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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Jul 17 2025

Full Issue

988 LGBTQ+ Suicide Prevention Lifeline Will Go Out Of Service Today

In April, counselors fielded roughly 70,000 crisis contacts from LGBTQ youth, marking an all-time high. In 2024, the Trevor Project reported that half of LGBTQ young people who wanted mental health care said they were unable to access it.

States and mental health organizations are bracing for the closure of a specialized聽service within 988, the National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, for LGBTQ youth on Thursday under orders from the Trump administration amid its broader spending cuts and the dismantling of programs dedicated to diversity and inclusion.聽鈥淲hen the line goes silent, there are a lot of open questions that we鈥檙e trying to prepare for,鈥 said Mark Henson, vice president of government affairs at the Trevor Project, an LGBTQ youth suicide prevention organization that responds to roughly half of 988鈥檚 calls and text messages from LGBTQ young people.聽(Migdon, 7/16)

LGBTQ+ youth no longer have a specially tailored option for help at the 988 National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. The Trump administration announced a month ago that beginning July 17, it would eliminate the 鈥淧ress 3 option鈥 on the free, 24/7 national hotline. The specialized service had been active for about three years. (Oliverio, 7/17)

Baltimore鈥檚 988 mental health crisis hotline is getting a boost, thanks to a $10 million grant agreement approved by the Board of Estimates Wednesday. The five-year agreement between Mayor Brandon Scott鈥檚 Office of Recovery Programs and Behavioral Health System Baltimore Inc. (BHSB) allocates $2 million each fiscal year through 2030, according to ORP acting director Elizabeth Tatum. A presentation by Tatum showed that more than $7.35 million of the total funds will be allocated to 鈥渃ontracts and consultants,鈥 while $1.3 million will go toward 鈥渋ndirect costs.鈥 (Swick, 7/16)

After a decade-long rise in suicide rates among young Americans 鈥 and with depression diagnoses soaring in this age group during the pandemic 鈥 the U.S. surgeon general issued a report in 2021 warning about the 鈥渄evastating鈥 state of youth mental health. The American Psychological Association declared it a 鈥渃risis.鈥 Meanwhile, another demographic has gone largely overlooked. (Goldhill, 7/17)

If you need help 鈥

Public health updates 鈥

Katherine Wells still remembers finding out that measles had hit West Texas. It was late January, and Wells, the director of the Lubbock Health Department, was notified that a child from nearby Gaines County was being treated for the respiratory disease at one of the local hospitals in Lubbock County. (Rodriguez, 7/16)

The proportion of severely overweight children in the US has skyrocketed in recent years, with the highest rates seen in adolescents and Black children, a new study found. Roughly 23% of all children were obese in 2023, up from 19% in 2008, according to the survey published Wednesday in JAMA Network Open. Additionally, more than 1% of children between the ages of 2 and 18 had 鈥渆xtremely severe obesity鈥 鈥 a 250% increase from the start of the study, the researchers from the University of California, San Diego, found. (Amponsah, 7/16)

A new report finds that only a third of states protect access to affordable contraception through their policies, such as Medicaid expansion or requiring health insurers to pay for prescriptions for months at a time. The report, released Wednesday, analyzed current birth control policies across the 50 states and Washington, D.C. ... The report 鈥 a state-by-state contraceptive policy scorecard 鈥 shows how important local legislation is to family planning and health care. (Sullivan, 7/16)

Overcoming meth addiction has become one of the biggest challenges of the national drug crisis. Fentanyl deaths have been dropping, in part because of medications that can reverse overdoses and curb the urge to use opioids. But no such prescriptions exist for meth, which works differently on the brain. ... Lacking a medical treatment, a growing number of clinics are trying a startlingly different strategy: To induce patients to stop using meth, they pay them. (Hoffman, 7/16)

麻豆女优 Health News: Maybe It鈥檚 Not Just Aging. Maybe It鈥檚 Anemia

Gary Sergott felt weary all the time. 鈥淚鈥檇 get tired, short of breath, a sort of malaise,鈥 he said. He was cold even on warm days and looked pale with dark circles under his eyes. His malady was not mysterious. As a retired nurse anesthetist, Sergott knew he had anemia, a deficiency of red blood cells. In his case, it was the consequence of a hereditary condition that caused almost daily nosebleeds and depleted his hemoglobin, the protein in red blood cells that delivers oxygen throughout the body. But in consulting doctors about his fatigue, he found that many didn鈥檛 know how to help. (Span, 7/17)

Drugmaker Pfizer is warning doctors that it expects to run low on supplies of Bicillin L-A, a long-acting injection of the antibiotic penicillin, the preferred option for treating syphilis during pregnancy. The news 鈥 the latest twist in a drug shortage that began in 2023 鈥 follows a July 10 recall of certain lots of Bicillin L-A that were found to be contaminated with floating particles. Pfizer says it has not received any reports of adverse events related to the recalled shots. (Goodman, 7/16)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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