Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Texas Supreme Court To Hear Challenge To Youth Gender Care Ban
The Texas Supreme Court will hear a legal challenge Tuesday to a new state law banning doctors from prescribing gender-affirming care for transgender youth, a prohibition that a district court judge said was unconstitutional. (Melhado, 1/30)
Ohio politicians may be poised to consider whether the state might break its unofficial moratorium on the death penalty by following Alabama in using nitrogen gas to execute inmates. Ohio hasn鈥檛 executed anyone since 2018. In 2020, Republican Gov. Mike DeWine declared lethal injection 鈥渘o longer an option,鈥 citing a federal judge鈥檚 ruling that the protocol could cause inmates 鈥渟evere pain and needless suffering.鈥 Republican state Attorney General Dave Yost scheduled a news conference Tuesday to discuss 鈥渘ext steps to kickstart鈥 Ohio鈥檚 capital punishment system. (Smyth, 1/30)
The large Florida hospital that shut down surgeries abruptly this month over concerns about sterilized operative room equipment is suspending all nonemergency surgeries for an additional week as it grapples with issues that could lead to serious patient infections, surgeons said. (Sandoval, 1/29)
Colorado may become the third state to allow out-of-state residents to receive medical aid in dying through a bill that would also shorten the mandatory waiting period for people seeking to end their lives. Senate Bill 68, which was introduced in the legislature on Jan. 22, would shrink the waiting period to 48 hours from 15 days and also let advanced practice registered nurses, in addition to doctors, prescribe aid-in-dying medication. (Paul, 1/30)
At Duke Health, annual openings for nurses hover around 5,000. For nursing care assistants, the hospital system sees more than 1,200 openings. The list goes on and on: certified medical assistants, 350 openings; respiratory care practitioners, 170; medical lab scientists, 170; clinical research coordinators, 100; surgical technicians, 100. (Fernandez, 1/30)
Calls for reform, increased staffing and resources for Broward鈥檚 four jail facilities are rising following reports of 21 inmate deaths in less than three years. The latest happened last week when Joseph Kirk, a 34-year-old inmate in the Broward County鈥檚 Main Jail in Fort Lauderdale, died at the facility鈥檚 hospital. Kirk was being held on a misdemeanor charge in the Main Jail鈥檚 detox unit. His death is under investigation. (Acevedo, 1/29)