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Millions at Risk as Key Health Panel Stalls
27 Feb
Summary
- Task force meetings canceled, leaving over 150 million people without updated guidance.
- Panel operates with fewer members, potential political interference suspected.
- Lives at stake as critical screening and prevention advice is delayed.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, a vital independent panel that advises on crucial preventive healthcare services, has not convened for formal votes in almost a year. This halt impacts over 150 million individuals with private insurance, as well as millions on Medicaid and Medicare, who benefit from the Affordable Care Act's mandate to cover services with A or B grades from the task force.
The task force's typical thrice-yearly meetings were canceled in July and November 2025 due to a government shutdown and lack of announcement. Compounding the issue, five member terms expired, reducing the panel's active members from 16 to 11. While weekly virtual meetings occur, voting on recommendations, essential for clinical guidance, has ceased.
Recent reports suggest potential political motivations behind the slowdown, with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reportedly criticizing the panel as "woke." This follows similar reshuffling of other federal advisory groups. Concerns are rising that such politicization could undermine the task force's non-biased, science-based function, potentially leading clinicians to disregard its guidance.
Key recommendations, including updates for cervical cancer screening and perinatal depression, remain pending. The task force's work, which includes essential screenings like mammograms and statin recommendations, is considered a "North Star" for preventive medicine. Delays in issuing new or updated guidance could represent an "existential threat to clinical practice," potentially returning medicine to a pre-evidence-based era.




