Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: More Doctors Treat Obesity As Prevention; Health Crises Shouldn't Hit Your Credit Score
Health care is undergoing a major paradigm shift. Some clinicians are shifting away from treating chronic conditions such as hypertension, heart disease, diabetes, back pain and fatigue 鈥 long the bread and butter of primary-care medicine 鈥 and toward targeting their common root cause: obesity. (Leana S. Wen, 10/1)
The impact of medical debt being included on my credit report is the very definition of adding insult to injury. It鈥檚 aged me. I already struggled to keep up with the cost of living to begin with, and now that struggle is even harder. There鈥檚 no money left over after paying my bills to pay off the medical debt or put money into my retirement fund. (George Curlee, 9/30)
One of the World Health Organization鈥檚 most important jobs is managing viral outbreaks. The rapid spread of mpox, a disease related to smallpox, is a reminder of its shortcomings. (10/1)
鈥淎bortion, framed as a threat, mobilizes Black people to engage in politics,鈥 said Christopher Towler, director of the Black Voter Project. 鈥淎bortion is motivating Black support for Harris in a way that it didn鈥檛 for Biden.鈥 (Nia-Malika Henderson, 10/1)