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In short supply?
To:Brew Readers
Healthcare Brew // Morning Brew // Update
The war and Strait of Hormuz closure hasn’t had adverse impacts on the US yet, but that could change.

We hope you have a great weekend, and for those who participate, an eventful National Prescription Drug Takeback Day! There are places to safely throw away prescription medication anytime, but twice a year the Drug Enforcement Administration holds an official day for the public to safely and anonymously dispose of unwanted prescription meds. The last Takeback Day raked in 570,000+ pounds of drugs. While it may not technically be a holiday, we’ll take any excuse to celebrate.

In today’s edition:

Supply chain stress

Checking in with NIH researchers

Health systems leveraging AI and telehealth

—Maia Anderson, Cassie McGrath

PHARMA

A shipping container with pills, pill bottles, and money spilling out

Credit: Morning Brew Design, Photos: Adobe Stock

While Britain’s National Health Service has warned that the country is just “weeks away” from drug shortages linked to the war in Iran, pharma experts say the US is in a more stable position. At least for now.

In response to US and Israeli attacks that began at the end of February, Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway that’s important to many global supply chains and that roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes through. The global pharmaceutical supply chain relies on the petroleum that moves through the strait to manufacture medicines.

However, David Warrick, EVP of enterprise at supply chain risk management firm Overhaul, told Healthcare Brew the US has a “fairly healthy buffer” of medications, so there’s no immediate concern. In mid-2025, the White House ordered the Department of Health and Human Services to build a six-month stockpile of 26 essential medicines.

The International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations, which represents global drugmakers, told Healthcare Brew the group is closely monitoring the war in Iran and working to ensure an uninterrupted drug supply.

Experts aren’t too concerned for the US—yet.—MA

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RESEARCH

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Credit: Morning Brew Design, Photos: Getty Images

It’s been over a year since the Trump administration began cutting $32 billion in National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding, leaving researchers with fewer resources and often also without jobs.

In a recent Stat survey of nearly 1,000 US-based NIH grantees, 35% saw all funding return after initial cuts, but 27% reported that none of their funding was restored and 26% said only some was.

“A lot of people have been defunded. A lot of young people have gotten out of [research] or decided not to go into it,” Eric Perakslis, chief science and data officer at health tech Pluto Health, told us. “And all of these things add up.”

‘Deeply damaged.’ Perakslis, who also previously worked at the FDA as chief information officer and chief scientist of informatics from 2011 to 2013, said the research ecosystem has been “pretty deeply damaged” by these cuts.

Here are some of the implications of cuts.—CM

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AI

Mother on video call with doctor about sick child

Stocksy

Technologies like telehealth and AI have become ubiquitous in healthcare as the industry adapts to challenges like care deserts and burnout.

Most healthcare workers say their organization utilizes virtual care and AI, according to Morning Brew Inc. research. Only 5% respondents said their organization wasn’t using AI, and just 11% said their organization wasn’t using telehealth.

Health systems have found a variety of use cases. Most respondents (63% of 117) said their organization used telehealth for messaging or portal communication, while 26% said they used it for remote monitoring. Additionally, 43% said they use it for behavioral or mental health services. The Covid-19 pandemic spurred increased demand for virtual behavioral health visits, with 39% of outpatient telehealth visits being for mental health services between March and August 2021, according to KFF.

Find more insights from Chapter 2 of our new report here.—MA

VITAL SIGNS

A laptop tracking vital signs is placed on rolling medical equipment.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: 1 in 4. That’s how many out-of-state patients get an abortion in Illinois. (Stateline)

Quote: “It’s a mess, and it’s in litigation and the pharmaceutical companies are suing, and the only thing that can fix it is Congress.”—Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on the 340B Drug Pricing Program (Modern Healthcare)

Read: The Trump administration wants PBMs to disclose drug pricing information. PBMs argue that would be illegal. (Stat News)

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