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
Being Black and Pregnant in the Deep South Can Be a Dangerous Combination
Being Black has always been dangerous for pregnant women and infants in the South. And researchers say things are continuing to move in the wrong direction.
Dodging the Medicare Enrollment Deadline Can Be Costly
As open enrollment ends, many people are tuning out. They could wind up with a surprise next year: higher costs and less access to health care providers.
麻豆女优 Health News' 'What the Health?' Podcast: Democrats See Opportunity in GOP Threats to Repeal Health Law
Sensing that Republicans are walking into a political minefield by threatening once again to repeal the Affordable Care Act, the Biden administration is looking to capitalize by rolling out a series of initiatives aimed at high drug prices and other consequences of 鈥渃orporate greed in health care.鈥 Meanwhile, the Supreme Court hears a case that could determine when and how much victims of the opioid crisis can collect from Purdue Pharma, the drug company that lied about how addictive its drug, OxyContin, really was. Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, Anna Edney of Bloomberg News, and Rachana Pradhan of 麻豆女优 Health News join 麻豆女优 Health News chief Washington correspondent Julie Rovner to discuss these issues and more. Also this week, Rovner interviews Dan Weissmann of 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 sister podcast, 鈥淎n Arm and a Leg,鈥 about his investigation into hospitals suing their patients over unpaid bills.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
THE TROUBLE WITH MEDICARE ADVANTAGE
They work when you're well 鈥
鈥 Angela Gyurko
But Medicare Advantage
hassles when you鈥檙e sick
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:
Reproductive Health
Texas Judge Allows Woman To Have Emergency Abortion Despite Ban
For the first time in at least 50 years, a judge has intervened to allow an adult woman to terminate her pregnancy. When Travis County District Judge Maya Guerra Gamble handed down the temporary restraining order Thursday, Kate Cox, 31, of Dallas burst into tears. Cox and her husband desperately wanted to have this baby, but her doctors said continuing the nonviable pregnancy posed a risk to her health and future fertility, according to a historic lawsuit filed Tuesday. (Klibanoff, 12/7)
Hours after a Texas judge ruled a woman may receive an emergency abortion, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton warned three Houston hospitals that they could still face penalties if they allow the procedure to happen.聽鈥淲e feel it is important for you to understand the potential long-term implications if you permit such an abortion to occur at your facility,鈥 Paxton wrote in a letter Thursday to Houston Methodist, The Woman鈥檚 Hospital of Texas and Texas Children鈥檚 Hospital. (Goldenstein, 12/7)
Paxton said Thursday that the ruling 鈥渨ill not insulate hospitals, doctors, or anyone else, from civil and criminal liability for violating Texas鈥 abortion laws.鈥 He continued, 鈥淭he TRO [temporary restraining order] will expire long before the statute of limitations for violating Texas鈥 abortion laws expires.鈥 (Robertson, 12/7)
It had only been three weeks since Ann Carver and her husband started trying to have a baby, and somehow, she was already pregnant. In the summer of 2022, she鈥檇 become a mom.聽The couple told everyone they knew, too excited for early pregnancy secrecy and caution. Carver was 26. She felt like there was no reason to worry. (Luthra, 12/7)
More abortion news 鈥
A newly introduced bill in New Hampshire would ban abortion at 15 days of pregnancy,聽effectively outlawing the procedure entirely 鈥 and indicating either a misunderstanding or misrepresentation of how pregnancy and pregnancy dating work. And Democrats in the state believe it could be setting other abortion bans up to look less strict. (Luthra, 12/7)
The Republican debate over abortion has centered around one number: 15. Backers of a 15-week federal ban tout it as a compromise measure, even in the face of recent electoral defeat. Anti-abortion advocates hope congressional candidates will embrace this measure, and they鈥檙e pushing GOP presidential candidates to promise they would sign such a bill. (Luthra, 12/6)
麻豆女优 Health News and PolitiFact: Candidates Clashed But Avoided Talk Of Abortion At 4th GOP Primary Debate聽
Raised voices and sharp words marked Wednesday night鈥檚 fourth Republican presidential primary debate as four candidates argued about everything from their own electability to the continued front-runner status of former President Donald Trump. Abortion was never mentioned. (12/7)
In other reproductive health news 鈥
Sitting in the living room of her Cleveland home, 30-year-old Grace O鈥橫alley reflects on when she ruled out having kids of her own. O鈥橫alley has Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a genetic condition that weakens the body鈥檚 connective tissue, and can get much worse postpartum. About three years earlier, when she was in her mid-twenties, her condition worsened. O鈥橫alley鈥檚 doctors told her that if she did get pregnant, her uterus could rupture and her child would be more likely to be born prematurely. (Wizner, 12/7)
麻豆女优 Health News: Being Black And Pregnant In The Deep South Can Be A Dangerous Combination
O鈥檒aysha Davis was a few weeks shy of her due date when in mid-August she decided it was time to switch doctors. Davis had planned to give birth at a small community hospital about 20 minutes from her home in North Charleston, South Carolina. But that changed when her medical team started repeatedly calling her cellphone and pressuring her to come to the hospital and deliver the baby. (Sausser, 12/8)
On transgender health 鈥
Three days after Roe v. Wade was overturned, Sam Guido gave birth to his first child. His doctors, unsure of what was still legal, didn鈥檛 prescribe misoprostol 鈥 a drug used in medication abortions 鈥 to help with contractions.聽That was another blow, another way in which Guido felt he wasn鈥檛 in control of his labor. (Rummler, 12/7)
In her teens, Prisha Mosley, 25, transitioned from female to male. Last year, she detransitioned and joined forces with conservative activists fighting to ban the gender-affirming care she had received. Mosley is among more than a dozen detransitioners who have gained prominence this year, suing the doctors and clinics from which they received care in more than half a dozen states, headlining conservative events and starring in documentaries often sponsored by right-wing groups. (Hennessy-Fiske, 12/6)
Coverage And Access
Census Bureau Shift Could Overhaul How Government Defines Disabilities
The U.S. Census Bureau wants to change how it asks people about disabilities, and some advocates are complaining that they were not consulted enough on what amounts to a major overhaul in how disabilities would be defined by the federal government. Disability advocates say the change would artificially reduce their numbers by almost half. At stake are not only whether people with disabilities get vital resources for housing, schools or program benefits but whether people with disabilities are counted accurately in the first place, experts said. (Schneider, 12/8)
In updates from Capitol Hill 鈥
The Senate Health Committee will hold a hearing next week on the diabetes epidemic in the U.S., committee Chair Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) said.聽Sanders, who earlier this year interrogated drug manufacturers about the high cost of insulin, told The Hill the hearing will focus broadly on the underlying causes of the rise in diabetes, especially in children.聽(Weixel, 12/7)
Medicare negotiations of prescription drug prices could have cut seniors' out-of-pocket costs by nearly a quarter had the program been in effect in 2021, according to an analysis Mathematica provided first to Axios. The research consultancy's analysis offers a glimpse at potential savings enrollees might see as Medicare begins negotiating the prices of certain high-cost drugs. (Reed, 12/8)
On Medicare and insurance coverage 鈥
A bipartisan group of senators is urging the Biden administration to beef up the amount of data it collects from private Medicare plans in order to combat overpayments and improper care denials. (Bannow, 12/8)
The Center for Medicare Advocacy, National Health Law Program, Disability Rights Connecticut and National Disability Rights Network wrote the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Federal Trade Commission and other state and federal agencies Thursday to protest UnitedHealthcare advertisements for Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans appearing in Connecticut. The ads target people with both Medicare and Medicaid and spotlight extra benefits from Medicare Advantage plans that state and federal laws already require, the groups wrote. (Tepper, 12/7)
麻豆女优 Health News: Dodging The Medicare Enrollment Deadline Can Be Costly聽
Angela M. Du Bois, a retired software tester in Durham, North Carolina, wasn鈥檛 looking to replace her UnitedHealthcare Medicare Advantage plan. She wasn鈥檛 concerned as the Dec. 7 deadline approached for choosing another of the privately run health insurance alternatives to original Medicare. But then something caught her attention: When she went to her doctor last month, she learned that the doctor and the hospital where she works will not accept her insurance next year. (Jaffe, 12/7)
麻豆女优 Health News: Democrats See Opportunity In GOP Threats To Repeal Health Law聽
With other GOP presidential candidates following Donald Trump鈥檚 lead in calling for an end to the Affordable Care Act, Democrats are jumping on an issue they think will favor them in the 2024 elections. The Biden administration almost immediately rolled out a controversial proposal that could dramatically decrease the price of drugs developed with federally funded research dollars. The drug industry and the business community at large are vehemently opposed to the proposal, but it is likely to be popular with voters. (12/7)
The era of massive overhauls of the health care system appears to be over 鈥斅燼t least for now. Health care is shaping up to be a prominent 2024 campaign issue, but today's political environment has all but extinguished hopes for sweeping changes to the system. (Owens, 12/8)
Health Industry
Senators Launch Bipartisan Inquiry Of Private Equity Ownership Of Hospitals
The two leaders of the Senate Budget Committee on Thursday launched a bipartisan investigation into private equity ownership of hospitals in the United States, citing concerns that such arrangements are bad for both health care providers and patients. (Trang, 12/7)
Humana Inc. disbanded the executive committee of the board, a governance change that comes as the company is in talks to combine with Cigna Group. The board voted to amend its bylaws to remove the requirement for an executive committee and disbanded the group, the company said in a filing Thursday. ... It鈥檚 unclear what the decision means. A Humana spokesperson didn鈥檛 immediately respond to a request for comment. (Tozzi, 12/7)
Humana聽said Thursday it plans to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 54.6% by 2032 and its targets have been approved by the Science Based Targets initiative. The initiative works with companies to improve their environmental sustainability. Humana said its strategies include lowering by 30% the emissions caused by the purchase, transportation and distribution of products used throughout the company. (DeSilva, 12/7)
A long-awaited review of Harvard鈥檚 anatomical gift program, ordered by the university after its morgue manager was arrested for allegedly stealing and selling body parts, points no fingers and finds no fault. Instead, the panel of outside experts recommends a series of procedural improvements that, taken together, imply that the morgue鈥檚 three-person staff often operated without adequate documentation and oversight. For example, the experts found there was no formal procedure for receiving, reviewing, and approving requests to use donors鈥 bodies. (Freyer and Cotter, 12/7)
The digital transformation is underway at health systems but it increasingly doesn't involve in-house IT departments. Health systems are transitioning their analytics and tech employees to managed service companies as they look to scale virtual care, artificial intelligence and analytics initiatives. By moving the work out-of-house and the employees with it,聽a process called聽rebadging, health systems struggling with razor-thin margins say they can deploy IT projects more efficiently while saving on costs. (Perna, 12/7)
Also 鈥
Now coming to a mall, gym or office building near you: A self-contained doctor's office, powered by artificial intelligence, where you 鈥 the patient 鈥 draw your own blood and take your own vitals. (Kingson, 12/8)
Pharmaceuticals
Deadline Is Today: FDA Soon To Decide On Sickle Cell Treatment Using CRISPR
The Food and Drug Administration must decide by Friday whether to approve a new gene-editing therapy to treat sickle cell disease, a debilitating blood disorder that affects at least 100,000 Americans, most of whom are Black. The treatment, called exa-cel, would be the first approved medicine in the U.S. to use the groundbreaking gene-editing tool CRISPR to alter DNA.聽The new therapy, from Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics, is, experts say, a stunning advancement in medicine. (Bellamy, 12/7)
In other pharmaceutical industry news 鈥
Trading in the options of Cerevel Therapeutics Holdings Inc experienced an unusual surge along with its stock price in the days before Wednesday's announcement that AbbVie would buy the drug developer in a multi-billion dollar deal. AbbVie said after the market close on Wednesday it would buy Cerevel for about $8.7 billion in a bid to replace revenue as its huge-selling arthritis drug Humira faces a raft of new competitors. The announcement came minutes after Reuters reported a deal was near. (Ahmed, 12/8)
Medtronic is no longer buying EOFlow, a Korean maker of wearable insulin pumps. The news comes three months after Insulet, EOFlow鈥檚 rival, filed a lawsuit accusing the company of stealing trade secrets. (Lawrence, 12/7)
Ajax Health has established a new medical technology company to develop a treatment for the most common heart rhythm disorder. The new company, Cortex, has raised $90 million from KKR & Co. and Hellman & Friedman, according to a statement reviewed by Bloomberg News. Cortex is developing an integrated, comprehensive platform for evaluating and treating atrial fibrillation. (Davis, 12/7)
A maker of cannabis and herb supplements in Adams County just outside Denver recently settled one lawsuit and faces other claims after some people who took its marijuana-infused sleep aids said they developed sudden liver problems. ... The drops, sold under the 1906 brand name, included cannabis and corydalis, a traditional Chinese herbal remedy. Corydalis contains tetrahydropalmatine, or THP, a chemical that can cause liver damage at high doses. The manufacturers recalled the products earlier this year. (Wingerter, 12/7)
Research universities are voicing concerns over some proposed changes to the process for reviewing scientific misconduct allegations, citing worries that new government requirements would hobble their own independent procedures and constitute a huge administrative burden. (Merelli, 12/8)
In global news 鈥
Hospitals in Ukraine are now battling an "alarming increase" in germs with resistance to the last-ditch antibiotic medications used to treat the infections, a study published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Thursday.聽Officials are now calling for the "urgent crisis" to be addressed, and warning that the drug-resistant germs are spreading beyond the war-torn country's borders. (Tin, 12/7)
The World Health Organization on Thursday said several contaminated syrups and suspension medicines had been identified in countries in the WHO regions of the Americas, the Eastern Mediterranean, South-East Asia and the Western Pacific. The affected products were manufactured by Pharmix Laboratories in Pakistan, the WHO said, and were first identified in the Maldives and Pakistan. Some of the tainted products have also been found in Belize, Fiji and Laos. Pharmix was not immediately available for comment. (Rigby and Deshmukh, 12/7)
State Watch
Michigan Expands Medicaid Coverage To Community Health Workers
The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) expanded Medicaid coverage for Michigan beneficiaries to include community health worker services (CHW), according to a Thursday press release.聽The new benefit is scheduled to go into effect on Jan. 1, 2024.聽CHWs are trained public health professionals who address social determinants of health, serving between residents and the health and social resources needed to improve well-being, the press release states.聽(Dawson, 12/7)
Bariatric surgery is a major operation that, for the right patients, can ward off heart disease, diabetes and strokes. Bellevue, which serves a disproportionately poor and obese population, says the operations have saved many lives. But a New York Times investigation found that the bariatric program, led by surgeons with financial incentives to perform more operations, has become a high-speed assembly line that has endangered some patients and compromised urgent care for others. And because most of the hospital鈥檚 patients are on Medicaid or uninsured, taxpayers foot the bill. (Silver-Greenberg, Kliff and Ortiz, 12/7)
With California facing an expected $68-billion budget deficit, Gov. Gavin Newsom is seeking 鈥渕ajor reforms鈥 to pull funding from a costly plan next year to begin raising the statewide minimum wage for healthcare workers to $25 an hour. Newsom told The Times last week that his staff has 鈥渂een working behind the scenes鈥 with Democratic leaders in the Legislature on how to move forward with the minimum wage law in light of state budget concerns. (Luna and Mays, 12/7)
Ohio is officially the 24th state to have legal, adult-use marijuana. Provisions of a voter-approved legalization law took effect at midnight, including legal possession and home cultivation for anyone at least 21 years old. But Ohio lawmakers are rushing to pass legislation to make changes to the initiative. On Wednesday, the Senate passed legislation to alter potency caps, taxation, home cultivation, and social equity and expungement provisions. (Zhang, 12/7)
The City of Minneapolis has declared unsheltered homelessness a public health emergency. And several council members called on the city to delay the closing of a large encampment scheduled for next week. The city council unanimously passed a resolution with the declaration Thursday afternoon. (12/7)
Outbreaks and Health Threats
Draft Defense Bill Requires Review Of Troops Discharged Over Covid Vaccine
Congress may require the Department of Defense to review the reinstatement of former U.S. troops discharged for refusing to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, according to a draft of the annual defense bill released earlier this week. The mandate, if passed in the final version of the bill, could see thousands of troops return to the armed services. (Knutson, 12/7)
More on covid, RSV, and whooping cough 鈥
Despite the higher risk that the coronavirus poses to older adults, a surprisingly low share of nursing home staff and residents are up to date with their COVID-19 vaccinations. Only six states are indicating that over 10% of staff members are updated on their vaccines, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).Overall updated vaccination rates are higher among residents 鈥 but still fall short of the CDC鈥檚 recommendations. Only three states have more than 50% of residents with a fully updated vaccination status. (Rudy, 12/7)
U.S. officials met with manufacturers of the infant and toddler RSV immunization Beyfortus this week seeking to boost access to the shot, the White House said in a statement on Thursday after senior Biden administration officials met with the companies last week. The officials on Tuesday met with representatives of Sanofi, AstraZeneca and Thermo Fisher "and urged them to work expeditiously to meet demand for immunizations this winter season through the commercial market," the White House said in a statement. (12/7)
Health officials in the U.K. are warning the public about a concerning rise in whooping cough after cases soared 250% this year.聽Between July and November, there were 716 reported cases of pertussis, a bacterial infection of the lungs, which is three times higher than the same period in 2022, the U.K.'s Independent reported, citing the U.K. (Pandolfo, 12/7)
On mpox and chickenpox 鈥
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a health alert on Thursday to notify clinicians and health departments about a deadly type of the mpox virus spreading in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The CDC said it was alerting about the possibility of a subtype of the mpox virus called Clade I in travelers who have been in DRC. (12/7)
Almost 30% of mpox patients described in a retrospective study from Nigeria were co-infected with chickenpox. The study was published yesterday in The Journal of Infectious Diseases. Previous mpox outbreaks in endemic countries in Africa have involved co-infections with chickenpox, resulting in more severe symptoms and presentation. The authors of the study say the burden of chickenpox is not well-known in Nigeris, as it is not a notifiable disease and the vaccine is not included in the national immunization program. (Soucheray, 12/7)
Other outbreaks and health alerts 鈥
A salmonella outbreak tied to tainted cantaloupe has now killed eight people 鈥 three in the U.S. and five in Canada, health officials reported Thursday. Dozens more illnesses were reported by both countries. In the U.S., at least 230 people have been ill in 38 states and 96 have been hospitalized since mid-November, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Aleccia, 12/7)
The dangerous bacteria that sparked powdered formula recalls and shortages last year has infected two babies this year, killing a Kentucky child and causing brain damage in a Missouri infant. Federal health officials confirmed Thursday that two cases of invasive infections caused by cronobacter sakazakii have been reported in 2023, both in infants who consumed powdered infant formula made by Abbott Nutrition, the company at the center of the 2022 crisis. Food and Drug Administration officials said there was no evidence that the infections were linked to manufacturing and no reason to issue new recalls. (Aleccia, 12/7)
The number of children with lead poisoning potentially linked to tainted pouches of cinnamon apple puree and cinnamon applesauce has increased to 64, the Food and Drug Administration reported Wednesday.聽The 64 cases, up from 57 last Thursday, all involve children under the age of 6, according to the agency.聽All were reported to it from Oct. 17 through Dec. 1. (Lovelace Jr., 12/6)
The parasite Toxoplasma gondii, spread through cat poop, could be linked to frailty in older humans, according to a new study. (Ingold, 12/8)
Although the scientific investigation is in early stages, what has become known as the mystery illness may not be all that mysterious 鈥 or even a single illness, scientists said. Instead, a variety of run-of-the-mill viruses and bacteria could be driving the current outbreaks. 鈥淲e cannot know or even assume that all cases being reported have the same cause,鈥 Dr. Rena Carlson, the president of the American Veterinary Medical Association, or A.V.M.A., which has been monitoring the situation, said in an email. (Anthes, 12/6)
Gun Violence
Under Dark Shadow Of UNLV Shooting, Gun Opponents Urge Congress To Act
Gun safety advocates from Connecticut and across the country came back to Washington, D.C., to push for passage of a trio of reforms nearly 11 years since the Sandy Hook school shooting. They teamed up with most of Connecticut鈥檚 congressional delegation to redouble their efforts in passing gun safety legislation that did not make it into federal legislation 鈥 the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act 鈥 that passed in 2022. (Hagen, 12/7)
The man suspected of killing three faculty members and wounding a fourth at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, on Wednesday had applied to be a professor at the school but wasn鈥檛 hired, law-enforcement officials said. The official identified the suspected attacker as 67-year-old Anthony Polito, a longtime business school professor, who died after a gunfight with university police shortly after the rampage began.聽He killed three UNLV faculty members, the university said. The university named two of the victims on Thursday as Patricia Navarro-Velez and Cha Jan 鈥淛erry鈥 Chang, who both taught at the Lee Business School on campus, as well as a third faculty member whom the university has yet to identify. (Elinson, 12/7)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
Health officials on Friday released the first nationally representative estimate of how many U.S. adults have chronic fatigue syndrome: 3.3 million. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 number is larger than previous studies have suggested, and is likely boosted by some of the patients with long COVID. The condition clearly 鈥渋s not a rare illness,鈥 said the CDC鈥檚 Dr. Elizabeth Unger, one of the report鈥檚 co-authors. (Stobbe, 12/8)
Imagine getting surgery without ever being cut open. Researchers at Duke University and Harvard Medical School have successfully demonstrated a proof of concept in new research published Thursday in Science using a 3D printer that uses ultrasound to print biomaterials inside an organ. (Balthazar, 12/7)
The U.S. is in the midst of a loneliness epidemic. For a lot of people, the feeling is even more pronounced during the holidays. In addition to the emotional impact of chronic loneliness, it has some dramatic health consequences: increased risk of heart disease and stroke, infections, cancer, even death. Recent research also suggests that loneliness can change the way the brain processes the surrounding world. (Carlson, Barber, McCoy, and Ramirez, 12/8)
It鈥檚 one of the most critical questions facing aging Americans: Where to live as you get older, and may require more care? Many might imagine living in a nursing home. But an analysis of census data by The Washington Post found less than 10 percent of 85-year-olds live in such a facility. (Lerman and Cocco, 12/8)
Weekend Reading
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
The stomach pain stopped Vickie-Lee Wall in her tracks. 鈥淭he first time the pain got that bad, I honestly thought something had burst in my gut,鈥 said the 64-year-old New Jersey woman, who has stage 4 lobular breast cancer. Her oncologist had prescribed two drugs, including a targeted medication called abemaciclib, after the cancer spread to Wall鈥檚 spine in 2018. Initially the pain was relatively mild. But then it ratcheted up until, three months later, Wall begged her physician for relief. 鈥淭he next visit with him I went, 鈥業 can鈥檛 do this at this dose.鈥欌 (Huff, 12/6)
With her husband near death from an antibiotic-resistant superbug, a scientist found a cure no one had used in the US 鈥 intravenous injections of viruses called phages 鈥 and convinced the medical system to save his life. (LaMotte, 12/6)
If Patrick Kane stays in the lineup for the rest of Detroit鈥檚 season, he鈥檒l have played more post-hip-resurfacing-surgery games than anyone. Resurfacing 鈥 an alternative to a full hip replacement that involves shaving damaged bone and cartilage from the femur, capping that bone with metal and popping it back into a lined socket 鈥 has high-profile test cases in tennis (Andy Murray) and pro wrestling (The Undertaker). (Gentille, 12/5)
Jennifer Livovich started a nonprofit to give socks to the homeless population in Boulder, Colo. She lost it, and more, in a legal and policy dispute. (Richtel, 12/4)
If any one country had schools that were designed to cope with the Covid pandemic, it would be Finland, which already had a highly digital education system that made the logistics of distance learning surprisingly easy. Yet even in Finland, the impact has been stark. At Kulosaari Secondary School, it took a year and a half for teaching to return to normal after the Finnish government declared a state of emergency in March 2020 in response to the rapid spread of Covid.颅颅 (Borrett, 12/4)
When the destructive summer blaze swept across Lahaina, in west Maui, Maryann Kobatake鈥檚 nephew helped ferry a friend鈥檚 grandmother and cousins to safety. On the drive out of a burning Front Street, the town鈥檚 main thoroughfare, she said the 18-year-old heard screams and witnessed carnage that haunts him still. He has not discussed what he鈥檚 seen with her or other family members. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think he wants to relive it by talking,鈥 she said, adding that she鈥檚 tried to get him to open up to her. 鈥淏ecause he鈥檚 had it tough in life, I think that鈥檚 just how he copes with it.鈥 (Wang, 12/3)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Hair Relaxers Have Hidden Health Dangers; How Do We Ensure AI In Health Care Is Ethical?
Last year, one study found women who used formaldehyde hair straighteners at least four times a year doubled their risk of developing uterine cancer. Formaldehyde has long-term effects like asthma exacerbation and headaches and other short-term effects like nausea, dizziness and respiratory problems. More than 150 chemical hair-straightening products, such as keratin treatments or Brazilian blowouts, contain formaldehyde. Activists have also accused companies of hiding formaldehyde in their ingredient list. (Amanda Joy Calhoun, 12/7)
It was no surprise when the Biden administration recently outlined in a broad executive order the challenges AI poses and what is needed to address them, including within health care. AI has enormous potential to shape health care鈥檚 future, but its use comes with serious ethical responsibilities. (Peter Shen, 12/8)
Decades of drug price inflation have reached a fever pitch that finally has lawmakers in both political parties itching for action. But, as is often the case in Washington, good intentions don't always equate to good ideas or outcomes. The government's drug price controls enacted last year in the Inflation Reduction Act are already killing innovation, as drug makers abandon research into therapies for certain cancers and blindness. A study warns the law will result in 135 fewer new drugs, and that may well be a conservative estimate. (Senator Chuck Grassley, 12/8)
鈥淐an I tell you what I really think about what鈥檚 going on?鈥 she asks, looking down and clutching her coffee, her right sneaker tapping. I had been fairly sure about two things ahead of our session: one, that she would talk about the Conflict, and two, that I would dislike what she was going to say. (Sarah Darghouth, 12/8)
As a registered nurse in Connecticut 鈥 one who graduated in 2019 shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic made its boisterous presence 鈥 I have seen firsthand the detrimental effects that inadequate staffing and unsafe nurse-to-patient ratios can have on the health of your loved ones. (Kristin Henry, 12/8)
It is heartbreaking, although not surprising, to learn that our kids are struggling with their mental health. A recent report by Children鈥檚 Health is just a confirmation of a national trend previously reported by the Centers for Disease Control. (12/8)