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Monday, Jan 30 2017

Full Issue

Viewpoints: The Cancer Moonshot Should Be Blind To Class Lines; In Kentucky, A Face-Off On Abortion Policy, Politics

A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.

Cancer. The ominous word instantaneously triggers fear and anxiety. According to the American Cancer Society, cancer is the second most common cause of death in the United States, accounting for one in four deaths. Despite the attention cancer has garnered, an inequality exists. Patients without Internet access may not learn about possible therapeutic interventions. As we proceed with the 鈥淢oonshot鈥 to better control cancer, we must assure that all patients reap its benefits. (Rachel Mintz, 1/29)

Gov. Matt Bevin tore into Attorney General Andy Beshear this week claiming, wrongly, that Beshear was backing away from his promise to defend Kentucky鈥檚 recently passed anti-abortion ultrasound law. Bevin鈥檚 false attack, though, wasn鈥檛 about the AG's constitutional obligations or protecting the unborn. It was about 2019. Mark this date on your calendar: Nov. 5, 2019. That鈥檚 when the governor and attorney general will be on the ballot for re-election. (1/27)

Thanks to the Women鈥檚 March on Washington, which predictably devolved into a pro-abortion rally, and in the wake of this week鈥檚 annual March for Life, the debate over 鈥渁bortion rights鈥 in the U.S. is beginning anew. (Cynthia M. Allen, 1/30)

The D.C. Council last year made a serious error when it passed the Death With Dignity Act, legalizing physician-assisted suicide in the District. Now it is Congress鈥檚 duty and constitutional obligation to ensure the act does not stand. Those who argue that the D.C. Council, in its capacity as the local government, has spoken for the citizens of the District ignore a central and crucial fact: The awesome responsibility of acting as the state for the citizens of the District lies not in the hands of a local government, but with Congress. Article 1, Section 8, Clause 17 of the Constitution vests Congress with exclusive legislative jurisdiction. (Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, and Jim DeMint, 1/27)

It鈥檚 estimated that as much as a third of expenditures in healthcare are waste, and we spend nearly 20% of GDP on healthcare. This is a huge bullseye for efficiency gains that computers and the internet have brought to nearly every other industry. But our status quo is in the early technology adopted鈥攊t鈥檚 in the pagers, fax machines, dumb clients, and servers cooled in the basement. It鈥檚 in the habits of entrenched providers picked up decades earlier in medical school before the adoption of technology-enabled healthcare. This is the canvas innovation has to work with. The new technology is out there, but our industry has an adoption problem. (Niko Skievaski, 1/27)

Rooted in pre-Americans with Disabilities Act thinking, the nation鈥檚 core programs for individuals with disabilities, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) fail to reflect its aspirations: ensuring that those with impairments integrate into employment and society to the fullest extent their abilities allow. Why the failure? Partly because states view these programs as federal responsibilities and have avoided developing their own solutions. (Richard V. Burkhauser, 1/28)

In December, Brandon Brown鈥檚 story reached its sad climax in a Kansas courtroom, where he was sentenced to 20 years in prison. The Star introduced you to Brown in June 2015. Brown, then 30 years old, had been in and out of treatment for mental illness for most of his adult life. He eventually landed in a nursing home in Kiowa County near the Oklahoma border. (1/29)

My husband, Steven, is a retired Navy SEAL who during his 20-year career engaged in over 250 combat operations. He was awarded the Silver Star and three Bronze Stars, among other honors. He retired about two and a half years ago and was diagnosed with traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder and a myriad of physical ailments. Most of what I鈥檝e read about PTSD in veterans lumps TBI with PTSD, but TBI should perhaps stand alone in treatment and support. (Sabrina Brown, 1/27)

The phrase 鈥渉ealthcare data鈥 either strikes fear and loathing, or provides understanding and resolve in the minds of administration, clinicians, and nurses everywhere. Which emotion it brings out depends on how the data will be used. Data employed as a weapon for purposes of accountability generates fear. Data used as a teaching instrument for learning inspires trust and confidence. (Tom Burton, 1/29)

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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