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Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faced tough questions on vaccine policy and deep staff cuts at federal health agencies in a pair of House hearings Thursday that marked his first appearance before Congress in more than six months.
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The big picture: Kennedy doubled down on some of his most controversial moves, but also gave some ground, acknowledging at one point that the measles vaccine could have saved the life of a child who died in an outbreak in Texas last year.
Driving the news: Democrats on the Ways and Means and Appropriations committees repeatedly pressed Kennedy on the surge in measles cases across the country and tried to tie them to his vaccine criticism.
Between the lines: Kennedy didn't mention vaccines in his prepared remarks, instead touting less controversial moves on healthy foods and lowering drug prices.
The intrigue: Republicans were less confrontational, but Rep. Darin LaHood (R-Ill.) asked about reports of "mismanagement and bungled drug reviews" at the Food and Drug Administration, and whether they were chilling biomedical innovation.
Kennedy said his department is adding staff. After falling from 82,000 to 62,000 employees last year, it is now up to 72,000 and plans to bring on 12,000 more, he said.
What we're watching: There could be more friction ahead after Kennedy said he plans to overhaul and put new members on the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, the expert panel that makes recommendations for services that insurers must cover fully under the Affordable Care Act.