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Monday, Mar 27 2017

Full Issue

Doctor's Social Media Promos For His Company's Cancer 'Breakthrough' May Violate Federal Rules

Following questions from Stat about promotion of a non-Food and Drug Administraiton approved treatment, NantKwest softened the language. Meanwhile, The New York Times writes on how more surgeries are being conducted while patients are awake. And other news outlets report on tuberculosis, the flu vaccine, Zika, another virus that can cause birth defects called Cytomegalovirus and more public health stories.

The emotional聽video聽tells of a patient with blood cancer who tries an experimental therapy involving 鈥渘atural killer鈥 cells.聽鈥淣EW BREAKTHROUGH HELPS PATIENTS KILL CANCER鈥 the banner headline聽declares as the patient, wiping away tears, covers her face with her hands and murmurs, 鈥淚t鈥檚 really good news.鈥 Billionaire Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong聽retweeted the video several times in recent days, amid a flurry of social media posts in which he vowed to聽鈥渟olve鈥 cancer. But where the ordinary viewer might see an inspirational story, drug industry experts聽saw a likely violation of federal regulations. (Robbins, 3/27)

鈥淒o you want to see your tendons?鈥 Dr. Asif Ilyas, a hand and wrist surgeon, was about to close his patient鈥檚 wound. But first he offered her the opportunity to behold the source of her radiating pain: a band of tendons that looked like pale pink ribbon candy. With a slender surgical instrument, he pushed outward to demonstrate their newly liberated flexibility. (Hoffman, 3/25)

The drug-resistant TB had quietly spread for the better part of a decade among [Atlanta's]聽homeless population. Then in 2014, the stubborn strain turned fatal, killing at least three men and infecting dozens. The deadly 鈥淎tlanta strain鈥 also cropped up in more than a dozen states nationwide. Alarmed, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention intervened with emergency aid. A multimillion-dollar effort to screen and treat vulnerable residents has worked: Officials announced this week that TB cases in Fulton County, which includes most of Atlanta and and some of its surrounding suburbs, have dropped by nearly a third. They say the approach here can offer valuable lessons to other communities battling public outbreaks. (Blau, 3/24)

For Jernica Qui帽ones, the reality of sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS, hit close to home this year when a friend woke up on New Year's Day and discovered the lifeless body of her baby girl. That's why Qui帽ones' 4-month-old son, Bless'n, has spent a lot of his life so far sleeping in a cardboard box. (Pao, 3/26)

The researchers found African-Americans worried about the safety of the shot more than the health risks of the flu. The findings are important as the medical community tries to improve vaccination rates. Fewer than half of Americans get the flu vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Just 41 percent of African-Americans get vaccinated, compared with 47 percent of whites. The study, published in the journal Risk Analysis, included 800 white and 800 African-American participants. Researchers from the University of Georgia and the University of Pittsburgh also participated in the research. (McDaniels, 3/25)

Micaela Delgado is a beautiful dark-eyed baby girl with a ready smile. She's eight months old. She's one of more than 1,000 babies already born in Puerto Rico to mothers with Zika. (Allen, 3/27)

When Kathleen Muldoon had her second child everything was going smoothly. The delivery was short, the baby's APGAR score was good and he was a healthy weight. "Everyone said he was amazing," says Muldoon. But when a doctor noticed that Gideon was jaundiced, everything changed. (Neighmond, 3/27)

Breast-feeding has many known health benefits, but there's still debate about how it may influence kids' behavior and intelligence. Now, a new study published in Pediatrics finds that children who are breast-fed for at least six months as babies have less hyperactive behavior by age 3 compared with kids who weren't breast-fed. (Aubrey, 3/27)

The examinations,聽X-rays and dry runs using a 3D model of her tiny spine all came down to this: A聽team of surgeons made a careful incision聽and, over the next six hours, systematically removed an extra聽pelvis, legs, feet and tiny toes that were protruding from her neck and back. Since birth, baby Dominique had been carrying her parasitic twin. (Bever, 3/25)

Gertrude Siegel is 101 and hears it all the time. 鈥淓veryone says 鈥業 want to be just like you.鈥 I tell them to get in line,鈥 she said. John and Charlotte Henderson, 104 and 102, often field questions from wannabes eager to learn their secrets. 鈥淟iving in moderation,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e never overdo anything. Eat well. Sleep well. Don鈥檛 overdrink. Don鈥檛 overeat. And exercise regularly.鈥 (Jayson, 3/27)

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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