A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report released July 16 found that wastewater surveillance failed to detect an internationally circulating measles genotype that accounted for about 5% to 10% of U.S. measles cases in 2025, highlighting potential challenges of using wastewater surveillance as a public health tool. The report said that of two unrelated measles cases reported to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services in February 2026, wastewater surveillance detected one case before the case was reported. The second, caused by the international B3 genotype, was undetected. Public health officials later released a modified laboratory procedure that improved the detection of the B3 genotype. The CDC said that wastewater testing should be standardized and revalidated against circulating viruses and supported by publicly available whole-genome sequencing data.

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Ryane Jackson, vice president of Community Health Network at Memorial Hermann Health System, explains how the system is creating seamless connections between…
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The Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services July 8 launched  a voluntary pledge that hospitals can…
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The Social Security Administration today announced actions to help parents enroll newborns in Trump Accounts, which are investment accounts for children under…
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The adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, marked a pivotal turn for colonists, from a fight for rights as British subjects to the…
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To improve the health of individuals and communities, hospitals and health systems provide holistic care to patients and work to address all factors that…
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The AHA will host a webinar June 25 at noon ET, in which leaders from Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., and Rush University Medical Center in…