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
States Set Minimum Staffing Levels for Nursing Homes. Residents Suffer When Rules Are Ignored or Waived.
The Biden administration set stringent new federal staffing rules. But for years, nursing homes have failed to meet the toughest standards set by states.
How to Find a Good, Well-Staffed Nursing Home
Here are the telltale signs to look for in nursing homes to avoid, and resources that can point to better places.
Lifesaving Drugs and Police Projects Mark First Use of Opioid Settlement Cash in California
California is in line for more than $4 billion in opioid settlement funds, and local governments are most often spending the first tranche of money on lifesaving drugs. An exclusive 麻豆女优 Health News analysis also found projects to help police deter youths鈥 drug use and counsel officers who witness overdoses.
GOP Platform Muddies Abortion Waters
As Donald Trump prepares to be formally nominated as the GOP鈥檚 candidate for president next week, the platform he will run on is taking shape. And in line with Trump鈥檚 approach, it aims to simultaneously satisfy hard-core abortion opponents and reassure more moderate swing voters. Meanwhile, the Federal Trade Commission takes on pharmacy benefits management firms. Shefali Luthra of The 19th News, Sandhya Raman of CQ Roll Call, and Jessie Hellmann of CQ Roll Call join 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 chief Washington correspondent, Julie Rovner, to discuss these stories and more. Also this week, Rovner interviews Jennifer Klein, director of the White House Gender Policy Council, about the Biden administration鈥檚 policies to ensure access to reproductive health care.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
TRUST ME WHEN I SAY IT HURTS
Pain scales are useless听鈥
鈥 Anonymous
Your 鈥10鈥 is a 鈥5鈥 to me.
High pain tolerance!
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
Most US Adults Support Protecting Access To IVF: Survey
Relatively few Americans fully endorse the idea that a fertilized egg should have the same rights as a pregnant woman. But a significant share say it describes their views at least somewhat well, according to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. The new survey comes as questions grow around reproductive health access in the continued fallout from the decision by the Supreme Court to end federal abortion protections. (Long and Thomson-Deveaux, 7/12)
A report from Senate Democratic staff shows the cascading effects of abortion bans across all states, even those where the procedure is still legal.聽The report, led by staff of Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) and joined by all the Democratic women senators, as well as Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), was based off interviews with more than 80 health care providers and advocates.聽(Weixel, 7/11)
In reproductive health news from across the country 鈥
Backers of a November abortion rights ballot initiative have sued a GOP-led legislative committee that seeks to include proposed language for the voter pamphlet referring to a fetus as an 鈥渦nborn human being.鈥 Arizona for Abortion Access filed a lawsuit in Maricopa County Superior Court on Wednesday, asking that a judge refuse to allow the language favored by a Republican-dominated legislative group for the initiative summary. The summary will appear on a pamphlet voters can use to decide how to cast their ballots. (7/12)
A proposed amendment to New York鈥檚 constitution to bar discrimination over 鈥済ender identity鈥 and 鈥減regnancy outcomes鈥 will appear on the ballot this November, the state鈥檚 high court ruled Thursday. The decision from the Court of Appeals affirms a lower court ruling from June, dismissing an appeal 鈥渦pon the ground that no substantial constitutional question is directly involved,鈥 effectively declining to take up the case. (Izaguirre, 7/11)
Also 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News' 'What The Health?' Podcast: GOP Platform Muddies Abortion Waters
As Donald Trump prepares to be formally nominated as the GOP鈥檚 candidate for president next week, the platform he will run on is taking shape. And in line with Trump鈥檚 approach, it aims to simultaneously satisfy hard-core abortion opponents and reassure more moderate swing voters. (Rovner, 7/11)
Pharmaceuticals
Pfizer Plans Clinical Trials For Its Once-A-Day Weight Loss Pill
Pfizer plans to move a reworked, once-a-day version of its weight-loss pill danuglipron into clinical trials later this year, the company said on Thursday, after scrapping a twice- daily version of the drug late last year. The new drug is part of the second generation of weight-loss pills under development by companies including Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk that will offer patients a more convenient alternative to injections. (Erman and Mishra, 7/11)
Medical equipment group Gerresheimer posted second-quarter adjusted core profit in line with expectations on Thursday, driven by the deal pipeline for its plastics and devices business, which supplies weight-loss drug makers with autoinjector pens. The company confirmed guidance for the mid-term that its deals with weight-loss drug manufacturers, such as Novo Nordisk, are expected to bring at least 350 million euros ($379.44 million) of annual revenue over the next three years, despite lower demand in its primary packaging glass division. (Demetz, 7/11)
Capitol Watch
House Panel Pares And Passes HHS 2025 Budget Along Party Lines
Despite Democratic efforts to slam the brakes on Republican plans to limit abortion access and restructure the NIH, the House Appropriations Committee approved the fiscal 2025 HHS spending plan along party lines on Wednesday. The budget proposal, unveiled last month by Republicans, includes $107 billion for HHS 鈥 a 7 percent cut. It would streamline the NIH, slash Title X family grants and increase funding for substance-use disorder prevention block grants. (Cirruzzo and Leonard, 7/11)
A pair of Oversight Committee Democrats are asking a government watchdog to investigate the amount of federal funding directed toward crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs), anti-abortion nonprofits designed to convince people not to terminate pregnancies.聽In a letter sent Thursday to the Government Accountability Office (GAO) and shared first with The Hill, ranking member Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) and Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) asked for a study into how much federal money CPCs have received annually and from which federal accounts. (Weixel, 7/11)
In other political-leaning news 鈥
In what could prove to be a lifeline for a new crop of health tech startups, Medicare regulators proposed new codes that support payment for digital mental health treatments, like apps that deliver cognitive behavioral therapy. The new codes in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services鈥 2025 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Proposed Rule released this week would allow clinicians to bill for supplying apps and other digital treatments as part of behavioral health treatment, as well as for time spent on services related to a patient鈥檚 use of these devices. (Aguilar, 7/11)
Advocates for telehealth viewed the proposed physician payment rule聽from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services as a win聽but emphasized the need for Congressional action. CMS鈥 proposed regulation of the 2025 Medicare physician fee schedule, published on Wednesday, renewed a series of聽telehealth flexibilities that started during the public health emergency amid the COVID-19 pandemic.聽But telehealth advocates say more actions will be needed by Congress before the industry can operate with certainty. (Turner, 7/11)
With no strong government rules in place to regulate AI, private companies like Google are largely responsible for policing the potential harms of their own products. The fast growth of AI has raised new worries about the risks to citizens and consumers, from potential use of private data like images and texts without consent, to possible bias in AI systems that make decisions about people鈥檚 access to housing, financial assistance and health care. (Ng, 7/11)
Science And Innovations
Study: Risk Of Long Covid Is High For Pregnant Women Infected With Virus
Nearly 1 in 10 people infected with the coronavirus during pregnancy developed long covid, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology. Thursday鈥檚 study, which highlights the consequences of the virus during pregnancy, suggests long covid is more prevalent among people infected while pregnant than in the population overall. (Malhi, 7/11)
A new study that used health data from 212,984 Americans who experienced COVID-19 reinfections found that severe SARS-CoV-2 infections tended to foreshadow similar severity of subsequent infections. The researchers also found that long COVID was more likely to occur after a first infection compared to a reinfection.聽The findings were published today in聽Communications Medicine.聽(Soucheray, 7/11)
In other science and research news 鈥
Four in 10 cancer cases and about half of cancer deaths among U.S. adults 30 years old and older in 2019 were linked to 鈥渕odifiable鈥 risk factors like smoking, drinking, poor diet and not getting vaccinated, according to a new study from the American Cancer Society.聽Lead author of the study Farhad Islami, senior scientific director of cancer disparity research at the American Cancer Society, explained that modifiable risk factors are typically behavioral. (O鈥機onnell-Domenech, 7/11)
Children who live in homes where adults use e-cigarettes are exposed to significantly less nicotine through secondhand aerosols than children in homes where adults use traditional cigarettes, a new study shows. But vaping still exposes kids to nicotine and may present other risks, too. To keep children completely nicotine-free, according to the researchers, people shouldn鈥檛 smoke or vape around kids at all. (Christensen, 7/11)
Researchers were perplexed when the Food and Drug Administration announced it was investigating whether CAR-T therapy, one of the most effective treatments for blood cancers, could cause lymphoma. This was always a theoretical risk of genetically engineered therapies like CAR-T, but it never materialized in the decades after the technology鈥檚 birth. So, when the agency pointed late last year to a couple dozen cases of T cell lymphoma in patients who had previously been treated with CAR-T cells, it felt like an old question had been reignited. (Sajani and Chen, 7/12)
The聽New England Journal of Medicine聽has published results of a randomized controlled trial showing聽an聽estimated聽effectiveness of聽nirsevimab (Beyfortus) against hospitalization for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-associated bronchiolitis聽in babies of聽83%. Nirsevimab was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in July 2023, and little real-world data on efficacy are available. The study aimed to establish efficacy rates during the most recent RSV season at six hospitals in France.聽(7/11)
Research into chronic conditions affecting women is significantly lacking, and the National Institutes of Health and other agencies should do more to investigate issues that lead to worse medical treatment for women, a new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine says. Women are disproportionately affected by chronic illnesses, including Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and depression, according to the study requested by NIH鈥檚 Office of Research on Women鈥檚 Health and published Wednesday. (Malhi, 7/11)
Also 鈥
The tiny wires of Neuralink's brain chip implant used in the first participant in a trial run by Elon Musk's company have become "more or less very stable", a company executive said on Wednesday. The company had in May said that a number of tiny wires inside the brain of Noland Arbaugh, who is paralyzed from the shoulders down due to a 2016 diving accident, had pulled out of position. (Leo and Roy, 7/11)
If you鈥檙e hoping that the narcissist in your life will change, a new study suggests that you may have to wait a very long time. And even then, you might see only a small difference. The research, which was published in the journal Psychological Bulletin on Thursday, analyzed 51 studies with more than 37,000 participants 鈥 mostly from North America, Europe and New Zealand 鈥 to explore how narcissism changes over a person鈥檚 life span. (Caron, 7/11)
Health Industry
As Big PBMs Dangle On A Hook, Smaller Players Surface For A Bite
Smaller pharmacy benefit managers may be having more than a moment as some health insurers and employers show the major players the door. Insurance companies and employers fed up with commonplace industry practices are ditching PBMs owned by CVS Health, Cigna Group and UnitedHealth Group, and聽instead are inking contracts with smaller competitors聽pushing transparent business models. (Berryman, 7/11)
Mental health startup Headway is raising a new funding round valuing the company at $2.3 billion, according to people familiar with the matter, roughly doubling its valuation from a year earlier. The financing brings in about $100 million for Headway, which connects people with therapists and can handle tasks like looking up benefits and booking appointments. (Roof, 7/12)
Healthcare services provider Pennant Group has agreed to buy some assets from home health and hospice company Signature Healthcare at Home for $80 million. Pennant Group entered into two separate purchase agreements, it said Thursday. The deals, which are each subject to regulatory approval,聽would expand its footprint by 13 locations across Idaho, Oregon and Washington, according to a news release. (Eastabrook, 7/11)
Drugmaker Indivior Plc (INDV.L) slashed its 2024 profit forecast while signaling a slowdown in sales of its top-selling opioid addiction treatment, and said it would discontinue sales of its schizophrenia drug Perseris, prompting its shares to plunge 44% on Tuesday. Indivior's Sublocade drug has faced intense competition from the launch of a rival, as well as the end of pandemic-relief measures that has led to loss of coverage in the United States for some people enrolled in government-backed Medicaid plans. (Anilkumar, 7/11)
Also 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News: States Set Minimum Staffing Levels For Nursing Homes. Residents Suffer When Rules Are Ignored Or Waived
For hours, John Pernorio repeatedly mashed the call button at his bedside in the Heritage Hills nursing home in Rhode Island. A retired truck driver, he had injured his spine in a fall on the job decades earlier and could no longer walk. The antibiotics he was taking made him need to go to the bathroom frequently. But he could get there only if someone helped him into his wheelchair. By the time an aide finally responded, he鈥檇 been lying in soiled briefs for hours, he said. It happened time and again. (Rau, 7/12)
麻豆女优 Health News: How To Find A Good, Well-Staffed Nursing Home
Few people want to go into a nursing home, but doing so can be the right choice if you or a loved one is physically or cognitively disabled or recovering from surgery. Unfortunately, homes vary greatly in quality, and many don鈥檛 have enough nurses and aides to give residents the care they need. (Rau, 7/12)
Public Health
Beware Of Canned Meats Illegally Imported From Philippines, USDA Says
Multiple ready-to-eat meat products were illegally imported from the Philippines, prompting the U.S. Department of Agriculture to issue a public health alert. The department鈥檚 Food Safety and Inspection Service, or FSIS, issued the alert on Wednesday, according to a news release.聽The items were shipped to Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina and Virginia, the FSIS said, adding that the Philippines is not eligible to export meat and poultry products to the U.S. (Martin, 7/11)
Experts from the French national public health agency have developed a model framework to identify priority pathogens for wastewater surveillance (WWS) at the upcoming summer Olympic and Paralympic Games in Paris, expected to draw 16 million visitors from around the world. Viruses that cause polio and flu topped the list. (Van Beusekom, 7/11)
In other public health news 鈥
Dermatologist Elizabeth Houshmand sees a lot of tweens and teens in her Dallas practice. A few months ago, a mother brought her 9-year-old daughter in with a significantly red, itching face. It turns out the daughter had been using a moisturizer that she'd seen promoted on social media. ... But neither mother nor child realized that the moisturizer contained glycolic acid, an exfoliating ingredient that can be too harsh for the thinner skin of preteens. (Godoy, 7/12)
Human lifespan has a limit and we might have reached it. S. Jay Olshansky, who studies the upper bounds of human longevity at the University of Illinois Chicago, believes people shouldn鈥檛 expect to live to 100. Most, he contends, will reach between 65-90. (Dockser Marcus, 7/11)
Set against the gently rolling Piedmont hills between Greensboro and Burlington, Peacehaven Community Farm is an active experiment in supporting the choices of people with disabilities to live an active and meaningful life where they choose. Beds of lettuce, collards, green beans and other seasonal staples grow alongside dahlias and sunflowers on the 89-acre property. On 鈥済arden work days,鈥 people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, their loved ones and volunteers from nearby converge to work the farm 鈥 tilling the soil, rooting out weeds, picking flowers and produce. (Nandagiri, 7/12)
A child collapses and later succumbs to the heat after hiking in scorching temperatures on a Phoenix trail. A couple runs out of water near California's Joshua National Park and are airlifted from a dry creek bed. Three hikers die at the Grand Canyon in less than a month amid extreme heat. A stifling heat wave in the Western U.S. has turned some of its most alluring nature trails deadly. Here's why hiking in extreme heat can be so dangerous and how to keep yourself safe. (Hartounian, 7/12)
State Watch
2,400 Patients At Oregon Hospitals May Have Been Exposed To HIV, Hepatitis
More than 2,400 patients at hospitals around Portland, Oregon, may have been exposed to infectious diseases such as hepatitis B and C, as well as HIV, because of an anesthesiologist who may not have followed infection control practices, officials said. Providence said in a statement Thursday that it is notifying about 2,200 people seen at Providence Willamette Falls Medical Center in Oregon City and two patients seen at Providence Portland Medical Center that the physician鈥檚 actions might have put them at low risk of exposure to possible infections. (7/12)
In other health news from across the country 鈥
Health care centers and medical record-holders are targets for ransomware gangs. But why? The Florida Department of Health is working to recover systems that affect its efficiency in distributing birth and death certificates. The outages came after ransomware gang claimed it hacked into the network and stole 100 gigabytes of personal data. The department hasn't confirmed the cyberattack but said its Vital Statistics system was going through a temporary outage. (Pedersen, 7/11)
Despite a record 46-day streak of triple digit feels-like temperatures, Miami鈥檚 unprecedented brutal summer last year wasn鈥檛 that deadly, contrasting with the rest of the nation where federal records show heat fatalities nationally spiked to a 45-year high. One of the reasons is that Miami takes heat seriously, not just reacting when temperatures soar, but planning months in advance. ... The Miami-Dade government and the local National Weather Service office team up to treat heat like something more scary, but often less deadly. (Borenstein, 7/11)
A sweeping investigation into suspected drug trafficking rings has produced more than 200 arrests and drug seizures valued at nearly $685,000, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday. He also touted prevention and treatment programs fighting the deadly addiction epidemic. ... The crackdown, dubbed Operation Summer Heat, is ongoing and will result in additional arrests, said State Police Commissioner Phillip Burnett Jr. (Schreiner, 7/11)
West Virginia and Idaho are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review rulings that blocked the enforcement of state laws prohibiting transgender athletes from competing in sports. 鈥淚f the Supreme Court takes this up, it will determine the fate of women鈥檚 sports across the entire country for many years to come,鈥 West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey said Thursday at a briefing with reporters at the state Capitol in Charleston. (Willingham, 7/11)
As a child in Missouri, Anoela Martin sometimes lived in another person's garage. At other times, home was under a bridge. Occasionally, it was in an unsafe home with a parent. She bounced back and forth between her mom鈥檚 care in Kansas City and her dad鈥檚 in St. Joseph. 鈥淢y dad was a raging alcoholic at that time, and my mom was a drug addict,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 really get to eat as much as we probably should have. He wasn鈥檛 home a lot. We kind of had to take care of ourselves.鈥 (Husted, 7/11)
Also 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News: Lifesaving Drugs And Police Projects Mark First Use Of Opioid Settlement Cash In California
Sonja Verdugo lost her husband to an opioid overdose last year. She regularly delivers medical supplies to people using drugs who are living 鈥 and dying 鈥 on the streets of Los Angeles. And she advocates at Los Angeles City Hall for policies to address addiction and homelessness. Yet Verdugo didn鈥檛 know that hundreds of millions of dollars annually are flowing to California communities to combat the opioid crisis, a payout that began in 2022 and continues through 2038. (Pattani and Thompson, 7/12)
Weekend Reading
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
The mood was cautiously optimistic and the message was simple: Drug decriminalization saves lives. People who used or carried small quantities of illegal drugs in plain sight would no longer face arrest in British Columbia, the nexus of Canada鈥檚 opioid crisis, officials announced two years ago. So bold was the experiment, even in a province known for pioneering addiction policies, that its public health officer said she was in disbelief the day had actually come. But decriminalization, a policy introduced as a way of alleviating the opioid crisis, has instead been blamed for deepening it. (Isai, 7/11)
Public health experts and officials are amplifying their warnings about the risks of unregulated and sometimes illegal products advertised on social media and easily purchased online or in vape shops. Some claim to contain the hallucinogenic mushroom compound psilocybin, which is legal for use in two states but illegal federally. Some products contain potentially harmful synthetic chemicals or extracts from a sometimes-toxic mushroom known as amanita muscaria. (Ovalle, 7/4)
After a second course of treatment, the tennis Hall of Famer is optimistic about life, and vocal about the importance of early testing. (Waldstein, 7/1)
On Wednesday, the consumer electronics giant revealed a slew of new devices at a splashy event in Paris, including a pair of new foldable phones and updated smartwatches. But it鈥檚 the company鈥檚 鈥渟mart鈥 ring 鈥 the $399 Galaxy Ring 鈥 that seems to have garnered the most attention. That鈥檚 in part because it is new ground for Samsung, a company that has most recently highlighted its interest in artificial intelligence and home robotics. But it鈥檚 also the first big tech company to embrace of a class of health devices that haven鈥檛 yet gone fully mainstream. (Velazco, 7/10)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Has US Maternal Mortality Rate Been Misreported?; Consolidation In Health Care Is A Bad Deal
Grave warnings of a crisis in maternal deaths are being slightly eroded by articles suggesting that advocates overreached and that the 鈥渃risis鈥 was primarily a function of measurement error. (Eugene Declercq, 7/12)
Economic theory asserts that consolidation creates efficiency. It is the reason national consumer goods chains have purchasing power that ma and pa neighborhood stores lack. It鈥檚 the reason product choice is greater at chains than at smaller operations. In health care, however, consolidation has led to higher prices, less patient choice of facilities and doctors, and other monopolistic outcomes, according to a recent Wall Street Journal series. (7/12)
Imagine a comprehensive review of research on a treatment for children found 鈥渞emarkably weak evidence鈥 that it was effective. Now imagine the medical establishment shrugged off the conclusions and continued providing the same unproven and life-altering treatment to its young patients. This is where we are with gender medicine in the United States. (Pamela Paul, 7/12)
Imagine you are a young adult struggling with a toxic, dangerous environment at home. You flee but there is no permanent, safe place to go. You couch surf for as long as you can, you can鈥檛 afford an apartment, and beds at youth-oriented shelters are hard to secure because they have limited space with no open beds. Your only alternative is to sleep in a park or on a city street. (Mandy Lancaster, 7/11)
Health care is undergoing an important and well-needed shift from a one-size-fits-all approach to more personalized, precise, patient-focused care. A similar approach needs to be implemented at scale for clinical trials. (Raviv Pryluk and Mike Walsh, 7/12)