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INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OF CHICAGO

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  • 19 Feb 2026 3:44 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Governor Pritzker vows to keep Illinoisans informed, protected, and prepared amid President Trump’s retreat from global public health cooperation. [IDPH]

    CHICAGO – Today, Governor Pritzker announced the State of Illinois is joining the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN), a coordinated international network dedicated to monitoring and responding to global disease outbreaks.

    Following President Trump’s withdrawal of the United States from the World Health Organization and retreat from global public health cooperation, Illinois will now be directly connected to timely global alerts, expert public health networks, and international response capabilities essential to protecting Illinois residents from emerging disease threats. ​

    “By withdrawing from the World Health Organization, Donald Trump has undermined science and weakened our nation’s ability to detect and respond to global health threats. I refuse to sit idly by and let that happen,” said Governor JB Pritzker. "By joining the World Health Organization’s coordinated network, GOARN, we are ensuring that our public health leaders – and the public – have the information, expertise, and partnerships they need to protect the people of our state. Across our state and alongside valued partners around the world, Illinois will continue to put science, preparedness, and people first.”

    “We're dedicated to following the international standard for health and wellness, and this is another step in that work,” said Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton. “Just as Illinois continues to follow a scientifically supported vaccine schedule, we will continue to rely on evidence, data, and medical expertise to guide our decisions. We will always choose the health of our people over political grandstanding or misinformation, and we will remain focused on what keeps families and communities safe.”

    The outbreak response network, GOARN, is a WHO-coordinated, worldwide partnership of hundreds of public health institutions, national governments, academic centers, laboratories, and response organizations focused on rapidly detecting and responding to emerging public health threats. Membership in this network strengthens Illinois’ preparedness for future pandemics and emerging threats, and complements the Illinois Department of Public Health’s (IDPH) ongoing coordination with U.S. public-health partners, fortifying response efforts at home while gaining access to global expertise and real-time outbreak intelligence.

    “Disease knows no borders, and Illinois is taking decisive steps to strengthen our preparedness,” said IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra. “Joining the World Health Organization's GOARN connects us to global experts, rapid alerts, and real-time intelligence, essential tools for preventing and managing outbreaks. Under Governor Pritzker’s leadership, IDPH will continue to take decisive action to protect the health of Illinois residents.”

    By joining the network, Illinois will benefit from WHO membership resources including:

    • Direct access to global early-warning alerts and outbreak intelligence.
    • Opportunities for technical collaboration and surge support during major public health events.
    • Participation in international training, exercises, and best-practice exchanges.
    • Stronger coordination between state-level public health systems and global response efforts.

    Illinois already brings state resources, experience, and other advantages to GOARN:

    • Strong epidemiologic and laboratory capacity, including expanded genomic sequencing and wastewater surveillance built during COVID-19.
    • Rapid deployment expertise supporting outbreak investigations, infection prevention, and risk communication.
    • Experience sharing data, expertise, and lessons learned with local, state, federal, academic, and international partners.

    Governor Pritzker is dedicated to maintaining strong public health infrastructure in Illinois, despite federal actions that have eroded trust in science and weakened public health coordination and capacity.

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  • 18 Feb 2026 12:52 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Predicting a 90,000 shortage of doctors by 2037, with the greatest shortage in rural areas. | Primary care is the first point of contact for most patients.
    [Health Resources and Services Administration; Visual Capitalist]




  • 17 Feb 2026 4:23 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Why...? Why...? Why...? Jasper whimpered, not just once or twice, but repeatedly. It was January 2026. For one awful week, my friend's 21-month-old grandson was practically inert, spiked fevers to 103o, and barely ate or drank, all the while voicing his single word of despair. [MEDPAGE TODAY] 

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    Meanwhile, his mother and grandmother, who are both physicians in Boston, worried about dehydration, viral pneumonia, even a bacterial super-infection. They were also grieved to see a normally joyous toddler so psychologically distressed.

    This year, some version of "Why does my body feel so horrible?" entered the thoughts of many children fighting a newly-mutated strain of H3N2 influenza A that surged early -- and hard. Although its final toll will not be tallied for months, data released by CDC on February 6 confirmed that 60 U.S. youngsters had already perished this season. Five of them were in Massachusetts, a state that last saw a child die of flu in 2013.

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  • 16 Feb 2026 2:08 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Grateful for the leadership shown and looking forward to our 250th anniversary with optimism!!

  • 13 Feb 2026 2:37 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The Rural Health Transformation Program’s (RHTP's) $50 billion injection is “a significant step forward” for the rural health safety net but likely comes too late to reverse years of deterioration that have left hundreds of hospitals in jeopardy. [[Fierce Healthcare]

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    That’s according to the latest annual report from Chartis on the current state of rural health. This time around, the healthcare advisory services firm warned that 41.2% of all rural hospitals are operating in the red, and 417 are “vulnerable to closure” based on a model Chartis developed that incorporates factors like net patient revenue changes and consecutive years of operating losses.

    Those numbers are a slight improvement over last year’s report, which flagged 46% of rural hospitals operating at a loss and 432 vulnerable facilities.

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  • 12 Feb 2026 3:33 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The first national behavioral health leadership collaborative within the Children’s Hospital Association has merged with a youth suicide prevention initiative to form a network of 30 hospitals focused on the advancement of pediatric behavioral health, Stacy Drury, MD, PhD, psychiatrist-in-chief at Boston Children’s, told Becker’s.  [Becker's Behavioral Health]

    “Children’s hospitals are uniquely capable of [redesigning the whole process in a system] because of their commitment to the community and being kid-focused,” she said. 

    The collaborative will expand shared data collection to identify which approaches are most effective and accelerate the pace of improvement beyond traditional academic timelines, which can take years to publish findings.

    “These are really important networks that allow you to activate data across all of the children’s hospitals around best practices, but also [determine] who in your community do you need to partner with,” Dr. Drury said. “Who do you need to get at the table to design an iterative quality improvement structure that has the same capacity to advance care that has happened with the sepsis network, the Children’s Oncology Network and the Vermont Oxford Network?”

    It is designed to apply that data-driven model to pediatric behavioral health, enabling children’s hospitals to share insights and scale effective solutions more quickly.

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  • 11 Feb 2026 1:41 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Despite medical advancements, maternal mortality rates have doubled since 1987. Yet more than 80% of pregnancy-related deaths have been deemed preventable. [American Hospital Association] 

    We know that behind every statistic is a mother and child. Hospitals across the country are rewriting the story of maternal care — one data point, one mom, one family and one partnership at a time. 

    Working alongside hospitals and health systems, the American Hospital Association’s Better Health for Mothers and Babies (BHMB) initiative aims to eliminate preventable maternal deaths and reduce pregnancy-related morbidity across the United States. This initiative is built on four core principles: Examine quality and outcomes data to guide strategy; consider the causes of disparities in health outcomes; involve patients and community in their own care; and engage the workforce.

    During the summer of 2025, the AHA launched its BHMB webinar series, organized around the four core principles, where hospital leaders and clinicians shared how they are putting them into action.

    The first session focused on the power of data and quality metrics and featured Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association, Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation and Regional One Health. Vicki Buchda, director of care improvement from Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association stated, “We can’t treat what we don’t measure — and we can’t improve what we don’t share.”

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  • 10 Feb 2026 8:57 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP), created under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Public Law No. 119-21), is a major new federal initiative to strengthen rural healthcare delivery and stabilize essential services. NRHA developed this document to provide a picture of how states are designing and initially budgeting their transformation strategies. 

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    All information summarized in this document is drawn from state applications and other publicly available sources. In some cases, it reflects NRHA’s best interpretation of partial or variable information provided by states. As of December 29th, 2025, CMS has announced the RHTP FY2026 funding-level awards for each state. State activities summarized in this brief do not reflect CMS funding decisions and therefore may change. Find CMS’ state application abstracts here and state spotlights here.

    Early trends show strong focus on health workforce stabilization, prevention and CDM, and VBP and innovative care models. Many states focus on strengthening rural systems for resilience through hospital sustainability, EMS modernization, mobile and community-based service delivery, and models with regional support and local delivery. Technology modernization through consumer-facing tools, telehealth, interoperability, and cybersecurity are common across states. Almost every state includes behavioral health access and SUD treatment as a priority. Across states, RHTP proposals emphasize strengthening the rural care infrastructure, building local partnerships, and addressing long-standing gaps in access.

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  • 9 Feb 2026 8:46 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    A senior US public health official called on Americans to get vaccinated against measles as outbreaks continue in multiple states and concerns grow that the country could lose its measles elimination designation. Dr Mehmet Oz, a cardiothoracic surgeon, spoke in support on Sunday of the measles vaccine. [The Guardian]

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    “Take the vaccine, please,” said Oz, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. “We have a solution for our problem.

    “Not all illnesses are equally dangerous and not all people are equally susceptible to those illnesses,” he told CNN’s State of the Union. “But measles is one you should get your vaccine.”

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  • 6 Feb 2026 3:46 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    MEXICO CITY -- The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) issued a new epidemiological alert following a surge of measles cases across the Americas, with Mexico reporting the highest numbers. It also called for urgent vaccination campaigns, highlighting that 78% of recent cases involved unvaccinated people as reported by MEDPAGE TODAY. 

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    Through the first 3 weeks of the year, Mexico led the way with 740 cases

    The alert, announced on Wednesday, follows Canada's loss of measles-free status in November -- a setback the U.S. and Mexico could soon mirror. While both governments have requested a 2-month extension to contain their respective outbreaks, the situation is complicated by the Trump administration's January withdrawal from the World Health Organization, the parent agency of PAHO.

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