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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Dec 4 2024

Full Issue

Massachusetts Scores Big With ARPA-H Hub

Research universities, hospitals, and life sciences companies collectively received $276 million in federal funds after the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health opened in Cambridge last fall. In other news: The nationwide McDonald's E. coli outbreak is officially over.

When state officials celebrated the announcement that a new federal health agency would be coming to Cambridge, they boasted that it could bring an influx of research dollars for the state鈥檚 life sciences sector. After a year in operation, we now have an idea of just how much money has come this way. A tally by ARPA-H for The Boston Globe shows that various companies and nonprofits in the state have collectively received $276 million in federal funds, out of more than $2 billion in allocations, since September 2023 鈥 essentially ARPA-H鈥檚 first year. (Chesto, 12/3)

When SmileDirectClub shut down a year ago, scores of existing customers of the teeth-straightening company were left in limbo. Now, tens of thousands are set to get some relief. New York Attorney General Letitia James has announced that her office recovered $4.8 million to distribute nationwide to more than 28,000 consumers. SmileDirectClub illegally charged those customers after it ceased operations, James said. (Grantham-Philips, 12/3)

Nathan Young and his addiction treatment empire have mounted a full-throated defense of how they do business, turning the tables on Aetna 鈥 their accuser 鈥 by asserting that the insurance giant greedily endangers addicts鈥 lives by cutting treatment short. 鈥淚n addiction treatment, more is generally better,鈥 the counterclaim by Young and associates filed on Thanksgiving eve said. 鈥淒ecades of research point to longer treatment as the number one predictor of a successful addiction treatment outcome. (Sforza, 12/3)

A new mental health treatment option in Boulder is working to lower suicide rates. The Hope Institute has already helped people stay out of the hospital for mental health crisis in other parts of the country and now the organization is aiming to do the same in Colorado. (Horbacewicz, 12/3)

It was 5:45 a.m. when three buses with 鈥淢cDowell County Schools鈥 painted on their sides rumbled through the mist into the gravel lot at Sandy Andrews Park. Starlight revealed the silhouettes of large oak trees lying on their sides, ripped from the earth by a storm that had dropped 40 trillion gallons of water across the Southeast just five weeks earlier. When the buses filled up over the course of an hour, it wasn鈥檛 with students. Instead, adults who work at the local plant of Baxter International, a medical supply company that produces 60 percent of the United States鈥 bags of intravenous fluid, filed in to get dropped off at the factory, whose parking lot had been destroyed by flooding. (Gilreath, 11/28)

麻豆女优 Health News: Listen To The Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

This week on the 麻豆女优 Health News Minute: Some hospitals are rethinking IV hydration amid a nationwide IV fluid shortage, and rattlesnake antivenom is cheap to make but expensive to receive. (12/3)

Also 鈥

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Tuesday said the deadly E. coli outbreak linked to slivered onions served at McDonald鈥檚 is over, more than a month after the agency began its probe of the spread.聽The CDC said 104 people in 14 states were infected in the outbreak. It led to 27 hospitalizations and one previously reported death of an older adult in Colorado. (Constantino and Lucas, 12/3)

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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