A look back on the Biden administration’s most significant actions impacting food and farming during the president’s tenure.
The Biden administration's Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released additional details on a proposed rule that would effectively ban cigarettes currently on the market.
WASHINGTON — President Trump began his second term Monday with a sweeping order aimed at reversing dozens of former President Biden’s top priorities, from regulations aimed at lowering health care costs, to coronavirus outreach, Affordable Care Act expansions, and protections against gender-based discrimination.
The proposal in the waning days of the Biden administration leaves it up to President-elect Donald Trump to finalize the effort — or scrap it.
Biden spent like no president in history, and, with a sleight of hand, by taking hundreds of billions out of Medicare and spending it on green energy subsidies.
A proposed FDA rule would mandate a reduction to minimally addictive or nonaddictive levels, but the incoming Trump administration isn’t expected to follow through on the idea.
The US Food and Drug Administration is proposing limits on the level of nicotine in cigarettes and some other types of tobacco products, such as cigars and pipe tobacco, in order to make them less addictive,
President Joe Biden is using the last days of his presidency to pursue some of the long-term goals of the administration, particularly when it comes to issues of drugs, whether legal or criminalized.
Click in for more news from The Hill{beacon} Health Care Health Care The Big Story Biden leaving 11th-hour health measures for TrumpThe Biden administration in its final days has been
The Biden administration is poised to try to lower the amount of nicotine in tobacco products, an eleventh-hour effort that’s been years in the making. The move would give the White
The Biden administration is withdrawing a ... Health plans would’ve covered daily oral contraceptives or other Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs if a therapeutic equivalent were ...