Well said.
open.substack.com/pub/drjessic...
Posts by Robert Califf
I think the 2 key points are important: 1) food for patients sick enough to be in hospital should be fit for the clinical situation; 2) the biggest impact would be the food service for families and employees. Hopefully, this will be taken seriously.
www.foodpolitics.com/2026/04/2840...
Interesting summary of the differences between American Heart Association recommendations and USG dietary guidelines.
www.foodpolitics.com/2026/04/diet...
Good, brief interview. I particularly like the exchange at the end of the interview about the list of things that people are wasting a lot of money purchasing these days.
www.cnn.com/2026/02/26/h...
My belief is that those who are dedicated to public health need to develop a strategy to deal with the environmental saturation of advertising for commodities that are adverse to health.
www.foodpolitics.com/2026/04/week...
This is a good example to use. We need a method of getting the basics across to the public so that public discourse is more aware.
open.substack.com/pub/tomfried...
Part 3 of my thoughts on FDA Form 483 and what I thought was some misguided thinking about how to use it to assess quality in generic drug manufacturing. More to come in subsequent substacks on the important issue of generic drug shortages.
robcaliff272993.substack.com/p/the-much-f...
As usual Dr Woolf makes critical points about the role of the public health and system and how its vitally linked to other social support.
Article titled "When Disregard for Population Health Becomes US Policy" by Steven H. Woolf, MD, MPH, published online March 16, 2026, in JAMA. The article discusses US population health policies and their impact.
💬 Perspective: Cuts to social welfare, health agencies, and data surveillance are projected to increase mortality rates and escalate the US health disadvantage relative to other nations.
ja.ma/40CyT2L
Enjoyed reviewing contributions to the journal for the Society of Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions on the struggle to understand and "fix" health equity in a high-intensity specialty.
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Excellent summary. There is such a thing as expertise and government has the responsibility to produce a defensible public record of the science behind its public health policies. Good to see that these basics were upheld.
open.substack.com/pub/yourloca...
Right problem--need a better solution that really addresses the need and avoids nebulous pseudoscience. Worth engaging to find the right place though.
open.substack.com/pub/theunbia...
one day humpty-dumpty will need to be put back together again--hopefully in a way that creates an even better system than the one Dr Frieden describes.
tomfrieden.substack.com/p/what-just-...
This is well done & the second half on misinformation and dietary supplements is really important.
drjessicaknurick.substack.com/p/fertility-...
Otherwise what's depicted in this article will continue to grow with serious consequences for health.
i remain hopeful that one day we'll sort through dietary supplements and separate the supplements with health benefits outweighing risks from those with either no health benefit or excess risk.
www.nytimes.com/2026/03/09/b...
We need to make this work for primary care as a key national priority-I'm glad radiology is still attractive, but all that complexity is magnified when decisions need to be made about how to proceed.
A good one. I think the point about AI bringing up a multitude of potential issues is really important.
open.substack.com/pub/robertwa...
Good article by @pauloffit.bsky.social on how low our expectations have become for people like Podcast Jay and other MAHA doctors.
The red-green-yellow designation is more complicated than I would have thought--but that's why we need empirical research.
This wil be interesting to follow. I hope they move forward based on the extensive research already done and make other changes based on research that can be done now.
open.substack.com/pub/drsusanm...
A real problem if this analysis is right!
I hope we will find common ground there, but the broader environmental issues will also have to be approached for it to work. This part is really going in the wrong direction--it doesn't help to use slogans when the policies are going the opposite direction.
For those immersed in HHS goings on, this post provides an important perspective. "Fixing" the US food system is a multiyear process because of the huge effect of supply chain incentives and the economy.
open.substack.com/pub/sharonmc...?
Some thoughts on congenital heart disease and the potential for learning health systems.
robcaliff272993.substack.com/p/congenital...