Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Big Pharma Should Stop Gearing Up To Fight 'Medicare For All'; Opioid Epidemic Is Devastating All Communities, Not Just White Ones
As a growing pantheon of Democratic politicians pledge their support for 鈥淢edicare for all鈥 and its variants, the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries are gearing up for an epic and expensive battle to kill these proposals. As someone who has worked at the highest levels of the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, I think this opposition is a huge mistake. (Jim Tananbaum, 2/27)
Last April, The Baltimore Sun ran an op-ed essay by a woman in mourning. Her sister, a 鈥渕iddle-class suburban mom,鈥 had become addicted to alcohol and opioids and died. Two years earlier, The Wall Street Journal published the names and photographs of some of the 300,000 Americans who had died of opioid overdoses since the 1990s. Smiling faces stared back at the reader with eyes full of promise. The families of the dead described how their once-vibrant loved ones had fallen into opioid use, how an injury or divorce led to medication, which then spiraled into addiction. In 2016, the NPR podcast 鈥淓mbedded鈥 told the heartbreaking story of a nurse with three children who hurt her back at work and was soon hooked on opioids. (Abdullah Shihipar, 2/26)
We know that each day, 10,000 people around the world die of substance abuse and that addiction affects one in five people over the age of 14. So far, substance use disorders are costing society almost five times the cost of HIV/AIDS and twice as much as cancer. As physicians specializing in addiction treatment, our efforts to serve our patients are best assisted by policies which, as outlined by the American Society of Addiction Medicine, place an emphasis on teaching addiction medicine to increase and strengthen our workforce, standardizing the delivery of addiction medicine and expanding access to high-quality, evidence-based care. (Brent Boyett and Stephen Taylor, 2/26)
Did Immigration and Customs Enforcement turn a blind eye to abusive conditions confronting thousands of immigrants jailed without being convicted of a crime? Apparently so, according to a report by the Department of Homeland Security鈥檚 Office of Inspector General. Instead of using all the tools available to hold operators of immigrant detention facilities accountable for rampant health and safety violations, ICE did not impose financial penalties when it could have. Agency officials gave operators a pass in many cases by allowing them to avoid inmate facility requirements, the inspector general found. (Joe Davidson, 2/26)
Concerted efforts by political leaders, health officials, educators and manufacturers have driven underage use of conventional tobacco products to historic lows. Unfortunately, from 2017 to 2018, use of e-vapor products among high schoolers increased almost 80 percent and almost 50 percent for middle schoolers. FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb has called this an alarming 鈥渆pidemic鈥 and said that more must be done. I agree. Now is the time to act.聽(Howard A. Willard, 2/26)
When Medicare was signed into law in 1965, it did not include any coverage for hearing aids. They were considered 鈥渞outinely needed and low in cost鈥 and most Americans didn鈥檛 live long enough to actually need them. Even though the costs are now high and the need great, Medicare still doesn鈥檛 cover hearing aids. Today, hearing loss affects one-third of adults over the age of 65 and has a significant impact on health. Those experiencing it are at increased risk for depression, loneliness, and dementia, and may become socially isolated. Hearing loss also affects physical health, putting individuals at higher risk for falls and disability and possibly causing functional limitations such as reduced mobility or balance. (Elsa Pearson and Austin Frakt, 2/27)
My mother has lived with Alzheimer鈥檚 for almost 10 years. Caring for her has been like raising a child in reverse鈥攅very month she does less for herself. That鈥檚 heartbreaking. But keeping her with us, instead of in a nursing home, has been more enriching than I imagined. Mom was a 75-year-old widow in Florida when my siblings and I learned of her dementia. We鈥檇 flown in for a family vacation and walked into an intervention by her friends. After the vacation, she flew straight to my sister鈥檚 home in New York. (Brian Gaffney, 2/26)
Eliminating the distance between agency decision-making and political pressure, as this proposal does, begins to introduce a patronage system. Health care for veterans shouldn鈥檛 have to flow through a congressional office. (Robert Robb, 2/26)
My public health colleagues and I will continue the work we鈥檙e doing in our individual states and jurisdictions to raise immunization rates, provide science-based information and answer parents鈥 questions. But if we鈥檙e going to eliminate vaccine-preventable diseases in Washington, New York, Texas, or your home state, we have to see the big picture. That big picture means adequately funding governmental public health 鈥 this country鈥檚 community prevention system, working globally for our health security, funding our school nurse partners and making public policy that protects our most vulnerable. (John Wiesman, 2/26)
When it comes to health care in Massachusetts, there鈥檚 good news and bad news. The good news? The state recently announced that individuals who buy health care through the Health Connector, our health care exchange, pay the second lowest premiums in the country. The bad news? According to the Massachusetts Health Policy Commission, small businesses and their employees in the state have the second highest premiums in the country. (Jon B. Hurst, 2/26)
Others have noticed what a foolish thing the Utah Legislature did in rolling back the Medicaid expansion that was approved by the voters in November. (George Pyle, 2/26)