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Morning Briefing

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Monday, Jun 10 2024

Full Issue

New York Moves To Import Cheaper Canadian Drugs In Bulk

The move follows a similar policy in Florida to try to tackle high drug prices. Also in the news: Bird flu variant that infected Texas dairy worker found lethal to ferrets in experiments; layoffs at Oregon Health and Science University; and more.

New York is making a rare move in Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis鈥 footsteps. State legislators are pressing forward with creating a program to import drugs in bulk from Canada, emboldened by federal approval of a similar plan in Florida earlier this year. The bill directs New York health and education officials to develop a list of medications that are 鈥渆xpected to generate substantial savings for consumers in the state鈥 if acquired from Canadian suppliers. (Kaufman, 6/7)

The bird flu virus strain that infected a Texas dairy farm worker in March was lethal to ferrets in experiments designed to mimic the disease in humans, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported on Friday. Seasonal flu, by contrast, makes ferrets sick but does not kill them, the CDC said. Ferrets are considered the best small mammal for studying influenza virus infection and transmission and are commonly used as a tool to inform public health risk assessments of emerging influenza viruses, according to the CDC. (Lapid, 6/7)

Texas denied requests by Centene, Elevance Health and six other insurers to reconsider which managed care companies it will rely on to run its $116 billion Medicaid program over the next six years, rejecting allegations that local officials鈥 process improperly advantaged rival CVS Health.聽The Texas Health and Human Services Commission in March announced it intended to award new, six-year Medicaid and Children Health Insurance Program managed care contracts to 14 companies including CVS Health鈥檚 Aetna, Centene, Elevance Health, Humana, Molina Healthcare and UnitedHealthcare.聽(Tepper, 6/7)

A federal panel on Friday centralized 49 lawsuits accusing UnitedHealth Group's Change Healthcare payment processing unit of failing to protect personal data from February's cyber attack in Minnesota. The federal Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation said in an order on Friday that Minnesota, where UnitedHealth is based and where several cases are already pending, is the most logical venue. (Pierson, 6/7)

In other news from across the country 鈥

Oregon Health and Science University said Friday it plans to lay off at least 500 employees in the coming months. The academic health center attributed layoffs to financial pressures from rising labor and supply costs, according to a message sent to employees Thursday. (Hudson, 6/7)

Health departments in the Midwest are warning of the emergence of a new deadly animal tranquilizer that鈥檚 linked to overdose deaths. The drug, medetomidine, is a powerful sedative used in veterinary medicine to keep dogs sedated and comfortable during exams and medical procedures, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said when it approved the drug in 2022. (Irwin, 6/7)

As a boy, Nathan Clark developed a fear that he would lose his limbs and be unable to fish and crab with his grandfather.聽Today, Clark is a triple amputee. He lost his limbs after using fentanyl and xylazine, an animal tranquilizer also known as 鈥渢ranq鈥 that rots flesh and bone. Less than five years after xylazine showed up in his dope bag, the 29-year-old can鈥檛 bathe or use the toilet on his own.聽(Wernau, 6/9)

At the dinner table the night before she died, Judy Rohwer told her daughters and grandson that they were all working too hard on the family farm. They must stop working seven days a week, take breaks and do fun things. 鈥淪he wanted us each to come up with two things we wanted to do away from the farm,鈥 Angela Rohwer said. About 12 hours later, they were forcibly torn from their work when their pickup was struck head-on as they traveled May 21, 2022, to the Durango Farmers Market from their southwestern Colorado farm hauling a trailer full of seedlings and produce.聽(McMillin and Carey, 6/9)

Besides facing greater mortality rates due to heart disease, cancer and overdoses, Connecticut鈥檚 Black residents also face higher rates of maternal mortality and severe maternal morbidity. (Martinez, 6/7)

Also 鈥

On a Friday night in late May, a soccer ball struck 12-year-old Dhruvtej Karande in the face, driving the edge of his glasses into his eyebrow and opening up a two-inch gash.聽His parents rushed to the nearest urgent care center, but it was already closed when they arrived, said his mom, Priyanka Karande. Then it was off to another urgent care in Charlotte鈥檚 University City area. It, too, was closed. (Crouch, 6/10)

Health care services in Missouri state prison facilities are deteriorating according to activists and groups like the Missouri Prison Reform. The nonprofit has been receiving concerns from prison residents, their families and current medical staff about the health care conditions for years, but Executive Director Lori Curry said conditions have been getting worse. She said the organization has received complaints from both staff and residents as recently as this week. (Holcomb, 6/10)

At a white plastic table in an office in Arapahoe, Lance Oldman is pounding a mix of ground-up cedar, water and honey into something a bit unexpected: an empty Chapstick tube. 鈥淔ill it up with cedar and use a stick, push them out and they come out perfect little cylindrical circles,鈥 he said. Oldman is Northern Arapaho and is a certified peer specialist at the White Buffalo Recovery Center, an outpatient addiction treatment facility in Riverton and on the Wind River Reservation. He鈥檚 making sticks of cedar incense. Cedar, he said, is traditionally used to heal the mind, body and spirit. (Habermann, 6/7)

Elisha Griffith directly experienced the positive impact of a tool that steers parents to drug rehabilitation. Griffith is a Franklin County resident and the mother of four children. Eight years ago, her daughters were placed in foster care for four years as she struggled with substance use. 鈥淭hey were super traumatized from it, and I'm traumatized from thinking back to that moment,鈥 Griffith said. 鈥淢y daughter broke out in blotches and was freaking out and didn't know what was happening or where she was going with strangers.鈥 (Rosenbaum, 6/10)

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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