Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: The Battle Against Mifepristone Carries On; Overturning Roe Is Killing Women
Donald Trump has threatened to 鈥減rotect鈥 women, 鈥渨hether the women like it or not.鈥 If this bullying paternalism doesn鈥檛 sit well with you, consider the lawsuit by Missouri, Kansas and Idaho curtail women鈥檚 access to mifepristone, the abortion medication. (Ruth Marcus, 11/4)
Over 20 years ago, I had an experience that will be familiar to many women. I had a series of miscarriages, including one for which I needed a medical procedure to protect me from infection 鈥 which is to say, to protect me from possible death. (India Baird, 11/3)
The word 鈥淭uskegee鈥 has long embodied the painful symbol of medical racism, epitomizing how ethnically uninformed research practices have harmed Black Americans. It is impossible to erase this painful history. But we 鈥 one of us working for Tuskegee University, the other for Southern Research 鈥 are working on an innovative project to create a future in which Black Americans participate more fully in clinical research and share in its benefits. (Khalilah Brown and Stephen Sodeke, 11/4)
We treat many common conditions that affect the ability to drive, including seizures, heart arrhythmias, eye diseases and dementia. We are privy to our patients鈥 abilities and to medications that may affect their driving. Our patients also tend to follow our advice on matters of health and lifestyle. (Sandeep Jauhar, 11/24)
Recently, the smoldering embers of conflict in my family鈥檚 rare disease community have burst into flames over the use of an eponym: Niemann-Pick. An eponym is a name derived from a person who first discovered a disease or who was otherwise closely associated with its identity. (Kara Ayik, 11/4)