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CDC Updating Lyme Disease Guidelines After Roundtable Led by HHS

The Ultimate Human · Dr. Stephanie Haridopolos: On Screen Harms in Kids & the Surgeon General's New Advisory · May 24, 2026
CDC Updating Lyme Disease Guidelines After Roundtable Led by HHS
The Ultimate Human
The Ultimate Human
Dr. Stephanie Haridopolos: On Screen Harms in Kids & the Surgeon General's New Advisory
"We know long COVID exists, and so it's being recognized. And really that helped with the medical community realizing that the same version of an infection-associated chronic illness with chronic Lyme exists too. Not all will persist to a chronic Lyme, maybe about 20%, but a majority of the ones that do go to the chronic Lyme are women."
Dr. Herodopoulos revealed HHS held a roundtable on Lyme disease in December, bringing together policymakers, physicians, patient advocates, and researchers. The CDC is now updating its Lyme guidelines, acknowledging chronic Lyme as an infection-associated chronic illness similar to long COVID, with women disproportionately affected due to autoimmune factors.

About this episode

In this episode of The Ultimate Human Podcast, host Gary Brecka interviewed Dr. Stephanie Herodopoulos, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Health at HHS and senior advisor to the U.S. Surgeon General's Office. Dr. Herodopoulos, a physician with 25 years in family medicine, discussed major public health initiatives emerging from the Surgeon General's office under the current administration's focus on preventative health. The conversation centered on three major revelations: a new Surgeon General's advisory on screen harms in youth, updates to the newborn screening panel, and a renewed focus on chronic Lyme disease recognition. Dr. Herodopoulos disclosed that since 2010, reading scores in 13-year-olds have dropped 7% and math scores 14%, coinciding with ubiquitous screen adoption, and that children now spend more time on screens than sleeping or attending school. She revealed HHS added two rare diseases to the Recommended Uniform Screening Panel in December—metachromatic leukodystrophy and Duchenne—enabling life-saving early intervention including one-time gene therapy for MLD if caught at birth. The episode also covered the Office of the Surgeon General's December roundtable on Lyme disease, leading to CDC guideline updates that now recognize chronic Lyme as a legitimate infection-associated chronic illness affecting approximately 20% of Lyme patients, disproportionately women. Dr. Herodopoulos emphasized the paradigm shift happening in U.S. healthcare policy toward upstream prevention and keeping people out of the chronic care system. The discussion touched on gut health research initiatives, bell-to-bell phone policies in 37 states, and the broader mission of the 5,500-member Public Health Service Commissioned Corps.

Key takeaways

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