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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Oct 15 2024

Full Issue

Kids' Lead Poisoning Rates 2 to 3 Times Worse In Cleveland Than In Flint, Mich.

A study showing elevated lead poisoning rates, shared Monday in Cleveland's lead poisoning hearing, caused municipal leaders to call for a revision of City Hall鈥檚 landmark 2019 lead-safe law. Meanwhile in Missouri, lawmakers plan to study and regulate the effect of nuclear weapons production in the St. Louis area.

Despite half a decade of Cleveland鈥檚 focus on combatting the ill effects of lead paint, childhood lead poisoning rates among young Cleveland children remain two to three times higher than they were in Flint, Michigan during the height of that city鈥檚 lead crisis. That stunning statistic was shared Monday by Cleveland Public Health Director Dr. David Margolius, who, among other municipal leaders, are now calling for a revamp of City Hall鈥檚 landmark 2019 lead-safe law. (Astolfi, 10/14)

Missouri lawmakers will convene a special committee to study the consequences of nuclear weapons production in the St. Louis area and recommend legislation for next year, House Speaker Dean Plocher announced Thursday. In a press release, Plocher said the Special Interim Committee on the Impact of U.S. Nuclear Weapon Programs on Missouri will allow 鈥減olicymakers, health professionals, environmental experts and affected community members to document their concerns and develop legislative solutions.鈥 (Kite, 10/14)

A 4-year-old burn victim at Massachusetts General Hospital received the first two-layered skin graft in the United States using a new procedure that, if successful, could improve outcomes for reconstructive burn care. The procedure was performed in June, according to Dr. Jeremy Goverman, the Mass General surgeon who undertook the operation. It is the first of its kind to create bi-layered, 鈥渇ull-thickness鈥 skin grafts that are bioengineered from the patient鈥檚 own donor tissue. (Fonseca, 10/11)

When San Francisco Supervisor Hilary Ronen first started asking around about what artificial intelligence programs the city uses, she was surprised to find out no one person or department knew. That is why Ronen is planning to introduce legislation Tuesday at the Board of Supervisors requiring the city鈥檚 Department of Technology to keep a public list of where and how AI technology is used across the city and county, and the reasons for it. 鈥淭his is basically just a transparency bill,鈥 Ronen told the Chronicle. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not prohibiting any uses鈥 of AI. (DiFeliciantonio, 10/14)

The leading private prison company in the U.S. has spent more than $4.4 million to settle dozens of complaints alleging mistreatment 鈥 including at least 22 inmate deaths 鈥 at its Tennessee prisons and jails since 2016. More than $1.1 million of those payouts involved Tennessee鈥檚 largest prison, the long-scrutinized Trousdale Turner Correctional Center, which is now under federal investigation. (Mattise, Loller and Hall, 10/13)

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