Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Shea Stephens. The Trump administration has announced deals with pharmaceutical giants Norvo Nordisk and Eli Lilly to lower the costs for popular anti-obesity drugs. NPR's Sydney Lupkin has more.
Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly's blockbuster obesity and type 2 diabetes drugs are the centerpiece of agreements announced by the White House. The drugs, Ozempic, Wegovy, Zepound, and Manjaro, will be available to the government at lower prices and to Medicare beneficiaries for a $50 copay.
The deals expand Medicare and Medicaid access for some but not all patients with obesity, and the arrangements would expand discounts available to patients buying the drugs through TrumpRx.gov, a website that is expected to launch before the end of the year.
Chapter 2: What agreements did the Trump administration announce regarding anti-obesity drugs?
The companies also promised that if experimental obesity pills they are developing win FDA approval, they will cost $149 per month for their starting doses. Sydney Lepkin, NPR News.
The U.S. Supreme Court has given President Trump the okay to require passport applicants to list their sex at birth without any accommodation for transgender individuals. As NPR's Nina Totenberg reports, the decision overturns a lower court ruling that blocked implementation of the passport plan.
In an unsigned opinion, the six-member conservative court majority was unusually blunt, declaring that the Trump administration was suffering a form of irreparable injury by not being allowed to carry out a policy with foreign affairs implications. In a strongly worded dissent,
Justice Katonji Brown-Jackson, speaking for the court's three liberals, accused the majority of once again paving the way for immediate infliction of injury without adequate or really any justification. Nina Totenberg, NPR News, Washington.
The Congressional Budget Office says it's been hit by a cyber attack partially disclosing government data to foreign actors. A spokesperson for the agency says steps have been taken to contain the situation. including adding new security controls. Israel has carried out new airstrikes in southern Lebanon, killing at least one person despite a U.S. broker's ceasefire reached last year.
And PR's Jawad Rasala has details.
At around noon local time, Israeli warplanes struck a village in southern Lebanon. The Israeli military said it was targeting what it called, quote, saboteurs in Hezbollah's construction unit. Later, the Israeli military issued evacuation warnings to residents in five other villages in the south, before striking what it said was Hezbollah's, quote, military infrastructure.
Neither Hezbollah nor the Lebanese state, which has vowed to disarm the militant group, have been responding to the year-long Israeli attacks, which have killed upward of 100 civilians, according to the UN. In a public letter to the Lebanese government, Hezbollah said it stands beside the army to defend Lebanese sovereignty. Shoaib Rizqallah, NPR News.
You're listening to NPR. For the second time in less than three months, Ukrainian drones have attacked a major oil refinery in southwest Russia, according to Ukraine's army's general staff. The facility is the largest producer of fuel and lubricants in Russia's southern federal district. and accounts for about 5% of the country's total refining capacity.
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