Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
The stomach pain stopped Vickie-Lee Wall in her tracks. 鈥淭he first time the pain got that bad, I honestly thought something had burst in my gut,鈥 said the 64-year-old New Jersey woman, who has stage 4 lobular breast cancer. Her oncologist had prescribed two drugs, including a targeted medication called abemaciclib, after the cancer spread to Wall鈥檚 spine in 2018. Initially the pain was relatively mild. But then it ratcheted up until, three months later, Wall begged her physician for relief. 鈥淭he next visit with him I went, 鈥業 can鈥檛 do this at this dose.鈥欌 (Huff, 12/6)
With her husband near death from an antibiotic-resistant superbug, a scientist found a cure no one had used in the US 鈥 intravenous injections of viruses called phages 鈥 and convinced the medical system to save his life. (LaMotte, 12/6)
If Patrick Kane stays in the lineup for the rest of Detroit鈥檚 season, he鈥檒l have played more post-hip-resurfacing-surgery games than anyone. Resurfacing 鈥 an alternative to a full hip replacement that involves shaving damaged bone and cartilage from the femur, capping that bone with metal and popping it back into a lined socket 鈥 has high-profile test cases in tennis (Andy Murray) and pro wrestling (The Undertaker). (Gentille, 12/5)
Jennifer Livovich started a nonprofit to give socks to the homeless population in Boulder, Colo. She lost it, and more, in a legal and policy dispute. (Richtel, 12/4)
If any one country had schools that were designed to cope with the Covid pandemic, it would be Finland, which already had a highly digital education system that made the logistics of distance learning surprisingly easy. Yet even in Finland, the impact has been stark. At Kulosaari Secondary School, it took a year and a half for teaching to return to normal after the Finnish government declared a state of emergency in March 2020 in response to the rapid spread of Covid.颅颅 (Borrett, 12/4)
When the destructive summer blaze swept across Lahaina, in west Maui, Maryann Kobatake鈥檚 nephew helped ferry a friend鈥檚 grandmother and cousins to safety. On the drive out of a burning Front Street, the town鈥檚 main thoroughfare, she said the 18-year-old heard screams and witnessed carnage that haunts him still. He has not discussed what he鈥檚 seen with her or other family members. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think he wants to relive it by talking,鈥 she said, adding that she鈥檚 tried to get him to open up to her. 鈥淏ecause he鈥檚 had it tough in life, I think that鈥檚 just how he copes with it.鈥 (Wang, 12/3)