Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Texas Attorney General Sues Second Doctor Over Gender-Affirming Care
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing a second doctor for allegedly violating state law and providing gender-affirming medical care to minors. Dr. Hector Granados is an El Paso pediatric endocrinologist. Paxton accuses him in the lawsuit of prescribing puberty blockers and hormone therapy to more than 20 minors to treat gender dysphoria, or the distress someone can feel when their gender identity doesn鈥檛 match their physical appearance. (Klibanoff, 10/30)
A House subcommittee has referred former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York to the Justice Department for potential prosecution, accusing him of lying to Congress about his involvement in a state Covid report on nursing home deaths. Mr. Cuomo was accused of engaging in a 鈥渃onscious, calculated effort鈥 to avoid accountability for his handling of nursing homes where thousands of people died of Covid, according to the referral from the Republican-led House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic. (Ashford and Oreskes, 10/30)
Florida鈥檚 First Coast has seen a marked increase in an already-high infant mortality rate. A report released Tuesday by the Northeast Florida Healthy Start Coalition shows infant deaths rising almost 19% over the past five years. That鈥檚 despite a decline in deaths from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS. (Corum, 10/30)
Over the past year, Palm Beach County's only needle exchange program served over 250 clients and reduced the overall syringe count by nearly 7,800. It鈥檚 part of the ongoing effort to reduce opioid drug abuse, said Austin Wright, director of Syringe & Harm Reduction Services at Rebel Recovery Florida. (Brutus, 10/30)
Like many people and business owners in western North Carolina left to pick up the scattered pieces after the remnants of Hurricane Helene pummeled the region, dentists have had to pivot to tend to their patients鈥 needs. Safe drinking water is critical to that care. And with key components of Asheville鈥檚 municipal water system blown to bits and its feeder reservoirs suffering from tenacious turbidity, the North Carolina Board of Dental Examiners issued an emergency order on Oct. 14 waiving some facility requirements related to piped water and functioning toilets to allow oral health care providers more flexibility. (Blythe, 10/31)
麻豆女优 Health News: In Montana, Conservative Groups See Chance To Kill Medicaid Expansion
Conservative groups are working to undermine support for Montana鈥檚 Medicaid expansion in hopes the state will abandon the program. The rollback would be the first in the decade since the Affordable Care Act began allowing states to cover more people with low incomes. Montana鈥檚 expansion, which insures roughly 78,800 people, is set to expire next year unless the legislature and governor opt to renew it. Opponents see a rare opportunity to eliminate Medicaid expansion in one of the 40 states that have approved it. (Houghton, 10/31)
Health news from California 鈥
Public health officials have reported two more locally acquired cases of the mosquito borne illness dengue in Los Angeles County, bringing the total to 11 cases in recent weeks.聽One of the cases was reported in Baldwin Park, where health officials are currently investigating a cluster of cases. It's now the seventh discovered in the area.聽(Fioresi, 10/30)
Santa Cruz County will prohibit the sale of filtered cigars and cigarettes, an effort to slash waste from cigarette butts which proponents said litter the coastal county鈥檚 beaches and harm marine life.聽The ordinance, passed by the county鈥檚 board of supervisors Tuesday, is the first county-level filtered cigarette ban in the country, according to Supervisor Justin Cummings, who introduced the measure.聽The ban will apply to the county鈥檚 unincorporated areas, where more than half of the county鈥檚 roughly 270,000 residents live, according to the county鈥檚 website.聽(Ellis, 10/30)
San Francisco balloon artist Korene Tom had not been to the dentist in more than 20 years 鈥 a gap she made up for with vigorous brushing, which was all the dental care she could afford after she lost her job as an office administrator.聽But that changed this week when the free Clinic by the Bay moved into the historic Alemany Emergency Hospital building, newly renovated after sitting vacant for nearly half a century in the Excelsior District. The nonprofit clinic, which has served uninsured, low-income patients for 14 years in the city, now offers extended hours and expanded services 鈥 including dental care.聽(Whiting, 10/30)
麻豆女优 Health News: Can A $10 Billion Climate Bond Address California鈥檚 Water Contamination Problem?
When Cynthia Ruiz turns on her kitchen faucet, she hears a slight squeak before cloudy fluid bursts out of the spout. The water in her Central Valley town of East Orosi is clean enough most of the time to wash dishes, flush toilets, and take showers, but it鈥檚 not safe to swallow. Drinking water is trucked in twice a month. 鈥淭here are times where the water is so bad you can鈥檛 even wash dishes,鈥 said Ruiz, who is advised not to drink the tap water, which is laden with nitrates 鈥 runoff from orange and nectarine fields surrounding the town of roughly 400. (S谩nchez, 10/31)