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Morning Briefing

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Friday, Jan 17 2025

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Steps Medical Professionals Can Take To Safeguard Immigrant Patients

Opinion writers tackle these public health issues.

Medical professionals constantly battle insurance companies and pharmacy benefit managers to get our patients鈥 medical treatments covered. We tussle with our own institutions to expedite CT scans and medical appointments. We write advocacy letters for things like walkers and dental clearance and problems with bathroom mold and jury duty. But in this upcoming era we may have to face off against our own federal government. (Danielle Ofri, 1/17)

We鈥檙e lawyers and lobbyists who work frequently with healthcare, and last year we petitioned the Texas Medical Board to give doctors specific guidelines that clarify exactly when women and girl's life-threatening pregnancies necessitate abortions. (Amy Bresnen and Steve Bresnen, 1/17)

鈥淲hat do you think of Dr. Fauci?鈥 friends and colleagues asked me throughout the Covid pandemic. As a medical epidemiologist, I was flattered they trusted me, but soon recognized that this was a trick question. They were simply applying their 鈥淒r. Fauci test鈥 of pandemic allegiance. This was a forced binary: Was I an acolyte of the gold standard of sound science, or a denier who dismissed his knowledge in favor of the dogma of zealots and crackpots? Did I 鈥渇ollow the science,鈥 or sell out to political ideologues? (Steven Philips, 1/17)

I鈥檝e long known that obesity is a problem in America. I hear about it all the time in TV ads for miracle drugs and from fitness centers that insist clients do more than they鈥檙e willing to do. Americans need another Richard Simmons, a fitness cheerleader who can keep his eyes on our potbellies. From an essay Rev. Al Sharpton wrote for The Washington Post, whites need a Simmons less than Black folk do. (Justice B. Hill, 1/17)

The United States continues to face a pervasive public health challenge: lack of access to behavioral health providers and resources. Behavioral health conditions have been significantly increasing in prevalence, but despite the widespread need, there continues to be a large gap between demand and availability of behavioral health resources. Persistent shortages within the behavioral health workforce often result in lengthy wait times for a behavioral health appointment and delayed patient care, which ultimately lead to worse outcomes. (Meena Seshamani, Emily Parris, Doug Jacobs, Michelle Tarver, David McMullen and Josh Rising, 1/17)

According to the National Institutes of Mental Health, 1 in 40 adults will develop OCD. Also, 1 in 200 children and adolescents will have this condition. (Georgia La Grone, 1/17)

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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