Skip to main content

Posts

Tuberculosis cases have been rising as public health agencies struggle to keep up

Family nurse practitioner Munira Maalimisaq, center, gives a vaccine education session at Inspire Change Clinic, a nonprofit health care center she leads in Minneapolis. Tuberculosis cases in the U.S. have been rising since 2021. (Photo courtesy of Munira Maalimisaq) In Johnson County, Iowa, the number of tuberculosis cases has increased in recent years — and so has the cost of containing it. The cost of contact tracing and surveillance, traveling each day to patients’ homes to ensure they take their meds or booking hotel rooms to quarantine patients, has surged from $17,000 in 2020 to $65,000 last year. That doesn’t include $13,000 spent last year for language translation, as many of the cases were among the local immigrant communities, said Danielle Pettit-Majewski, director of the Johnson County public health department. She said the rise in spending is directly tied to the increase in diagnoses since 2020, with latent infections tripling, from 27 that year to 90 last yea...
Recent posts

Death toll for US service members in Iran war at 4 as Hegseth refuses to specify timeline

U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth listens to questions during a news conference at the Pentagon on March 2, 2026 in Arlington, Virginia. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) WASHINGTON — The U.S. war on Iran will continue unabated on President Donald Trump’s terms, with more troops on the way and more casualties expected, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth told reporters early Monday. Speaking to the press for the first time since the United States and Israel launched a massive attack early Saturday, the secretary, whose comments came as the military announced the fourth U.S. service member killed, would not specify a timeline or exit strategy for the mission. “We will finish this on America first conditions of President Trump’s choosing, nobody else’s, as it should be,” Hegseth said. Hegseth did not provide details about the three U.S. service members whose deaths were announced Sunday. The secretary said that “a squirter” — apparently referring to an offensive missile or dro...

Katie Britt’s Trump whisperer strategy isn’t working for Alabama

U.S. Sen. Katie Britt, R-Alabama, speaks to the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on July 15, 2024. (Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom) At several points in this recent New York Times profile of Katie Britt, I had to stop my eyebrows from hitting the ceiling. The piece traces the rise and fall of Britt’s interest in Liam Ramos, the 5-year-old Minneapolis child apprehended by ICE agents in January. As a reminder, the agents locked this boy up and used him as bait to arrest other members of his family. In the profile, Britt at first expresses worries about this young boy. She directs her staff to look into his case. GET THE MORNING HEADLINES. SUBSCRIBE “I’m sorry,” she says at one point, with tears in her eyes. “I just keep thinking about that child.” Alabama’s soon-to-be senior U.S. senator calls DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, a particularly untrustworthy member of an administration of unreliable narrators. Noem tells her that the agents followed prope...

Former U.S. Attorney: Trump ‘tried his best to break us, and he failed’

Former U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama Joyce Vance (left) speaks to Rep. Chris England, D-Tuscaloosa, about her recent book on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026 in Montgomery. Vance said the book offers a glimpse into the actions of the second Trump administration and a framework for how to protect democracy in the U.S. (Ralph Chapoco/Alabama Reflector) Former U.S. Attorney Joyce White Vance said Tuesday that for all his threats to democracy, President Donald Trump has revealed something about it. Speaking at NewSouth Bookstore in Montgomery to promote her book “Giving Up Is Unforgivable: A Manual for Keeping a Democracy,” Vance said that she worried after Trump’s election because so many people said “that they were ready to give up.” “Folks were devastated and said, ‘I am just going to leave and whatever happens, happens,’” she said. “And to me, that felt like the worst possible outcome for our country; the idea of Donald Trump with no guardrails.” But Vance said that ...

Early prenatal care declines across US, reversing years of progress

A couple sits with their newborn inside their Bentonville, Arkansas, home earlier this month. Nearly a quarter of pregnant women aren’t getting prenatal care in the early stages of pregnancy, according to a new analysis from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Photo by Antoinette Grajeda/Arkansas Advocate) Nearly a quarter of pregnant women aren’t getting prenatal care in the early stages of pregnancy, according to a new analysis from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The share of pregnant women getting prenatal care had been improving: It rose between 2016 and 2021 to a high of more than 78%, but then declined to 75.5% by 2024, wiping out previous gains. The trend is worrying because getting care early in pregnancy can improve the likelihood of a healthy pregnancy and baby. The decrease in early prenatal care held true for nearly all race and ethnic groups, but the drops were sharpest for Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islanders, Black ...

Alabama House committee approves bill to allow public health agency to inspect jails and prisons

Sen. Larry Stutts, R-Tuscambia, speaking at the Senate Health Committee on Jan. 21, 2026, in the Alabama State House in Montgomery, Alabama. An Alabama House committee passed legislation he sponsored that authorizes the Alabama Department of Public Health to oversee food inspections in prisons and jails. (Anna Barrett/Alabama Reflector) An Alabama House committee on Wednesday approved legislation to require the state’s public health department to inspect both jails and prisons to ensure they meet standards for sanitary conditions. SB 84 , sponsored by Sen. Larry Stutts, R-Tuscumbia, mandates that the Alabama Department of Public Health (ADPH) inspect and recommend correctional measures in cafeterias and other areas in correctional facilities to ensure they are sanitary. “Every person who I have talked to, their reaction has been, ‘You mean they don’t already do that,’” Stutts told the House Health Committee about ADPH not having the authority to oversee food service areas in jai...

Education Department data shows foreign contracts, gifts to US colleges topped $5B in 2025

People walk past blooming trees on the Harvard University campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in April 2025. (Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images) WASHINGTON — American colleges and universities received gifts and contracts worth more than $5.2 billion from foreign entities in 2025, according to the  U.S. Department of Education , which also recently published summaries of foreign investment in U.S. higher education dating back to 1986.  Qatar, the United Kingdom, China, Switzerland, Japan, Germany and Saudi Arabia marked the largest sources of reportable gifts and contracts to U.S. institutions in 2025, according to the agency, which released the latest funding disclosures this month.  The department also made public roughly 40 years of data on a  transparency dashboard that offers a snapshot of the foreign funding disclosures submitted by colleges and universities. The administration described the move as a transparency effort, but critics say it lacks key co...