Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Medical Debt Is A Full-On Health Emergency; Ultraprocessed Foods Have Sickened Americans
When we talk about the U.S. healthcare crisis, the conversations often turn to buzzwords: skyrocketing premiums, pharmaceutical greed, hospital consolidations. However, the real emergency isn鈥檛 just what鈥檚 happening inside hospitals or insurance plans. Instead, it鈥檚 what鈥檚 happening to millions of Americans: crushing medical debt. (Brandon M. Macsata, Guy Anthony and Jonathan Sosa, 9/10)
Such advice has won the backing of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who makes valid critiques of the state of America鈥檚 health while also promoting wearable health devices to help people 鈥渢ake responsibility,鈥 and promising to free Americans from the Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 鈥渁ggressive suppression鈥 of vitamin supplements, which he views as a key part of a healthy lifestyle. (Julia Belluz and Kevin Hall, 9/10)
Young adults in the US are dying at a slower pace. The 2024 mortality numbers collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 National Center for Health Statistics won鈥檛 be officially finalized for a while yet, but I鈥檝e been checking the provisional updates every week, and the totals have stopped changing, so I think its safe to say that last year鈥檚 US death rate for ages 25 through 34 was the lowest since 2015. (Justin Fox, 9/9)
When I turned 60, I knew something wasn鈥檛 right. I lost weight. I felt drained. I had no appetite. I had a gut feeling 鈥 literally, abdominal discomfort 鈥 and a sense that something serious was going on beneath the surface. So I asked my doctors to test everything.聽(Steve Brown, 9/10)
Cancer is the leading cause of death in Colorado, with 44,527 dying from cancer in 2024; and nearly 26,000 new cancer diagnoses last year. People who live in areas with low household incomes 鈥 be it urban, suburban or rural 鈥 are more likely to be diagnosed with later stage disease, require more aggressive treatments, and have a poorer health outlook. However, with rising costs of new cancer drugs, unaffordable treatments will not be confined to those without insurance or access to care. The ability to be treated may soon be out of reach for many patients and families.聽(Cathy J. Bradley, 9/9)
In 2009, what began as a swollen ankle ended with a terminal cancer diagnosis. Driving home from Florida, I could barely walk when I pulled off I-95. A Virginia ER dismissed me as constipated. But back in New Jersey, CT scans revealed a 28-centimeter uterine mass and multiple lung metastases. A lung biopsy confirmed stage IV uterine leiomyosarcoma. (Michelle Patroni, 9/10)