• WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    F.D.A. Turmoil Keeps Spotlight on Its Commissioner
    The agencys high-level turnover and conflicting policy decisions on drug oversight have fueled concerns about the leadership of Dr. Marty Makary.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Want to Know Where the Market Is Going? Dont Trust This, or Any, Forecast.
    Wall Street stock gurus are making predictions again. Our columnist got into the game with a number he doesnt believe.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    After the Louvre Heist, Museums Look for Lessons to Help Stop Thieves
    Museums and the consultants who advise them have been busy reviewing their own precautions in the aftermath of the brazen daylight break-in at the Louvre.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    How the Army Caused Alarm in the Washington Skies Years Before a Fatal Crash
    An aged helicopter fleet and inexperienced pilots from nearby Fort Belvoir had raised widespread concern among local pilots before a midair collision killed 67 people.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    World shares advance after Japan raises its key interest rate to its highest level in 30 years
    A person walks in front of a chart showing Japan's Nikkei index at a securities firm Friday, Dec. 19, 2025, in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)2025-12-19T04:15:58Z World shares advanced on Friday after the Bank of Japan raised its key policy rate to its highest level in 30 years and U.S. inflation cooled more than expected.Germanys DAX gained 0.2% to 24,241.32, while the CAC 40 edged 0.1% higher to 8,156.83. Britains FTSE 100 gained less than 2 points to 9,838.83.Fridays 0.25 percentage point increase by the BOJ was widely expected. It took the benchmark rate to 0.75%, the highest since 1995, but still low compared with other major economies.In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 gained 1% to 49,507.21, leading the rise across Asias key markets.Following the BOJs decision, Japans benchmark 10-year government bond yield surpassed the 2% mark for the first time since May 2006. The U.S. dollar rose to 157.08 Japanese yen from 155.53 yen.Global investors had been bracing for reactions to the BOJs move, but markets appeared to take the decision in stride. The future for the S&P 500 rose 0.3%, while that for the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.1%. The Bank of Japans decision to raise interest rates at its meeting today was clearly signaled ahead of time and therefore came as no surprise, Abhijit Surya of Capital Economics said in a report, noting that financial markets had almost fully priced in a hike ahead of todays meeting. Hong Kongs benchmark Hang Seng rose almost 0.8% to 25,690.53, while the Shanghai Composite index added 0.4% to 3,890.45. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on In Seoul, the Kospi climbed 0.7% to 4,020.55. Australias S&P/ASX 200 picked up 0.4% to 8,621.40. Asias share gains were also built on optimism over more Fed rate cuts, after the U.S. on Thursday reported a lower-than-expected 2.7% rise in inflation for November, leaving potentially more room for the Fed to cut rates as the U.S. job market slows.On Thursday, European indexes gained after the Bank of England cut its key interest rate and the European Central Bank kept its rate steady. But Thursdays U.S. inflation update may also not move the needle that much at the Fed given how noisy economic reports have been following the 43-day U.S. governments shutdown. The inflation report was delayed eight days by the shutdown, which also prevented the Labor Department from compiling overall numbers for consumer prices and core inflation in October.The next monthly update on inflation, for December, could provide a better gauge of whats actually happening.In the U.S. on Thursday, the S&P 500 edged up 0.8% following a four-day losing streak. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.1% and the Nasdaq composite rose 1.4%.Technology stocks helped lift the U.S. stock market. Micron Technology, a key maker of memory chips, jumped 10.2% on stronger-than-expected profit and revenue for the latest quarter ending November as the company also delivered an upbeat forecast for upcoming revenue and profit.But investor concerns over an overblown AI bubble are still clouding the prospects of some companies which benefited big from the AI boom. Broadcom and Oracles shares had fallen significantly since last week. Oracles shares rose 0.9% on Thursday, while Broadcoms added 1.1%. Nvidia, the chip company thats become Wall Streets most influential because of its immense size, gained 1.8%.Another winner was Trump Media & Technology Group, which jumped 41.9% to trim some of its steep loss for the year so far, 69.3% coming into the day. The company, which began with President Donald Trumps Truth Social platform and then moved into cryptocurrencies and various other lines of business, is now moving into nuclear power. Its merging with TAE Technologies in an all-stock deal, and each company will own roughly half of the combined business. In other dealings early Friday, U.S. benchmark crude oil lost 16 cents to $55.84 per barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, shed 21 cents to $59.61 per barrel.The euro slipped to $1.1715 from $1.1724.The price of bitcoin rose 3.9% to about $88,000, according to CoinDesk. ELAINE KURTENBACH Based in Bangkok, Kurtenbach is the APs business editor for Asia, helping to improve and expand our coverage of regional economies, climate change and the transition toward carbon-free energy. She has been covering economic, social, environmental and political trends in China, Japan and Southeast Asia throughout her career. twitter mailto CHAN HO-HIM Chan covers China business, economy and finance for The Associated Press, reporting on key sectors from technology to trade. He is based in Hong Kong. mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Putin tells his annual news conference that the Kremlins military goals will be achieved in Ukraine
    Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures while speaking during his annual news conference and call-in show at Gostinny Dvor, in Moscow, on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Pavel Bednyakov)2025-12-19T09:12:32Z MOSCOW (AP) Russian President Vladimir Putin emphasized Friday that Moscows troops were advancing across the battlefield in Ukraine and voiced confidence that the Kremlin would achieve its goals militarily if Kyiv fails to agree to Russias conditions in peace talks.Speaking at his tightly orchestrated annual news conference, Putin declared that Russian forces have fully seized strategic initiative and would make more gains by the years end.In the early days of the conflict in 2022, Ukraines forces managed to thwart an attempt by Russias larger, better-equipped army, to capture the capital of Kyiv. But the fighting soon settled into grinding battles, and Moscows troops have made slow but steady progress over the years. Putin frequently touts this progress even though it is not the lightning advance many expected. Our troops are advancing all across the line of contact, faster in some areas or slower in some others, but the enemy is retreating in all sectors, Putin said at the live news conference, which is combined with a nationwide call-in show that offers Russians across the country the opportunity to ask questions of their leader. Putin, who has ruled the country for 25 years, has used the event to cement his power and air his views on domestic and global affairs. This year, observers are watching particularly for Putins remarks on Ukraine and the peace plan put forward by U.S. President Donald Trump. Despite an extensive diplomatic push, Washingtons efforts have run into sharply conflicting demands from Moscow and Kyiv.While the event often focuses heavily on domestic questions, Ukraine has dominated so far this year. Since the event is highly choreographed, that could reflect the Kremlins desire to assuage the public after nearly four years of fighting. Russian demands remain unchangedPutin reaffirmed that Moscow was ready for a peaceful settlement that would address the root causes of the conflict, a reference to the Kremlins tough conditions for a deal.Earlier this week, Putin warned that Moscow would seek to extend its gains in Ukraine if Kyiv and its Western allies reject the Kremlins demands.The Russian leader wants all the areas in four key regions captured by his forces, as well as the Crimean Peninsula, illegally annexed in 2014, to be recognized as Russian territory. He has also insisted that Ukraine withdraw from some areas in eastern Ukraine that Moscows forces havent captured yet. Kyiv has publicly rejected all these demands.The Kremlin has also insisted that Ukraine abandon its bid to join the Western NATO military alliance and warned that it wouldnt accept the deployment of any troops from NATO members and would view them as legitimate target.Putin also has repeatedly said that Ukraine must limit the size of its army and give official status to the Russian language demands he has made from the onset of the conflict.Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has expressed readiness to drop Ukraines bid to join NATO if the U.S. and other Western nations give Kyiv security guarantees similar to those offered to alliance members. But at the same time, he has emphasized that Ukraines preference remains NATO membership as the best security guarantee.The United States dont see us in NATO, for now, Zelenskyy said this week. Politicians change. Putin warns any seizure of Russian assets will backfire As it faces grinding Russian advances across the front line and relentless attacks on its energy facilities, Ukraine is in on the verge of bankruptcy and it desperately needs more cash from its Western allies.On Friday, European Union leaders agreed to provide a massive interest-free loan, but they failed to bridge differences with Belgium that would have allowed them to use frozen Russian assets to raise the funds.The leaders worked deep into night to reassure Belgium, where most of the frozen assets are held, that they would protect it from any retaliation from Moscow if it backed the plan, but as the talks bogged down the leaders eventually opted to borrow the money on capital markets.Putin commented that using the Russian assets to help Kyiv would have amounted to robbery, adding that the move would have spooked investors, dealing not only an image blow but undermining confidence in the eurozone. Putin says troop numbers are strongPutin told the audience that the flow of volunteer soldiers has remained strong, topping 400,000 this year. It was not possible to verify that claim since recruitment effort isnt open to independent scrutiny.But the government offers relatively high pay and extensive benefits to volunteer soldiers that have helped swell their ranks. The Kremlin says that it exclusively relies on volunteers to fight in Ukraine, but some media reports and rights groups have said that military officers often coerce conscripts into signing military contracts.Asked by a soldiers widow about the slowness in paying out a pension, Putin apologized and vowed that the issue would be quickly solved an exchange typical of the annual event, which the Russian leader often uses to show his command of a wide array of subjects and his ability to solve problems.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    A sunrise crowd gathers at Bondi Beach in solace and defiance after a massacre
    Surfers and swimmers head out to the ocean as a tribute following Sunday's shooting at Bondi Beach, in Sydney, Friday, Dec. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Steve Markham,File)2025-12-19T09:08:39Z SYDNEY (AP) In the first full day of opening since a mass shooting driven by antisemitism killed 15 people at Australias famed Bondi Beach on Sunday, thousands of people returned to the waterfront Friday to commemorate the losses and try to heal through a sense of community.In a hastily organized event, people gathered shoulder to shoulder on Bondis pristine crescent of sand and then formed an enormous circle in the ocean in an expression of solidarity among Sydneys residents and support for the Jewish community. Police reopened parts of the beach Thursday, sparking a return to one of the countrys beloved landmarks five days after two shooters attacked a Hanukkah celebration at a park near the shore, killing 15 people.With questions emerging about whether Australian Jews were sufficiently protected from the threat of attack, and fears of a backlash against Muslims, armed police officers stood guard outside synagogues and mosques in Sydney on Friday. Strangers embraced and wept during the morning commemoration. Some people stood in prayer near fluttering remains of crime scene tape and the shoes abandoned as people fled the horror of the shooting. Those who joined the circle in the ocean observed a minutes silence for the dead, the wounded and those who rushed into danger to save them. The calm and comfort of beach life begins to returnLife also began returning to normal on the sand and boardwalk, where people jogged, walked dogs and sipped coffee as the hum of everyday life at Bondi Beach. In a country where mass shootings are rare and most people pride themselves on an ability to get along, Australians have been stricken and bewildered by the attack. Many looked to cope as they always have, by rising at dawn, donning swimsuits, grabbing surfboards and making their way to the beach. Some of the beachgoers expressed a fervent wish that Australias relaxed and friendly way of life would continue undisturbed.Ive grown up here my whole life, 22-year-old swimmer Jack Hobbs said. Today was a reminder of the amazing people where we live and what this communitys built on. Australians inspired by stories of heroismIn the days after the attack, Australians have celebrated those who helped in the aftermath or threw themselves into harms way to save lives. In a land repeatedly tested by wildfires, floods and other natural disasters, resilience is forged through pulling together in tough times. Many have embraced the stories of heroism that emerged after the shooting. Ahmed al Ahmed, an Australian Muslim store owner who was born in Syria, tackled and disarmed one of the two gunmen before he was shot and wounded by the other. It was a nice day, everyone enjoying celebrating with their kids, al Ahmed said from his hospital bed in a video posted to social media Friday. They deserve to enjoy and its their right.His message was to stand together, all human beings, he said.Australia is the best country in the world, al Ahmed said. He raised a fist and, in a faint voice, pronounced a phrase engendering national pride among Australians everywhere: Aussie, Aussie, Aussie. Tensions about antisemitism lingerAl Ahmeds remarks reflected a national mood of solidarity, which included a menorah beamed onto the sails of Sydneys famous opera house and the citys residents queueing for hours to donate blood. In a national record, nearly 35,000 donations were made and more than 100,000 appointments booked since Monday, according to Lifeblood, a branch of the Australian Red Cross.Through their grief, the families of three Jewish people who died trying to stop the slaughter, Reuven Morrison and Boris and Sofia Gurman, also celebrated their courage.But a fraught debate has grown in Australia about how to quell the hateful ideologies that apparently drove Sundays shooting, while Jewish leaders spoke of their grief and rage that the horror had been able to unfold. There have been various leaders present here from various parts of the spectrum, trying to kind of groom political capital, Andrew Stephen said, standing at the beach close to what has become a makeshift memorial of bouquets. But these community gatherings have been really good, said Stephen, 53, who has lived at Bondi for more than 20 years. People are wanting to connect.On Saturday, Bondi Beachs lifeguards will return six days after members of their service became first responders by running toward the gunfire barefoot and clutching first aid kits. As the familiar sight of their red and yellow flags are planted in the sand to direct beachgoers where to swim, another marker of life at Australias most famous beach will return. ___Smith reported from Newcastle, Australia, and Graham-McLay reported from Wellington, New Zealand. CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-MCLAY Graham-McLay is an Associated Press reporter covering regional and national stories about New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific Islands by putting them in a global context. She is based in Wellington. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    How the FDAs Lax Generic Drug Rules Put Her Life at Risk
    Wrapped in a flashy fur coat shed found at a thrift store for the occasion, Hannah Goetz blew out the candles on her favorite red velvet cheesecake. It was her 21st birthday. The celebration with her family that evening in February 2023 was a milestone not just for her age, but because she was alive.Three and a half years before, her lungs had collapsed from cystic fibrosis. She was saved by a double-lung transplant that had been allowing her to breathe deeply. Hannah had slowly worked her way back to stable health, overcoming infections and, every day, taking a crucial medication to protect her donated lungs from rejection. Her doctors were optimistic.Hannah had been feeling well enough to sing karaoke, work as a nanny while taking college classes and begin her first adult relationship, with a Navy sailor. Her 21st birthday gift from her mom was a trip to Nashville, Tennessee, where the two of them and their friends could explore the citys music scene and cavort in its bars.Just days after her birthday, though, she was back in the hospital. Shed been feeling her chest tighten, and she struggled for air. By March, Hannah felt as if she were breathing through a straw. Tests showed she was taking in less than half the oxygen of a healthy person.One of the first questions came from her transplant teams pharmacist, who had overseen her medications since her operation.Did the tacrolimus pills you take change? he asked.Most people have never heard of tacrolimus. But to anybody who has received a transplant, its nothing short of a miracle. The medication prevents organ rejection. Without tacrolimus, a simple capsule taken twice a day, cells in the blood identify the transplanted organ as a foreign invader and treat it like an infection, trying to rid the body of it. That attack can be fatal.A team of Japanese scientists discovered tacrolimus in the 1980s, in a fungus found in the soil of a lush, purple-hued mountain north of Tokyo.Along with another similar drug, tacrolimus radically improved the long-term prospects of transplant patients. The chances that a donated organ would still work after a year roughly doubled for those who used the drugs. Recipients of kidney, heart and liver transplants started living years longer. So did lung patients, but the challenges of those transplants meant the increases in lifespan were smaller.By the numbers, if Hannah made it past her first year, she could expect her new lungs to give her nine more years of life.Hannah was upbeat during regular two-week hospital stays she dances here during one visit in 2015 which were often needed to treat infections after she was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis. Courtesy of Holly GoetzHannah was in fourth grade in 2012 when doctors figured out that her regular bouts of bronchitis and her struggle to gain weight were caused by cystic fibrosis, a genetic disease that leads to mucus building up in the lungs and other organs. The disease is ultimately fatal.Ten-year-old Hannah sat listening for hours as a medical team explained the diagnosis to her and detailed how it was treated. The doctors managed to avoid any discussion of mortality, and it wasnt until Hannah got home that she found the answer she sought online. At that time, the median lifespan was less than 40 years. Mom, she asked, did you know I wont live as long as most people?Holly Goetz, a high school teacher who was newly divorced and shouldered almost all of her daughters care, tried to reassure Hannah. Her case wasnt severe, she told her daughter. And new advancements could improve the outlook.Hannah didnt dwell on the diagnosis, and she managed to keep up with peers in her Isle of Wight, Virginia, school, playing soccer and singing in musicals. Like any tween, she documented every moment of her life in a series of selfie videos. In one from fourth grade, she chatted to the camera as if she were a jocular TV host, capturing the twice-a-day event when she wore a device that looked like a life preserver and shook her chest to break up the mucus in her lungs. Here I am, vibrating, whooo! she trilled in rhythm with the pink vest. She ended the video, See you next time on Vest Treatment with Hannah.Sometimes, she also needed a feeding tube hooked up to her stomach at night to ensure her body absorbed enough calories. And there were occasional two-week stints at the local childrens hospital for a course of antibiotics.Still, she graduated high school a year early, as a 17-year-old, in June 2019. That month, sporting purple streaks in her hair, shed gone with her family to the Caribbean to celebrate her achievement. She was looking forward to attending Longwood University, a couple of hours west from her hometown.Hannah, whose signature pose was sticking her tongue out, was relatively healthy during her teen years despite having cystic fibrosis at least, until she was 17.One afternoon not long after returning from the trip, Hannah told her mom she was feeling sick. Holly packed up, thinking they were headed to the hospital for a standard tune up.This time, though, Hannah quickly went from sitting up in her hospital bed, mouthing along with the Frozen song Do You Want to Build a Snowman? to a ventilator in the pediatric ICU. She had pneumonia, which was filling her already clogged lungs with even more fluid. Hannah also had an infection from a rare bacteria that had caused sepsis, a type of potentially lethal inflammation. Before Holly could process what was happening, Hannah was in an ambulance, being transferred three hours north to the better equipped Inova Fairfax Medical Campus.The doctors said the prognosis was dire: Hannahs lungs were too damaged to recover, and she needed a double-lung transplant. But the infection was proving insurmountable. Hannah was stuck on the wrong side of an agonizingly thin line: A patient needs to be severely compromised to qualify for a replacement organ; but if theyre too gravely ill, theyre ineligible.The transplant team proposed something bold. The only way to give Hannah a chance, they said, was to remove both of her lungs without knowing whether theyd find new ones for her in the hopes that if they went, so too would the infection. That would clear the way for her to be added to the transplant list.For four days, Hannah lay unconscious in the ICU with no lungs while machines pumped her heart and tubes the size of garden hoses circulated oxygen through her body. Holly curled her lanky frame into a chair by Hannahs bedside every night. She prayed first that the infection would clear and then, later, that a lung donor would be found.The risky move was a success. When Hannah awoke in August, fully conscious for the first time in three weeks, she had no memory of what had happened. Her mom told her everything was going to be OK; she had new lungs.Hannah spent 67 days recuperating in the hospital. At first, she could only take a few tentative steps from her bed with the aid of both a walker and a nurse. She ultimately strode out of the hospital with her arms flung above her head in triumph. Doctors marveled, saying that Hannah had been saved by her youth and surprisingly healthy body.Hannah posed for a picture with her care team, including transplant pharmacist Adam Cochrane, and her mom, Holly Goetz, the day she was discharged from the hospital in 2019 after her transplant. Courtesy of Holly GoetzMedications are so central to recovery from a transplant that the federal government requires hospitals to assign a pharmacy expert as part of a patients team. For Hannah, that person was Adam Cochrane, a specially trained transplant pharmacist with two decades of experience who worked exclusively with lung- and heart-transplant patients.Cochrane, who has a calm, measured disposition, tried not to overwhelm Hannah and her mom as he taught them about the lineup of pills Hannah now needed to take. The daily regime was critical. She cant live without these medications, he told them. Hannah would need to take tacrolimus twice a day at the same time every day for the rest of her life.Tacrolimus is part of a special category of drugs that work only if the dose is calibrated within a very narrow range. Any amount outside that window can be dangerous, particularly for lung transplant patients, who face high rates of rejection. To make sure Hannah was getting the correct dose of tacrolimus, Inova would test her blood every other week to start and then once a month after that. (Inova said that it doesnt comment on individual cases but that it collaborates closely with transplant recipients to ensure they access appropriate medications to maximize the likelihood of a successful outcome.)Theres no formula that tells Cochrane what dosage each patient needs, so he tinkered to find the sweet spot. He thought of it as a teeter-totter. Too much tacrolimus and the immune system would dip too weak to ward off infection. Too little tacrolimus, and the immune system would tip too strong and attack the transplanted organ. Cochrane knew that a steep tip in either direction was potentially catastrophic.For years, tacrolimus was made by one company, now called Astellas, which had discovered and patented the drug. When generic versions arrived 15 years later, none behaved in the body exactly like the original tacrolimus or like one another. To make a generic, most companies have to reverse engineer the brand drug; theres no recipe to follow. Each generic is a distinct formula made in a distinct way.As with all generics, the tacrolimus versions approximated the original within a broad range set by the Food and Drug Administration. In general terms, its how much a generic can differ from the original brand in the amount of the key ingredient that reaches the relevant part of the body and when.As the FDA considered the first generic version of tacrolimus in the mid-2000s, the agency had to decide whether there should be stricter rules for generic versions of the small number of drugs like tacrolimus that require such precision dosing. Canada and the European Union both adopted tighter standards. Those governments essentially halved the range considered to be a match for the brand drug.But the U.S. continued with a one-size-fits all approach, allowing the looser standards that treated tacrolimus like any other generic drug. The agency said in 2009 that it was confident that its method for approving generic tacrolimus uses appropriate bioequivalence standards.The FDA approved the first generic version of tacrolimus that same year. In May 2010, one made by an Indian generics company called Dr. Reddys was approved. The next year, so was one made by another Indian company called Intas, whose U.S. brand is called Accord.In all, six generics were greenlit before the FDA reversed course and decided in 2012 that tacrolimus should, after all, be made under tighter criteria. But the rule applied only to companies newly approved to sell a generic version of tacrolimus. The agency did not require Dr. Reddys, Accord and the others already on the market to meet the new standard. The agency stated later in a public filing that it doesnt retroactively apply new standards to existing products.Almost from the beginning, some transplant doctors had raised concerns that patients on Dr. Reddys tacrolimus were faring worse than those on other generics. The Cleveland Clinic was so alarmed that it banned Dr. Reddys generic for its transplant patients in 2013. Later, at the Tulane Transplant Institute, doctors found that patients taking generic tacrolimus by any drugmaker had a higher chance of organ rejection, and the hospital decided to use only the brand drug.At Inova, Cochrane had noticed irregular fluctuations in patients taking Dr. Reddys as well as early signs of organ rejection. Omg! Another [patient], victim of Dr Reddy, an Inova nurse wrote in a 2019 email obtained by ProPublica.Holly knew none of this when she picked up her daughters tacrolimus at the local Kroger grocery store after Hannahs discharge in the fall of 2019. (Kroger didnt respond to requests for comment.) Unlike with Hannahs medical care, where Holly could research and choose a doctor or hospital, the brand of generic tacrolimus Hannah received was out of her hands. She would get whichever one that pharmacy happened to have in stock.Inovas transplant team had typed, in the electronic prescription that it sent to Kroger, do not dispense Dr. Reddy. But thats what Hannah received.Just months after Hannah was discharged from the hospital with her new lungs, COVID-19 shut down the world. Holly couldnt believe she had to be on guard against yet another threat, one so dangerous to her immunocompromised daughter. Lungs are among the trickiest organs to protect, in part because they draw in germs in the air with every breath.Despite those threats, Holly found a kind of appreciation for the moment. The pandemic meant she could keep 18-year-old Hannah, otherwise eager to leap back into life, tucked away at home during her perilous first year after the transplant. When shed first been discharged, Hannah had shown a streak of teenage rebelliousness. She was quick to drive off in the pumpkin-colored Jeep Holly had given her and get tattoos and piercings, risking infections that transplant patients were supposed to avoid.Holly Goetz in her bedroom this yearHannah lived through the COVID-19 quarantine with her mom and younger brother in their modest clapboard house on a neat suburban street. The three of them, and their newly adopted St. Bernard-poodle mix, Miracle, made dance videos together, and at night, Hannah curled up to sleep in her moms bed rather than head to her own room.That year, Hannahs lung function improved to normal levels as her body grew stronger. When the pandemic began to recede in 2021 and Hannah ventured out more, Holly remained diligent about her daughters tacrolimus, making sure she took it every morning and night. Holly insisted Hannah either send a video of her taking the medication or FaceTime while she did so.Cochrane and the team observed fluctuations in Hannahs tacrolimus levels. Theyd adjust her dosage to try to keep her at the optimal amount. Cochrane concluded that Hannah was perhaps not taking her medication at the same time every day, he told ProPublica. Thats not unusual for young patients. Her adherence to other drugs unrelated to rejection had proved spotty. Hannah wasnt always diligent about taking the enzymes she needed to aid her pancreas and keep her weight up, and she declined to continue a new cystic fibrosis medication that she didnt feel was giving her results.But Cochrane said he didnt think any sloppiness with her tacrolimus meds fully explained the wild swings he often saw when she was admitted to the hospital to treat an infection. His experience with other patients had convinced him that the generic versions of tacrolimus varied significantly, enough to harm the health of a patient.During one inpatient stay at Inova in August 2021, Cochrane gave Hannah the same dose of tacrolimus she took at home. But he used a different generic from the hospitals pharmacy. Cochrane expected to see steady levels of the drug in Hannahs system. Instead, the amount of tacrolimus was much higher than it had been. He said he couldnt remember why he didnt ask Hannah about which brand of generic she was using.During the COVID-19 quarantine, Peyton, Hannahs brother, would make dance videos with her and their mom.Well before Hannah began taking the drug, there had been concerns inside the FDA about whether tacrolimus generics were being made correctly, according to an agency drug official who was there at the time. The manufacturing process for tacrolimus is particularly complex.The medical community had kept pushing the FDA to do more to verify the effectiveness of tacrolimus generics, and in 2013 the agency acquiesced and commissioned a study. That study, which was completed in 2015 and included Dr. Reddys, identified a problem with one generic: the version made by Accord. It didnt mimic the brand drug as it was supposed to.But the agency decided those results were not definitive. The FDA didnt make the findings public, and Accords tacrolimus remained on the market.In 2021, an FDA-commissioned follow-up study showed unequivocally that Accord was not equivalent to the brand drug, potentially delivering too much medication to the patient. But once again, the FDA did not warn the public. Accord continued to be sold as usual.A few months later, in December 2021, Kroger began filling Hannahs prescription with Accords version of tacrolimus.At first, the new generic seemed to have no negative effect. Hannah had fewer bouts of infection than the year before. She was feeling the best she had since the operation, faring well enough that Holly thought it was OK to leave her for the first time and go on a cruise.That year, in July 2022, Hannah marked her three-year transplant anniversary on Instagram with a close-up picture of her bad ass scars. They were a sort of tattoo she hadnt chosen, but, as she wrote, they will always remind me that I got a second chance.Both Hannah and her mom were taken by surprise when Hannahs breaths became shallow around the time of her 21st birthday in 2023.i wish i was out and about with friends and family enjoying the weather but unfortunately my reality has been me cooped up in a hospital room, she posted to Instagram in March. I put on a brave face for all my loved ones, but deep down it affects me everyday.Hannah celebrated her lungiversary one year by taking the roof and doors off her orange Jeep and convincing her cousin to get matching Saturn and moon tattoos. Courtesy of Holly GoetzThe next month, tests confirmed that Hannahs lung function had declined precipitously. If shed been breathing through a soda straw before, now it was closer to the thin red ones used to stir coffee.Cochrane asked what brand of tacrolimus she was taking. He always had to sleuth a bit to figure out what might be going on; perhaps a patient had chronic digestive problems or their diet had changed, affecting the absorption of tacrolimus. He was most concerned that a patient had been on Dr. Reddys. Cochrane was not suspicious of Accord at the time; the FDA hadnt made its study results public.Holly went home after the conversation with Cochrane and scoured her medicine cabinets. It was the first time shed ever had a reason to look at the manufacturer. Cochrane had trusted pharmacies to follow Inovas instructions, and so he hadnt previously warned Holly to avoid Dr. Reddys. Sure enough, Hannah had old bottles labeled Dr. Reddys. Cochrane told Holly to throw them away.For more than three years, Hannah had exclusively taken tacrolimus manufactured by companies that had alarmed either doctors, pharmacists or the FDA. Cochrane would later wonder if there had been a cumulative effect chronic rejection is sneaky and slow and Hannah had now reached a tipping point. Her donated lungs were failing.Hannahs mood darkened as her decline accelerated. In April 2023, back at her local hospital yet again, she snapped at the nurses. Everyone was always telling her how strong she was, she fumed. She wanted out of that room. When she counted the days shed been home rather than hospitalized since late January, she realized it had been only 20.I dont want to do this again, Hannah told her longtime respiratory therapist.Anxiety gripped her at all hours. She couldnt breathe.That month, a biopsy had confirmed that her body was rejecting her lungs, precisely what tacrolimus was supposed to prevent. The damage was irreversible.Once again, theyve decided i need new lungs, Hannah wrote on Instagram. Its happening a lot sooner than anyone expected.Hannah checked into Inova in June with the expectation that she would have a second lung transplant. But as she got increasingly sick, she spent the next five weeks being moved between the transplant wing and the ICU two floors below. Holly was vigilant by her side. When Hannah lashed out because there was a tear in her pink security blanket, the one shed had every time she was hospitalized since she was 10, Holly paid someone double to patch it in one hour. She followed doctors into the hallway after they checked on Hannah. Her daughter had done everything theyd asked of her. When was she getting new lungs?Doctors wanted Hannah to be able to stand up and walk, a sign she was strong enough to survive a second transplant. Holly encouraged Hannah to push through the discomfort, thinking to herself, Youve got to show them you want to live. Hannah lacked the energy to even speak most days. She agreed when the transplant team proposed a tracheostomy, a surgical procedure to place a tube into her windpipe to help her breathe. That way, she could have the benefit of a portable ventilator and still do the required physical therapy. On a sheet of printer paper, she wrote in shaky letters that she needed the vent.hurryhurryAt 3 in the afternoon after Hannah received the tracheostomy, the transplant team called a meeting with Hannahs family. Standing in a conference room in clothes shed worn for days, Holly listened in shock as doctors explained that Inova would no longer consider Hannah for a transplant. Hannah was underweight, she had poor kidney function that would likely require dialysis and she had a persistent sinus infection. Hannah was simply too fragile.How could you deny someone so young? Holly asked again and again. What about the medication, the Dr. Reddys? No one had told her to look out for that until Hannah was already in rejection. Didnt they owe her another chance?Over the next few days, while Hannah was sedated, Inova searched for other transplant programs. Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia was the only facility willing to evaluate her. Shed have to start over with a new transplant team.Whos going to tell Hannah? Holly asked. It wasnt going to be her.Hannah lacked the energy to speak most days, so she would communicate by writing on printer paper. She asked for a ventilator to help her breathe.Hannah lay in the intensive care unit with her blond hair slicked back off her face, puffy from the side effects of aggressive medications. She was gently roused from sedation. Several transplant doctors hovered at her bedside. Hannah looked with confusion at her mom and grasped her hand.Christopher King, Hannahs favorite among her transplant doctors, tried to help her understand what was happening. Youve been a little bit in the dark for the last day or so. Youve been sedated, King said. Things have changed a little bit over that time.He told her he wasnt sure shed survive a second transplant. He didnt want to put her through more suffering if, in the end, it wouldnt help. We dont think we should offer you a transplant here, he said.Hannah, unable to speak because of the tracheostomy tube, reached her pale hand for a marker and wrote on a small dry erase board: I dont wanna die. Im only 21.King told her she could go to Temple, but she would need to be off the ventilator during the day and be able to walk a lap around the ICU to be eligible for a transplant. Even if she could do that, a transplant was not guaranteed.Do you want me to give you some time? King asked.Holly watched her daughter fade back into sedation, and she knew: Hannah was done fighting. Holly had begged the surgeon to do everything to keep Hannah alive. She had begged the director of the transplant program. She had begged other hospitals. She would not beg her daughter.Im sorry, Hannah wrote after waking a short time later. She didnt want to try for a second transplant. She was ready to let go.Hannah took her brothers hand and made him promise he wouldnt forget her. She FaceTimed with friends, mouthing that she loved them. She pushed to stay awake for goodbyes with her father, grandparents and other family.As nighttime fell, Holly sat by Hannahs side, in the glow of two lava lamps. Holly told her how proud she was and that she understood that she couldnt do it any more. Youve made me so happy, she said. Holly was sorry she hadnt done something more to save her.Hannah was gasping for air. She needed more Dilaudid, an opioid that is about five times stronger than morphine.Holly knew it was time. She walked out into the harsh light of the nurses station and requested the drugs that would slip her daughter into unconsciousness for good. Is this really happening? she thought to herself. Did I just talk to her for the last time?At 10:48 p.m., the doctors removed Hannahs ventilator.Holly found a note in Hannahs phone: dear mom, i think eventually you will find this, and when you do i dont want you to get sad. She assured her mom shed had a great life, and you truly are my best friend.i fought so hard and this time luck just wasnt on my side.Holly and Peyton, who is now 19When Hannah died at 8:19 in the morning on July 16, 2023, eight years had gone by since the FDAs first study raised questions about Accord. Two years had passed since the FDA had definitive results that Accord didnt match the brand-name medication.Two months after her death, in September 2023, the FDA finally took public action. The agency announced that Accords tacrolimus doesnt provide the same therapeutic effect as the original brand-name medication. That step would stop many prescriptions, since some states bar pharmacists from automatically dispensing a generic flagged in that manner. Still, in the very next sentence, the FDA added, the pills remain FDA-approved and can be prescribed. The agency told ProPublica that it needed two years to review and release the study results in order to evaluate the potential public health impact and determine what to do about the drug. (The FDA answered questions about its handling of tacrolimus generics but didnt respond to questions about Hannahs specific case.)The problem, the agency stated, was that Accords drug could provide a toxic dose to a patient. But the FDA said that did not cause an increased risk for organ rejection, because the amount of drug in the body when measured at its lowest concentration was not significantly different than the brand drug.The FDA should have moved quicker, Janet Woodcock, the longtime head of drug safety for the agency, told ProPublica. This obviously is a quality problem with Accord, Woodcock, who retired in 2024, said. Scientists had gotten caught up in debate about how significant the results were, she said. That doesnt excuse the fact that the agency should immediately jump on these things and try to sort them out, she said, adding that tacrolimus for transplant patients is crucial to health and should be right.An Accord spokesperson said in a statement that the company can not comment on individual cases but that it is dedicated to patient safety, product quality and regulatory compliance. Accord maintains that its tacrolimus is safe and effective. The FDA recommended in 2023 that the company do new studies to prove its bioequivalence, but shortly after, the FDA banned two of Accords factories in India from selling drugs in the United States, citing a cascade of failure in the companys manufacturing. The work on tacrolimus is on hold while the import ban remains in place.ProPublica hired Valisure, an independent lab, to test both Accords and Dr. Reddys tacrolimus. Valisure used peer-reviewed methods designed to compare the quality of generics, a method adopted by the Department of Defense. The tests concluded that Accord dissolved too quickly, raising the possibility of too much active ingredient at the outset and then too little after the surge. In tests that focused on dosage, three out of seven sample batches didnt provide enough of the medication, including pills that were supposed to be 0.5 milligram, 1 milligram and 5 milligram doses.Dr. Reddys tacrolimus, which is still sold in the U.S., also fared poorly. The lab found that it dissolved up to twice as fast as the brand-name drug. A 2021 study by Cleveland Clinic doctors found similar results.A Dr. Reddys spokesperson said in a statement that the companys version of tacrolimus was approved based on rigorous studies; the statement added that all batches sold in the United States have met FDA specifications and FDA studies didnt reveal any problems with its tacrolimus. The company said the independent lab did not use the FDA-approved testing method, so the results cannot be considered an accurate representation of Dr. Reddys dissolution performance. Dr. Reddys did not receive a complaint about Hannahs case nor any other complaints that indicated any concerns in patient safety, according to the statement. Patient safety and consistent product performance remain our highest priorities.Hospitals like Inova and the Cleveland Clinic today advise patients not to take Dr. Reddys and Accords tacrolimus. Cochrane had another lung transplant patient die this year after experiencing rejection that he ties to Dr. Reddys tacrolimus. Like Hannah, the patient received that brand despite Inovas instructions on the prescription, and its impossible to say with certainty what caused the organ rejection. Since 2019, Cochrane has reported to the FDA database that tracks adverse events related to drugs four episodes in which he suspected that Dr. Reddys tacrolimus contributed to organ failure or the death of a patient.Cochrane understands that patients could use brand-name tacrolimus and still suffer organ rejection. And no one knows what exactly caused it in Hannahs case.But Cochrane told ProPublica, I believe her medicine contributed to her rejection.Holly wants to hold someone accountable, but its extremely difficult to sue the FDA and lawyers told her it was impossible to draw a straight line from Hannahs death to a generic manufacturer.Holly is tortured by the question of whether Hannah would still be alive if she had been on a different brand of tacrolimus: I just wish I had known.These days, with Hannahs younger brother at college, Hollys house feels too quiet. Each night, she falls asleep holding Hannahs worn pink blanket.Hannahs bedroomThe post How the FDAs Lax Generic Drug Rules Put Her Life at Risk appeared first on ProPublica.
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SAM MEDNICK Mednick is an AP correspondent for Israel and the Palestinian Territories. She focuses on conflict, humanitarian crises and human rights abuses. Mednick formerly covered West & Central Africa and South Sudan. twitter
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  • THEONION.COM
    Community Does Jack Shit To Make Christmas Better For Towns Second-Poorest Family
    WAYNE, NEAfter coming together and pooling resources to save Christmas for the towns most impoverished family, a tight-knit Nebraska community reportedly did jack shit this week to make the holiday better for its second-poorest family. Getting to see the smiles on the Turner kids faces when they realized they were going to have a merry Christmas after all was a heartwarming moment that made me feel proud to live in a small town like ours, said elementary school teacher Linda Clark, who sure as fuck didnt bake a Christmas ham for the Hoffman family two blocks away, who are functionally just as poor. The holidays are a time when we make sure were looking out for the least fortunate members of our community. As for the second-least, well, its a slippery slope. I mean, if you spend all day decorating a Christmas tree for the second-poorest family, then the third-poorest is going to want help buying presents, and pretty soon youre on the hook for everybody, which, come on, sounds like a total nightmare. Of course, we wanted to help the Hoffmans out, but after all the charitable acts we just did for the Turners in order to emulate Christ during this season of giving, we were pretty wiped out. But if theres one thing I know about our little town, its that if youre down on your luck enough to be clearly the worst one off, well be there to lift you up. At press time, reports confirmed the Hoffman family was looking through a window at the town Christmas party being thrown for the Turners, which they had not been invited to attend.The post Community Does Jack Shit To Make Christmas Better For Towns Second-Poorest Family appeared first on The Onion.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Student Whos Been In 3 School Shootings Starting To Think This Might Be About Him
    MACKINSHAW, NEEmphasizing that he didnt want to seem paranoid but it was the only way he could make sense of it all, high school senior Geoffrey Lesseder stated Monday that he was starting to suspect the three school shootings he had been in might be about him. At first I thought it was due to a lack of universal background checks, but now it feels personal, said Lesseder, adding that despite attending multiple high schools in states with vastly different gun laws, high-caliber rifle bullets always seemed to fly in classrooms when he was present. I dont want to be too self-centered, but what is the common thread that connects all these shootings, if not me? God, do all these shooters just think Im annoying? I especially got weird vibes from that last onethe way he glared at me as I was clamoring past my dying classmates toward the supply closet it was like he hated me or something. At press time, Lesseder had reportedly decided he would know for sure if there was a fourth school shooting in his vicinity.The post Student Whos Been In 3 School Shootings Starting To Think This Might Be About Him appeared first on The Onion.
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  • WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COM
    The Easiest Rental Upgrade Youll Ever Make (It Changes Everything)
    The often overlooked detail that makes your place a home. READ MORE...
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Pentatonix's Scott Hoying & husband Mark Hoying dish on starting a family (exclusive)
    The big day is finally coming!Over the last couple of years, adorable hubbies Scott Hoying and Mark Hoying teased that they were closer than ever to having a baby. Well, 2026 is the year that dream will become a reality!After announcing to the world that the couple is expecting their first child via surrogate during Dedication Night on Dancing With the Stars, the Pentatonix frontman shared just how excited they are to begin the next chapter of their lives."Family's been the theme of this year! We're starting a family officially. The book Fa La La Family means so much to us. A big thing on Dancing With the Stars is they always say, 'This is a family.' That's been the theme of this year," Scott Hoying tells PRIDE. See on Instagram As the duo preps for fatherhood, Mark Hoying is proving to be the world's most supportive husband as he cheers on Scott Hoying at Dancing With the Stars or front row at all of the tour dates on Pentatonix's nationwide Christmas in the City Tour."People of all ages are being exposed to all of this new type of love that usually doesn't get to be shown on TV. I'm so proud of that! That's something that I feel like Scott did really a good job representing this season," Mark Hoying says."I'm here to make the yuletide gay, because it's needed more than ever! This is going to be the best thing ever to show our child in the future," Scott Hoying adds.The pair's viral Dedication Night dance is one of the most magical memories for the husbands thus far! It's safe to say that they can't wait to eventually show the tear-jerking performance to their baby in the future."We get to show this to our baby and say, 'This dance and this Dedication Night was for you and dedicated to you!' Watching that 10, 15, 20 years from now is going to be so special. I just know I'm going to be balling watching it with him one day."Fans can follow Scott Hoying and Mark Hoying on Instagram. To see the full interview, check out the video at the top of the page.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    'Heated Rivalry' S1 E5 recap: confessions and the kiss that's a total game changer
    With a combination of intense gay yearning, quiet intimate moments, and sex that feels transgressive to see on TV, the first four episodes of Heated Rivalry have been building to a crescendo where our beloved hockey boys finally admit that they have feelings for each other.After crashing out when Ilya said his first name while they were having sex and stumbling his way into a relationship with Hollywood starlet Rose Landry, we start the episode with Shane waking up after having spent a disappointing night with his new girlfriend. Shane might not realize how bad an idea lying to himself about his sexuality and pretending to be straight is, but luckily, Rose clocks the issue right away. The pair meet up for dinner, where Rose acts like the best friend a closeted gay guy could hope for when she tells him that they are like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole, and gently gets Shane to admit he likes sleeping with men. This also means that fans of the Rachel Reid book the show is adapted from finally got the line of dialogue theyve been eagerly waiting for: The thing is, I kind of prefer being the hole than the peg, Shane says.When both men end up traveling to Florida for the All-Star Game, Shane tells Ilya that he and Rose are no longer together because they arent compatible a word Ilya has to look up later in the episode so he came alone. This episode also shows a more playful side of Ilya as he plays with a group of kids in the pool and then shakes his hair all over Shane.Shane and Ilya have another secret rendezvous in a hotel room over All-Star weekend, but instead of it being about hot sex, this time they actually get real with each other. If episode 4 broke your heart, just wait, because while there are plenty of joyful and hopeful moments this week, there are also scenes that will rend your heart in two.Shane finally says the words outloud and tells Ilya hes gay, and we get a moment of brevity where Ilya is basically like duh, before things take a turn for the serious. Shane tries to push for Ilya to admit that things changed between them after the tuna melt scene from the last episode and asks, Its not just me, right? But Ilya tells him, We cant be something Hollander because if anyone finds out hes bisexual and having sex with a man, it will never be safe for him to return to Russia again: I wouldnt be able to go home again. Ever. Do you get that?Then we get a rare moment of vulnerability and intimacy when Ilya tells Shane that his father has dementia and Shane holds him while he cries, and when Shane leaves after the two have sex off camera, they both call each other by their first names a nod to the previous episode's emotional debacle that had Shane running into Roses arms.Ilyas dad dies, forcing him to return to his home country, where he gets into a fight with his brother, who called Svetlana a whore and finally cuts him off. Feeling lost and depressed, Ilya calls Shane, who suggests he say everything hes feeling in Russian, even though Shane wont understand a word of it. Fans of the book have been talking endlessly about wanting to see this scene because in the novel, you're left in the dark, just like Shane, except for Ilya's final line.He tells Shane about feeling used by his family and being sad that he wasnt there to take care of his father, even though he never had a kind word for Ilya. Now that his father is dead, he feels like he has no one, except Svetlana, who he loves, but not like I love you. Thats the worst fucking part of all of this is that all I want is you. Its always you. Im so in love with you, and I dont know what to do about it, he admits in Russian.Once Ilya is back in the U.S., he and Shane face off on the ice, but Shane takes a bad hit and gets knocked out and taken to the hospital. Shane, loopy on painkillers when Ilya comes to visit him, invites Ilya to come stay at his remote cottage where they can be together in private for two weeks during the off-season, but Ilya knows he cant say yes.That is, until they are watching Scott Hunter the Admirals player we saw fall in love with a smoothie barista named Kip in episode 3 pull Kip onto the ice after he wins the Stanley Cup and plants a "game-changing" kiss on him on national television.The episode ends with Ilya calling Shane to say that hell come to the cottage, which means that episode 6 is about to get really spicy and extremely sweet.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    <i>Nature's</i> News & Views roundup of 2025
    Nature, Published online: 19 December 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-04065-6From astrophysics to genetics, climate change to materials science the News & Views team talk about some of their science highlights of 2025.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Our guide to every Week 16 NFL game: Matchup previews, predictions and what's at stake
    Must-win game for Lions? Can Dallas still make the postseason? We have picks, predictions and stats for every game.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    The race for No. 1 draft pick: Five teams still in the mix, plus prospects they might consider
    The Raiders, Browns, Titans, Giants and Jets are front-runners for the No. 1 pick. What would they do with the top selection?
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Could Aston Villa be crowned Premier League champions?
    Can third-place Aston Villa sustain a title challenge, and why are they like the 2024 Kansas City Chiefs?
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Did you know there are 13 active former No. 1 picks in the NFL? We examine them all
    Matthew Stafford, Myles Garrett are having the best seasons of all 13 of the former No. 1 picks currently in the NFL.
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