Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Texas Tries $2 Billion Effort Against Rural Mental Health Care Gaps
Three times a week, Potter County Judge Nancy Tanner holds hearings for people to determine whether they should be placed in a mental health hospital. Since she was elected in 2014, she has seen many of the same people cycle in and out of her courtroom 鈥 a long-running marathon of familiar faces who either don鈥檛 want help or get it, and still end up back in Tanner鈥檚 presence. When she doesn鈥檛 see them again, she quietly hopes they find help on their own. Unfortunately, Tanner is acutely aware of what can happen if they don鈥檛. (Carver, 11/22)
The University of St. Thomas opened its third Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing program site in Sugar Land. 鈥淎s Texas and the nation continue to experience a nursing shortage, we recognize the need to grow enrollment in our undergraduate nursing program in a way that provides accessibility for anyone in the Houston area interested in our program,鈥 Dr. Claudine Dufrene, the university鈥檚 executive dean and associate professor, said in a statement. (Varma, 11/24)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Tennessee has seen an alarming jump in nursing homes with serious deficiencies, and advocates worry the quality of long-term care has plummeted. (Puente, 11/26)
During the worst of the pandemic, Shin-Yi Lao, then Newton鈥檚 only public health nurse, at times fell into despair as she juggled testing, contact tracing, and data analysis amid a daily flood of new COVID-19 cases. Almost four years later, the pandemic鈥檚 extraordinary demands have faded, yet Newton鈥檚 health department still struggles to keep up with some basic functions. Those include conducting inspections for pools, housing, and restaurants, said Lao, now the city鈥檚 director of public health services. (Laughlin, 11/26)
A southern Minnesota substance abuse treatment center's license has been revoked Wednesday due to safety concerns. Olmsted County revoked public lodging, food and beverage licenses from Oakridge Treatment Center in Haverhill Township near Rochester after the Public Health Services Advisory Board declared the facility a public health nuisance earlier in the month. Concerns regarding the treatment center include a "disproportionate number of reported overdoses and calls for service" as well as other pending investigations. (Moser, 11/22)
Roughly $10 million in federal aid will flow to the New Haven area over the next five years to help municipal health departments take a聽regional approach in combating the opioid epidemic through the hiring of 10 case-management聽鈥嬧渘avigators鈥 and the cross-town sharing of overdose聽data. This aid comes as the number of overdose deaths in 2022 reached 490聽in New Haven county, including 128聽in the city聽itself. (Breen, 11/25)
Professors at the University of Florida had high hopes for Joseph Ladapo. But they quickly lost faith in him. In 2021, the university was fast-tracking him into a tenured professorship as part of his appointment as Florida鈥檚 surgeon general. Ladapo, Gov. Ron DeSantis鈥 pick for the state鈥檚 top medical official, dazzled them with his Harvard degree and work as a research professor at New York University and UCLA. (Sarkissian, 11/26)
Keinymar Avila, a tiny 7-year-old with microcephaly who has never been separated from her mother, curled up in the arms of a woman she鈥檇 recently met. Her mother, Yamile Perez, glanced over at her daughter to make sure all was well as she attended a virtual meeting with Chicago Public Schools officials who were evaluating Keinymar鈥檚 needs. It is not easy to let someone else hold your child, especially if your child requires special medical care. No one knows this better than the person cradling the girl, Mary Otts-Rubenstein, a Lakeview resident who has her own child with disabilities. (Salzman, 11/26)