Americans hate their health care system. Here's how Trump may be making it worse.
Americans hate their health care system. Here's how Trump may be making it worse. Proposed cuts threaten health insurance for tens of millions, tariffs will drive up drug prices, and key programs are being cut, medical experts say.
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Trump celebrates for 100 days at Michigan rally
President Donald Trump held a rally in Macomb County, Michigan, to celebrate his first 100 days in office.
In a little more than 100 days, the Trump administration has upended the U.S. health care system Americans love to hate, sparking turmoil and confusion.The Trump administration calls its sweeping changes a "critical course correction" to the way the nation delivers heath care.
"This is not just policy ‒ it's a revolution in public health," HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in an April 29 statement touting the administration's accomplishments.
On the administration's list of accomplishments: a new commission to end childhood chronic diseases, a review of infant formula safety, an investigation into the causes of autism and an effort to reduce animal testing. HHS also plans to review whether fluoride is safe to add to drinking water, despite decades of evidence that it supports dental health and poses no substantial risks.
But some people on the frontlines of the health care system – doctors and nurses, researchers, advocates and local officials – criticize the rapid-fire overhaul as "reckless" and say it will cost dollars and lives.
More than 70% of Americans say the health care system isn't meeting their needs in some way, according to a recent poll.
Yet it can still get worse. Millions of people are likely to lose health insurance under policy changes and expected cuts to Medicaid and other programs. Tariffs are expected to push up drug prices. A healthy school lunch program was terminated. Critical research trials have already been canceled midstream. Although states will continue to address childhood lead poisoning, the federal workers they counted on for expertise have all been fired. And Trump's proposed fiscal year 2026 budget calls for a 37% cut to the National Institutes of Health, which includes the National Cancer Institute.
Already announced cuts to the country's research infrastructure will trigger roughly $16 billion in economic losses and 68,000 jobs nationwide, according to the Science & Community Impacts Mapping Project (SCIMaP), which has mapped the economic impact of the cuts on every county in America. And Trump is proposing to chop the National Institutes of Health budget by 40% next year.
Among its other actions, the administration has suspended testing of milk quality (saying that states can adequately perform this function) as well as cancer research funding, support for LGBTQ youth considering suicide and money to investigate child sexual abuse and internet crimes against children.
"These are reckless, thoughtless cuts that will only make American communities less healthy and less safe," Dr. Richard Besser, president and CEO of the nonprofit Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, said in a statement. "They are systematically and cruelly dismantling our nation's public health system and workforce, which threatens the health and wellbeing of everyone in America."
Dr. Richard Besser on the podcast: RFK Jr.'s impact on HHS so far has some worried | The Excerpt
Drug prices may come down ‒ or may not
Trump has criticized President Joe Biden's plan for slowly lowering the price of select, popular medications. On April 15, he announced his own drug price reduction proposal in an executive order.
Medical experts say it's not yet clear how Trump's plan will work in practice.
"Some of these proposed reforms could assist patients struggling with high drug prices; others would face significant legal and practical obstacles; and still others might even increase drug prices,' Rachel Sachs, a former senior advisor at the Department of Health and Human Services, wrote in a recent article in Health Affairs.
While Trump's initial round of tariffs left pharmaceuticals exempt, many of the raw materials that go into drug-making are expected to increase in price, making it harder and more expensive to get these ingredients.
"There are clearly going to be tariffs that impact pharmaceutical supply chains," Tom Kraus, of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, which represents hospital pharmacists, previously told USA TODAY. Generic drugs − which account for the vast majority of prescriptions − have small profit margins and are more likely to feel the financial squeeze from tariffs, he said.
A number of major drug companies have forecast hundreds of millions of dollars in extra costs from the tariffs, which could end up being passed on to consumers.
In a win for the administration, which aims to bring manufacturing back to the United States, drugmaker Roche announced on April 21 that it would invest $50 billion in building new manufacturing capacity, creating 12,000 jobs across five states.
Planned cuts to Medicaid
Across the country local officials and low-income Americans are preparing for dramatic cuts to Medicaid, which serves 78 million low-income and disabled Americans and is funded with a combination of federal and state dollars.
Any cuts will have a ripple effect across the country, public health experts and health care advocates said, and even conservative activists like Laura Loomer have advised against chopping Medicaid because of the expected political fallout from Trump supporters.
Trump has repeatedly promised he wouldn't touch Social Security or Medicare, but cutting Medicaid will harm the same people who receive those programs, Amber Christ, a managing director at the advocacy group Justice in Aging, said in a recent webinar. Roughly 30% of Medicaid spending supports Medicare enrollees, she said.
"Without Medicaid financial assistance, seniors could not afford Medicare," she said.
In Omaha, Nebraska, more than one-third of all children and nearly 1 in 5 of all residents receive Medicaid funding, according to the advocacy group FamiliesUSA. Medicaid also covers 5 in 9 nursing home residents in Nebraska.
Families in the Omaha metro area are already struggling to pay for their health care bills, FamiliesUSA found, with 18% saying they have trouble paying medical bills.
A coalition of disability rights activists, unions and caregiving organizations planned a 24-hour rally in D.C. from 1 p.m. May 7 to noon May 8 to protest the cuts.
In a little-noticed move, the federal workers who determine eligibility limits for Medicaid have all been laid off, said Manat Singh, executive director of the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative, an advocacy group.
"Everything that makes all of the work we do function is getting cut, dismantled, gutted, defunded, moved around, and it's hard enough for those of us who work on this every day to figure out what's going on," she said in a recent webinar.
If hospitals are forced to close because of these cuts ‒ a distinct possibility, especially in small, rural areas and big cities, she and other public health experts said ‒ then many more than just Medicaid recipients will lose access to care.
Cutting back on lead testing
All of the CDC's staff involved in testing for lead poisoning in children have been eliminated, as have many grants for that purpose.
The city of Milwaukee, for example, was relying on expertise from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to help it address a growing problem of older elementary school students with lead poisoning, said Dr. Michael Totoraitis, the city's health commissioner.
Milwaukee has lost $5 million in federal health care funding so far, including a grant to reduce health care disparities, wastewater testing for infectious diseases and support in addressing childhood lead poisoning.
Totoraitis' staff was working with CDC officials to develop a long-term plan for helping older children with lead poisoning. But the entire childhood lead team at CDC was cut on April 3, and his city's request for help addressing lead poisoning was denied, he said in a Big Cities Health Coalition webinar.
"Children are getting hurt, life expectancy is declining," he said. "We are handcuffed in our ability to help our own residents because the federal government had been helping us for decades with all these fights and currently is unresponsive to our needs."
"It's a pretty humbling moment working in public health not knowing where to go (for expertise)," Totoraitis said.
Emphasizing chronic diseases
Kennedy has said he wants to put more public emphasis on addressing chronic diseases, particularly those in childhood.
Marlene Schwartz, who directs the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Health at the University of Connecticut, said she's thrilled the administration is interested in trying to prevent diet-related chronic diseases.
Kennedy has promised a complete overhaul of the school lunch program, but so far, the only concrete change has been to cut a $1 billion Biden plan to buy local fresh foods for schools, child care centers and food banks.
Kids typically eat healthier at school than at home, Schwartz said. Research has shown school meals are helping to reduce childhood obesity, and the Biden plan also would have benefited local farmers, she said.
"I hope that the administration reconsiders and puts that program back into place," Schwartz said, "because I do think that it's very consistent with the goals of the administration to really improve children's diets."
Cutting back on vaccinations and infectious disease spending
The flip side of Kennedy's effort to focus on chronic diseases is a plan to de-emphasize infectious ones. Already, Kennedy has overseen massive cuts to the government support for vaccines and disease prevention.
President Joe Biden officially ended the COVID-19 emergency two years ago, but the Trump administration says that because the pandemic is over, no further spending is needed on the disease. So, it has ended financial support for wastewater screening, which allowed communities like Milwaukee to track the spread of COVID-19, along with flu and RSV.
The administration has also delayed approval for updated and improved COVID-19 vaccines and abruptly cut research funding for other dangerous coronaviruses that might appear in the future. And it has ended spending on long COVID, the sometimes debilitating symptoms millions of people suffer for years after an infection.
As the largest and deadliest measles outbreak in years rages in west Texas, Dallas County had to cancel more than 50 free measles vaccine clinics. Dr. Philip Huang, the health director in the county that includes the city of Dallas, said his department has had to lay off 21 staff members who conduct those clinics.
No one in Dallas County has so far come down with measles in the current outbreak, though two adjacent counties have had cases. "If we get more people opting out and not vaccinated, this is what we start seeing," Huang said.
The federal cutbacks have cost his department four out of its 30 epidemiologists, making it harder to investigate possible cases of measles, which are happening more often because of the state's outbreak, he said.
Huang said he's also concerned about the apparent zeroing out of a program to prevent HIV in the United States. Each new person who comes down with HIV costs $420,000 in lifetime medical care, he said. In Dallas County alone, the price of supporting these patients came to more than $380 million in 2022.
Eliminating prevention programs "is very short-sighted and crazy," Huang said. "If you're trying to be efficient, it makes absolutely no sense."
Cuts to basic research and future treatments
Between the end of February and the end of April, 700 federal research grants were cut totalling $1.8 billion, according to a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Those cuts affected 210 institutions, both public and private, all across the country ‒ not just the elite schools that have been the focus of political and media attention, said co-author Kushal Kadakia.
One in five of those grants had been awarded to early-career researchers, said Kadakai, who graduates from Harvard Medical School in a few weeks and is heading into a medical residency program.
"We're hopeful that any health research priority or policy for the United States is always seeking to advance the next generation of researchers," he said. "It'll remain to be seen whether these cuts are a temporary blip or it becomes the new policy or what it looks like for long-term sustainability for career researchers in the United States."
About 70% of the grant funding had already been spent, said co-author Michael Liu, also a graduating Harvard Medical student. "It remains to be seen" whether the government will try to reclaim that money, he said.
There are far too many cuts to basic research to detail, but the work of Dr. Mustafa Khasraw at the Duke University School of Medicine in North Carolina offers one small example.
He studies the exceedingly deadly brain cancer glioblastoma, and helped successfully lobby the federal government for $10 million to run research trials aimed at turning the immune system against these tumors.
The grant was approved last year with strong support from both sides of the political aisle, which was fitting, as glioblastoma killed both Sen. John McCain, an Arizona Republican, and Sen. Ted Kennedy, a Massachusetts Democrat.
Now, Khasraw said, he's been given no explanation and no funding.
'We submitted applications and there is no communication to what's happening to that money," he said. 'No one knows. We tried and no one says anything.'
Research like his simply can't go on without that funding.
'We can start, but we're not going to be able to accomplish the long-term goals without federal support," he said.
Contributed: Ken Alltucker, Adrianna Rodriguez
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'To provide our patients and communities clear and consistent information that explains our programs, policies and services, we are making various changes to our websites.' Ascension, one of the largest nonprofit hospital systems in the nation, took down the entire page on diversity, equity and inclusion. The health care system currently operates at over 165 locations in Milwaukee, Racine, Appleton and Fox Valley. The system still has modules on 'Identifying & Addressing Barriers to Health' and 'Ensuring Health Equity.' Ascension did not respond to a request for a comment. UW Health removed its page on diversity, equity and inclusion, replacing it with a page titled 'social impact in belonging.' In doing so, UW Health removed 'anti-racism' from its entire website. It used to be one of the main themes. UW Health removed the anti-racism modules titled 'Being a leader in anti-racism' and 'anti-racism funding,' and now in their place are modules called 'Being a social impact leader' and 'Community giving.' Chief Social Impact Officer Shiva Bidar-Sielaff and CEO Alan Kaplan addressed the changes in a video, stating social impact and belonging align with their mission, values and strategies as a health care organization. 'At UW Health, social impact refers to the effects health care policies, practices and interventions have on the well-being of individuals and communities, improving health outcomes, access to care and quality of life,' Bidar-Sielaff said. 'Belonging is the understanding that you are valued and respected for who you are as an individual.' UW Health reported receiving $315 million in federal funding, totaling over half of the $622 million in grant funds — federal and non-federal — awarded to the School of Medicine and Public Health. That total is 37% of all grant funding awarded to UW-Madison. Despite claims by health care centers that missions remain the same, advocacy groups in Wisconsin are raising concerns regarding the impact these changes could have on communities in Wisconsin. Chris Allen, president and CEO of Diverse & Resilient — an advocacy group focused on health inequities for LGBTQ+ people in Wisconsin — said these quiet language shifts are significant. 'They send a message that commitments to addressing disparities may be weakening, even if that's not the stated intention,' Allen said. William Parke Sutherland, government affairs director at Kids Forward, a statewide policy center that advocates for low-income and minority families, said many health care partners feel pressured to preserve funding sources. In Wisconsin, maternal mortality rates are 2.5 times higher for Black women than white women. Maternal morbidities — or serious birth complications — were the highest among Black women and people enrolled in BadgerCare, the state's largest Medicaid program. From 2020 to 2022 there were 7.8 stillbirth deaths per 1,000 births among Black babies, compared with 4.5 among white babies. Disparities in maternal and infant mortality rates could be attributed to stress caused by poverty, lack of access to quality care, or systemic racism, according to health care researchers. If a mother is stressed over a long period of time, that can cause elevated levels of stress hormones, which could increase premature births or low birth weights for infants. For Black women, midwives have been found to reduce the disparities they otherwise may experience during pregnancy, reducing the risk of maternal mortality or morbidity. Access to midwives is currently covered by Medicaid, so losing federal funding could harm these services. Regardless of language, 'Wisconsin's racial disparities in health access and outcomes aren't going away on their own,' Sutherland said in an email. Removing language that acknowledges DEI efforts will not reduce the health care disparities felt by Wisconsin residents, Sutherland said. Federal funding cuts could also hurt rural families in Wisconsin, specifically those who rely on Medicaid for their health care needs. 'We cannot begin to address these challenges if we're not willing to acknowledge them,' Sutherland said. 'A colorblind approach has not helped in the past.' This article first appeared on Wisconsin Watch and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.