Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
Since 1970, more than 75,000 miners have died of black lung disease. Now, researchers working to prevent those deaths get layoff notices. (Duff, 6/17)
In Cape Town, South Africa, one of the world鈥檚 foremost H.I.V. researchers has been spending a chunk of each day gently telling longtime workers and young doctoral students that the money is gone and so are their jobs. When the calls are done, she weeps in her empty office. (Nolen, 6/17)
Before there was MAHA, there was Michelle. Anyone following the rise of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 Make America Healthy Again movement can鈥檛 help but recall former First Lady Michelle Obama鈥檚 efforts to improve Americans鈥 diets 鈥 and the vitriol she faced in response. Now, many of the same Republicans who skewered Michelle Obama as a 鈥渘anny state鈥 warrior have embraced the MAHA movement. (Brown, 6/14)
School districts are having a harder time putting nurses in every building, including in D.C., where Children鈥檚 National Hospital is ending a $25 million agreement to manage school nurses. (Portnoy, 6/16)
Desperate to break free from addiction, thousands of Americans hooked on opioids are heading to Mexico for a radical鈥攁nd risky鈥攖reatment banned in the U.S. Watch the video above to see why people are betting their lives on ibogaine. The African root is a powerful psychedelic that can wipe out withdrawals and cravings in just one dose. But it isn鈥檛 without danger. Ibogaine can induce traumatic visions and cause fatal heart complications. (Hotz, 6/19)
China has one of the lowest rates of obesity in the developed world. So why has it emerged as one of the top locations for testing the scores of new weight loss drugs cropping up every month? (DeAngelis, 6/17)
As temperatures rise, ticks of several kinds are flourishing in ways that threaten people鈥檚 health. (Astor, 6/16)