Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'I Just Couldn鈥檛 Hang On': Students Seeking Mental Health Help Often Stranded On Waiting Lists
Colleges across the country are failing to keep up with a troubling聽spike in demand for mental health care 鈥 leaving students stuck on waiting lists for weeks, unable to get help. STAT surveyed dozens of universities about their mental health services. From major public institutions to small elite colleges, a striking pattern emerged: Students often have to wait weeks just for an initial intake exam to review their symptoms. The wait to see a psychiatrist who can prescribe or adjust medication 鈥 often a part-time employee 鈥 may be longer still. (Thielking, 2/6)
You may have heard of the "Roseto Effect," referring to a famous community of Italian immigrants in Roseto, Pennsylvania 鈥 made even more famous by Malcolm Gladwell 鈥 who get shockingly few heart attacks, apparently because their social ties with each other are so robust. Well, the latest county-by-county cancer statistics suggest there may be something of a "Nantucket Effect." Cancer death rates are down nationwide, the study in the journal JAMA finds, but on the island of Nantucket, they've plummeted so dramatically that Nantucket County ranks in the top 10 counties that have cut their mortality the most. (Goldberg, 2/3)
By the time Kay Schwister got her diagnosis last summer, she couldn't talk anymore. But she could still scowl, and scowl she did. After weeks of decline and no clue what was causing it, doctors had told Schwister 鈥 a 53-year-old vocational rehab counselor and mother of two from Chicago 鈥 that she had an incurable disease called Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or CJD. The disease was shrinking Kay's brain, and riddling it with holes. She would likely only live a few more weeks, the doctors said. (Bichell, 2/6)
They called him the Beast.David Fajgenbaum was the fittest of his friends at the University of Pennsylvania鈥檚 medical school, a 6-foot-3 gym addict and former quarterback at Georgetown. His mammoth hands seemed more suited to spiraling footballs than the fine fingerwork a doctor-in-training might need. He had endurance to match, taking multiple hits and returning to the field to play on. ... In July 2010, that all changed. (Thomas, 2/4)
A central Ohio doctor said he is seeing success with a new heart stent that is absorbed by the body after delivering medication and helping to strengthen arteries in people with coronary artery disease. The stent is used to hold open arteries clogged with plaque and disappears within about three years, leaving four small platinum markers embedded in artery walls so cardiologists know where it was, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which approved its use last summer. Before dissolving, it administers a drug that inhibits the growth of scar tissue and reblockage. (Viviano, 2/5)
While traditional cigarette smoking is falling among both adults and teens, the use of e-cigarettes among young people rose in recent years.聽In 2005, about 20.9 percent of adults were current smokers versus 15.1 percent in 2015, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found. That鈥檚 a decrease of around 8.5 million people. (Siddons, 2/6)
鈥淭he Dr. Oz Show,鈥 which has come under fire from physicians and politicians for promoting 鈥渕iracle鈥 cures with no evidence, will launch a new聽weekly segment on the connections聽between spirituality and health that veers, once again, into the territory of miracles. Christian author and motivational speaker Priscilla Shirer聽and several pastors will join Oz for 鈥淔aithful Fridays.鈥 Among the topics to be explored: 鈥淢iraculous medical recoveries only God can explain,鈥 according to a press release from the show. (Thielking, 2/3)