麻豆女优

Skip to main content

The independent source for health policy research, polling, and news.

Subscribe Follow Us
  • Trump 2.0

    Trump 2.0

    • Agency Watch
    • State Watch
    • Rural Health Payout
  • Public Health

    Public Health

    • Vaccines
    • CDC & Disease
    • Environmental Health
  • Audio Reports

    Audio Reports

    • What the Health?
    • Health Care Helpline
    • 麻豆女优 Health News Minute
    • An Arm and a Leg
    • Health Hub
    • HealthQ
    • Silence in Sikeston
    • Epidemic
    • See All Audio
  • Special Reports

    Special Reports

    • Bill Of The Month
    • The Body Shops
    • Broken Rehab
    • Deadly Denials
    • Priced Out
    • Dead Zone
    • Diagnosis: Debt
    • Overpayment Outrage
    • Opioid Settlement Tracking
    • See All Special Reports
  • More Topics

    More Topics

    • Elections
    • Health Care Costs
    • Insurance
    • Prescription Drugs
    • Health Industry
    • Immigration
    • Reproductive Health
    • Technology
    • Rural Health
    • Race and Health
    • Aging
    • Mental Health
    • Affordable Care Act
    • Medicare
    • Medicaid
    • Children’s Health

  • Medicaid Work Mandate
  • Suicide Prevention
  • Community Health Workers
  • Rural Health Payout
  • Opioid Crisis

TRENDING TOPICS:

  • Medicaid Work Mandate
  • Suicide Prevention
  • Community Health Workers
  • Rural Health Payout
  • Opioid Crisis

Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

  • Email

Tuesday, Nov 7 2023

Full Issue

Firearm Injuries Saddle Kids With Pain, Psychiatric Issues In Long Term: Study

Perhaps unsurprisingly, researchers found that through a year after surviving a firearm injury, youngsters experience steep rises in pain as well as psychiatric and substance abuse disorders. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court is set to tackle whether people accused of domestic violence have a right to carry firearms.

Through one year after a firearm injury, children and teens experienced a 117% increase in pain disorders, a 68% increase in psychiatric disorders, including PTSD, anxiety, depression and psychosis, and a 144% increase in substance use disorders relative to the controls. 鈥淥ur results suggest that the struggles of the survivors on a daily basis to recover, to heal, to get by and make it to the next day is a challenging road,鈥 said Dr. Zirui Song, one of the paper鈥檚 authors and a primary care physician and associate professor of health care policy and medicine at Harvard Medical School. (Mantel, 11/6)

麻豆女优 Health News: Children Who Survive Shootings Endure Huge Health Obstacles And Costs聽

Oronde McClain was struck by a stray bullet on a Philadelphia street corner when he was 10. The bullet shattered the back of his skull, splintering it into 36 pieces. McClain鈥檚 heart stopped, and he was technically dead for two minutes and 17 seconds. Although a hospital team shocked him back to life, McClain never fully recovered. Doctors removed half his skull, replacing it with a gel plate, but shrapnel remains. (Szabo, 11/6)

With each mass shooting, Americans look to one grim indicator 鈥 the number of dead 鈥 as a measure of the destructive impact. But damage left behind by gunshot wounds reverberates among survivors and families, sending mental health disorders soaring and shifting huge burdens onto the health care system, a new analysis of private health insurance claims shows. ... 鈥淲hat comes after the gunshot is so often not talked about,鈥 said Dr. Chana Sacks, co-director of the Gun Violence Prevention Center at Massachusetts General Hospital and an author of the new study, published on Monday in the journal Health Affairs. The study, which analyzed thousands of insurance claims, maps out lasting damage to families and communities. (Barry, 11/6)

People who experienced trauma as a child or adolescent were found to be 48 percent more likely to have serious and recurrent headaches as an adult than were those who had not experienced trauma in their early years, according to research published in the journal Neurology. The finding stemmed from the analysis of data from 28 studies, involving 154,739 people. The researchers categorized traumatic events as either threat-based (such as physical, sexual or emotional abuse, witnessing or being threatened by violence, and serious family conflicts) or deprivation-based (including neglect, financial adversity, parents鈥 separation, divorce or death, and living in a household with mental illness, alcohol or substance abuse). (Searing, 11/6)

The Supreme Court weighs gun rights and domestic violence 鈥

The justices will reach for their historian hats again Tuesday as the Supreme Court confronts the latest test of gun rights in modern America: whether people accused of domestic violence have a right to carry firearms. A 29-year-old federal law says no. It bars people under domestic violence protective orders from possessing guns. But when the court hears arguments on the constitutionality of that law, the justices likely will focus on whether the law meets a 鈥渢ext, history, and tradition鈥 test the court laid out just last year for gun-rights cases. (Gerstein, 11/7)

Zackey Rahimi pulled a gun on his ex-girlfriend in a parking lot and shot at a witness who saw them arguing, prompting a Texas family court to issue a protective order in 2020 temporarily forbidding him from possessing firearms.聽Rahimi ignored the order, authorities say, going on to threaten another woman with a gun, fire an AR-15 into the house of one of his narcotics customers, and shoot into the air at a Whataburger drive-through after his friend鈥檚 credit card was declined. That led to his conviction under a 1994 federal law prohibiting people under domestic-violence orders from possessing guns鈥攁nd set up the latest chapter in the modern history of the Second Amendment.聽 (Bravin, 11/6)

In a handwritten letter from jail, the man at the center of a major Supreme Court gun rights case to be heard on Tuesday apologized for going down 鈥渁 wrong path鈥 and wrote that he would no longer carry a gun. 鈥淚 will make sure for sure this time that when I finish my time being incarcerated to stay the faithful, righteous person I am this day,鈥 the man, Zackey Rahimi, wrote. He added that he wanted 鈥渢o stay away from all firearms and weapons, and to never be away from my family again.鈥 Despite Mr. Rahimi鈥檚 vows in the July 25 letter addressed to a local judge and prosecutor, gun rights advocates acknowledge that he is not an ideal poster boy for the Second Amendment. (VanSickle, 11/6)

Also 鈥

The father of the man accused of killing seven people and wounding 31 at the 2022 Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Ill., pleaded guilty Monday to seven counts of misdemeanor reckless conduct for his role in allowing his son to obtain firearms. Robert Crimo Jr. had been charged for 鈥渞ecklessly鈥 sponsoring his son鈥檚 gun ownership application and allowing him access to firearms and ammunition, even though he was aware that Robert Crimo III had threatened violence and expressed suicidal thoughts. The young man was indicted last year in connection with the mass killing in the suburban Chicago town. (Berger, 11/6)

Nearly 18 months after the deadliest school shooting in Texas, Uvalde residents will elect a new mayor in a special election. Among the three candidates vying to lead the majority-Latino town is Kimberly Mata-Rubio, whose daughter Lexi was killed at Robb Elementary School last May. (Salhotra, 11/7)

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

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

Stay informed by signing up for the Morning Briefing and other emails:

Recent Morning Briefings

  • Today, April 29
  • Tuesday, April 28
  • Monday, April 27
  • Friday, April 24
  • Thursday, April 23
  • Wednesday, April 22
More Morning Briefings
RSS Feeds
  • Podcasts
  • Special Reports
  • Morning Briefing
  • About Us
  • Republish Our Content
  • Contact Us

Follow Us

  • RSS

Sign up for emails

Join our email list for regular updates based on your personal preferences.

Sign up
  • Editorial Policy
  • Privacy Policy

漏 2026 麻豆女优