r/publichealth 3d ago

META How can I, your new Moderator, improve your experience in this community?

119 Upvotes

Hey folks, it's been a few weeks since I was added to the moderator team here. In that time, I've stopped swiped of a lot of garbage and banned a fair number of people.

Here's what I intend to offer you:

  1. No platform for antivaxxers, conspiracy nuts, nor any other public health antagonists. Report them, and I will delete their content and ban them. As a mid-career PH professional, I don't see any reason to enable people who make my day job suck. Neither should you.
  2. Stricter moderation of surveys. As with other subreddits I manage, I will require that those requesting to recruit study participants message us for Moderator approval and submit proof of IRB/ ethics board approval and a link to their survey.

What I ask of you, my esteemed Public Health colleagues is your support, and your judicious use of the Report function instead of slap fighting in the comments. I respond to Mod Queue pretty quickly, but I don't see all comments on all threads, so I miss out on a lot of awful stuff until it's too late.

Let me know what you think of these bits so far, and I'll also put some ideas out in the comments for you to collective address.


r/publichealth 17h ago

DISCUSSION /r/publichealth Weekly Thread: US Election ramifications

3 Upvotes

Trump won, RFK is looming and the situation is changing every day. Please keep any and all election related questions, news updates, anxiety posting and general doom in this daily thread. While this subreddit is very American, this is an international forum and our shitty situation is not the only public health issue right now.

Previous megathread here for anyone that would like to read the comments.

Write to your representatives! A template to do so can be found here and an easy way to find your representatives can be found here.


r/publichealth 7h ago

NEWS Following lawsuit, White House releases $184 million for AmeriCorps

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koin.com
85 Upvotes

r/publichealth 4h ago

NEWS US just saw its 44th school shooting in 2025: Data shows true scale of the problem

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the-independent.com
44 Upvotes

r/publichealth 8h ago

NEWS How the Trump-Kennedy Alliance Is Pushing the Boundaries of Public Health

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nytimes.com
69 Upvotes

r/publichealth 3h ago

NEWS Will the C.D.C. Survive?

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nytimes.com
18 Upvotes

r/publichealth 3h ago

DISCUSSION Is Public Health a good path ?

11 Upvotes

If there anyone who is currently doing there bsc or mph in public health or a proffessional, please kindly share your insights and experiences.They'll be really worth for me.


r/publichealth 23h ago

NEWS Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana

237 Upvotes

Senator Cassidy cast the deciding vote to confirm RFKJr. As a physician he should be ashamed. He seems to have some regrets now


r/publichealth 1d ago

NEWS CVS: COVID vaccines not available in 16 states following new RFK Jr. limits

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331 Upvotes

r/publichealth 7m ago

ADVICE Post-grad public health advice

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Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

NEWS RFK Jr. has claimed he can diagnose kids by just looking at them

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280 Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

RESOURCE Helpful article on COVID-19 vaccine access

129 Upvotes

We CANNOT give up on sharing information on how people can access COVID-19 vaccines in the coming months. Found this article helpful and hope others do too. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/who-is-eligible-for-the-covid-vaccine-in-2025-and-how-to-get-it/


r/publichealth 7h ago

NEWS Healthy School Lunch

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1 Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

DISCUSSION If you are a public servant, I am begging you to learn about everyday acts of resistance instead of just resigning during the current administration.

1.3k Upvotes

I keep seeing a lot of people discussing what's going on at the CDC. Everybody keeps praising the scathing letters from resigned officials and the staff walk out. THIS. IS. WHAT. THEY. WANT. They want people willing to resist to quit. They want people not working at the CDC. What they don't tend to have the power to deal with is everyday acts of resistance. James Scott has written some books on this and while the context is much different, I'm sure some of the smartest people in the world could come together to figure out similar strategies. Making dictators as ineffectual as possible is THE ONLY STRATEGY we have right now. Quitting and walking out does nothing. You all understand your offices better than anybody in Washington, use that to your advantage and slow these mofos down.


r/publichealth 1d ago

NEWS 'Public health is in trouble,' says high-ranking CDC leader who resigned in protest

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261 Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

NEWS COVID 19 Vaccines with Walgreens

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22 Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

FLUFF I was musing out in my hives the other day and thought...

29 Upvotes

To be a public health nurse is in many ways like being a keeper of bees. You learn a deep respect for PPE—the veil, the gloves, the barrier between your soft skin and the sting. Not out of fear, but reverence. Protection is not distance; it is what allows you to step close enough to serve. You see that the hive shapes the health of each bee. The strength of the whole flows into the one—its protection, its nourishment, its rhythm. When the hive thrives, each bee carries that vitality; when the hive falters, even the strongest cannot stand apart. The community is not background but lifeblood, woven into every wingbeat. You practice the art of building trust and staying calm. The bees know your heartbeat; patients feel your steadiness. A frantic hand provokes, but a steady one soothes. In both fields, calm is not the absence of danger but the presence of respect. In maternal health, you stand among women whose power is both fierce and tender. You witness the fire that brings life forth, and the gentleness that cradles it after. Their strength teaches you that resilience is not hard stone but living flame—nurturing, protective, unyielding when called. And always, there is the connection to nature—cruel and astonishing, fragile and fierce. Life cycles unfold before your eyes: birth, loss, resilience. Honey and sting, grief and sweetness. To nurse and to tend is to accept that beauty and brutality share the same field. So you rise each day, veil or mask in place, stepping into the hum of the world’s need—a keeper of bees, a keeper of health.


r/publichealth 1d ago

Just Venting Black sheep at the dinner table

210 Upvotes

I just need to vent about something that hit me hard after another dinner with extended family. I’ve always felt like the black sheep in my family, not because of who I am, but because of what I value. I started working for a medical school 3 years ago and I teach family centered care, health policy, how to advocate, and sexuality topics all within in the lens of disability. This drove me to pursue my MPH. I love my work. I love my degree. I just had my first guest lecture at an Ivy League for a workshop I’m developing all before I even graduate with my masters. I have had some of the greatest highs of my career and I can’t even celebrate them because my family can’t look past their discomfort. No one ever asks me about how work is or what I’m learning, or what’s going on in my life outside my relationship or how I look. My degree is “controversial” and my work is “political”. Yet still I sit there quietly, waiting for my turn, waiting for someone to show curiosity about me… but it never comes. As the youngest, I’ve spent years thinking eventually they’d see me, that my moment would come. But I’m realizing maybe it never will. We live in a different world now. I don’t want applause or praise. I just want to be considered, to be asked, to feel like I belong in my own family. And it stings to realize that in their eyes, my existence feels less comfortable to engage with than others’ all because after covid I chose to run towards the chaos not from it…


r/publichealth 2d ago

NEWS ‘It Feels Like the CDC Is Over’

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theatlantic.com
365 Upvotes

r/publichealth 2d ago

NEWS Robert F. Kennedy Jr. lashes out at CDC over Covid response after firing its director

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tag24.com
401 Upvotes

r/publichealth 2d ago

NEWS CDC Director is refusing to resign. We need to see people more people stand up to this administration!

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843 Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

NEWS Are You Sure Your Shrimp Is Safe? A Look at Contaminants and the FDA’s Role

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newstalkflorida.com
9 Upvotes

r/publichealth 2d ago

NEWS Covid Shots Could Run $225 for Many Americans Under RFK Jr. Plan

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news.bloomberglaw.com
281 Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

NEWS The CDC Implosion Continues as Staff Stage Unprecedented Walkout

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146 Upvotes

r/publichealth 2d ago

Just Venting The windows on Building 18 at CDC headquarters, where an anti-vaxxer fired nearly 500 rounds

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114 Upvotes

r/publichealth 1d ago

DISCUSSION Are Doctors Reluctant Leaders ?

19 Upvotes

Seems to me that Doctors have ceded a lot of space to management and administration for far too long. I can appreciate that clinical duties are paramount. However, several decisions that directly and indirectly impact patient care plans, safety, and performance get taken many a time without the doctors being adequately involved or designing them. It seems to me that hospital administrators prefer keeping their doctors at the periphery, especially when it comes to economics.

Most Doctors, privately and in smaller groups, continue to rue and helplessly grumble over their almost complete loss of franchise and agency within the hospital system. Unlike in the past, when it was just the doctor and the patient in a “parent-child” relationship, healthcare systems are now incredibly complex. Hospitals are heavily indebted to banks, shareholders, PE, increasingly powerful regulators, and litigious “consumerist” patients.

There is also a growing trend towards privatization of healthcare in emerging economies. In markets like India, almost 70% of all care is in the private sector. Even in countries like China, where the state is pervasive, over the last decade, the share of private hospitals has increased from 10-12% to about 40-45%. The USA has a strong network of private hospitals. Fee-for-service payment mechanisms continue to be dominant and contribute close to 70% of the healthcare provided in the USA. In a largely private system, economics will always be front and center. 

But the balance between economics and medicine is a gentle and delicate one. A balance that can only be maintained with alignment and mutual coordination. The risk to doctors is when “good medicine” cedes too much space to “good economics.”

Doctors have no choice but to “grab the bull by the horns” to find the sweet spot where “good compromises” between good medicine and good economics can peacefully co-exist. The Covid pandemic demonstrated to us that doctors must be at the forefront of designing and delivering care. There is nothing that is non-medical about a hospital enterprise.

We need our Doctors in the Boardrooms as much as in the Procedure/Operating Rooms. 

Views ?


r/publichealth 2d ago

ALERT CDC Crisis Alert: Top Officials Resign Amid Allegations of Political Pressure — Who’s Really in Control of Public Health?

78 Upvotes

Multiple senior officials at the CDC have resigned, claiming the agency’s decision-making is being politicized. This raises serious alarms:

What does this do to public trust in health guidance?

Could vaccine campaigns or future disease response be compromised?

Is leadership failing us at a critical time?

We just published a 10-minute exposé unpacking the timeline, who's involved, and the potential fallout for millions of Americans.

Watch here (and weigh in with your take):

https://youtu.be/byDdoLWxlBM

Question for you all: Does this signal the end of trust in federal health institutions or is it a chance to rebuild with better oversight?