Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Poverty Has Deadly Health Consequences; Is Therapy Always The Answer For Struggling Kids?
Safety-net hospitals and clinics care for a population heavily skewed toward the poor, recent immigrants and people of color. The budgets of these places are forever tight. And anyone who works in them could tell you that illness in our patients isn鈥檛 just a biological phenomenon. It鈥檚 the manifestation of social inequality in people鈥檚 bodies. (Lindsay Ryan, 4/11)
We parents have become so frantic, hypervigilant and borderline obsessive about our kids鈥 mental health that we routinely allow all manner of mental health experts to evict us from the room. (鈥淲e will let you know.鈥) We鈥檝e been relying on them for decades to tell us how to raise well-adjusted kids. Maybe we were overcompensating for the fact that our own parents had assumed the opposite: That psychologists were the last people you should consult on how to raise normal kids. (Abigail Shrier, 4/11)
When Roe v. Wade was overturned, Wisconsin鈥檚 1849 abortion ban, some 50 years moribund, sprung back to life, shutting down Planned Parenthood鈥檚 clinics for more than a year. Arizona鈥檚 1864 ban similarly wrought horror-movie havoc after Dobbs; no one knew whether it or a more recent, less restrictive ban took precedence. As the Arizona Supreme Court just decided: the zombie lives. (Kate Cohen, 4/10)
On March 20, the Republican Study Committee, a voluntary body that includes 80 percent of the Republican House Caucus 鈥 including Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La. 鈥 released its budget plan for fiscal year 2025. This release deservedly received a lot of media attention based on its plan to raise the Social Security retirement age, adopt an extreme national abortion ban, and 鈥渧oucherize鈥 Medicare. Each of these actions piles more costs and burdens onto middle-class Americans and codifies draconian restrictions on the privacy rights of women and families to make reproductive health care decisions. (Rep. Joe Courtney, 4/10)
It鈥檚 no surprise in today鈥檚 corrosive political environment that trust in government is near an all-time low. That鈥檚 a big problem. Communities with more trust during the Covid-19 pandemic had fewer deaths and less economic devastation. (Tom Frieden, 4/11)