Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Less Than Half Of Those In Need Of Opioid Treatment Get It: Survey
Roughly three in 10 adults have been addicted to opioids or have a family member who has been, and less than half of those with a substance use disorder have received treatment, according to a new survey conducted by 麻豆女优, a health policy research group. The survey, which polled more than 1,300 adults in July, underscores the broad and often harmful influence of opioid addiction across the nation, which recorded around 110,000 fatal drug overdoses last year alone. (Weiland, 8/15)
More people died from accidental fentanyl overdoses in San Francisco in July than almost any other month since the city began releasing overdose death data three years ago, according to preliminary figures released by the San Francisco Medical Examiner鈥檚 office Tuesday.聽(Ho and Toledo, 8/15)
Kevin Foehrkolb was tending bar on a routine Saturday night last September at Kent House Irish Pub in Towson, Md., when he heard a commotion from the corner booth where a group of regular customers were playing the card game Magic: The Gathering.鈥 They were the type to drink beer, not get rowdy or do shots,鈥 he said. When he ran over, he saw that one man鈥檚 face had turned yellow and his eyes had rolled back in his head. He was overdosing. (Krishna and Park, 8/15)
On the opioid settlements 鈥
Mallinckrodt on Tuesday said it was preparing to seek bankruptcy protection for the second time in three years after struggling to make a required $200 million settlement payment to opioid victims. The drugmaker, one of the largest makers of opioids, said it is negotiating a restructuring support agreement with its stakeholders, while deferring deadlines for missed debt payments and opioid settlement payments to next week. (Jain and Knauth, 8/15)
For Michael Quinn, a partner in the New York City law firm of Eisenberg & Baum, the Supreme Court decision is a temporary victory in a battle he鈥檚 been fighting on behalf of his clients for years. During Purdue鈥檚 original bankruptcy proceedings, he represented the famous photographer Nan Goldin and activists from around the country who, he says, 鈥渁re really concerned about getting accountability in this case from the Sacklers.鈥 (Brady, 8/15)