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Opinion - The ugly truth about the student loan caps in Trump's ‘big beautiful' law

Opinion - The ugly truth about the student loan caps in Trump's ‘big beautiful' law

Yahoo2 days ago
New federal student loan caps pose an urgent and overlooked threat to the health of all Americans. These changes will severely undermine the graduate education pipeline for the clinician workforce — including both nurses and physicians— jeopardizing access to care, straining the workforce and, ultimately, harming patients.
The bill, now signed into law, will cap graduate unsubsidized student loans at $20,500, with a $100,000 total cap on top of undergrad loans, and phase out Grad PLUS loans. These changes are especially detrimental for those pursuing clinician roles, such as nurse practitioners. Nurse practitioners play a crucial role, filling gaps in primary care — especially in rural and underserved communities. Their presence expands access, relieves pressure on healthcare systems and allows physicians to focus on the most complex cases.
Graduate education is not optional for becoming a nurse practitioner. Nor is it optional for becoming faculty to teach the next generation of physicians and nurses. Weakening the pipeline of advanced practice nurses doesn't just hurt nursing, it threatens the entire care delivery system.
For nursing, this is a moment where education is already strained. Nurses have left the profession en masse since the COVID-19 pandemic and older nurses are retiring. We urgently need more nurses and nurse educators in the pipeline. Yet in 2023, enrollment in bachelor's-level nursing programs grew by just 0.3 percent. Meanwhile, enrollment in master's and Ph.D. nursing programs declined by 0.9 percent and 3.1 percent, respectively. That same year, U.S. nursing schools turned away more than 65,000 qualified applications due to a lack of faculty, clinical placements and funding — not because of a lack of interest.
Faculty shortages are especially dire. Nearly 2,000 full-time faculty vacancies remain unfilled nationwide, according to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. These positions require a master's or doctoral degree — precisely the kind of education now placed at risk by this legislation. Without nurse educators, we cannot train the next generation of nurses at any level.
This law also directly contradicts the Make America Healthy Again initiative, which calls on healthcare systems to take on chronic disease through prevention. Nurses make up the largest segment of the healthcare workforce. Their education emphasizes prevention and whole-person care for people and communities. Nurses are central to the shift from reactive 'sick care' to proactive prevention, so restricting their ability to enter the profession is not just shortsighted, it's self-defeating.
A diminished nursing workforce will trigger a familiar cycle: reduced access, longer wait times, more chronic disease and an even more overwhelmed workforce. And these consequences won't be limited to nurses — they will affect physicians, hospitals, insurers and, most of all, everyday Americans.
This is a national health issue. While the bill has passed, it is not too late to mitigate its harm. Policymakers must find alternative solutions, from scholarship expansion to loan forgiveness, to ensure access to graduate nursing education remains within reach. We cannot solve a workforce shortage and a chronic disease crisis by cutting off the professionals trained to fix it.
Sarah Szanton is dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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'I'm gonna die': Inmate described sharp pain before 'gruesome' jail death, lawsuit says
'I'm gonna die': Inmate described sharp pain before 'gruesome' jail death, lawsuit says

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'I'm gonna die': Inmate described sharp pain before 'gruesome' jail death, lawsuit says

The family of a Colorado man whose final minutes saw him cry for help as he was throwing up blood in a southwestern Colorado jail filed suit against the county and the jail's medical provider on July 21. The estate of Daniel Foard called the 32-year-old's 2023 death at the La Plata County Jail "gruesome and entirely preventable" in a complaint filed in the United States District Court for Colorado. "The final 15-plus hours of his life were dominated by terrible pain and suffering, including his expressed and doubtlessly terrifying consciousness of his impending death," the complaint reads. Jail cell video obtained by USA TODAY shows Foard throwing up coffee-ground like vomit and begging officers for medical attention. Foard died from acute peritonitis due to a perforated duodenal ulcer, according to the complaint. "We spend a lot of time thinking about deliberate indifference and it's a really, really hard concept to explain," Dan Weiss, one of the estate's lawyers told USA TODAY in an interview ahead of the filing. "This case right here is one of the clearest illustrations of that concept we have ever seen." The lawsuit names La Plata County, the county's Sherriff Sean Smith, the jail's medical provider Southern Health Partners, and eight nurses and jail employees as defendants. Ted Holteen, a spokesperson for La Plata County, told USA TODAY in a statement the "county has not analyzed the allegations made in the complaint" and that it does not comment on pending litigation. USA TODAY reached out to the sheriff and Southern Health Providers ahead of the filing and did not receive a response. "Our pain of loss is immeasurable, but we know that the path forward must lead to healing, to resolution, to something that allows us to take a deep breath and feel a sense of closure," Jim Foard and Susan Gizinski, Daniel's parents, said in a statement provided to USA TODAY. "Without any accountability for what happened to our son, there can be no closure." Boulder jail death: Colorado family sues after man dies from infection in jail in his 'blood and vomit' August 2023: Daniel Foard enters La Plata County jail Foard was booked into La Plata County jail on August 11, 2023. He was being held on warrants for failure to appear, a jail supervisor told the Durango Herald at the time of Foard's death and the estate's lawyers confirmed in the interview. Foard told nurses at the jail that he regularly took fentanyl pills during the intake process and was placed in the jail's detoxification program. During his time in the program, he had some vomiting and diarrhea that soon went away. But an elevated heart rate, fast breathing and high blood pressure continued, according to the complaint. During a routine body scan around 9:45 p.m. on Aug. 15, 2023, before he was to be moved to general population housing, Foard collapsed to the floor multiple times, according to the complaint. The complaint alleges that a jail deputy mouthed to another that Foard was "faking." Denver police recruit recalls 'hazing': 'I'll never be the person that I was' Later that night, nurse Ashley Box concluded that Foard was stable and could be transferred to general population. He was moved to the jail's G block, according to the complaint. USA TODAY reached out to a publicly listed phone number for Box and did not receive a response. Deputies tasked with escorting Foard told Box that he was "really struggling." Box responded by asking, "what do you think?" The complaint alleges that Box did not go to see Foard or relay his condition to a doctor. "Box chose to rely on a medically untrained Deputy to tell her how her patient was doing, but then disregarded what she reported," the complaint reads. The next day: Foard's condition worsens The next morning, on Aug. 16, 2023, Foard fell into his cell door twice when he went to retrieve breakfast, according to the complaint. A deputy asked him to step out to be seen by the jail's medical personnel. "Over the course of the (previous) night, he vomited repeatedly and continually complained of stomach pain," the complaint reads. "He called deputies from the cell's call box several times, telling them that he was sick, his stomach was hurting, and that he wanted to be seen by medical." The complaint notes that the last time Foard's vital signs were taken was 3:27 a.m., around the time he was moved into general population. 'Don't hurt us!' Denver police 'terrorized' family when they raided wrong apartment: Lawsuit When he stepped out of the cell, he was only able to take a few steps before needing to sit on the ground because "he obviously could not safely ambulate, stand, or maintain balance," the complaint states. The lone registered nurse in the jail at the time, Sierra Snooks, responded the call for help. She charted that Foard reported an intense, "sharp" and "shooting" abdominal pain that was a "10" on a 1-10 scale, according to the complaint. Foard told her that the symptoms did not feel like those from withdrawal. Snooks told Foard that she was initially concerned about appendicitis, but that she had decided that the pain wasn't in the right place to be appendicitis, so they would "monitor" him in the jail's booking area. The complaint states that registered nurses are prohibited by licensure from diagnosing or ruling out appendicitis. It alleges the symptoms reported by Foard required Snooks to call a doctor, and that she did not. "Ten-out-of-10 sharp, shooting, and persisting abdominal pain is unquestionably a serious medical emergency. These symptoms mandate immediate provider involvement," the complaint reads. USA TODAY reached out to a publicly listed email for Snooks and did not receive a response. Foard was moved by Snooks to the jail's booking area for medical monitoring. The complaint alleges the medical monitoring never happened. "Snooks did not even communicate with any of the Deputies why Mr. Foard was being moved back to be monitored," the complaint reads. "The next time a nurse came to see him he was dead." Daniel Foard's final hours Foard was placed in Holding Cell 4 around 7 a.m. on Aug. 16 and continued vomiting through the day. By 6 p.m., Foard was moved to Holding Cell 5 due to vomit in the first cell. Snooks left the jail in a shift change around 6 p.m., with Box coming on duty. 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At approximately 9:49 p.m., Box banged on the door of Holding Cell 6 to no response. When deputies opened the door, they found Foard dead in a pool of his own bloody vomit, according to the complaint. The lawsuit says an autopsy found Foard had "a liter of cloudy brown fluid in his peritoneal cavity," stomach fluid in his respiratory system, and that his stomach contained dark brown fluid. Foard was found to have fentanyl still in his system, Mike Arnall, a forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy, told the Durango Herald at the time, but said that "the greater problem was a belly full of pus." "As the surgeon would say, that's a surgical problem with a surgical cure – meaning there's only one way you're going to cure that, and that's with surgery,' Arnall told the newspaper. Lawsuit points at jail's medical service provider Documents included in the filing show that Southern Health Partners was chosen by La Plata County after significantly underbidding its competitor. 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Family reveals shocking details of what really happened in fatal Long Island MRI accident
Family reveals shocking details of what really happened in fatal Long Island MRI accident

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time22 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Family reveals shocking details of what really happened in fatal Long Island MRI accident

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Jacob Frey's campaign challenging Minneapolis DFL endorsement of Omar Fateh
Jacob Frey's campaign challenging Minneapolis DFL endorsement of Omar Fateh

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jacob Frey's campaign challenging Minneapolis DFL endorsement of Omar Fateh

The Brief Jacob Frey is challenging the Minneapolis DFL's endorsement of Omar Fateh as the city's next mayor. Frey's campaign alleges only 578 votes were counted in the first round of balloting, when more than 1,000 delegates and alternates were checked in. Frey made his first public appearance since on Monday, but did not address the result. MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) - The Minneapolis DFL held its convention on Saturday at Target Center, and Jacob Frey did not get the endorsement for mayor. That instead went to State Senator Omar Fateh. Frey has been the mayor of Minneapolis since 2018. What we know Frey made his first public appearance since the DFL convention on Monday as state leaders gathered to celebrate the reopening of the Stone Arch Bridge in Minneapolis. He made celebratory comments about the bridge and did not take any questions before leaving the event. Frey's wife is due with a child. Frey to file endorsement challenge Mayor Frey's campaign released a statement after the vote at the DFL convention. "This election should be decided by the entire city rather than the small group of people who became delegates, particularly in light of the extremely flawed and irregular conduct of this convention. Voters will now have a clear choice between the records and leadership of Sen. Fateh and Mayor Frey. We look forward to taking our vision to the voters in November." Why you should care On Monday, Frey's campaign filed a challenge to those results with the Minnesota DFL Party. Campaign officials say the challenge centers on the extraordinarily high number of missing or uncounted votes. They say the voting system is "highly flawed" and "untested." Frey's campaign says 578 votes were counted in the mayoral ballot, despite more than 1,000 delegates and alternates being checked in at the time of the first ballot. Frey Campaign Manager Sam Schulenberg said,"Everyone who endured this multi-hour convention process deserved to have their voices heard. DFL leaders, delegates, and voters across our city and party are filing challenges to ensure that the inaccurate balloting of the convention does not create a permanent rift in our party. In an overwhelmingly Democratic city like Minneapolis, there is no reason to push through a DFL endorsement using a highly flawed process that clearly missed or did not count a large percentage of the votes cast." 'It will work its way out' What they're saying Gov. Tim Walz was also at Monday's event, and was asked about Frey not getting the endorsement. "Some of you know my history with endorsements, I don't put a lot of time on them. Party does the party work, the rest of us who are there. We'll take a look at everything on that and it will work its way out," Walz said. "I would just say that I have had the privilege of working with Mayor Frey for quite a few years here. We'll talk." Solve the daily Crossword

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