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Morning Briefing

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Monday, Oct 30 2023

Full Issue

Viewpoints: More Midwives Can Help US Birth Equity; Ozempic Use Has Direct Effect On Junk Food Purchases

Editorial writers weigh in on birth inequity, Ozempic, mental health, and more.

I became a midwife after working as a doula for 10 years. I came into the work with the knowledge and concern for the lack of safety that is espoused to Black women and birthing people that I witnessed while attending births within institutions that have and continue to perpetuate harm in birthing spaces. (Jeanine Valrie Logan, 10/30)

Can Ozempic save us from the perils of obesity? It turns out that the drug, first developed to treat diabetes, has become a high-profile appetite killer. Ozempic and similar drugs are skyrocketing in popularity, thanks to their ability to help take off those dreaded pounds. (Laura Washington, 10/30)

The lasting impacts of homelessness and housing instability are devastating and cruel. Not only does homelessness impact people鈥檚 health and wellness 鈥撀燿rastically increasing聽their stress, exposure to communicable diseases and violence, and further exacerbating chronic health conditions 鈥 but聽suicide聽rates among people experiencing homelessness have been estimated to be at least聽nine times higher. (Laura Feldman Hay, 10/30)

Open enrollment goes through Dec. 7. My mailbox is already filling with o铿僣ial-looking letters from commercial insurance companies posing as Medicare. They tout the advantages of their particular plan while conveniently withholding information that we seniors need and deserve in order to make a truly informed decision about our choice of health insurance. (Carol Paris, 10/30)

Nearly three years after the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, preparedness has emerged as the top public health priority for 2024 and beyond. The backdrop for this focus is compelling: The next pandemic is already here. We face an ongoing crisis of chronic disease that not only generates huge economic and societal costs, but also increases the risk from emerging infectious diseases and seasonal viruses. (Julio Frenk, 10/27)

We are longtime financial journalists. In our new book, The Big Fail, we wrote about how the pandemic both exposed and exacerbated preexisting problems in America. One such problem is how financial engineering has helped hollow out our health-care system. (Joe Nocera and Bethany McLean, 10/28)

My husband鈥檚 cancer came back this summer after not being evident for almost two years. With advances in cancer surveillance, we now speak of cancer survivors being cancer-free far less frequently. If you are among the luckiest unlucky who survive treatment for metastatic cancer and receive clear scans, you simply have 鈥渘o evidence of disease.鈥 (Mara Buchbinder, 10/29)

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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