Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Worry About The War On Mifepristone In Louisiana; America's IV Shortage Is Worse Than You Think
A new law in Louisiana, passed under the guise of patient safety, has reclassified abortion pills as 鈥渄angerous controlled substances.鈥 The law won鈥檛 reduce abortions, but it will make serious pregnancy complications more perilous. It is being heralded by supporters as a model for other states. (Greer Donley and Kimi Chernoby, 10/24)
It鈥檚 kinda wild that there鈥檚 a critical IV shortage in the US right now and there鈥檚 nary a peep about it. On the one hand, if you鈥檙e a perfectly healthy person who doesn鈥檛 work in the medical field, there鈥檚 no reason you鈥檇 know that nurses are rationing saline bags and telling their 60/40 blood pressure patients to drink Pedialyte instead. On the other hand, IVs are basic equipment for a hospital! (Jessica Karl, 10/24)
As Steward Health Care Systems LLC鈥檚 network of hospitals was struggling, it stopped paying some of its vendors. One of those vendors was a supplier of bereavement boxes, the tiny cases used to transport the remains of newborns who don鈥檛 survive. The vendor eventually stopped supplying the cases, which meant that grieving parents had to receive their children鈥檚 remains in cardboard shipping boxes. (Sarah Green Carmichael, 10/24)
Drug overdose deaths from synthetic opioids 鈥 primarily fentanyl 鈥 are starting to decline in the United States, offering hope that countermeasures are working. But it is too soon to pinpoint why. The response, then, is to keep doing everything. (10/23)
You don鈥檛 have to be a public health professional to know that the U.S. has the聽highest maternal mortality聽rate of any high-income country. It鈥檚 chilling, sobering, and unacceptable. The situation is particularly dire for Black women, who are聽four times more聽likely to die than white women. Conditions are worse in Southern states. In particular, Louisiana ranks 47 out of 48 states for maternal mortality. (Nupur Jain, Nancy Hinojos and Shawn Izadi, 10/25)