Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Is Trump's Nominee To Lead The FDA, Dr. Marty Makary, Up To The Job?
Dr. Marty Makary, President Trump鈥檚 nominee to lead the F.D.A., would step into a role increasingly defined by the tension between fostering lifesaving innovation and ensuring that the public is protected from unsafe or ineffective drugs. (Daniela J. Lamas, 3/6)
Nine states have now reported measles cases this year. The worst outbreak is in Texas, where low vaccination rates have resulted in more than 100 confirmed infections and the death of a child 鈥 the first measles death in 10 years. Public health officials fear that this could become a nationwide crisis given that rates of inoculation have been steadily falling across the country. (3/4)
I doubt people outside prison walls give a thought to what happens when one gets sick or old behind bars. Do they wonder who nurses the sick and the injured, who holds the hands of the critically ill and dying in prisons?聽In Connecticut state prisons, much of that work falls to certified nursing assistants who are incarcerated themselves. I was one of them: While incarcerated at Connecticut鈥檚 maximum security prison, MacDougall-Walker, I trained, and became, a CNA. For two of my 19 years in prison, I was a caregiver inside the prison infirmary.聽(Abraham Santiago, 3/6)
The relationship between Connecticut hospitals and the Connecticut Medicaid program can sometimes sound like a bad marriage 鈥 鈥淐an鈥檛 live with 鈥榚m but can鈥檛 live without 鈥榚m either!鈥澛犅燭he rhetoric can be heated at times, with alleged Medicaid underpayment being blamed for a myriad of problems in the healthcare system.聽But this rhetoric can obscure the facts, especially when it comes to Medicaid hospital payments. (Andrea Barton Reeves and Deidre S. Gifford, MD, 3/5)
The Trump administration is reportedly planning to reinstate a pandemic-era border policy known as Title 42, which would permit the swift expulsion of migrants at the border on the grounds that they might spread dangerous infectious disease. This policy prevents migrants from exercising their right to seek asylum. (Amesh A. Adalja and Agustina Vergara Cid, 3/6)