Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
The mood was cautiously optimistic and the message was simple: Drug decriminalization saves lives. People who used or carried small quantities of illegal drugs in plain sight would no longer face arrest in British Columbia, the nexus of Canada鈥檚 opioid crisis, officials announced two years ago. So bold was the experiment, even in a province known for pioneering addiction policies, that its public health officer said she was in disbelief the day had actually come. But decriminalization, a policy introduced as a way of alleviating the opioid crisis, has instead been blamed for deepening it. (Isai, 7/11)
Public health experts and officials are amplifying their warnings about the risks of unregulated and sometimes illegal products advertised on social media and easily purchased online or in vape shops. Some claim to contain the hallucinogenic mushroom compound psilocybin, which is legal for use in two states but illegal federally. Some products contain potentially harmful synthetic chemicals or extracts from a sometimes-toxic mushroom known as amanita muscaria. (Ovalle, 7/4)
After a second course of treatment, the tennis Hall of Famer is optimistic about life, and vocal about the importance of early testing. (Waldstein, 7/1)
On Wednesday, the consumer electronics giant revealed a slew of new devices at a splashy event in Paris, including a pair of new foldable phones and updated smartwatches. But it鈥檚 the company鈥檚 鈥渟mart鈥 ring 鈥 the $399 Galaxy Ring 鈥 that seems to have garnered the most attention. That鈥檚 in part because it is new ground for Samsung, a company that has most recently highlighted its interest in artificial intelligence and home robotics. But it鈥檚 also the first big tech company to embrace of a class of health devices that haven鈥檛 yet gone fully mainstream. (Velazco, 7/10)