Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Hidden Costs Of Extreme Heat Landed California With $7.7B Bill
How much do heatwaves cost? The hidden costs of extreme heat 鈥 from lost productivity to healthcare for heat-related illnesses 鈥 totaled more than $7.7 billion over the last decade, a new report from the California Department of Insurance found. It concluded that there are gaps in traditional insurance coverage for losses due to extreme heat events and recommended the creation of new insurance solutions. (Pender, 7/9)
The state legislature earmarked $50 million in the 2022 budget for 鈥渙fficer wellness鈥 programs, with an eye toward improving the mental health of police, and documents show law enforcement has been spending that money on items that range from gym equipment to saunas and Himalayan salt. Some departments chose more offbeat ways to use the money. The Yuba City Police Department put some of its $1,328 toward out-of-work social events and an 鈥渆motional support service animal,鈥 an adopted bunny named Officer Percy. (Lange, 7/9)
A hospital closure in the heart of the San Joaquin Valley a year and a half ago underscored something that people in the region have long known: They don鈥檛 have enough doctors or access to medical care. Madera County鈥檚 lone acute care hospital is expected to reopen later this year. But the issues around medical access that patients in this county and neighboring ones experience will likely continue long after Madera Community Hospital reopens. (Ibarra, 7/8)
Alando Williams, a fixture for years selling the Street Spirit newspaper outside the Berkeley Bowl supermarket on Oregon Street, was admitted to Oakland nursing home Brookdale Wellness in December 2022. Less than a month later, he was dead, aged 64. Now his daughter is suing the facility on Fruitvale Avenue and its owner, claiming the drugs used to keep Williams from wandering contributed to his death. (Baron, 7/9)
Emma Craig was outside the Beverly Hills Medical Center on Wilshire Boulevard, spoiling for a fight. Armed with a bullhorn, sidewalk chalk and 鈥済iant photos of dead babies,鈥 the Bay Area art teacher and antiabortion activist had arrived with her confederates last summer to pray and protest against a clinic seeking to expand its services to California amid a flurry of national restrictions on reproductive care. (Sharp, 7/9)
Jo Franco still remembers the moment she realized that her nose worked. Growing up in Wilmington, a Los Angeles neighborhood dotted with oil refineries and next to one of the largest port complexes in the country, she鈥檇 always assumed she had a fever, or allergies: 鈥淚 could never breathe through my nose at all,鈥 she told me. But when she moved away from the city for college, her breathing suddenly got easier. 鈥淚t was this wonderful surprise,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 could smell lemons.鈥 (Unzueta, 7/9)
Congressman and longtime California politician John Garamendi said Monday that he has been diagnosed with a rare form of blood cancer called multiple myeloma. In a statement and a video posted on the social media platform X on Monday afternoon, Garamendi (D-Walnut Grove), 79, said doctors found the cancer early. He recalled his doctor calling him to say: 鈥淲hen will you be back in California? You need to come in for a series of tests.鈥 (Nelson, 7/8)