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Death Valley drenched by record flooding, stranding about 1,000 in park

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Death Valley National Park was closed Saturday after exceptional amounts of rain drenched the park on Friday, triggering flash floods that left about 1,000 visitors and park staff stranded.

The park received 1.46 inches of rainfall at the Furnace Creek area — just shy of the previous calendar day record of 1.47 inches, set on April 15, 1988. This amounts to about three-quarters of what the area typically receives in an average year, 1.94 inches, and is the greatest amount ever recorded in August, The lowest, driest and hottest location in the United States, Death Valley averages just 0.11 inches of rain in August.

As of Saturday morning, “everything is going well,” said Nikki Jones, a server assistant at a restaurant in the park’s Ranch Inn, who also lives there and posted a video of the flooding from her colleague on Twitter. Jones told The Washington Post that the floodwaters receded Friday afternoon, but light debris remained on the roads.

“CalTrans has done an amazing job to get it cleaned up as soon as possible,” she told The Post in a Twitter message. “I drove on the roads today.”

Jones said some people are stranded at the Inn at the Oasis because of trapped cars, “but people are able to get out of the park today.”

“The floodwaters pushed dumpster containers into parked cars, which caused cars to collide into one another,” the National Park Service said in a statement Friday. “Additionally, many facilities are flooded including hotel rooms and business offices.

The NPS did not immediately respond to The Washington Post’s request for an update Saturday morning.

The torrent was triggered by the Southwest monsoon, which develops each summer as prevailing winds shift from out of the west to out of the south, drawing a surge of humidity northward. This moisture can fuel vigorous downpours that douse the patched desert landscape. Because there is little soil to soak up the rains, any measurable rains can cause flooding in low-lying areas, and heavier rains can collect into normally dry creeks, triggering flash floods.

This year’s Southwest monsoon has been particularly intense — which has helped relieve drought conditions in the region but also resulted in many significant flood events. Serious flooding has recently affected areas around Las Vegas and Phoenix.

Las Vegas flooding sends water gushing through casinos

The Death Valley flood also comes amid a series of extreme rain events over the Lower 48 states. Over the week spanning the end of July and beginning of August, three 1-in-1,000 year rain events occurred — inundating St. Louis, eastern Kentucky, and southeast Illinois. Earlier this summer, Yellowstone National Park also flooded.

How two 1-in-1,000 year rain events hit the US in two days

Death Valley holds the record for the highest temperature ever recorded on Earth, as well as several runners-up. Officially, Death Valley reached 134 degrees on July 10, 1913, but some climatologists have questioned the legitimacy of that reading. The next highest temperature on record, 131 degrees from Kebili, Tunisia, set July 7, 1931, is also controversial. Last summer and the summer before, Death Valley hit 130 degrees, which may be the highest pair of reliably measured temperatures on Earth if the 1931 Tunisia and 1913 Death Valley readings are disregarded.

Death Valley soars to 130 degrees, matching Earth’s highest temperature in at least 90 years

The rainfall inundated the park, trapping vehicles in debris, according to a video tweeted by John Sirlin, an Arizona-based stormchaser. He wrote that roads were blocked by boulders and palm trees that had failed, and that visitors struggled for six hours to leave the park.

Earlier this week, flash floods hit parts of western Nevada, forcing the closure of some roads leading to the park from Las Vegas. Flash floods also hit parts of northern Arizona.

Flash floods close roads into Death Valley National Park

Sirlin told the Associated Press that Friday’s rain started around 2 am and was “more extreme than anything I’ve seen there.”

“There were at least two dozen cars that got smashed and stuck in there,” he said, adding that he saw washes flowing several feet deep although he did not see anyone injured, and the NPS reported no injuries as of Friday.

Last July, rare summer rains also soaked Death Valley, bringing 0.74 inches in a day at Furnace Creek approximately two weeks after the park set the world record for the hottest daily average temperature, at 118.1 degrees Fahrenheit.

Desert downpours: Rare summer rains soaked Death Valley and parts of California on Monday

Scientists say human-caused warming of the climate is intensifying extreme precipitation events. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change found some evidence that rainfall from the Southwest monsoon has increased since the 1970s.

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US

President Joe Biden tests negative for Covid-19 following rebound case

“The President continues to feel very well,” Dr. Kevin O’Connor wrote. “Given his rebound positivity which we reported last Saturday, we have continued daily monitoring. This morning, his SARS-CoV-2 antigen testing was negative. In an abundance of caution, the President will continue his strict isolation measures pending a second negative test as previously described.”

During isolation, the President has participated virtually in public events from the White House residence. On two occasions, he delivered socially distanced remarks to a restricted pool from the Blue Room balcony, announcing a successful strike that killed al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri Monday and signing two bills cracking down on Covid-19 relief fraud Friday.
The President and first lady Jill Biden are scheduled to travel on Monday to visit Kentucky after deadly floods in the eastern part of the state killed dozens of people and devastated the area.

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “People with recurrence of COVID-19 symptoms or a new positive viral test after having tested negative should restart isolation and isolate again for at least 5 days.”

During Biden’s first bout with the disease, he experienced mild symptoms, including runny nose, fatigue, high temperature and a cough, according to his doctor. The five-day course of Paxlovid the President completed requires a doctor’s prescription and is available via emergency use authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration for treatment of mild-to-moderate Covid-19 in people 12 and older who are at high risk of serious illness.

The CDC issued a health alert to doctors on May 24 advising that Covid-19 symptoms sometimes come back, and that may just be how the infection plays out in some people, regardless of whether they’re vaccinated or treated with medications such as Paxlovid. The CDC said that most rebound cases involve mild disease and that there have been no reports of serious illness.

Biden is fully vaccinated and received two booster shots. He received his first two doses of the Pfizer / BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine ahead of his inauguration in January 2021, his first booster shot in September and his second booster vaccination in March.

This story has been updated.

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Sports

Commonwealth Games schedule today, Day 9: Watch live stream and coverage of Australia v New Zealand in the T20 cricket as our Diamonds win v England in the netball

England have closed the gap at the top of the Commonwealth Games medal tallyand are on the verge of taking the lead after a rare day without Australian gold.

Australia remain atop the medal tally with 50 gold medals, but England have moved within three golds after winning five golds on Friday, including two at the diving.

See all of the highlights from Day 8 of the Commonwealth Games in the video player above

Stream Seven’s coverage of the Commonwealth Games 2022 for free on 7plus >>

The Aussies added eight medals on Friday, with decathletes Daniel Golubovic and Cedric Dubler taking silver and bronze behind Grenada’s Lindon Victor.

There was also a silver for diver Brittany O’Brien in the women’s 1m springboard, an another five bronze medals.

Australia are on track for a big weekend with both the men’s and women’s hockey teams, the women’s T20 cricket side and netball outfit among those staring down medals.

On Saturday, we’ve got a massive night of Aussie action in the athletics, boxing, netball, and beach volleyball. There’s also T20 cricket, hockey, diving and a whole lot more.

Follow all of the live action from the Day 9 of the Commonwealth Games in the live blog below.

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US

Justice subpoenas of Trump counsel mark turning point

The Justice Department’s grand jury subpoenas to former White House Counsel Pat Cipollone and others in former President Trump’s inner circle mark a turning point in the federal law enforcement investigation of the former president.

The grand jury probe has considerably more power than the House Jan. 6 select committee to pierce any executive privilege claims that the former president might raise — an issue that has come up with Cipollone.

When Cipollone agreed to provide testimony to the Jan. 6 panel, he declined to answer certain questions concerning his conversations with Trump, citing attorney-client and executive privileges.

Experts say those assertions of privilege would be unlikely to hold up in court if Trump or Cipollone were to try to use them to withhold information from a grand jury.

“The grand jury subpoena from the Department of Justice is a much more powerful tool than a congressional subpoena,” said Neil Eggleston, who served as White House counsel for the Obama administration and represented former President Clinton in a dispute over another White House lawyer’s grand jury testimony.

“In my view, it would be inconceivable that the Department of Justice would not win,” Eggleston added.

Cipollone’s insights into Jan. 6 are likely of great interest to prosecutors following his emergence as a key figure in the congressional investigation.

The select committee has presented evidence that the former top White House lawyer expressed concerns about Trump’s conduct in the weeks leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

Cassidy Hutchinson, an aide in the Trump White House, testified in June that Cipollone issued stark warnings in the days before Jan. 6 when it became clear that Trump wanted to lead his supporters in a march to the Capitol to protest Congress’s certification of his election loss to President Biden.

“Please make sure we don’t go up to the Capitol, Cassidy,” Cipollone told Hutchinson, according to her testimony. “We’re going to get charged with every crime imaginable if we make that movement happen.”

While select committee lawmakers had little recourse when Cipollone and others declined to answer questions about their conversations with Trump, legal experts say federal prosecutors have more tools at their disposal and any assertion of executive privilege in a grand jury context would face an uphill battle in the courts.

ABC News reported on Tuesday that a federal grand jury had subpoenaed Cipollone, making him the highest-ranking Trump White House official to be targeted in the DOJ’s escalating Jan. 6 investigation.

The select committee has been fighting to enforce their investigative demands through the courts in more than a dozen civil lawsuits over the past year. While the panel has had some success, the cases can drag on for months.

In instances where a target of a congressional subpoena refuses to comply, the House also has the option of issuing a criminal contempt referral to the Justice Department for prosecution, which is what lawmakers did with four of Trump’s close allies.

But prosecutors ended up charging only two of them – Steve Bannon and former White House trade adviser Peter Navarro – with criminal contempt of Congress, and neither of them appear to be any closer to cooperating with the committee. A jury convicted Bannon last month on two counts of the misdemeanor contempt charge, each of which carries a possible sentence of between 30 days and one year in jail.

The Justice Department declined to bring charges against two other Trump aides who were held in contempt, social media guru Dan Scavino and former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.

Meadows filed a civil suit against the committee late last year, challenging its subpoena and claiming to be protected by testimonial immunity for White House advisers. The case has been tied up in court for eight months and it’s unclear when it might be resolved.

While the Supreme Court has said former presidents have some authority to assert executive privilege, some legal scholars say such an assertion would stand little chance of shielding information sought in a criminal investigation.

Jonathan David Shaub, a law professor at the University of Kentucky and a former attorney with the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, said he believes any assertions of privilege from Trump or Cipollone before the grand jury would be “frivolous” and federal prosecutors would be able to move quickly to force compliance.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) “has a much more effective and quick enforcement mechanism to go to the district court and have these claims of privilege adjudicated and almost for sure rejected,” Shaub said.

“My guess is given how tenuous his claims of privilege are that we’re not going to hear much else, that he’s going to enter into negotiation and ultimately get the best he can from DOJ and then comply, because he doesn’t have much. of a leg to stand on,” he added.

When courts evaluate privilege assertions against subpoenas, the major question judges seek to answer is whether the need for the information is compelling enough to outweigh the need for executive branch confidentiality.

In 1974, the Supreme Court unanimously sided with the Watergate special prosecutor when then-President Nixon tried to quash a grand jury subpoena for White House tape recordings.

Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote in the decision, “The generalized assertion of privilege must yield to the demonstrated, specific need for evidence in a pending criminal trial.”

In a more recent case, the Supreme Court rejected Trump’s bid to block the select committee from obtaining troves of documents from his time in the White House. In an 8-1 ruling in January, the justices declined to review a lower court’s decision that the select committee’s need for the documents would outweigh any assertion of privilege even if Trump had still been in office at the time.

Eggleston said he believes the courts would rule the same way if a dispute over privilege were to arise out of the grand jury investigation.

“I think that’s probably the way the courts are going to think about this as well,” he said. “Because if you just apply a standard balancing test under US v. Nixon, I think it is overwhelming that the Department of Justice will have shown compelling need for this testimony and President Trump’s interest in confidentiality at this stage, particularly after the January 6 hearings, is virtually zero.”

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US

GOP Rep. Newhouse, who voted to impeach Trump, wins Washington primary, NBC News projects

GOP Rep. Dan Newhouse who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump last year for his role in the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol, has won his primary in Washington, NBC News projects.

Newhouse advanced out of Tuesday’s primary in Washington’s 4th Congressional District, beating Republican challenger Loren Culp, a candidate endorsed by Trump.

The four-term incumbent will face Democrat Doug White, who also advances, NBC News projects, in the district rated as solid Republican this fall. Under Washington state’s open, nonpartisan primary system, the top 2 candidates, regardless of party, advances to the November election.

Newhouse and nine other House Republicans voted to impeach Trump in Jan. 2021, charging him with “incitement of insurrection” for his role in the violent riot by a mob of his supporters. It was the most bipartisan vote on a presidential impeachment in history, doubling the five Democrats who voted to impeach Bill Clinton in 1998.

Like other impeachment supporters, Newhouse had out-raised his Trump-backed opponent. He brought in about $1.6 million while Culp raised $310,000 through the middle of last month.

Rep. Peter Meijer, R-Mich., and Jaime Herrera Beutler, R-Wash., two others who voted to impeach, also faced primary challengers backed by Trump on Tuesday in contests that marked a test of the former president’s influence in GOP elections. Meijer was defeated by John Gibbs, a former Trump administration official.

Rep. Liz Cheney, of Wyoming, the highest-ranking Republican to support impeachment and vice chair of the House committee investigating the riot, faces her primary on Aug. 16.

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Technology

Cult of the Lamb fearsome four Bishop bosses revealed :

Earlier today, publisher Devolver Digital released a new video showing the combat and boss battles you can anticipate in Cult of the Lamb.

As you fight to grow your cult across the game, four Bishops of the old faith will attempt to thwart your crusade. To defeat the Bishops of old, you’ll also need to take advantage of various weapons and abilities that change the way you fight. You can also get a first glimpse for yourself in the video below.

Cult of the Lamb Fight the Four

As you venture across the evolving Lands of the Old Faith, you’ll need to use a variety of melee weapons to slice through your foes. In addition, you can absorb curses to wield the dark magical powers of the crown. You can also unlock new abilities by finding Tarot cards across the world.

Alongside combat, you’ll also have a variety of paths to take as you explore. As you choose which direction to head next, you’ll also encounter resources and followers to help grow your community. Although some people will join you willingly, others will need to be converted through force.

In Cult of the Lamb, you’ll also need to face the four Bishops of the old faith. The first Bishop is Leshy, the youngest of the four, who resides in the tangled Darkwood. The second Bishop is Heket, the harbinger of famine. Next comes Kalamar, Lord of Anchordeep, who is born of plague. The final Bishop, Shamura of the Silk Cradle, is the oldest and most powerful.

Cult of the Lamb is developed by Massive Monster and published by Devolver Digital. You can begin your quest to spread the Word and lead the one true cult on August 11 for PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch and PC. You can also learn more about the game and pre-order it on any available platform on its official website.

Will you take this possessed lamb on its righteous crusade? As always, let us know down in the comments!

via Youtube

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Technology

Dystopian document thriller game Papers, Please is now available on iPhone and Android – TechCrunch

Award-winning dystopian document thriller game Papers, Please is now available on smartphones nine years after its initial release. You can download the game on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store for $4.99 starting today.

Papers, Please takes place in the fictional communist state of Arstotzka, where you play as a border control agent who is faced with numerous moral dilemmas. The game challenges players to confront their own perceived bias while touching on real-world issues surrounding immigration.

“Your job as immigration inspector is to control the flow of people entering the Arstotzkan side of Grestin from Kolechia,” the game’s description reads. “Among the throngs of immigrants and visitors looking for work are hidden smugglers, spies, and terrorists. Using only the documents provided by travelers and the Ministry of Admission’s primitive inspect, search, and fingerprint systems you must decide who can enter Arstotzka and who will be turned away or arrested.”

Papers, Please was created by indie game developer Lucas Pope and published through his production company 3909 LLC. The game was released in August 2013 for Microsoft Windows and OS X, for Linux in February 2014, for iOS on iPad in December 2014 and the PlayStation Vita in December 2017.

The game was received positively on its release and is seen as a demonstration of video games as an art form. Papers, Please has received BAFTA game awards for the Strategy and Simulation categories, and most recently won the Peabody Award for Digital Storytelling.

Pope tweeted that the smartphone version of the game includes an updated user interface and minor tweaks designed to make the game playable on mobile. If you already own the iPad app, you’ll access to the iPhone app for free, he says.

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Sports

Aleix Espargaro fastest with top four split by 0.090s

The Aprilia star is hunted by a trio of Ducatis in FP3 with Quartararo and Bagnaia safely into Q2

Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) heads into qualifying at the Monster Energy British Grand Prix at the top of the timesheets after setting a blockbuster 1:58.254 in FP3, but it’s tight at the summit. Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) and Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) are inside the top three and sit just 0.028s and 0.078s behind the Spaniard respectively.

A typically thrilling end to FP3

Raul Fernandez (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing) and Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) were the only two riders to improve their Friday efforts in the opening 25 minutes of FP3, but heading into the closing 20 minutes, soft rear tires were being fitted – and the time attacks were inbound.

The Aprilia Racing duo of Aleix Espargaro and Maverick Viñales were the first big movers. The Spaniards exchanged fastest laps with 15 minutes to go, Viñales 0.096s ahead of Espargaro. But on his second time attack lap, Espargaro set a blistering 1:58.254 to move 0.345s clear of Viñales and anyone else. Miller, shadowing Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™), cut Espargaro’s advantage down to 0.078s to move into P2, while Quartararo sat P4 after improving his best time.

After missing out on a top 10 on Friday, Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) slotted into P7 with 10 minutes left on the stopwatch, before Johann Zarco (Prima Pramac Racing) rose to P3 to sit within a tenth of Espargaro. Pecco, after a few hand gestures were exchanged with Aleix Espargaro after the Ducati man was forced to sit up on a fast lap, went again and made sure he was safe in P6. Zarco then crashed unhurt at Turn 13 while on a potentially record-breaking lap, bringing out the yellow flags, but the Frenchman was safely inside the top 10.

Martin’s late lap moved him up to second place to make it four riders within a second heading into qualifying, Zarco is the third rider within a tenth of Espargaro in P4, with fifth place Viñales 0.321s away from his teammate’s time. Quartararo has to settle for P6, three tenths shy of his closest title rival, with Pecco sitting in P7 just 0.006s down on Quartararo. Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar), Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) and Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) are the other automatic Q2 qualifiers in P8, P9 and P10.

Make sure you tune into qualifying at 14:10 local time (GMT+1)!

Top 10 combined:
1. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) – 1:58.254
2. Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) + 0.028
3. Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) + 0.078
4. Johann Zarco (Prima Pramac Racing) + 0.090
5. Maverick Vinales (Aprilia Racing) + 0.321
6. Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) + 0.328
7. Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) + 0.371
8. Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) + 0.403
9. Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) + 0.409
10. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) + 0.475

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What you should know about drug price reform : Shots

Demonstrators outside PhRMA headquarters in Washington, DC, protest lobbying by pharmaceutical companies to keep Medicare from negotiating lower prescription drug prices.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images


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Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images


Demonstrators outside PhRMA headquarters in Washington, DC, protest lobbying by pharmaceutical companies to keep Medicare from negotiating lower prescription drug prices.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Americans pay way more than people in other countries do for prescription drugs. This drives voters crazy, and although lawmakers have been vowing to do something about it for decades, they haven’t made much progress.

That could change as soon as this week. The Inflation Reduction Act – hashed out by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., and Senator Joe Manchin, DW.V. – includes several provisions around drug prices and health insurance. The Senate is planning to start the voting process Saturday, and it appears on track to get through Congress and be signed into law by President Biden.

This is all music to the ears of patients who’ve been burdened by high-priced drugs for years.

“The proposal to limit out-of-pocket expenses that’s on the table right now would absolutely make a huge difference in my life,” says Medicare recipient Bob Parant, 69, of Westbury, New York. He has Type 1 diabetes and pays about $5,000 out of pocket for insulin each year, on top of thousands more for a heart medicine.

Here are details about that proposal and others in the bill, and answers to some frequently asked questions.

What exactly is Congress changing about drug prices?

For the first time, the federal health secretary would be able to directly negotiate the prices of certain expensive drugs each year for Medicare. This starts in 2026 with 10 drugs and increases to 20 drugs by 2029. To qualify for negotiation, the drugs would have to be on the market for several years.

Then there’s the proposal Parant is most excited about: People on Medicare won’t have to pay more than $2,000 a year in out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs, which will make a big difference for seniors with certain conditions like cancer and multiple sclerosis. This would kick in in 2025.

And, starting next year, if drug companies raise the prices of their drugs faster than inflation, they’ll have to pay a rebate to Medicare. That could affect a lot of drugs – according to an analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation; In 2019-20, half of all prescriptions covered by Medicare increased in price faster than inflation. This provision could help discourage drug companies from constantly hiking prices.

Do experts think it will make a difference?

Actually, many health policy experts think these changes are significant.

“This is a huge breakthrough,” says Tricia Neuman, who directs the Program on Medicare Policy at KFF. “Congress has been talking about doing something about drug prices for decades. [This] may not be everything everyone wants, but it really is a big deal and it will provide significant help to literally millions of people who need it.”

“It’s a huge deal,” agrees Stacie Dusetzina, professor of health policy at Vanderbilt University. “It really does break a lot of new ground and fix a lot of problems.”

The Congressional Budget Office, which analyzed an earlier version of the bill, estimates these changes will save the government $288 billion through 2031.

Why does it take so long for many of these things to kick in?

For someone who’s on Medicare and spends $10,000 a year on cancer treatment, like Neuman’s friend, the timeline of these changes might be tough to take.

“Clearly, she’ll be wondering next year, ‘Why am I still paying a lot of money?'” Neuman says. “Some things just can’t happen fast enough just because it takes a while to put things in motion.” It will take a lot of work by the federal health agencies and industry groups to get ready for these provisions to take effect.

Neuman says she understands people are anxious for relief, but once provisions like the out-of-pocket cap in Medicare do take effect, “this really will be a big deal for people who rely on expensive medication and for others who have seen their drug prices increase each year.”

I heard the bill will lead to fewer new drugs. Is that true?

This is an argument made by drugmakers to try and scare people into opposing these changes. The pharmaceutical and health products industry has spent more on lobbying Congress in 2022 than any other industry, according to the nonprofit Open Secrets. It’s fighting hard to prevent these changes from becoming law because they would cut into their profits.

For instance, PhRMA, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, is making its case in an ad campaign that the drug-pricing provisions in the bill could lead to fewer new medicines coming to market by “chilling research and development.” The trade association also pointed NPR to this industry-funded analysis from Avalere, which estimates the bill could reduce drug manufacturer revenue by $450 billion by 2032.

But an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office estimates the effect on drug development would be quite modest. About 15 out of 1,300 drugs would not come to market over the next 30 years – that’s about 1% of new drugs. Also, most big drug companies spend more on marketing than on research and development.

Some ads claim Medicare would be cut. Is this true?

These ads are misleading. For example, a project dubbed Commitment to Seniors launched a seven-figure ad campaign claiming that the Senate bill would “siphon nearly $300 billion out of Medicare.” In fact, that amount of money is what the government is expected to save because Medicare won’t have to pay as much for expensive drugs, it’s not money that’s being taken away from Medicare’s budget. So, importantly, seniors’ benefits would not be cut.

“When people see an ad on TV from a group called Commitment to Seniors, that sounds pretty innocuous,” says Michael Beckel of Issue One who tracks dark money. It turns out, Commitment to Seniors is a project of another group, American Commitment, that has given PhRMA more than a million dollars, including $325,000 in 2020.

Beckel says it’s not unusual to see the industry engage in such tactics. “The pharmaceutical industry is a major lobbying force and major dark money player.”

What about insulin? Would people with diabetes get help with those prices?

Insulin is often the poster-child drug when it comes to out-of-control prices and life-or-death stakes. US insulin prices are four times higher after rebates, on average, compared with other countries, and about 1 in 4 diabetes patients have reported taking less insulin than prescribed because they can’t afford it. At this point, it’s unclear if any of the proposed reforms on the price of insulin – or at least patients’ out-of-pocket costs – will make it into the final bill.

There are ongoing efforts to cap copays at $35 a month for people with insurance who take insulin, which has bipartisan support, but this may not be included in the bill.

What else is in the bill on health?

The other big thing in the bill protects consumers from a potentially disastrous change that would happen without new legislation.

People who buy insurance on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces – like Healthcare.gov and the state marketplaces – will be able to keep generous premium subsidies for three more years. After these extra subsidies went into effect with the passage of the American Rescue Plan, the government estimated 4 out of 5 enrollees qualified for a plan with a premium of $10 or less per month.

Krutika Amin, who works with Neuman at KFF, says it’s important for lawmakers to nail down this extension now, since insurance companies are currently setting their rates for next year’s plans in advance of open enrollment in the fall.

“If Congress is able to extend the extra subsidies before the August recess, it will help provide certainty to both insurance companies and state and federal agencies who are running [the marketplaces] to be able to implement it in a way that’s seamless for consumers,” she says.

The extra discounts on plans have made a difference. Last year 14.5 million people – more than ever – signed up for insurance on Healthcare.gov, and an early analysis from HHS suggests the overall number of people who were uninsured in the US hit a record low in the first months of this year.

NPR Pharmaceuticals Correspondent Sydney Lupkin contributed reporting.

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Business

Zodiac signs causing parents to time their pregnancy for right birth month

Parents are timing their pregnancies to coincide with desirable zodiac sign birth months – and it’s a phenomenon that stretches back years.

Several parents are reportedly planning the conception so that nine months later their child will be born in the right month.

There’s multiple threads in Reddit dedicated to the trend.

“Has anyone tried their future children’s zodiac planning based on you and your s/o zodiac?” the Reddit question begins.

“My husband thinks I’m crazy for wanting to plan our next child according to signs so that when we do have another child we can all be compatible.”

Dozens weighed in, including one person who said: “Dad is a Gemini, mum is an Aquarius, and they planned me as a Gemini and I was born in the dead center of Gemini.

“I think it’s a great idea! My parents and I had an incredible relationship.”

Another added: “I like the idea of ​​adding a Libra. I have had three best friends that have been Libras so I thought maybe that could work!”

According to Vicebelief in zodiac signs is prevalent among multiple aspiring parents in America who plan when they want to conceive their child.

However, it doesn’t always go to plan.

The US outlet spoke to several parents who had their babies slightly too early or too late to fulfill their wishes of having the perfect zodiac sign.

Mackenzie Warren, from the US state of North Carolina, was hoping for a Scorpio child but her daughter ended up being Libra.

The couple tried again but deliberately delayed it hoping to avoid Pisces. The second time it worked, as they ended up in Aquarius.

Then there’s Kimberly Miller, from LA, who told the publication that she really didn’t want a Virgo child because that had been her mother’s zodiac, who was quite uptight.

Accordingly, when her due date approached, she tried all kinds of things to kick the process along as the Virgo months neared.

The mum-to-be ate ‘maternity salad’ and even underwent Buddhist chanting upon a friend’s suggestion.

Her daughter, now a teenager, is reportedly very laid-back despite being a Virgo.

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