Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Federal Cuts Deal A 'Big, Devastating Blow' To Los Angeles Health System
Los Angeles County鈥檚 health system, which is responsible for the care of the region鈥檚 poorest, is careening toward a financial crisis because of cuts from a presidential administration and Republican-led Congress looking to drastically slash the size of government. President Trump鈥檚 鈥淏ig Beautiful Bill,鈥 which passed earlier this month, is expected to soon claw $750 million per year from the county Department of Health Services, which oversees four public hospitals and roughly two dozen clinics. In an all-staff email Friday, the agency called the bill a 鈥渂ig, devastating blow to our health system鈥 and said a hiring freeze had gone into effect, immediately. (Ellis and Ordner, 7/20)
One recent morning, not long after the Trump administration launched its extraordinary immigration crackdown in Los Angeles, Alfredo Contreras pulled a large RV into the parking lot of a rehab center south of the city鈥檚 skyline. The RV is part of a small fleet of rolling exam rooms run by St. John鈥檚 Community Health that have taken on heightened importance in the city鈥檚 health care 鈥 and, increasingly, political 鈥 landscape since the start of the raids. (Bluth and Schultheis, 7/20)
麻豆女优 Health News: Georgia Shows Rough Road Ahead For States As Medicaid Work Requirements Loom
Every time Ashton Alexander sees an ad for Georgia Pathways to Coverage, it feels like a 鈥渒ick in the face.鈥 Alexander tried signing up for Pathways, the state鈥檚 limited Medicaid expansion, multiple times and got denied each time, he said, even though he met the qualifying terms because he鈥檚 a full-time student. Georgia is one of 10 states that haven鈥檛 expanded Medicaid health coverage to a broader pool of low-income adults. (Rayasam and Whitehead, 7/21)
Around the nation 鈥
Bowing to federal pressure under the Trump administration, UChicago Medicine has become the latest Illinois hospital to end gender-affirming pediatric care. The decision, announced Friday, leaves no room for ongoing transitional care, and an unknown number of patients in limbo. (Channick, 7/18)
The recent mass overdose in West Baltimore underscored the need to expand drug treatment and harm reduction services, addiction specialists say. But efforts to build out services addressing the opioid crisis often face resistance that some say is rooted in prejudice. (Belson and Nordstrom, 7/20)
麻豆女优 Health News: Louisiana Upholds Its HIV Exposure Law As Other States Change Or Repeal Theirs
When Robert Smith met his future girlfriend in 2010, he wanted to take things slowly. For Smith, no relationship had been easy in the years since he was diagnosed with the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV. People often became afraid when they learned his status, even running away when he coughed. The couple waited months to have sex until Smith felt he could share his medical status. To prepare her, Smith said, he took his girlfriend to his job in HIV prevention at the Philadelphia Center, a northwestern Louisiana nonprofit that offers resources to people with HIV, which also provided him housing at the time. (Parker, 7/21)
James Granger says primary care doctors shouldn鈥檛 just focus on patients鈥 physical health. Their mental well-being is just as important. (Perez-Moreno, 7/20)
Early on the morning of July 12, a young woman walked into MetroHealth Medical Center鈥檚 emergency room, bleeding from the face after being pistol-whipped at a gas station. 鈥淢y face,鈥 the woman said, seeing the image of her injuries. 鈥淢y face.鈥 Her brother met her with a hug and assured her that he would retaliate. Moments later, Jeff Crosby, a violence interrupter for the Cleveland Peacekeepers Alliance, stepped in to prevent that. (Daprile, 7/20)