Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:
麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories
Nearly 1 in 4 Adults Dumped From Medicaid Are Now Uninsured, Survey Finds
A first-of-its-kind survey of Medicaid enrollees found that nearly a quarter who were dropped from the program in the last year鈥檚 unwinding say they鈥檙e uninsured.
As Bans Spread, Fluoride in Drinking Water Divides Communities Across the US
The broad availability of over-the-counter dental products containing fluoride has some community leaders arguing that its addition to public drinking water is no longer necessary. But public health experts worry that, much like vaccines, fluoridation may be a victim of its own success.
California Fails to Adequately Help Blind and Deaf Prisoners, US Judge Rules
Thirty years after prisoners with disabilities sued and 25 years after a federal court first ordered accommodations, a judge found that California prison and parole officials still are not doing enough to help deaf and blind prisoners 鈥 in part because they are not providing readily available technology such as video recordings and laptop computers.
Arizona Turns Back the Clock on Abortion Access
A week after the Florida Supreme Court said the state could enforce an abortion ban passed in 2023, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled that state could enforce a near-total ban passed in 1864 鈥 over a half-century before Arizona became a state. The move further scrambled the abortion issue for Republicans and posed an immediate quandary for former President Donald Trump, who has been seeking an elusive middle ground in the polarized debate. Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, Rachel Cohrs Zhang of Stat, and Rachel Roubein of The Washington Post join 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more. Also this week, Rovner interviews 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 Molly Castle Work, who reported and wrote the latest 麻豆女优 Health News-NPR 鈥淏ill of the Month鈥 feature, about an air-ambulance ride for an infant with RSV that his insurer deemed not medically necessary.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
PAST IS PROLOGUE
1864.
鈥 Deb Patterson
Civil War. Now, back on rights
in Arizona
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of 麻豆女优 Health News or 麻豆女优.
Summaries Of The News:
After Roe V. Wade
Harris To Visit Arizona Today; Ex-Gov. Ducey Says Court Overstepped
Vice President Harris will rally supporters in Arizona on Friday, where outrage is brewing among Democrats over a court ruling that聽upheld an 1864 law and made performing abortion a felony.聽Harris will take direct aim at former President Trump in her remarks, according to excerpts shared by the Biden campaign. The vice president will say Trump 鈥渋s to blame鈥 for the wave of restrictions on abortion following the overturning of Roe v. Wade, and she will warn a second Trump term would mean more restrictions. (Samuels, 4/12)
A ban on nearly all abortions in Arizona doesn鈥檛 sit well with the Republican former governor whose expansion of the state Supreme Court allowed him to appoint the four conservative justices whose ruling cleared the way for it. Doug Ducey is among Republicans in several states who are wrestling with the consequences of their opposition to abortion since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. He expanded the state court in 2016, but thinks its ruling this week went too far. (Gruver, 4/11)
Camelback Family Planning in Phoenix is the busiest abortion clinic in Arizona, according to its founder Dr. Gabrielle Goodrick, seeing some 350 patients a month. But following the Arizona Supreme Court ruling Tuesday that clears the way to reinstate an 1864 law that would ban nearly all abortions, Goodrick says she's worried about what could happen. (Shamlian, 4/11)
Attempts to gain power mostly fueled Arizona鈥檚 near-total abortion ban in 1864, as male physicians sought to dominate health care over midwives and anti-abortion advocates felt threatened by immigrants, historians said. ... Back then, midwives predominantly performed abortions, using herbs or metal instruments, which caused resentment among male physicians, said Karissa Haugeberg, who teaches history at Tulane University in Louisiana. 鈥淧hysicians marked midwives as competitors,鈥 Haugeberg said. So they began campaigning to be the authorities on reproductive rights and health care. (Chan, 4/11)
麻豆女优 Health News: 麻豆女优 Health News' 'What The Health?': Arizona Turns Back The Clock On Abortion Access聽
The Arizona Supreme Court shook up the national abortion debate this week, ruling that a ban originally passed in 1864 鈥 before the end of the Civil War and decades before Arizona became a state 鈥 could be enforced. As in some other states, including Florida, voters will likely have the chance to decide whether to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution in November. (4/11)
Also 鈥
Four states restrict divorce during pregnancy, and, with a decision by the Arizona Supreme Court this week, now all four also have near-total bans on abortion. It鈥檚 a combination that can be fatal, say experts on domestic violence.聽(Gerson, 4/11)
According to legal experts, the Comstock Act could be used to stop virtually all abortion in the country, including in places it is currently legal. ... Here's what you need to know about the Comstock Act, and what the consequences would be if it is enforced the way some conservatives would like. (Kurtzleben, 4/10)
Iowa's High Court Weighs Abortion Ban After Contentious Back-And-Forth
The state asked the Iowa Supreme Court Thursday to let Iowa鈥檚 law that bans abortions as early as six weeks of pregnancy take effect, as lawyers for abortion providers argued the law is unconstitutional and must be permanently blocked. It was the second time in as many years the Iowa Supreme Court heard oral arguments over what supporters call a 鈥渇etal heartbeat鈥 law in the state. The seven Republican-appointed justices are now poised to decide by the end of June if the Iowa Constitution allows for a strict abortion ban. (Sostaric, 4/11)
Republican lawmakers in Tennessee on Wednesday advanced legislation making it illegal for adults to help minors get an abortion without parental consent, sparking objections from Democrats who counter that doing so could result in young victims needing approval from their parents who may have raped them in order to terminate the pregnancies. The GOP-controlled Senate signed off on the proposal 26-3. The bill is still advancing toward the floor in the House. (Kruesi, 4/10)
One of the questions about a ballot measure legalizing abortion in Missouri is when the state鈥檚 voters would actually decide the initiative. Unless Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft uses a procedure aimed at speeding up the petition signature counting process, which his office says at this point he isn鈥檛 planning to do, it will be functionally impossible for signatures to be verified before the August primary. (Rosenbaum, 4/11)
Even as Miami-Dade County has shifted right in recent years, support for abortion rights has remained resilient among its majority Latino population, despite the group's strong religious views and typically conservative politics. Where South Florida's Latino population stands on the issue could be vital to the outcome of November's referendum that would enshrine a person's right to an abortion in the state constitution. (Brugal, 4/10)
Anti-abortion groups in Florida will try to block implementation of a ballot measure protecting the procedure if voters approve the initiative in November, signaling that the fight over abortion rights in the state will likely continue far past this year鈥檚 elections. Mat Staver, the founder of the anti-abortion group Liberty Counsel and who argued against the ballot measure before the state Supreme Court last winter, said on Thursday that if voters approve the initiative, 鈥渢here is a prime lawsuit waiting to take it up to the Florida Supreme Court.鈥 (Sarkissian, 4/11)
Also 鈥
Maine State Rep. Michael Lemelin (R) on Wednesday said the Lewiston mass shooting in October that left 18 people dead was a consequence from God after state lawmakers passed a law expanding abortion access in the state. In a fiery floor speech Wednesday, Lemelin warned against passing LD 227 鈥 which would protect individuals who get abortions or gender-affirming care in Maine from facing legal consequences in other states 鈥 saying, 鈥淟D 227 will have severe consequences.鈥 (Fortinsky, 4/11)
Outbreaks and Health Threats
US Might Lose Elimination Status As Measles Cases Climb
A rapid rise in measles cases in the first months of 2024 threatens the United States' elimination status, a situation the nation hasn't faced since 2019, when prolonged outbreaks posed a similar problem, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today. CDC scientists from the group spelled out the warning today in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR). In their analysis of measles activity from January 1, 2020, to March 28, 2024, they said cases in the first quarter of 2024 have risen 17-fold compared to the mean first-quarter average from 2020 to 2023. (Schnirring, 4/11)
Nationwide, measles cases already are nearly double the total for all of last year. The U.S. Centers of Disease Control and Prevention documented 113 cases as of April 5. There have been seven outbreaks and most of U.S. cases 鈥 73% 鈥 are linked to those flare-ups. Still, the count is lower than some recent years: 2014 saw 667 cases and 2019 had 1,274. The 2019 measles epidemic was the worst in almost three decades, and threatened the United States鈥 status as a country that has eliminated measles by stopping the continual spread of the measles virus. (Shastri and Stobbe, 4/11)
On bird flu 鈥
A worker on a dairy farm in Texas tested positive for the avian flu, only the second case of a person in the United States who has contracted the H5N1 influenza strain.聽The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that the person was diagnosed with the H5N1 virus and was recovering with mild symptoms. (Hetter, 4/11)
The outbreak of bird flu in dairy cattle is still unfolding. Both North Carolina and South Dakota have detected the virus in dairy herds, bringing the total number of states affected to eight. The unlikely spread among cattle and one dairy worker has scientists looking through the data to better understand this spillover. They say the risk to humans hinges on whether the virus can evolve in key ways to better infect mammals. (Stone, 4/11)
Dairy farmers in the United States are raising their defenses to try to contain the spread of bird flu: banning visitors, cutting down trees to discourage wild birds from landing, and disinfecting vehicles coming onto their land. While the first cases appear to have been introduced to herds in Texas and Kansas by wild birds, the USDA said transmission among cattle was also possible. Agricultural officials in Michigan and Ohio said infected herds in those states received cattle from Texas. Reuters spoke to seven dairy farmers in five states who said they are reinforcing safety and cleaning procedures, with three producers exceeding government recommendations. (Polansek, 4/11)
On data sharing 鈥
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and last year鈥檚 mpox outbreak, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Mandy Cohen is updating the agency鈥檚 data-sharing strategy for the next two years 鈥 with a focus on what the agency can do without congressional help. (Cohen, 4/11)
Medicaid
How Medicaid's 'Unwinding' Affected Millions Of Americans
Justin Gibbs had finally gotten his high blood pressure under control with a combination of three medications. But after he had his Medicaid coverage terminated in December amid a nationwide eligibility review, he had to go without one medication for a week and a second for several days, sparking fears that the delicate balance would unravel. (Luhby, 4/12)
麻豆女优 Health News: Nearly 1 In 4 Adults Dumped From Medicaid Are Now Uninsured, Survey Finds聽
Nearly a quarter of adults disenrolled from Medicaid in the past year say they are now uninsured, according to a survey released Friday that details how tens of millions of Americans struggled to retain coverage in the government insurance program for low-income people after pandemic-era protections began expiring last spring. The first national survey of adults whose Medicaid eligibility was reviewed during the unwinding found nearly half of people who lost their government coverage signed back up weeks or months later 鈥 suggesting they should never have been dropped in the first place. (Galewitz, 4/12)
Without additional action by the Legislature, Idaho Gov. Brad Little worries a new bill requiring legislative approval for Medicaid waivers could disrupt health care services, including by halting millions of dollars in payments to medical providers across the state. Little鈥檚 office received 118 emails from providers asking for a trailer bill to House Bill 398, said spokesperson Madison Hardy. Little, in a letter to lawmakers Monday, called for imminent action by the Idaho Legislature. (Pfannenstiel, 4/9)
Mississippi Senate leaders point to one component of the federal Affordable Care Act health care law as a reason not to expand Medicaid to provide health care coverage to the working poor. The Senate has passed legislation to allow only those earning less than 100% of the federal poverty level (about $15,000 annually for an individual) and who are working to be covered by Medicaid. (Harrison, 4/11)
In Medicare news 鈥
Doctors have long lamented that Medicare fails to pay enough to meet rising costs. Key members of the Senate Finance Committee said Thursday they agreed, and pledged to do something about it. "The way traditional Medicare pays physicians to manage and treat these conditions has not kept up with the times," Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said at a hearing on bolstering pay for treating chronic care. "It is now time to act once more." (McAuliff, 4/11)
A modest cut to the base Medicare Advantage payment rate next year may compel health insurance companies to carry out threats to scale back benefits, hike premiums and reduce provider payments. Last week, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finalized a 0.16% cut to the benchmark Medicare Advantage rate, which excludes risk adjustment payments, in 2025. It was the second consecutive year the agency reduced payments and the first time since 2018 that it didn't offer a higher rate in the final rule than it proposed. (Tepper, 4/11)
Hospitals within months could get extra federal money to administer pricey new gene therapies for sickle cell disease, including the first CRISPR-based treatment. The Medicare proposal would provide more incentive to offer the multimillion-dollar gene therapies when about half of those living with sickle cell are lower-income people on Medicaid. (Goldman, 4/11)
Health Industry
Organ Transplant Surgeon In Texas Accused Of Manipulating Database
For decades, Dr. J. Steve Bynon Jr., a transplant surgeon in Texas, gained accolades and national prominence for his work, including by helping to enforce professional standards in the country鈥檚 sprawling organ transplant system. But officials are now investigating allegations that Dr. Bynon was secretly manipulating a government database to make some of his own patients ineligible to receive new livers, potentially depriving them of lifesaving care. ... It was not clear what could have motivated Dr. Bynon. Reached by phone on Thursday, he referred questions to UTHealth Houston, which declined to comment. Dr. Bynon did not confirm he had admitted to altering records. (Rosenthal and Silver-Greenberg, 4/11)
More health care industry developments 鈥
In late February, Emily Benson noticed something strange: her counseling practice was getting no checks from insurance claims. It was the start of a grating month and a half. Since then, her clinic in Edina has been making around five percent of the revenue it usually brings in.聽鈥淚t feels like COVID-19 all over again, but much, much worse,鈥 Benson said. (Timar-Wilcox, 4/12)
A federal appeals court has revived a proposed class action lawsuit alleging UnitedHealth Group used an algorithm to more stringently review patient claims for substance abuse treatment compared with requests for medical or surgical procedures. (Tepper, 4/11)
A U.S. judge on Thursday declined a bid to end Tehum Care Services' bankruptcy, but he said the prison healthcare company would need to come up with a new bankruptcy deal if it wants its restructuring to move forward. Opponents of Tehum's so-called "Texas two-step" bankruptcy, including prisoners who have sued over substandard medical care and the U.S. Department of Justice, had argued that the company's predecessor Corizon Health abused U.S. bankruptcy law when it created a new shell company, Tehum, and placed it into bankruptcy solely to halt lawsuits filed against it. They said the case must be dismissed because it was filed in a bad faith effort to protect YesCare, the new company that inherited Corizon's contracts and business assets. (Knauth, 4/11)
On Thursday, the Federal Trade Commission took action against alcohol addiction telehealth company Monument, affirming its promise to crack down on digital health companies鈥 misuse of personal health data. (Palmer, 4/11)
Kaiser Permanente launched a Food is Medicine Center of Excellence on Thursday, expanding the health system鈥檚 food and nutrition scanning methods, research, partnerships and clinical nutrition training, according to a news release. (DeSilva, 4/11)
Also 鈥
A聽study of patients who developed infections after spinal surgery found that for most, the bacteria causing the infection was present on their skin before surgery, researchers reported yesterday in Science Translational Medicine. (Dall, 4/11)
It seemed as if Logan Jenner had the best possible chance for a cure. Diagnosed at age 3 with acute myeloid leukemia, an aggressive blood cancer, Logan happened to have a targetable mutation that occurs in a small minority of childhood AML cases, making it possible for him to receive a precision therapy drug that 鈥 with chemotherapy 鈥 got him to a point where he could receive a bone marrow transplant. (Chen, 4/11)
Amid the many demands of practicing medicine, doctors can have less time and energy for their patients, and those relationships can suffer. Yet research has shown that when physicians show empathy, that can generally lead to better clinical outcomes, at least over the near-term. Now, a new study, published Thursday in JAMA Network Open, demonstrates that those benefits can extend longer and be even more effective than some clinical therapies in dealing with lower back pain, which affects half of the U.S. population in any given year. (Balthazar, 4/12)
Pharmaceuticals
So Far, So Good For Chlamydia Vaccine: 'This Is Desperately Needed'
An early-stage clinical trial yielded promising results for a chlamydia vaccine, researchers reported Thursday in The Lancet Infectious Diseases. There is currently no vaccine to protect against the sexually transmitted infection, which is the most common bacterial STI in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2022, there were more than 1.6 million cases. (Syal, 4/11)
In other pharmaceutical news 鈥
A growing number of drugs are in short supply around the U.S., according to pharmacists. In the first three months of the year, there were 323 active medication shortages, surpassing the previous high of 320 shortages in 2014, according to a survey by the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) and Utah Drug Information Service. It also amounts to the most shortages since the trade group started keeping track in 2001. (Gibson, 4/11)
The European Parliament has voted overwhelmingly to adopt legislation that is supposed to transform the way medicines are brought to market and accessed across much of Europe. But the effort 鈥 which must still be approved by the European Council 鈥 drew mixed reactions from the pharmaceutical industry and consumer groups. (Silverman, 4/11)
Denise Lee grew up in Detroit in the mid-1970s and went to an all-girls Catholic high school. She smoked her first cigarette at age 14 at school, where cigarettes were a popular way of trying to lose weight. Instead, her nicotine addiction lasted four decades until she quit in her mid-50s. "At some point it got up as high as 2.5 packs a day," Lee, 62, recalls. (Noguchi, 4/12)
More than 20 lawsuits brought by families who say their children were harmed by baby food products made by Gerber, Beech-Nut, Campbell Soup Co and several other companies that were tainted with heavy metals will be centralized in San Francisco federal court, a federal judicial panel said Thursday. (Jones, 4/11)
State Watch
Alaska Is One Step Closer To Legalizing Subscription-Based Health Care
The Alaska Legislature has adopted a bill that would legalize subscription-based health care in the state. The bill would allow primary care providers to offer care to patients based on a monthly fee, similar to a gym membership. Direct health agreements, as they are called, can give patients access to limited health care services without the involvement of insurance companies. (Samuels, 4/11)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Colorado lawmakers are considering a bill that would prevent hospitals from publicly concealing their involvement in lawsuits against patients, following a joint Colorado Sun/9News investigation into the practice. The bill, House Bill 1380, would apply to all debt collection lawsuits broadly, not just those over medical debt. It would require that the owner of a debt be listed among the plaintiffs in any lawsuit seeking to collect on the debt. (Ingold, 4/12)
Disability Rights North Carolina announced a settlement agreement on Wednesday with the state Department of Health and Human Services in a long-running state court battle known as the Samantha R case. And on Thursday, the nonprofit heralded a federal judge鈥檚 rejection of DHHS鈥 request to dismiss a lawsuit challenging the treatment of children with disabilities in the state鈥檚 foster care system. Both cases focus on how people with disabilities are housed and treated in North Carolina. (Blythe, 4/12)
On a brisk day at a restaurant outside Chicago, Deb Robertson sat with her teenage grandson to talk about her death. She鈥檒l probably miss his high school graduation. She declined the extended warranty on her car. Sometimes she wonders who will be at her funeral. Those things don鈥檛 frighten her much. She didn鈥檛 cry when she learned two months ago that the cancerous tumors in her liver were spreading, portending a tormented death. But later, she received a call. A bill moving through the Illinois Legislature to allow certain terminally ill patients to end their own lives with a doctor鈥檚 help had made progress. Then she cried. (Bedayn, 4/12)
More than 500 District residents died of opioid overdoses last year, recent data shows, setting another grim record in the city鈥檚 struggle to combat the growing crisis. The number of deaths attributed to opioid use in the nation鈥檚 capital jumped 12 percent to 518 last year, the fifth consecutive year of increases since fentanyl became the predominant drug in overdoses, according to a March report from D.C.鈥檚 chief medical examiner. (Portnoy, 4/11)
The Department of Defense will expand its investigation into the prevalence of "forever chemicals" in base drinking water systems and neighboring water supplies following the Environmental Protection Agency's publication of stricter standards for the synthetic substances. ... Since 2016, the Defense Department has conducted assessments or investigated the use of PFAS and related contamination at 715 active and former military installations, National Guard facilities and other closed defense sites. As of December, the DoD had completed assessments of 707 installations, finding that 574 needed to proceed to the next step of the cleanup process, while no further action was required at 133 installations. (Kime, 4/11)
麻豆女优 Health News: As Bans Spread, Fluoride In Drinking Water Divides Communities Across The US
Regina Barrett, a 69-year-old retiree who lives in this small North Carolina city southeast of Charlotte, has not been happy with her tap water for a while. 鈥淥ur water has been cloudy and bubbly and looks milky,鈥 said Barrett, who blames fluoride, a mineral that communities across the nation have for decades added to the water supply to help prevent cavities and improve dental health. (Newsome, 4/12)
麻豆女优 Health News: California Fails To Adequately Help Blind And Deaf Prisoners, US Judge Rules聽
Thirty years after prisoners with disabilities sued the state of California and 25 years after a federal court first ordered accommodations, a judge found that state prison and parole officials still are not doing enough to help deaf and blind prisoners 鈥 in part because they are not using readily available technology such as video recordings and laptop computers. U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken鈥檚 rulings on March 20 centered on the prison system鈥檚 need to help deaf, blind, and low-vision prisoners better prepare for parole hearings, though the decisions are also likely to improve accommodations for hundreds of other prisoners with those disabilities. (Thompson, 4/12)
Weekend Reading
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
As the former president assails President Biden鈥檚 health, he has declined to release details about his own condition beyond a three-paragraph letter by his New Jersey physician: Bruce A. Aronwald, a 64-year-old osteopathic physician from New Jersey 鈥 and a longtime member of Trump鈥檚 Bedminster golf club. (Kranish, 4/6)
England鈥檚 abortion laws could be headed for an overhaul. Brits probably won鈥檛 be taking to the streets. As the United States continues to grapple with the divisive fallout of the 2022 Supreme Court ruling which overturned Roe v. Wade and so ended the federal right to abortion, British lawmakers are gearing up to have their own debate on the hot-button issue. Under ancient English law it is a crime for a woman to 鈥減rocure a miscarriage,鈥 although a 1967 act of parliament allows for abortion up to 24 weeks into a pregnancy 鈥斅爏o long as a number of conditions are met and two doctors provide a sign off. (Dickson, 4/8)
Any day now, Joey Knoll told himself, he鈥檇 grab the bullhorn he kept at the edge of his desk, and he鈥檇 tell everyone at Spektrum Health that their year-long nightmare was over. All of Knoll鈥檚 patients had been on edge since the Florida legislature banned nurse practitioners like him from prescribing hormones to trans people. Florida doesn鈥檛 have nearly enough doctors to take up the slack, and so, for many patients, the care simply disappeared when the law took effect last May. A judge had the power to change that. (Parks, 4/7)
In a nondescript office building near the Charlotte airport last month, adults clad in blue gowns crowded around the body of a woman who had died of cardiovascular disease. An instructor gently pressed her gloved finger against the woman鈥檚 lung and invited the others to do the same. 鈥淚f you鈥檝e never felt a lung, you need to feel a lung,鈥 she said. 鈥淢ost people think lungs are like a balloon, but they are more like a kitchen sponge. They have millions of tiny air sacs.鈥 (Crouch, 4/8)
Peru's Andean mountains may hold the secret to longevity and the world's oldest ever person, if a new claim by state officials of a 124-year-old man born in 1900 are proven to be true. The country's government has claimed that local resident Marcelino Abad from the central Peruvian region of Huanuco is 124, which would make him by a distance the oldest living person and even top the oldest ever independently verified human. (Aquino and O'Boyle, 4/9)
Disney will soon change its policies for theme park visitors with disabilities, restricting eligibility for services that help some people avoid waiting in line for rides. The updates, which the company posted on park websites this week, have created a wave of uncertainty among fans, who are left wondering whether they鈥檒l be able to continue using the disability access service known as DAS. The shift comes as Disney acknowledges that some customers have misused the program; the company has already taken some steps to crack down on abuse. (Sampson, 4/11)
Tech-driven bathrooms could be common in many high-end U.S. homes in the next decade, with postpandemic wellness concerns helping drive the trend, designers and tech executives say. Smart bathroom tech is already used in top hospitals, hotels and some ultraluxury homes in China, says Thomas Serval, co-founder and chief executive of Baracoda, a French company that specializes in internet-connected health technology. (Paynter, 4/9)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: WHO's Changes Could Prevent Future Pandemics; India Is Trying New Way To Educate Patients
Despite years of warnings, much of the world was unprepared for the covid-19 pandemic. Shortages, confusion and delays cost many lives. Rich nations served themselves first with vaccines, while the poor waited in line. Now, an international effort to redress some of these shortcomings with a new agreement faces a deadline when the 194-member World Health Assembly, the governing body of the World Health Organization, meets next month in Geneva. (4/11)
In India, where health care walks hand in hand with superstition, myths and luck, Mr. Balakrishnappa helps patients sift through good and bad information 鈥 a matter of life and death both inside a critical care ward and after patients are discharged. (Vidya Krishnan, 4/12)
Why am I going public about this cancer that many men are uncomfortable talking about? Because I want to lift the veil and share lifesaving information, and I want all men to benefit from the medical research to which I鈥檝e devoted my career and that is now guiding my care. (Former NIH Director Francis Collins, 4/12)
In a world without partisan politics, the Cass report on youth gender medicine would prompt serious reflection from American trans-rights activists, their supporters in the media, and the doctors and institutions offering hormonal and surgical treatments to minors. At the request of the English National Health Service, the senior pediatrician Hilary Cass has completed the most thorough consideration yet of this field, and her report calmly and carefully demolishes many common activist tropes. (Helen Lewis, 4/12)
Powerful groups of mostly men are making major decisions about biology and bodies they know little about. Embryos in deep freeze that may never be used are just the latest example. As a professor of biomedical design for the past 20 years, I have seen this trend increase in a seemingly exponential way since the Supreme Court鈥檚 Dobbs decision overturned Roe v. Wade, allowing states to ban abortion. And women continue to suffer from suboptimal medical care because of procedures and devices that were flawed from the start. (Catherine M. Klapperich, 4/12)
If a preventable error that might cause harm occurs during medical care, should there be transparency, or should the incident be swept under the rug? A rule proposed by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) leans toward the latter. (Pam Kohl and Bill Kiser, 4/12)