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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Mar 22 2017

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Concern Over NIH Budget Cuts; Abortion And The Supreme Court Again Are Front And Center

A selection of opinions on health care from around the nation.

Last week I was in London to participate in a scientific symposium. During coffee breaks, many British colleagues asked me and other American visitors to explain the bewildering news that President Trump had announced his intention to cut the budget for the National Institutes of Health by 18.3 percent, about $5.8 billion. (Harold Varmus, 3/22)

Judge Neil M. Gorsuch has written little about abortion, and we do not know whether he would vote to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that established abortion as a fundamental right. But he has expressed a position on two related subjects, assisted suicide and euthanasia. In his Oxford dissertation and a later book, he defended the inviolability of human life. He rejected the role of states in granting the terminally ill a right to die and offered a legal framework that could be applied to abortion. (Corey Brettschneider, 3/21)

Democratic senators questioning Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch appear quite preoccupied with how often he has ruled for 鈥渢he little guy.鈥 That seems an odd way to measure the independence and acuity of a judge; presumably, little guys can be wrong now and again. But in his opinion in the controversial Hobby Lobby case, Gorsuch did rule for the little guy. And in doing so, he has given us some clues about the kind of justice he would be. (Melinda Henneberger, 3/21)

First things first: Neil Gorsuch is qualified to be a justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, and he should be confirmed by the Senate. That said, even qualified judges can make bad decisions. And Gorsuch and others on the federal appeals bench were deeply wrong when they decided Americans can opt out of laws for religious reasons. (Dave Helling, 3/21)

Lahren, the 24-year-old conservative internet provocateur, angered many of her followers Friday when she said this during an interview on ABC's "The View": "I'm pro-choice and here's why. I'm a constitutional 鈥 you know, someone that loves the Constitution. I am someone that's for limited government. And so I can't sit here and be a hypocrite and say I'm for limited government but I think that the government should decide what women do with their bodies. I can sit here and say that, as a Republican, and I can say, you know what, I'm for limited government, so stay out of my guns, and you can stay out of my body as well." This did not go over well with her bosses at The Blaze, a conservative media site founded by Glenn Beck. (Eric Zorn, 3/21)

Michael Yeaman鈥檚 lab on the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center campus in Torrance is loaded with bacteria, and it鈥檚 been that way for a quarter of a century. Yeaman is a bug detective. To be more technical, he鈥檚 a medical science investigator. You should not talk to him if you鈥檙e a hypochondriac, because you鈥檒l crawl into a bubble and zip it shut. (Steve Lopez, 3/22)

We鈥檙e in the midst of a rampant opioid epidemic that has surged in three successive waves. The first involved prescription opioids. The second saw increased usage of heroin as many of those addicted to prescription opioids sought a different source of pain relief, for various reasons. The third wave has been fentanyl. The drug that killed Prince has been linked to a soaring amount of overdoses and deaths across the country. (Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.), 3/21)

This was the proposal: Deliberately infect a small group of consenting adults with the Zika virus to learn about the disease and speed up the search for a vaccine... What might go wrong and what might go right with such an experiment? Perhaps no institution can handle those questions better than the National Institutes of Health. (Paul McLean, 3/21)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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