Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Surgeon General: Beating Loneliness May Help US Mental Health Crisis
As the surgeon general, part of Vivek H. Murthy鈥檚 job is to figure out what ails the country and how we can heal. His diagnosis: As we have receded from the places and activities where we used to find community, our mental health is worse than ever. 鈥淥ur connection to one another as a foundation on which we build a healthy society, as that foundation has crumbled and weakened, we鈥檝e seen that we鈥檙e suffering across the board,鈥 he told Dartmouth students and faculty during a panel at the college on Thursday. (Gokee, 9/28)
Seven current and former U.S. surgeons general were at Dartmouth College on Thursday to talk about the nation's mental health crisis. The country's current top doctor, Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, was joined by predecessors going back to the first Bush administration. Murthy said loneliness has become widespread, as communities have become less and less connected. He called it one of the country鈥檚 most pressing public health issues. (Cuno-Booth, 9/28)
While working in the West Wing under President George W. Bush, then-US Surgeon General Dr. Richard聽Carmona got a terrible telephone call from his daughter. After he had been missing, she found Carmona鈥檚 adult son in a catatonic state. He sat in the corner of his father鈥檚 home for two days and he kept screaming 鈥渋ncoming, incoming.鈥 Carmona鈥檚 son served in the army for 21 years, and Carmona said while he doesn鈥檛 talk much about it, his son has had 鈥渃rippling PTSD鈥 and been in and out of mental care facilities since that incident. Yet when the family initially sought help from the VA, Carmona said, even with all of his connections as surgeon general, they started to see the cracks in the country鈥檚 mental health care system. (Christensen, 9/28)
In other public health news 鈥
Low levels of a microscopic parasite were found during routine testing of Druid Lake Reservoir, the Baltimore Department of Public Works said, meaning the drinking water could sicken some vulnerable populations in parts of Baltimore, Baltimore County and Howard County. Today, Thursday, Sept. 28, DPW announced that during a routine test of the Druid Lake Reservoir low levels of the microscopic parasite Cryptosporidium were discovered. pic.twitter.com/VUBF6KJnBH (Mattu, 9/28)
TikTok has become a key marketing channel for vendors promoting steroids and other bodybuilding drugs to millions of the app鈥檚 users, according to a report released Thursday that the social media company disputes. In聽the study, the nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate says popular videos encouraging use of the products for aesthetic or athletic gain are being posted by influencers who often downplay the risks associated with them. It follows a warning issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April about performance-enhancing drugs being marketed to teenagers and young adults on social media platforms. (Hadero, 9/28)
Thousands of whole cantaloupes sold in 19 states and Washington, D.C., have been recalled due to potential salmonella contamination, the Food and Drug Administration announced.聽Eagle Produce, based in Scottsdale, Arizona, is doing a voluntary recall of 6,456 cases of whole cantaloupe after the fruits were tested in a distribution center by the FDA, the agency said in a news release.聽(Martinez, 9/28)
Baltimore City officials are advising immunocompromised individuals, as well as some young children and the elderly, to avoid drinking tap water across a large swath of its service area in the city, Baltimore County and a small part of Howard County due to parasitic contamination. Testing has detected low levels of a microscopic parasite called cryptosporidium in the drinking water reservoir at Druid Lake in Baltimore, officials announced Thursday. (Condon, 9/28)