Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Doctors Need To Be Trained On Climate Change Effects; Is Free Medical School Good Or Bad?
We trust doctors to be up to date with the latest developments in medical science. So it鈥檚 concerning that our future medical professionals aren鈥檛 being trained sufficiently or consistently on a very real threat to public health: climate change. (Lara Williams, 10/22)
Six years ago, the New York University Grossman School of Medicine, in Manhattan, announced that it would become tuition-free for all students. The change was made possible in part thanks to a $100 million donation from Kenneth Langone, a Home Depot co-founder, and his wife, Elaine. (Rose Horowitch, 10/21)
Abortion restrictions spreading across the county have upended people鈥檚 ability to make decisions about their lives, families, and futures. While the overall number of abortions in the U.S. has gone up since the聽Dobbs decision, in large part due to the growth of telehealth abortion, those numbers don鈥檛 tell the stories of people who聽have to聽move heaven and earth to get this basic, essential health care. (Christine Dehlendorf and Jody Steinauer, 10/22)
In Florida one day this spring, Megan Palmese and her husband put their two small children in the car and raced toward New York, hoping to arrive before her uterus ruptured and she bled to death. (Mara Gay, 10/21)
In recent years, smartwatches and smart rings have grown increasingly popular, adorning the wrists and fingers of consumers who use them to monitor their exercise, sleep and heart activity. Now, medical device companies, including north suburban-based Abbott Laboratories, are hoping health enthusiasts will embrace a new type of wellness accessory: wearable sensors to track glucose levels. (Lisa Schencker, 10/22)