- by foxnews
- 04 Jun 2025
"Obviously, I was really, really upset," Litvak told Fox. "What happened at Harvard after October 7th, and [at] the university, in my opinion, again, that's my personal opinion, the university was not ready to face these kinds of challenges. None of the universities were ready."
"I'm commending, actually, the letter from the president of the university," the Harvard professor added. "What I really like, in science, we say that you cannot solve any problem unless you formulate it. So he formulated the problem in his letter. He acknowledged that there is a problem. Otherwise, nothing would happen."
"I think that's a step in the absolutely right direction," Litvak told Fox News Digital. "I would like to see the fruits of it. But again, I was very, very pleased because of the acknowledgment that there is such a problem."
"I think Medicare and Medicaid are facing danger, regardless of what DOGE is doing," Litvak explained. "Medicare actually is going to become insolvent in 2036. It's very close. And Medicaid is not in the best position. I can tell you, we have, last year we had 4.9, this year I believe we would have more than $5 trillion spending."
The professor stated that reducing government spending, similar to DOGE cuts, on healthcare can be a solution to the looming crisis.
"I agree with the goal to reduce waste. It was a very timely call for waste reduction. It's much-needed, the Harvard professor added. "Before doing that, if I were making decisions, before firing people, I would say, 'how can we improve the efficiency of what we already have?'"
While Litvak pushes for change in the public healthcare space, a dark cloud continues to hang over the Boston-based university as tensions between the Trump Administration and the Ivy League school have shown no signs of cooling down.
A lawsuit over $2.2 billion in frozen research grants is still ongoing, and the funds may likely be held up into the summer. Harvard president Alan Garber said the "consequences" of the decision to withhold grants would be "severe and long-lasting", and may impact work similar to that which Professor Litvak is hoping to accomplish.
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