
Federal health cuts cost Columbus jobs and grants
The impact of recent cuts to the federal Department of Health and Human Services continues to be felt locally.
Catch up quick: A regional office in Chicago has shuttered, leaving the Midwest without a local point of contact for heating assistance, child care programs, Meals on Wheels and more.
Over a dozen recently terminated grants will also affect Central Ohio.
Zoom in: In one example that made headlines late last week, Columbus Public Health laid off 11 employees involved with infectious disease investigations due to a lost CDC grant.
"This reduction in staff is particularly concerning during a national measles outbreak, including cases in Ohio," spokesperson Kelli Newman told Axios in an email.
The Ohio Department of Health has lost over $250 million in grant funding, including that which impacted Columbus Public Health.
Plus: A National Institutes of Health grant awarded to the Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital was terminated. It was used to study the impact of puberty blockers on adolescents' health.
At least eight grants totaling $12 million awarded to Ohio State University, most regarding LGBTQ+ health, are also gone.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Chicago Faucets Hosts Public Health Webinar to Help Facilities Comply with Emerging Legionella Regulations
Spenser Johnson to Present "Navigating Evolving Water Management Regulations: Ensuring Compliance & Public Safety" Thursday, June 19, 2025, at 11:00 am CDT DES PLAINES, Ill., June 9, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- As water safety regulations continue to evolve across the United States, Chicago Faucets is hosting a new, expert-led webinar on June 19 at 11am CST designed to help facility managers in healthcare and other regulated environments stay ahead of compliance challenges. The webinar, will be presented by Spenser Johnson, Director of Water Safety and Management at Barclay Water Management, Inc. It is titled "Navigating Evolving Water Management Regulations: Ensuring Compliance & Public Safety," and will offer vital insights into developing and maintaining effective Water Management Programs (WMPs) that align with national standards and state-specific mandates. This educational topic will be presented Thursday, June 19, 2025, 11:00 am CDT. Click here to register. Legionella Looms Everywhere, New Regulations Coming Up Healthcare facilities, long-term care communities, colleges, hotels, athletic centers, parks and recreation buildings, and office complexes are increasingly expected to proactively manage waterborne risks such as Legionella. While not all these facilities are directly regulated by organizations like American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), The Joint Commission, or the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the standards and guidance they provide are shaping industry expectations. Additionally, new state-level regulations in Ohio, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey are significantly raising the bar for water safety compliance—making it essential for all building types with complex plumbing systems to stay informed and prepared. Spenser Johnson, Director of Water Safety and Management of Barclay will break down regulatory expectations into actionable strategies, covering: The 6 Steps of a Water Management Plan (ASHRAE 188): From risk assessment to documentation State-Specific Requirements: Including Ohio's Administrative Code 3701-22-07 and New Jersey's Senate Bill 2188 CDC Data on Legionnaires' Disease: What past outbreaks reveal about WMP failures Verification and Validation: How to ensure your WMP is more than a paper plan Chicago Faucets Champions Efforts for Public Health that Reduce Risks "Legionnaires' disease outbreaks remain preventable if Water Management Programs are correctly implemented and maintained," said Richard Nortier, Director of Marketing at Chicago Faucets. "This webinar, the third in our Public Health Series delivers the tools and updates that today's facility managers need to act confidently. Every facility with a complex water system, regardless of sector, should have a formal Water Management Plan in place to reduce risk, ensure accountability, and support public health." Who Should Attend? This session is ideal for: Facility Managers in healthcare, higher education, hospitality, and government Building and Plumbing Engineers responsible for complex plumbing systems Environmental Health & Safety Professionals seeking compliance clarity Infection Prevention Specialists, Nurses, and Operations Directors Subject Matter Expert: Spenser Johnson Spenser Johnson, of Barclay Water Management is an ASSE 12080 Certified Legionella Water Safety and Management Specialist. She brings more than eight years of experience in Legionella risk mitigation. She has developed site-specific WMPs for over 100 facilities and works closely with teams to provide remediation support and supplemental disinfection strategies. Spenser's leadership will equip attendees with immediately applicable insights grounded in real-world expertise. Reserve Your Spot Today Water safety is not optional—it's a regulatory necessity and a public health today and get the guidance you need to navigate what's next: About Chicago Faucets Chicago Faucets offers a wide range of products for healthcare, education, and commercial facilities. Chicago Faucets is committed to innovation, quality, and environmental sustainability, with many products manufactured in the USA and meeting stringent industry standards. Chicago Faucets is a member of the ASPE, ASHE, U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), the International WELL Building Institute. The company is also a partner with EPA WaterSense, and a charter sponsor of the Alliance for Water Efficiency. Many of the plumbing fittings meet the USGBC guidelines for LEED, EPA WaterSense and CALGreen. For more information on the Chicago Faucets offering, visit or call 800-566-2100. Contact: Perrie View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE The Chicago Faucet Company Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


New York Times
29 minutes ago
- New York Times
Gun Deaths of Children Rose in States That Loosened Gun Laws, Study Finds
Firearm deaths of children and teenagers rose significantly in states that enacted more permissive gun laws after the Supreme Court in 2010 limited local governments' ability to restrict gun ownership, a new study has found. In states that maintained stricter laws, firearm deaths were stable after the ruling, the researchers reported, and in some, they even declined. Guns are the leading cause of death in the United States for people under 18. Dr. Jeremy Faust, an emergency room doctor at Massachusetts General Brigham Hospital in Boston, who was the study's lead author, said he was dismayed to find that most of the children's deaths were homicides and suicides. 'It's surprising how few of these are accidents,' Dr. Faust said. 'I always thought that a lot of pediatric mortality from guns is that somebody got into the wrong place, and I still think safe storage is important, but it's mostly homicides and suicides.' The study, published Monday in JAMA Pediatrics, examined the 13-year period after the June 2010 Supreme Court ruling that the Second Amendment, which protects an individual's right to bear arms, applies to state and local gun-control laws. The decision effectively limited the ability of state and local governments to regulate firearms. The researchers classified states into three categories based on their gun laws: most permissive, permissive and strict. They used a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention database to analyze firearm mortality trends from 1999 to 2010 — before the Supreme Court ruling — and compared them with the 13-year period afterward. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
A new COVID-19 variant, vaccine changes: What to know in 2025
A new COVID-19 variant, vaccine changes: What to know in 2025 Show Caption Hide Caption RFK Jr. says COVID-19 vaccine no longer recommended for some The COVID-19 vaccine is no longer recommended for healthy children and pregnant women, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says. Like it or not, COVID-19 is still a public health issue five years after the start of the pandemic flipped the nation, and the world, on its head. Changing vaccination guidelines, ever-evolving variants and strains, threats to health insurance and more mean COVID is still very much a regular conversation on the lips of lawmakers, regulators and the general public. More than 40,000 positive tests were reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in May, and while hospitalizations and deaths are fortunately down significantly since the pandemic's peak, vulnerable people are still grappling with limiting their risk amid changing practices. Here is a brief recap of the status of COVID cases, variants and vaccines in the U.S. as of June 4, 2025. Where do COVID cases currently stand in the US? According to the most recent data on the CDC's COVID Data Tracker dashboard, there were 735 confirmed COVID-19 deaths in May 2025 as of May 24. In the four weeks leading up to May 24, 3% of 1,344,681 COVID tests administered nationwide were positive. New NB.1.8.1 COVID variant In January, a new COVID-19 variant known as NB.1.8.1 was first detected in China. As of mid-May, the variant had reached 10.7% of global reported COVID-19 cases, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). As of May 27, less than 20 cases of NB.1.8.1 had been reported in the U.S., a CDC spokesperson told USA TODAY. This figure is too low to be added to the CDC's COVID Data Tracker dashboard, the spokesperson added, though they did not clarify the threshold for adding new variants to the dashboard. New COVID variant in China: Here's what to know about NB.1.8.1 NB.1.8.1 is one of the latest variants of COVID-19, a "slightly upgraded version" of the LP.8.1 variant that is prominent right now, Subhash Verma, microbiology and immunology professor at the University of Nevada, Reno, previously told USA TODAY. For comparison, LP.8.1 made up 70% of reported COVID-19 cases in the U.S. between April 26 and May 10, as reported by the CDC. Verma said NB.1.8.1 may be able to be transferred more easily than LP.8.1. Additionally, he said that NB.1.8.1 is able to evade antibodies created by vaccines or past infections more easily than LP.8.1. The variant has similar symptoms to other strains, including fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, sore throat, congestion or a runny nose, new loss of taste or smell, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, nausea or vomiting. Vaccine back-and-forth: Who can get it and will there be new boosters? Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said on May 27 that the COVID-19 vaccine would no longer be included in the CDC's recommended immunization schedule for healthy children and pregnant women, a move that broke with previous expert guidance and bypassed the normal scientific review process. Under the changes, the only people who will be recommended for COVID-19 vaccines are those over 65 and people with existing health problems. This could make it harder for others who want the COVID-19 vaccine to get it, including health care workers and healthy people under 65 with a vulnerable family member or those who want to reduce their short-term risk of infection. RFK changes vaccine recommendations: Want a COVID vaccine? It could cost you $200. Insurance coverage typically follows federal recommendations, so anyone who is healthy and under 65 is likely to have to pay out of pocket to get the shot, which runs about $200, if they can get it. It's not clear what insurance companies will do about the new recommendations. RFK Jr. is a vaccine skeptic known for making false claims about vaccination and other medical practices. Under his leadership and the Trump administration, the FDA canceled the advisory meeting of independent experts who usually gather to formulate new flu shots annually and nixed a contract with Moderna to develop a bird flu vaccine amid the spread. He also pushed false claims about MMR vaccines as measles, previously eradicated in the U.S., began erupting in states across the country, causing the first death in a decade. It is not yet known how accessible the COVID-19 vaccine will be moving forward. Contributing: Karen Weintraub, Sudiksha Kochi, USA TODAY; Reuters