee, who wished to remain anonymous because they were not authorized to speak with the media, said there was now an “aggressive tone behind everything.”
The memo said the Trump administration would “give preference to communities with marriage and birth rates higher than the national average.”