Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Hackers Get Data On 6.9 Million People From 23andMe
Hackers, using old passwords from customers of the genetic testing company 23andMe, were able to gain access to personal information from about 6.9 million profiles, which in some cases included ancestry trees, birth years and geographic locations, the company said on Monday. In October, a hacker posted a claim online that they had 23andMe users鈥 profile information, the company wrote in a Securities and Exchange Commission disclosure on Friday. (Carballo, 12/4)
In legal news 鈥
The U.S. Department of Justice on Monday urged a federal appeals court in Boston to break new ground by holding that a defendant's conviction outlasts his death and does not get wiped away just because he died before his appeal could be heard, in a case involving a former biotech chief executive's securities fraud conviction. Prosecutors in making that argument to the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals acknowledged that every other federal appeals court would under their precedents vacate former PixarBio Corp CEO Frank Reynolds' conviction following his 2022 death. (Raymond, 12/4)
The Iowa Supreme Court was supposed to hear oral arguments next week in the appeal of a record-setting $76 million medical malpractice judgment against an obstetrics and gynecology clinic accused of causing an infant鈥檚 severe brain injuries. That appeal is now stayed amid a blitz of accusations and counterattacks, in both state and federal court, by the medical clinic and the company that provided its malpractice insurance. A case that began as a dispute over the tragic consequences of one infant鈥檚 birth has transformed into a high-stakes examination of an alleged conflict between the interests of a policyholder that allegedly wanted to settle and avoid trial and an insurance company that was dedicated to changing malpractice law. (Frankel, 12/4)
Until last week, the Department of Health and Human Services was facing a lawsuit from two people who said the state had put them at severe risk of entering a nursing home by providing them less in-home care than it had deemed necessary. In one case, a 38-year-old woman with disabilities was receiving only a 鈥渟mall portion鈥 of the 68 hours of weekly care the state had allotted her, according to the lawsuit. A federal judge has certified the case as a class-action lawsuit, pointing to evidence that there could be dozens, even hundreds of people who face the same risk of being institutionalized for the same reasons. (Timmins, 12/4)
An Orange County plastic surgeon who dubbed himself 鈥淒r. Laguna鈥 is under fire from dozens of former patients and the Orange County District Attorney鈥檚 Office amid claims of horribly botched procedures, medical negligence and a brief suspension of his medical license following the death of a patient. The chief of the plastic surgery department at a south Orange County hospital calls Dr. Arian Mowlavi 鈥渁 danger to the community.鈥 (Emery, 12/4)
Attorneys representing people who say they weren鈥檛 properly warned about harsh side effects associated with blockbuster weight loss drugs such as Ozempic and Wegovy are pushing to centralize the lawsuits in a Louisiana federal court, filings show. About 20 lawsuits over the drugs, known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, have been filed since August against pharmaceutical companies Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, court records show. Attorneys from Morgan & Morgan, which has brought nine of the lawsuits, filed a motion on Friday asking the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (JPML) to consolidate the litigation over the drugs in the Western District of Louisiana. (Jones, 12/4)
With Bayer facing investor pressure to resolve thousands of lawsuits over its Roundup weedkiller after being hit with $2 billion in verdicts in recent weeks, all eyes are on a trial wrapping up in Philadelphia. Plaintiffs have won the last four trials over their claims that the product causes cancer, each time securing a larger verdict. Those losses ended a nine-trial winning streak for Bayer, shattering investor and company hopes that the worst of the Roundup litigation was over. (Pierson, 12/5)
麻豆女优 Health News and CBS News: Patients Expected Profemur Artificial Hips To Last. Then They Snapped In Half.聽
Bradley Little, a physical education teacher in Arizona, was leading his class through a school hallway in 2017 when he collapsed. Little feared he was having a stroke. Or, in a sign of the times, that he鈥檇 been shot. He tried to stand, but his leg wouldn鈥檛 move. A student ran for help. Firefighters arrived and hoisted Little onto a gurney. At the hospital, an X-ray revealed that the artificial hip implant in Little鈥檚 right leg had 鈥渟uddenly and catastrophically structurally failed,鈥 according to a lawsuit Little would later file in federal court. The implant severed at its 鈥渘eck鈥 鈥 a 2-inch-long titanium part linking Little鈥檚 thigh to his torso. (Kelman and Werner, 12/5)