Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
@stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
1.1K followers 670 following 230 posts
Professor & Chair of Health Policy & Management at Rollins School of Public Health | Neonatologist at Children's Hospital of Atlanta | Emory University | Former White House Senior Policy Advisor | Child Policy/Medicaid/Opioid Crisis | Views my own
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stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
Excited to be on #Bluesky. I'm Chair of the Dept of Health Policy & Management @emoryrollins.bsky.social & a neonatologist Children's ATL.

We moved to #Atlanta about 6 months ago from Nashville. Here's a bit of my story. Look forward to connecting.

publichealthmagazine.emory.edu/issues/2024/...
Bridging Patient Care, Polling, and Policy | Emory University | Atlanta GA
publichealthmagazine.emory.edu
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
emoryrollins.bsky.social
The new Emory-Rollins National Child Policy Poll reveals how U.S. adults view recent federal actions and proposals that affect children's health.

"Cuts to critical public health programs that serve the nation’s children are unpopular across the political spectrum.” - @stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
Poll: Americans Largely Don't Support Federal Changes to Child Health Programs
A new national survey from Rollins School of Public Health revealed how American adults view recent federal actions and proposals that affect children's health and nutrition.
sph.emory.edu
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
joanalker1.bsky.social
👀In the name of “protecting vulnerable Americans” the Trump Administration will rip away Medicaid coverage from babies and toddlers👀

CMS announces Medicaid demos that 8 states are implementing to cover babies and young children continuously w/o gaps due to red tape will no longer be allowed.
stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
#bigbeautifulbill #snap #medicaid
stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
We have to remember too, that must state budgets must be balanced. So when there's a budget crisis, what do they do? They cut programs. It could be SNAP and Medicaid, but it could also spill over to education and roads.

Following the funds flow over the next few years is going to be important.
stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
They push new work requirements onto states which they must implement.

For states like West Virginia (my home state) and Kentucky, this is going to have a profound impact on state budgets and ultimately the people in the state.
stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
One issue that I haven't heard as much attention paid to as it deserves regarding the Big Beautiful Bill is the effect on states - especially poor red Medicaid expansion states.

Changes to Medicaid and SNAP in the bill push a lot onto states. They make states far more responsible for costs.
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
meganranney.bsky.social
A sobering story about the price of vaccines in the current US health system for those who are under-insured.

And a cautionary tale for the future, should the government & insurers stop covering this essential part of preventive care.

www.washingtonpost.com/wellness/202...
A Texas boy needed protection from measles. The vaccine cost $1,400.
Due to the ongoing U.S. measles outbreak, a Texas man worried that his young son was at risk and took him to get vaccinated. The cost of the shot? $1,400.
www.washingtonpost.com
stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
“Still, repealing the clean energy tax credits would threaten billions of dollars’ worth of economic investment. In Georgia alone, there have been more than $23.9 billion in new clean energy investments and more than 32,000 new jobs created since the law took effect”

www.nytimes.com/2025/06/07/c...
In Georgia, Republicans Vote to Kill Green Jobs but Face Little Fallout
www.nytimes.com
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
lizszabo.bsky.social
My mom, diagnosed with cancer at 88, wouldn't have gotten five more years of life without cancer research done at the National Institutes of Health.

I'd love to hear how NIH and other federal science agencies have benefitted you or your family. #ThanksNIH
lizszabo.bsky.social
My mom, who was diagnosed with lymphoma in 2000, passed away Friday at the age of 93. She took a chemo regimen called R-CHOP, which allowed her to celebrate 5 more birthdays and hold her great-grandchild. Thank you to scientists giving us those extra years with her. #ThanksNIH
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
ddiamond.bsky.social
The NOTUS reporters said they spent five days (!) going through the 522 citations in the report.
How did you get the idea to look through citations in the first place?
Margaret Manto: I got a tip over the weekend that there was some fishy stuff in the MAHA report citations. I started checking that they were real but figured out pretty quickly that I'd have to look at all 522 citations to know for sure.
522 citations! How long did it take, and what did you find?
Margaret: Emily and I took about five days to go through all of the citations.
Emily Kennard: We didn't have full access to every article, so we were mostly confirming that the bibliographic information was correct. But we pretty quickly found a handful of articles that we couldn't find anywhere through search engines or in the listed journals, so we decided to go through and check each one. It took a few full workdays to pore over a spreadsheet and to reach out to cited researchers.
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
ddiamond.bsky.social
Reminded of a story that @hannahnatanson.bsky.social + I did in early April about how DOGE’s cuts were inevitably creating new risks for Americans — including risks related to severe weather
Many said that the moves reflect a shifting of risk from the federal government to states and cities that have more limited resources to prepare for natural disasters, public health crises and other threats. They also predicted the cuts would place new burdens on average Americans, who might be faced with more uncertainty in their food supply - or less warning of a tornado or hurricane bearing down on them.
NOAA
WILL NOT
GO DOWN WITHOUT A FIGHT
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in March outside NOAA's headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, to protest
DOGE cuts. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) "Lives are at risk," said Mary Glackin, who spent 35 years at NOAA, including serving as the agency's top career official under the George W. Bush and Obama administrations. She pointed to delays on NOAA contracts to maintain radar systems, reductions in the launches of weather balloons and other pressures on her former agency as staffing shrinks. "It's a mess ... if this continues, people will die from this, I'm sorry to say," Glackin said.
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
jama.com
JAMA @jama.com · May 16
The White House's 2026 budget proposal recommends eliminating the Health Resources and Services Administration and cutting rural health funding by 25%, posing a threat to health care access and services in rural areas.

jamanetwork.com/journals/jam...
Federal Funds for Rural Health Care May Be Cut
This Medical News article discusses the impact that proposed federal funding cuts for rural health care programs would have on individuals and their communities.
jamanetwork.com
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
scott-delaney.bsky.social
All NIH and NSF grants for my entire team--and for all of Harvard, I guess?--have been terminated.

As provocative as that sounds, the practical effect is probably not much. Everything was already frozen. 🤷‍♂️

On the upside, it makes tracking terminated grants easier. No more guesswork at Harvard!
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
alexander-a-tin.bsky.social
A new CDC study estimates hundreds of drowning deaths could be prevented by more pool fences & life jackets while boating

It was one of last authored by agency's injury prevention researchers, before Secy Kennedy's layoffs largely eliminated them

www.cbsnews.com/news/pool-fe...
Pool fences and life jackets could save hundreds of lives, CDC estimates
The study was one of the CDC's last before its injury prevention teams were laid off.
www.cbsnews.com
stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
Cavities are common for kids. This is not a move supported by data.
nbcnews.com
The FDA announces it will begin the process of pulling prescription fluoride drops and tablets for children off the market. The supplements are usually given to kids at high risk for cavities.
Fluoride drops and tablets for kids should be taken off the market, FDA says
Despite decades of evidence that fluoride prevents cavities, the agency said the best way to keep kids' teeth strong is to stop eating so much sugar.
nbcnews.to
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
jama.com
JAMA @jama.com · May 12
After the end of emergency allotments, there were increases in food insecurity and poor physical health days among SNAP participants.

ja.ma/43dp8ZN @rkwadhera.bsky.social
Reposted by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH
unicef.org
UNICEF @unicef.org · May 9
Children pay the highest price in war and violence.

#ForEveryChild, peace and protection.
A blue graphic with white text that says: "for every child, peace". There is a UNICEF logo in the bottom right corner.
stephenwpatrick.bsky.social
Thoughtful insights from HPM's Ilana Graetz on the impact of recent cuts to HHS.

“These delays affect not only research institutions and investigators but also critical training programs for the next generation of public health and medical leaders.”

www.healthline.com/health-news/...
19 States, D.C. Sue Trump Administration Over HHS Layoffs
Attorneys general in 19 states and Washington, D.C., filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration's plans to significantly reduce staffing at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS),...
www.healthline.com