Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: On Conversion, High Court Seems Too Interested In Political Clout; States Must Protect Access To Vaccines
Another attack on LGBTQ+ communities in Colorado made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court last week. The outcome will tell us whether SCOTUS cares at all about consistency. The answer could unmoor the legal community. (Mario Nicolais, 10/12)
Vaccines have prevented diseases that once caused paralysis, deafness, pneumonia, meningitis, liver failure, certain cancers and death.聽 They are among the most significant medical breakthroughs in the history of public health and protect both individuals and entire communities from epidemics, hospitalizations, and death. (Gary F. Spinner, 10/14)
As a physician in the age of wearables, glancing at a patient鈥檚 wrist has become a natural, unspoken part of the physical exam. In most cases, finding an Apple Watch doesn鈥檛 mean much. But on occasion, it can offer a glimpse into a patient鈥檚 life 鈥 a heart rate trend, a sleep pattern, or a measure of activity. (Vishal Khetpal, 10/13)
As a dementia specialist, I think of my work as that of a writer. To diagnose a patient, I write the story of their problems, embellished with an exam, tests of cognition, and brain scans that show that organ鈥檚 structure and function. If this story nicely matches the textbook description of a disease that causes dementia, it鈥檚 a diagnostic story, what doctors call 鈥渁 classic case.鈥 (Jason Karlawish, 10/14)
My teenage years were ravaged by severe autoimmune disease. In that era, the burdens of treatment for Crohn鈥檚 disease rivaled the misery of the affliction. My illness brought searing stomach pain, fatigue, and fistulas. The steroids my physician prescribed caused breakouts of cystic acne all over my body as well as exhausting bouts of hyperactivity, manic mood swings, and a serious case of moon face. (Paul J. Hastings, 10/13)