Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

A children’s doctor on the crisis of medical trust

Matthew Abrams

I have spent most of my adult life preparing for one job: keeping babies alive.

That preparation took years — college, medical school, residency and fellowship — years of studying physiology measured in grams and millimeters, of learning how fragile life can be and how precise medicine must be to protect it. I chose neonatology because the margin between survival and catastrophe in an intensive care unit for infants is razor-thin.

Every decision we make is rooted in evidence. Every intervention is weighed against risk. And every recommendation is guided by the same promise I made on day one of my career: First, do no harm.

That is why the growing rejection of vaccines — by society at large, by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s HHS, and by state legislatures like Arizona’s that repeatedly entertain anti-vaccine bills while doing nothing to improve vaccine uptake — is not just frustrating.

 It is shocking. And, frankly, it is heartbreaking.

The paradox of the modern NICU

Consider a baby born at 23 weeks’ gestation.

To survive, this infant requires an extraordinary symphony of modern medicine: umbilical lines threaded into vessels the width of spaghetti strands, endotracheal tubes connected to mechanical ventilators, intravenous nutrition calculated to the decimal point. They receive steroids to mature underdeveloped lungs, caffeine to stimulate breathing, antibiotics to stave off infection, and meticulously fortified milk to support growth.

For months, parents entrust us with every heartbeat and every breath their child takes. They consent — often gratefully — to interventions that would have been unimaginable a generation ago.  And yet, a troubling paradox often emerges when that same baby reaches two months of chronological age.

Despite relying completely on neonatal science to get their child through the most perilous period of life, some families suddenly hesitate when we recommend routine childhood vaccines — vaccines that are standard for all infants, regardless of prematurity. The very science that saved their baby is now treated with suspicion.

As a physician and a parent, that moment, which is becoming increasingly frequent, is deeply disorienting.

The erosion of expertise

We are living through a time when medical expertise is no longer treated as the foundation of medical advice.

In delivery rooms across the country, parents increasingly refuse Vitamin K injections, erythromycin eye ointment, and the Hepatitis B vaccine — interventions that prevent devastating but entirely avoidable outcomes. These refusals are rarely rooted in new data. More often, they are fueled by what I think of as digital echoes: social media posts, influencers and viral anecdotes that drown out decades of accumulated medical knowledge.

When parents decline Vitamin K because they heard somewhere that “babies are born perfect,” they are unknowingly ignoring basic human biology. Newborns are born with sterile intestines and lack the bacteria required to synthesize vitamin K, an essential clotting factor. Without supplementation, infants are at risk for Hemorrhagic Disease of the Newborn — unpredictable, catastrophic bleeding that can lead to brain damage or death. This is not theoretical. I have seen it.

The shield of historical amnesia

Vaccines are a victim of their own success, and ironically, this success has become a catalyst for new parents’ modern-day doubt.  

Because of vaccines, many parents today have never seen the destruction of a child paralyzed by polio, scarred by smallpox, or killed by a secondary bacterial infection from chickenpox. This historical amnesia has allowed a darker narrative to take hold: That pediatricians are motivated by profit and that vaccine recommendations are influenced by kickbacks. 

I can say this without hesitation: that accusation is profoundly false.

The motive is singular — the survival of our children.

When politics undermines public health

What makes this moment especially dangerous is that skepticism is no longer confined to individual choices — it is being legitimized by policy.

When the federal government fails to lead decisively on vaccine confidence, and when state legislatures like Arizona’s repeatedly propose anti-vaccine bills while offering no meaningful strategies to increase immunization rates, it sends a clear message: science is negotiable.

As a physician, watching political ideology chip away at evidence-based medicine is maddening. We now live in a world where unregulated supplements with “proprietary blends” are marketed as safer than rigorously tested vaccines, and where influencers with no clinical training are treated as equals to professionals like me, who have dedicated their lives to pediatric health.

The same science, the same oath

The science I rely on when deciding how much oxygen a premature baby can tolerate without going blind is the same science I rely on when recommending vaccines.

The oath I take to protect a 500-gram infant in an incubator does not expire when that child goes home. It applies when I advise families about immunizations, about prevention, about how to keep a hard-won life safe beyond the NICU walls.

If we continue down this path — allowing misinformation and political cowardice to override evidence and expertise — we will not simply reach a tipping point. We will slide backward into an era of pediatric medicine we fought for decades to escape.

And the ones who will pay the price are the very babies we worked so hard to save.  

Matthew Abrams completed his pediatric residency, chief residency and neonatology fellowship at Indiana University Riley Children’s Hospital in 2004. He has been a member of Arizona Neonatology/Pediatrix since 2004 in the Phoenix Metro areas. He is a proud husband and father of five.

EPA Clean Air Programs are critical for public health

Victor Waters

Arizona has been facing an ongoing air quality crisis, and as a public health leader, I am calling on the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to do better to protect our health and hold polluters accountable. The American Lung Association just released their 26th annual “State of the Air” report which found Maricopa County averaged 54.8 unhealthy ozone days a year, the highest average number of ozone days since the 2010 report. 

The report looked at air quality data from 2021-2023. While Phoenix saw overall improvements on particle pollution levels, it reported a significant increase in smoggy days, ranking 4th as the most ozone-polluted city in the nation. 

Ozone and particle pollution are two of the most widespread and dangerous air pollutants that can significantly harm health when left unchecked. Short-term exposure can irritate airways, making it difficult to breathe. It increases risk of respiratory infections and worsens symptoms for those with chronic lung diseases. These health risks are of particular concern in Maricopa County since we have been in ozone nonattainment for well over 25 years and still receiving an ‘F’ grade for particle pollution levels. Long-term exposure to air pollution has been linked to metabolic disorders, reproductive issues including fertility and poor birth outcomes, and increased risk of premature death. Air pollution is especially harmful to people of color, lower-income families, individuals living near highways or other pollution sources. 

The combustion of fossil fuels — such as oil, coal and natural gas — in the transportation and energy sectors are primary drivers of our air pollution burdens. The American Lung Association has conducted statewide polling that shows for the fifth consecutive year that 80 percent of Arizona voters recognize our air pollution crisis and majority of voters agree policymakers need to do more to address climate change. The poll found that 77% of voters support clean energy solutions, and 78% of voters believe transitioning to clean energy will have a positive impact on air quality. 

The EPA is meant to protect human health and the environment, and yet their recent announcement of plans to roll back more than 30 clean air and other programs would do exactly the opposite. Instead, these actions would unleash even more pollution or let it go unmonitored. Several rules on the chopping block include stronger standards for emissions from coal-fired power plants, limits on particle pollution, measures to make new vehicles less polluting, and rules cleaning up leaks that spew methane and toxic emissions. Revoking these standards will mean that more kids in our communities will have asthma attacks, more workers will be sicker and more people will die due to polluted air. These actions go against what Arizona voters have been asking for years — more action to address air pollution. 

About 84% of all Arizonans live in a county with at least one failing air quality grade, and we need the EPA to follow through on implementing stronger standards on health-harming pollutants like particulate matter, air toxics and greenhouse gases. This year’s “State of the Air” report shows an ongoing national trend in the rise of particle pollution, and increased exposure to ozone pollution due to extreme weather events. Extreme heat, wildfire smoke and prolonged drought are all making it more difficult to clean up pollution. Now is not the time for EPA to weaken air quality standards. 

The EPA’s announcements would be a handout to polluting industries at the expense of public health and completely disregard the expertise of their own science and health experts. Everyone deserves to breathe clean air, but we can’t do that without implementing stronger standards that protect health and reduce our emissions. Arizona has some of the greatest air quality challenges in the country, and we need every tool in our toolbox to clean up harmful pollution from every sector. This means the EPA needs to set the standard and the example so that Arizona and other states can follow.  

Victor Waters, MD, JD, FCLM, is the Chief Medical Officer of Dignity Health Arizona Central and West Valley Market.

Access to life saving devices is critical for student athletes

As the former superintendent of Tempe Union High School District, I found having life-saving devices like AEDs at our fingertips critical to the health, well-being, and success of our student-athletes, coaches and their families. It was my responsibility to keep our students safe during athletic practice and events.

Dr. Kevin J. Mendivil sits on the American Heart Association Phoenix board of directors. He is the Principal of Auxier Elementary School and has nearly four decades of education experience.

In the spring of 2023, I witnessed firsthand the impact of having these life-saving devices when the use of an accessible AED saved the life of one of our coaches during basketball practice. That unforgettable day gave me peace of mind, knowing we were better prepared to intervene if students or staff experienced cardiac arrest.

Cardiac Arrest is the leading cause of death in young athletes. Once our families became aware of this fact, TUHSD took action to ensure AEDs were available at all school and district programs. It gave us a sense of security and confidence, knowing we were trained and equipped to respond quickly in an emergency. When responding to cardiac arrest, every second counts. When a shock is administered within the first minute of a cardiac arrest, nine out of ten people survive.

Every morning, parents across the great state of Arizona send their children off to school, entrusting them to the care of administrators, faculty and staff. I always believed our students must come first! According to the American Heart Association, only one in ten people survive cardiac arrest outside of a hospital environment. Without prompt action in the event of a cardiac arrest — calling 911, beginning CPR and using an AED — during school or sporting events, our student-athletes could be left vulnerable. Every year, more than 23,000 children under the age of 18 experience cardiac arrest outside of a hospital, with 40% of these incidents being sports-related. In schools with AEDs, approximately 70% of children survive cardiac arrest — 7 times the overall survival rate for children.

Implementing another key measure to better respond to a student-athlete, coach, or family member in the event of an emergency makes perfect sense. Our kids are worth every bit of the effort and resources expended in this way. Having accessible AEDs and a practiced plan in place as a standard part of athletic programming has the potential to save more lives!

 

“The Access to AEDs in High School Athletics bill (SB1707) would ensure that AEDs are clearly marked and easily accessible during the school day and school-sponsored athletic events, giving any student, parent, teacher or spectator a chance at surviving sudden cardiac arrest.”

This legislation is critical as it addresses our responsibility as educational leaders to foster a safe and healthy school environment for our student-athletes. Implementing these measures signals to our families and the community that we care about our students from the classrooms to the athletic fields!

I urge our state legislators to support this lifesaving legislation. Let’s ensure our schools are working to implement a proven chain-of-survival that helps save lives. Having an accessible AED in place was the difference between life and death for our district’s students and staff and could be the lifesaver for student-athletes across Arizona who experience sudden cardiac arrest. Together we can save lives from cardiac arrest.

Dr. Kevin J. Mendivil sits on the American Heart Association Phoenix board of directors. He is the Principal of Auxier Elementary School and has nearly four decades of education experience. 

We Must Do More to Protect Public Health from Nicotine

When I began medical school nearly two decades ago, tobacco use in the U.S. was declining rapidly, especially among young people. I was hopeful that once I completed my training as a cardiologist, I would see fewer patients suffering from heart disease caused by tobacco use and nicotine addiction. 

Nicotine is a dangerous and highly addictive drug that can damage the heart and other vital organs. It increases blood pressure, heart rate and blood flow to the heart, while narrowing and hardening arterial walls – a combination that can lead to heart attacks. 

Making cigarettes even more appealing is the slightly sweet minty menthol flavor added to some of the most widely used brands. For decades, combustible cigarette manufacturers have added menthol to their products to mask the harshness of cigarette smoke. This not only makes the products more palatable for beginners, but it can also strengthen nicotine addiction because the cooling sensation allows a person to inhale more deeply and quickly receive a greater amount of nicotine to their blood stream and brain. 

Rachel Bond, MD, an Arizona cardiologist, says physicians are witnessing an alarming number of adolescents and adults dependent on tobacco products. “This widespread issue demands urgent action and awareness to prevent its devastating cardiovascular consequences,” she explained.

While cigarette smoking continues to decline, the rise of e-cigarettes in the mid-2010s – particularly those available in thousands of kid-friendly flavors – marked the beginning of a troubling new trend. E-cigarettes quickly took over the shelf space once dominated by traditional cigarettes and reversed the downward trajectory of tobacco use as a new, younger generation became hooked on nicotine.

I reiterate that these flavors are not just harmless additives; they are deliberate tools designed to mask the harshness of nicotine products, making it easier for people, particularly young people, to start using these products and become addicted. It also makes it more difficult for those who are currently experiencing nicotine dependence to break free from their addiction. 

This issue disproportionately impacts communities of color and other marginalized groups. For example, tobacco executives have aggressively marketed menthol cigarettes to Black communities for decades by offering deep discounts on products, advertising products in the places kids can easily see them and sponsoring community events like jazz festivals. This predatory marketing has resulted in nearly 85% of Black people who smoke reaching for menthols over other types of products. 

Tobacco companies have employed similar tactics to hook those who identify as LGBTQ+ by sponsoring pride celebrations and keeping product prices low in the places these individuals congregate. 

To address the public health crises of tobacco use and nicotine addiction, we must do more to reduce, and ultimately eliminate, the use of menthol cigarettes and all other flavored tobacco products. This effort is critical not only for preventing the next generation from becoming addicted but also for addressing the inequities that have allowed specific communities to become addicted and die prematurely at the hands of the tobacco industry.

“It is vital that Arizona lawmakers implement tobacco control policies to prevent kids from accessing flavored tobacco products, which are specifically designed to attract and hook them.”

“It is vital that Arizona lawmakers implement tobacco control policies to prevent kids from accessing flavored tobacco products, which are specifically designed to attract and hook them.”

As a member of the American Heart Association-Arizona board of directors, I am proud to spearhead and support our ongoing efforts to improve public health. With the help of a grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the American Heart Association is working to inform the public about how, together, we can curb the use of these harmful products in Maricopa County and beyond.

We all have a role to play in protecting our children and our communities. Together, we can create a healthier future by supporting efforts that reduce the use of flavored tobacco products, including menthol, and by promoting broader public health initiatives that benefit the communities that call Maricopa County home.

Rachel M. Bond, MD, sits on the American Heart Association Greater Phoenix board of directors and is a national spokesperson for the “Go Red for Women” campaign. She works as the system director of Women’s Heart Health at Dignity Health in Chandler, Arizona.

When well-intentioned policies amplify over-policing 

As the Food and Drug Administration gears up to potentially ban menthol cigarettes, it’s crucial that we pause and consider the broader ramifications of such a decision. Although well-intentioned, this...

Get 24/7 political news coverage and access to events honoring top political professionals

Maricopa County tackling 3 major health issues

One of public health’s primary jobs is to identify the biggest health issues faced by residents and develop strategies to educate and prevent those issues from causing harm. We take...

Get 24/7 political news coverage and access to events honoring top political professionals

State marketplace would improve health care access  

Gov. Katie Hobbs demonstrated her political acumen during the recent showdown with the Republican-controlled Legislature to pass an $18 billion bipartisan budget. She worked diligently with both sides to negotiate...

Get 24/7 political news coverage and access to events honoring top political professionals

Recognize signs for preventable public health crisis

Arizona ranks in the top half of states for adults reporting symptoms of anxiety and depression. The number of suicides in Arizona increased in 2021, after...

Get 24/7 political news coverage and access to events honoring top political professionals

You don't have credit card details available. You will be redirected to update payment method page. Click OK to continue.