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
Federal Lawmakers Take First Steps Toward Oversight of $50 Billion in Opioid Settlements
The four-page bill lists how states should spend settlement money, but it doesn鈥檛 specify consequences for flouting the rules or name who is in charge of monitoring compliance.
What the Health Care Sector Was Selling at the J.P. Morgan Confab
When bankers and investors flocked to San Francisco for the largest gathering of health care industry investors, the buzz was all about artificial intelligence, the next hit weight-loss drug, and new opportunities to make money through nonprofit hospitals.
Rising Suicide Rate Among Hispanics Worries Community Leaders
The suicide rate for Hispanics in the United States has increased significantly over the past decade. The reasons are varied, say community leaders and mental health experts, citing factors such as language barriers, poverty, and a lack of bilingual mental health professionals.
Watch: Older Americans Say They Feel Stuck in Medicare Advantage Plans
You鈥檝e probably seen advertising about Medicare Advantage plans. 麻豆女优 Health News' Sarah Jane Tribble explains the pros and cons of this insurance option as enrollment in these plans increases.
Journalist Talks Distribution of Opioid Funds 鈥 And the Companies Angling for a Piece
麻豆女优 Health News senior correspondent Aneri Pattani made the rounds on national and local media in the last two weeks to discuss the opioid settlement funds flowing to state and local governments and her reporting on the topic. Here鈥檚 a collection of her appearances.
Political Cartoon: 'Whadda You Reckon?'
麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Whadda You Reckon?'" by Mark Lynch.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
WEIGHT LOSS DRUGS AREN'T JUST TO IMPROVE LOOKS
Can you lose more weight?
鈥 Angela Brice-Smith
Reduce blood pressure foremost,
otherwise, no pay.
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
On Anniversary Of Roe V. Wade, Biden Campaign Pushes For Abortion Rights
President Joe Biden will convene key members of his Cabinet on Monday to discuss abortion rights on the 51st anniversary of the Roe v. Wade ruling, according to a White House official. The president will 鈥渉ear directly from physicians on the frontlines of the fallout鈥 since the landmark decision was reversed and detail new actions his administration is taking to strengthen access to contraception and medication abortion, as well as ensuring patients can receive emergency medical care.聽The meeting will mark the fourth time his task force on reproductive health care access has come together since the fall of Roe roughly a year and a half ago.聽 (Alba, 1/22)
The Biden campaign will hit the airwaves in battleground states with its first abortion-focused ad of the year,聽featuring stark,聽emotional聽testimony聽from a woman personally affected by a state abortion ban who lays the blame directly on former President Donald Trump. It comes as the campaign is launching a full-court press this week to put abortion rights front and center in the 2024 race, including with events headlined by President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. The push聽marks the campaign鈥檚 first organized effort to聽emphasize the issue, seeking to further galvanize voters聽around reproductive rights in the first presidential election聽after the Supreme Court ended the federal constitutional right to an abortion. (Saenz, 1/22)
鈥淭his is the biggest election in terms of abortion that I鈥檝e lived through and any of us have lived through to date,鈥 said Mary Ziegler, a professor of law at UC Davis and a leading abortion historian. One major change since the 1970s is that abortion is now a partisan issue. 鈥淭hat was not true in 1973. It was hard to be a single-issue voter,鈥 said Ms. Ziegler. 鈥淚n 1976, neither candidate had a very clear position on abortion.鈥 (Webster, 1/22)
Today marks 51 years since Roe v. Wade, now overturned, was decided. And the anniversary is one of many opportunities that Democrats are seizing to remind voters which party seeks to keep curtailing abortion access. 鈥淚t鈥檚 crystal clear to me that the GOP is fully committed to a nationwide abortion ban,鈥 Rep. Pat Ryan told Playbook. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e continuing to even more aggressively pursue that, literally choosing a speaker of the House that authored the bill for a nationwide abortion ban. And that would certainly affect New York.鈥 (Ngo, Reisman and Coltin, 1/22)
Roe v. Wade may be history but Monday's anniversary of the 1973 decision is providing a potent rallying point for both sides in the abortion wars. Amid a showdown over funding the government, House Republican leaders brought up a pair of symbolic bills they said would protect pregnant women's rights but that Democrats contend would further erode abortion access. (Knight, 1/19)
Also 鈥
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says an Oklahoma hospital did not violate federal law when doctors told a woman with a nonviable pregnancy to wait in the parking lot until her condition worsened enough to qualify for an abortion under the state鈥檚 strict ban. Jaci Statton, 26, was among several women last year who challenged abortion restrictions that went into effect in Republican-led states after the Supreme Court revoked the nationwide right to abortion in 2022. Rather than join a lawsuit, Statton filed a complaint with the Department of Health and Human Services under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, or EMTALA. (Kruesi, 1/19)
Less than two years ago, the Supreme Court eliminated the federal right to an abortion, a decision that the court鈥檚 conservative majority suggested would remove them from further litigation of abortion rights. 聽鈥漈he Court鈥檚 decision properly leaves the question of abortion for the people and their elected representatives in the democratic process,鈥 Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in a concurring opinion. But this term, the court is now set to hear two cases that could further undercut access to the procedure. (Luthra, 1/19)
At Anti-Abortion Rally, Most Marchers Kept Mum On Plans For National Ban
At this year鈥檚 March For Life, the country鈥檚 largest annual anti-abortion rally, little was said about federal bans on the procedure, yet another sign of the growing political quagmire abortion opponents now face. (Luthra, 1/19)
Last year, anti-abortion activists descended on the National Mall in triumph for the annual March for Life, eager to enter a new era for their ambitions to end abortion following the reversal of Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court ruling that established federal abortion rights. But this year, the first presidential election year in post-Roe America, the movement finds itself marching once more in Washington not in triumph, exactly, but grasping to advance their cause after a series of political defeats, fewer powerful allies, and setbacks in the court of public opinion. (Dias, 1/19)
On a snowy Washington, D.C., day, one day after Congress passed a stopgap spending bill and fled town, a sizable and motivated crowd assembled for the annual March for Life on the National Mall to listen to the new speaker of the House praise their efforts to end abortion.聽In his first address to the nation鈥檚 largest annual anti-abortion rally as speaker Friday, Mike Johnson, R-La., shared the impetus for his interest in anti-abortion issues. (Raman, 1/19)
Falling snow and flight delays thinned this year鈥檚 anti-abortion March for Life in Washington, D.C., on Friday but did not deter the most impatient activists in the movement, those unsatisfied until the entire U.S. map is red with abortion bans. 鈥淚鈥檓 not OK with abortion states and non-abortion states. I want an abortion-free America,鈥 said Right to Life of East Texas director Mark Lee Dickson, standing outside the White House the day before, at a sparsely attended protest organized by the Christian Defense Coalition, where activists held signs picturing aborted fetuses. (Resnick, 1/22)
Civic Center Plaza was a sea of umbrellas Saturday afternoon as thousands of people took to San Francisco鈥檚 streets to peacefully protest abortion and seize on the movement鈥檚 gains since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the right to the procedure. The 20th annual Walk for Life West Coast began with a rally at Civic Center and continued with a march down Market Street to the Embarcadero, prompting street closures and bus reroutes. (Echeverria, 1/20)
Republican Lawmakers Propose New 14-Week Abortion Ban In Wisconsin
Republican lawmakers are proposing a new bill to ban abortion after 14 weeks of pregnancy except in situations where the mother's life or health would be endangered without the procedure 鈭 a measure that would reduce the timeframe for legal abortions by six weeks, prompting a promise to veto by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers. The bill, introduced Friday, requires voters to approve the policy before it could take effect and is being fast-tracked through the Legislature, with a public hearing scheduled for Monday 鈥 the same day Vice President Kamala Harris is scheduled to visit Waukesha County to promote the Biden administration's focus on preserving abortion access ahead of the 2024 presidential election. (Beck, 1/19)
In related news 鈥
Vice President Harris is kicking off a tour on Monday ... to draw attention to new restrictions on abortion, an issue that Democrats hope will fire up voters for the presidential election in November. ... "She is going to connect the dots for people," a White House official told NPR, speaking on condition of anonymity ahead of the tour. "She is going to make a clear connection between Roe being overturned, these extreme bans being put into effect by extremists across the country, and what harm those bans have caused for women." (Shivaram, 1/22)
Wisconsin is crucial to Mr. Biden鈥檚 re-election prospects 鈥 he won there by about 20,600 votes in 2020 鈥 and recent polling suggests a close race in 2024. It was also a target of former President Donald J. Trump鈥檚 efforts to spread falsehoods about illegal voting in 2020. But Democrats hope that a series of victories for abortion rights advocates in Wisconsin could signal a wider trend ahead of the general election. In April, Wisconsin voters elected a liberal candidate to the state鈥檚 Supreme Court by an 11-point margin. In September, Planned Parenthood began providing abortions again after a judge ruled that an 1849 state restriction against them 鈥 which had been invalidated by Roe until it fell 鈥 was not enforceable. (Rogers, 1/22)
Abortion news from Colorado and Minnesota 鈥
A coalition of reproductive rights groups in Colorado officially kicked off an effort Monday to place an amendment on the November ballot that would enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution. Coloradans for Protecting Reproductive Freedom is beginning its signature-collection efforts with events throughout the state 鈥 timing its campaign launch with the 51st anniversary of the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision, which, until it was overturned in 2022, had legalized abortion rights throughout the U.S. (Edelman, 1/22)
Abortion opponents who have long turned out in big numbers for an annual demonstration at Minnesota鈥檚 Capitol find themselves gathering amid cross currents this year, given laws that limit access in many states while protections are stronger than ever here. (Ferguson, 1/22)
Administration News
FDA Eyes End Of Year As Deadline For Inspection Procedure Overhaul
Food and Drug Administration officials hope to finish this year a massive overhaul of the way the agency inspects facilities that make drugs, medical devices, and food products, they said Friday. (Wilkerson, 1/22)
U.S. inspectors recently uncovered new manufacturing problems at an Eli Lilly plant that has been under scrutiny by federal investigators, according to government records obtained by Reuters. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration inspection in July at Lilly's Branchburg, New Jersey, plant detected eight separate deficiencies. They included problems in tracking manufacturing process and quality controls, as well as lapses in its calibration of equipment and failure to properly maintain facilities and equipment, the inspection report shows. (Taylor and Fick, 1/19)
A new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) urges the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to finalize its plan to implement new rules to help identify sources of foodborne illness outbreaks. The FDA's final rule on food traceability, introduced in November 2022, established a list of certain foods for which enhanced recordkeeping is required, including additional traceability records to track certain points in the item's supply chain鈥攌nown as critical tracking events. Products that contain dairy, eggs, nuts, prepared food, produce, and seafood are covered by the rule's recordkeeping requirements if that ingredient remains in the form in which it appears on the list, according to the FDA. Examples include fresh lettuce used in a bagged salad mix and a sandwich containing a tomato. (Dall, 1/19)
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration scolded Novartis for making false and misleading statements about a best-selling breast cancer treatment in a television ad in 2022. In a Nov. 18 letter, the agency admonished the company for touting the benefits of its Kisqali medicine by referencing data that did not support the messages in the ad. (Silverman, 1/19)
Medicaid
Nearly Half A Million Georgians Have Been Dropped From Medicaid Rolls
Georgia has dropped at least 488,000 from Medicaid, the government health insurance for the poor, as part of a federally mandated project to ensure those covered by the program qualify to remain on it. Georgia began the process of redetermination with 2.8 million Medicaid recipients, which account for a quarter of the state鈥檚 population. (Hart, 1/22)
New Medicaid numbers reveal Florida seems to have a growing number of children without health insurance. The state's December update shows that over 911,000 Floridians were disenrolled from Medicaid since the Department of Children & Families began its redetermination process in April. Of that total, about 420,000 were children. (Pedersen, 1/19)
On Medicare and drug pricing 鈥
The House Budget Committee did not take measures to protect systems like Medicare and Social Security on Thursday, despite advancing legislation to create a bipartisan fiscal commission designed to find a solution to the government鈥檚 budget. The committee approved the bill 22-12, with three Democrats joining Republicans in passing the measure. (Irwin, 1/19)
Physicians confronted a Medicare reimbursement cut this year, but the American Medical Association and other organizations are also looking ahead to a bigger fight: completely overhauling how the program pays doctors. Under the Merit-based Incentive Payment System, or MIPS, that exists today, physicians complain not only about inadequate compensation but also about red tape and standards some say fail to accurately capture quality. (Bennett, 1/22)
In the fall of 2020, Robert Sachs was prescribed a medication to treat prostate cancer that had metastasized into some of his bones. He welcomed the treatment, but was surprised by the $740 monthly copay cost, even after coverage from Medicare and supplemental insurance. (Silverman, 1/22)
麻豆女优 Health News: Watch: Older Americans Say They Feel Stuck In Medicare Advantage Plans聽
As enrollment in private Medicare Advantage plans grows, so do concerns about how well the coverage works, including from people who say they are stuck in the private plans as their health declines. 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 Sarah Jane Tribble explains. (Tribble, 1/22)
In related news about nursing homes 鈥
While staffing and reimbursement issues have certainly contributed to closures in some cases, especially for smaller, rural facilities, experts say the debate often omits some important facts and nuance: specifically, that many facilities that close are poor quality, have high staff turnover and are located in areas where multiple other homes and alternatives exist, making it difficult to fill empty beds. Others turn into assisted living facilities, which are more loosely regulated. A handful were kicked off of the Medicare program for low quality. (Hellmann, 1/19)
Every year, wildfires across the western U.S. and Canada send plumes of smoke into the sky. When that smoke blows into southwestern Idaho's Treasure Valley, it blankets Boise-area residents in dirty air. They include seniors living in long-term care facilities, many of whom are considered an at-risk population for smoke exposure because of respiratory or cardiac diseases. "An astonishing amount of smoke gets inside these facilities," said Luke Montrose, an environmental toxicologist and researcher at Colorado State University. Data from monitors Montrose installed in four Idaho long-term care facilities in 2020 showed that large amounts of smoke pollution recorded outside during wildfire season seeped into the facilities. One building let in 50% of the particulate matter outside; another, 100%. In some cases, Montrose said, "it was no better to be inside than to be outside during those smoke events." (Mohr, 1/22)
Pharmaceuticals
Blue Cross Insurers Will Be First To Cover New Sickle Cell Gene Therapies
Blue Cross Blue Shield insurers have become the first carriers to cover multimillion-dollar new gene therapies for sickle cell disease, and other insurers and Medicaid agencies are moving to follow suit. Blue Cross' Synergie Medication Collective has inked risk-sharing agreements with drugmaker BlueBird Bio to offer its $3.1 million Lyfgenia gene therapy treatment for sickle cell disease to some self-insured employers, as well as competitor Vertex Pharmaceuticals' $2.2 million Casgevy treatment. (Tepper, 1/19)
More pharmaceutical industry developments 鈥
Dr. Thomas Wagner, founder of the biotech company Orbis Health Solutions and cancer researcher, has made it his life's mission to find a way to treat cancer without the dreaded side effects that, for some, can become worse than the cancer itself or may even lead to an earlier death. ... Wagner's TLPO cancer vaccine has been tested in hundreds of patients with advanced forms of melanoma in Phase 2 clinical trials. The most recent data presented at an academic conference showed nearly 95% of people given only the vaccine were still alive three years after starting treatment and 64% were still disease-free. (Cobern, 1/20)
The rising popularity of glucagon-like peptide agonists has led to a gold rush of companies offering telehealth weight-loss services. GLP-1s, a class of medications that can help with weight loss and diabetes, have become big business in a short period of time. Drugmaker Novo Nordisk, which manufactures injectable GLP-1 agonist medications Ozempic and Wegovy, booked more than $12 billion in revenue in 2023's first nine months from those two drugs alone. (Perna, 1/19)
As the popularity of semaglutide weight-loss medications continues to grow, so does the rate of potentially dangerous overdoses, experts are warning.聽Reported overdoses of semaglutide products such as Ozempic and Wegovy more than doubled between 2022 and 2023, according to America鈥檚 Poison Centers in Virginia. "U.S. Poison Centers have documented 3,316 exposures to products containing semaglutide through Dec. 31, 2023, more than two times the number of cases reported in 2022," Dr. Kait Brown, clinical managing director of America鈥檚 Poison Centers, told Fox News Digital via email. (Rudy, 1/21)
HHS has banned Elizabeth Holmes, incarcerated founder of blood-testing company Theranos, from participating in any federal healthcare program for the next 90 years.聽According to a Jan. 19 news release from HHS' Office of Inspector General, Ms. Holmes will be unable to bill Medicare, Medicaid or any other federal program. Ms. Holmes is currently serving an 11-year prison sentence after being convicted of defrauding investors in Theranos. The company claimed to be able to screen for hundreds of conditions with a single drop of blood.聽(Wilson, 1/19)
Health Industry
Efficiency Study Finds VA Facilities Are The Best
Private-sector hospitals, clinics, and insurers are bloated, bureaucratic nightmares compared to efficiently run Veterans Health Administration facilities that put care over profits, a new study reveals. The study, by researchers at Hunter College of the City University of New York, Harvard Medical School, the Veterans Health Administration, and the University of Washington, points fingers at profit-driven private facilities and insurers, where a whopping 30% of staff are stuck in the tangled web of paperwork, while the VHA shines with a lean 22.5% administrative staff. That means nearly 900,000 fewer paper pushers would be needed if private hospitals, clinics, and insurers took a page from the VHA's playbook. The research is published in the journal JAMA Network Open. (1/19)
More health care industry news 鈥
Boston-based Massachusetts General Hospital is requesting permission from the state to add more than 90 inpatient beds amid what it says is an "unprecedented capacity crisis."聽The hospital's emergency department has experienced critical levels of overcrowding nearly every day for the past six months, Massachusetts General said in a Jan. 19 news release. The hospital boards between 50 to 80 ED patients every night who are waiting for a hospital bed to open. On Jan. 11, Massachusetts General had 103 patients boarding in the ED, representing one of the most crowded days in the hospital's more than 200-year history. (Bean, 1/19)
The state is planning to drastically shrink or even close University Hospital at Downstate in Brooklyn, the only state-run medical hospital in New York City. A number of concerns 鈥 too few patients, annual operating deficits of about $100 million and a deteriorating hospital building 鈥 have led to the proposal, which hospital administrators shared with doctors this week. It is unclear how the plan will affect access to medical care for residents of central Brooklyn and beyond. The hospital, in East Flatbush, is directly across the street from another public hospital, the city-run Kings County Hospital, so the change would not mean a swath of the city suddenly lost access to a nearby hospital. (Goldstein, 1/20)
Steward Health Care, a for-profit health system that serves thousands of patients in Eastern Massachusetts, is in such grave financial distress that it may be unable to continue operating some facilities, according to public records and people with knowledge of the situation. The fast-moving crisis has left regulators racing to prevent the massive layoffs and erosion of care that could come if hospital services were to suddenly cease. (Bartlett, 1/19)
It makes sense in theory for hospitals and startups to strike deals. Not only would doctors get first dibs on new health care technologies, their organizations would see windfalls if those startups hit it big. In practice, it often doesn鈥檛 work out that way. (Bannow, 1/22)
American Healthcare REIT Inc. is seeking to raise about $700 million in an initial public offering, according to people familiar with the situation. The Irvine, California-based senior housing and assisted living property owner could start gauging investor interest in the listing as soon as next week, the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is private. The company is a non-traded REIT, which is required to make regular filings and only infrequently trades over the counter. (Or, 1/19)
Three crew members died in a medical helicopter crash in Oklahoma on Saturday after transporting a patient, according to the company that runs the service. The company, Air Evac Lifeteam, said on social media that the crew members lost contact with the company鈥檚 control center around 11:23 p.m. local time while they were returning to their base in Weatherford, Okla., about 70 miles west of Oklahoma City. (Carballo, 1/21)
Also 鈥
A judge ruled this week that Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital in St. Petersburg will not get a retrial in a case that accused the health care provider of holding a young girl against her will. But the judge did decrease the $261 million awarded to the girl and her family by a jury by $47.5 million. (Bowman, 1/19)
Scientists at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, one of the nation鈥檚 leading cancer research and treatment centers, are 鈥渕oving to鈥 retract one paper and correct others amid an expanding investigation of data manipulation, officials told STAT. The investigation includes scores of papers authored by four top scientists and institute leaders, including CEO Laurie Glimcher and COO William Hahn. (Wosen and Chen, 1/19)
麻豆女优 Health News: What The Health Care Sector Was Selling At The J.P. Morgan Confab聽
Every year, thousands of bankers, venture capitalists, private equity investors, and other moneybags flock to San Francisco鈥檚 Union Square to pursue deals. Scores of security guards keep the homeless, the snoops, and the patent-stealers at bay, while the dealmakers pack into the cramped Westin St. Francis hotel and its surrounds to meet with cash-hungry executives from biotech and other health care companies. After a few years of pandemic slack, the 2024 J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference regained its full vigor, drawing 8,304 attendees in early January to talk science, medicine, and, especially, money. (Castle Work and Allen, 1/22)
Berish Strauch, a plastic surgeon whose pioneering procedures and devices to reattach or replace vital body parts included one of the first toe-to-thumb transplants, a device to reverse vasectomies and, perhaps most notably, the first inflatable prosthetic penis, died on Dec. 24 in Greenwich, Conn. He was 90. Beginning in the late 1960s, Dr. Strauch was at the forefront of a revolution in plastic surgery, in particular microsurgery, in which doctors use microscopes and precision instruments to sew together minuscule blood vessels, nerves and ligaments, some thinner than a human hair, said Dr. June K. Wu, an associate professor of surgery at Columbia University who completed her residency under Dr. Strauch. (Risen, 1/21)
Covid-19
Respiratory Illness Risks Still High, But Covid And RSV May Be Tailing Off
Illnesses from three main respiratory viruses remain high across the nation, but, for a second week, some indicators that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) tracks, such as hospitalizations and SARS-CoV-2 wastewater levels, showed declines. In its latest updates for COVID-19, flu, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), the CDC said rapid increases seen in the weeks leading up to the winter holidays have slowed, with decreases noted for COVID-19 and continuing declines in RSV activity in some regions. Overall, flu activity shows stable or declining trends, but the CDC said it is closely watching for a second spike that sometimes occurs after the winter holidays. (Schnirring, 1/19)
In California, a person who tests positive for Covid and has no symptoms does not need to isolate, according to new state health guidelines.聽People who test positive and have mild symptoms, meanwhile, can end isolation once their symptoms improve and they鈥檝e been fever-free for 24 hours without medication 鈥斅爀ven if that point arrives in less than five days. ... The state's guidance differs from that of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which continues to advise people with Covid to stay home for at least five days, regardless of whether they have symptoms. (Bendix, 1/19)
America is over the Covid vaccine. Frantic lineups for scarce doses when Covid vaccines first became available have long since given way to widespread indifference. Each new round of boosters has drawn fewer bared arms than the round before it. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that, as of Jan. 6, a mere 21.5% of Americans aged 18 and older and 11% of children have been vaccinated with the latest Covid vaccine. (Branswell, 1/22)
This winter the U.S. is seeing a new spike in COVID-19 cases, and so doctors are urging people to get new vaccine booster shots for the dangerous respiratory virus 鈥 which has killed almost 1.2 million Americans since the pandemic started four years ago. (Padgett, 1/19)
The head of the World Health Organization on Monday voiced concern that countries may miss a May deadline to finish negotiations and adopt a legally binding pandemic treaty. "I must say I'm concerned that member states may not meet that commitment," said Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus in an address to the global health agency's Executive Board. "In my view, a failure to deliver the pandemic agreement and the IHR (International Health Regulations) amendments will be a missed opportunity for which future generations may not forgive us," he said. (1/22)
On norovirus tracking and superbugs 鈥
Wastewater monitoring of norovirus can be a useful monitoring system and can provide an earlier signal than other surveillance methods, researchers from the University of Michigan reported yesterday in PLOS Water. ... Current surveillance relies on syndromic surveillance, such as school and emergency department data on gastrointestinal illnesses, which sometimes isn't specific to norovirus and isn't easily available to the public. (Schnirring, 1/19)
Cynthia Horton鈥檚 earaches are the stuff of nightmares. 鈥淚 can wake up from my sleep in horrible pain, like I鈥檓 having a root canal with no anesthesia,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen I sit up, my ear is often weeping with infection, even oozing blood.鈥 Already weakened by a lifelong battle with lupus, Horton鈥檚 immune system was devastated by rounds of radiation and chemotherapy after a 2003 surgery for a cancerous tumor in her ear. (LaMotte, 1/21)
Lifestyle and Health
CDC: Docs Should More Readily Consider Testing Patients For PFAS
The CDC on Jan. 18 issued updated guidance for clinicians regarding exposure to per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances, urging them to consider a patient's individual history and possible exposure to the chemicals and to order blood tests as needed to detect both recent and past exposures. These chemicals, also called PFAS, are found in drinking water and used in everything from non-stick cooking pans, to shampoo and dental floss. But exposure to high concentrations can cause chronic health conditions like high cholesterol, kidney and testicular cancer, pregnancy-induced hypertension, decreased vaccine response and more.聽(Hollowell, 1/19)
The U.S. Department of Defense plans to install two more groundwater treatment systems at a former Michigan military base to control contamination from so-called forever chemicals, U.S. Rep. Elissa Slotkin鈥檚 office announced Friday. Environmentalists say the systems will help prevent PFAS from spreading into the Clarks Marsh area and the Au Sable River near the former Wurtsmith Air Force Base in Oscoda on the shores of Lake Huron. The base closed in 1993 as part of a base realignment. (Richmond, 1/19)
Wind picks up microplastics from human-sewage-based fertilizers at higher concentrations than previously known, and may be an 鈥渦nderappreciated鈥 source of airborne plastic bits, flakes and threads. ... It means people are potentially inhaling these particles, which measure between 1 and 5,000 micrometers, or 5 millimeters, in size. Most of these particles are likely to be coated with harmful chemicals such as plastic additives, heavy metals, pesticides and other chemicals that have been poured down the drain or have trickled off streets into storm drains. (Rust, 1/19)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
After decades of good news in the fight against cervical cancer 鈥 marked by decades of steady declines in cases and deaths 鈥 a new report suggests that some women are being left behind. Thanks to early detection and treatment, rates of cervical cancer have plummeted by more than half over the past 50 years. Rates are falling fastest among women in their early 20s, the first generation to benefit from HPV vaccines, which were approved in 2006.聽HPV, the human papillomavirus, causes six types of cancer, including cervical cancer.聽(Szabo, 1/20)
Alcohol can cause risky surgical complications for patients who drink in the days leading up to a procedure, but signs of dangerous alcohol use aren鈥檛 always obvious on a patient鈥檚 chart. Artificial intelligence could help bring such problems to light, a new analysis suggests. The study, published in the journal Alcohol: Clinical & Experimental Research, used a natural language processing model to assess the medical records of 53,811 patients who underwent surgery between 2012 and 2019. (Blakemore, 1/20)
Coronary artery bypass grafting, the most common cardiac procedure in the United States, was studied mostly in men. Women are paying the price. (Span, 1/20)
Researchers have identified a total of five subgroups among Alzheimer鈥檚 patients, according to a new study published in the journal Nature Aging on Jan. 9. Different groups may require different treatment options, as noted in a press release from Alzheimer Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam UMC and Maastricht University. (Rudy, 1/20)
"While is an inconvenience for some, it's a life-threatening issue for others and we need to protect those whose lives it threatens," said Dr. Joan Casey, an assistant professor of environmental and occupational health sciences at the University of Washington School of Public Health. Power outages are particularly dangerous for those who use medical devices that require electricity such as CPAP machines, electric wheelchairs, electric heart pumps and oxygen concentrators. (Kekatos, 1/22)
Federal health officials yesterday issued new warnings about the risk of Salmonella illnesses in an ongoing outbreak, with a second brand now linked to some of the infections. (Schnirring, 1/19)
State Watch
Dangerous Winter Weather Has Killed Dozens Of People Across US
At least 72 people across the United States have died from weather-related causes after more than a week of frigid winter storms and brutally cold temperatures, according to reports from state officials, police departments, medical examiners and news outlets. The number is likely to grow as the authorities scramble to assess the death toll from the bitter chill, frozen roads and high winds, especially in parts of the country unused to extended bouts of a deep freeze. (Fortin and Edmonds, 1/21)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announced proposals this month that transgender advocates say could block access to gender-affirming care provided by independent clinics and general practitioners, leaving thousands of adults scrambling for treatment and facing health risks. Ashton Colby, 31, fears the clinic where he gets the testosterone he has taken since age 19 would no longer offer it. The transgender Columbus man believes he could eventually be treated by another provider that would meet the new requirements. But even a few months鈥 wait could leave Colby experiencing a menstrual cycle for the first time in many years. (Mulvihill, 1/20)
Willow Neal was 17-years-old and seven months pregnant when she was sent to an isolation cell in the Adair Youth Development Center in Columbia, Ky., in November 2022, a new lawsuit alleges. She rarely left. Neal was only let out of her cell five times to take a walk, and received just 12 showers during her month-long detention, isolation that went against the advice of her medical providers, according to the lawsuit. In the cell next to Neal鈥檚, 17-year-old Jamiahia Kennedy resorted to washing her body with her bra after being denied showers, according to the lawsuit. For two months, Kennedy was allegedly moved to a soiled padded cell without a bed or a working toilet. (Wu, 1/21)
麻豆女优 Health News: Rising Suicide Rate Among Hispanics Worries Community Leaders
A group from teens to seniors gathered in an office inside a grocery store, where Spanish-language food signs cater to the large Hispanic population in this northwestern Georgia city dominated by the carpet industry. The conversation, moderated by community leader America Gruner, focused on mental health and suicide. The Tuesday night meetings draw about a dozen people, who sit on makeshift furniture and tell their often emotional stories. Gruner formed the support group in 2019 after three Latinos ages 17 to 22 died by suicide here over a two-week period. (Miller and Castle Work, 1/22)
Students in Pennsylvania may soon be allowed to take "mental health days."聽The Pennsylvania House of Representatives Education Committee voted on Thursday to send the bill that would provide students in Pennsylvania with those days to the cull chamber.聽Introduced by Rep. Napoleon Nelson of Montgomery County in eastern Pennsylvania, he said in a memo to the House, that challenges, specifically those exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, make this legislation necessary.聽(Damp, 1/20)
麻豆女优 Health News: Montana鈥檚 Effort To Expand Religious Exemptions To Vaccines Prompts Political Standoff聽
Montana lawmakers are in a standoff with the state鈥檚 health department over a package of sweeping changes to child care licensing rules that includes a disputed provision to allow religious exemptions to routine vaccinations for children and workers. Both Republican and Democratic legislators on the Children, Families, Health, and Human Services Interim Committee voted Jan. 18 to renew their informal objection to the proposed child care licensing rules, which the committee has blocked since November. The vote prevents the state鈥檚 Department of Public Health and Human Services from adopting the rules until at least March, when committee members say they will debate a formal objection that could delay the rules鈥 adoption until spring 2025. (Volz, 1/19)
On drugs and substance abuse 鈥
Maurice Bostic was in a vicious cycle of using alcohol to deal with pain, which only led to more pain 鈥 struggles with relationships, money and drugs. When his 6-year-old granddaughter was accidentally shot seven years ago in her home, Bostic drank even more. 鈥淚f I had kept her with me, it wouldn鈥檛 have happened,鈥 said Bostic, 55. 鈥淚 drank so much that I was going to kill myself.鈥 Bostic finished a 90-day inpatient treatment program, but addiction continued to haunt him. What finally worked was a monthly injection of Vivitrol, a medication that blocks the euphoric effects of alcohol and opioids. (Munz, 1/20)
Attorney General Ashley Moody is warning Floridians about a rise in deaths from a dangerous designer drug often referred to as 鈥渇ake Xanax.鈥 鈥淭here鈥檚 been a rapid and drastic increase in toxology cases involving bromazolam. It鈥檚 a potent benzodiazepine,鈥 Moody said in a video alert. 鈥淚t鈥檚 imperative that Floridians understand how dangerous this street drug really is, especially when mixed with illicit fentanyl, which is the No. 1 killer of Americans age 18 to 45.鈥 (Jordan, 1/19)
麻豆女优 Health News: Federal Lawmakers Take First Steps Toward Oversight Of $50 Billion In Opioid Settlements聽
Some members of Congress are demanding federal oversight of billions of dollars in opioid settlements, which state and local governments began spending over the past two years 鈥 with some using it to plug budget holes rather than fight the addiction crisis. This month, Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio) and Rep. Ashley Hinson (R-Iowa) introduced legislation that would write into law approved uses for the funds so they reach people most affected by the crisis. (Pattani, 1/22)
麻豆女优 Health News: Journalist Talks Distribution Of Opioid Funds 鈥 And The Companies Angling For A Piece聽
麻豆女优 Health News senior correspondent Aneri Pattani discussed how business interests are positioning themselves and their wares to get a piece of the opioid settlement funds on 鈥淢arketplace鈥 on Jan. 15. Pattani also discussed how state and local governments across the country are using settlement money on Illinois Public Media鈥檚 鈥淭he 21st Show鈥 on Jan. 11. (1/20)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Which Is The Right Way To Eat Healthy?; TRAP Laws Make Abortion Care Dangerous
Mainstream experts are still warning us against meat, cheese, sugar, and the ill-defined group known as ultra-processed foods. Now there are people saying to avoid tomatoes, peppers and eggplant and even one theory that we鈥檙e poisoning ourselves with spinach. (F.D. Flam, 1/21)
Restrictive abortion laws do not decrease abortion rates. They just make them less safe. My mom saw this firsthand. Early in her Philadelphia nursing career, two of her emergency room patients needlessly died after illegal abortions. Her stories about these patients and others stayed with me, especially when I followed in her footsteps and began working as a nurse practitioner. (Tarik Khan, 1/22)
One month after I completed chemotherapy for Stage 3 breast cancer, and two weeks after I underwent a double mastectomy, I sat in bed, my surgical wounds itchy, my morale at an all-time low. 鈥淚 would pay $1,000 if I could have any real amount of hair right now,鈥 I told my husband. (Miranda Featherstone, 1/20)
Trust lies at the heart of healthcare. That鈥檚 because the level of trust between a patient and their care team affects an individual鈥檚 willingness to seek care and adhere to treatments.聽(Drs. Maria Ansari and Ramin Davidoff, 1/19)
There鈥檚 a common belief that people with past addictions should never take any potentially addictive substances for medical reasons 鈥 period. As a result, some languish in extreme pain because they believe that drug exposure will cause them to lose control and immediately return to active addiction. But the truth is, 鈥淲hile euphoria associated with drugs may be a trigger, the stress of profound pain also puts someone at risk of relapse,鈥 said Dr. Sarah Wakeman, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School. (Maia Szalavitz, 1/22)
Different Takes: Will Your Race Determine Your Emergency Care?; Legislation Would Improve Nursing
The recent conviction of two paramedics in the 2019 death of Elijah McClain has sent shockwaves through the emergency medical services (EMS) community. EMS clinicians and advocates fear that the jury's decision signals a trend toward criminalizing medical errors and worry about the impact it will have on the profession. The case also raised another issue, one that research consistently validates yet often gets ignored鈥攔acial bias in EMS care. (Michael S. Gerber and Jamie Kennel, 1/19)
When you go to a healthcare facility, like a hospital or ambulatory surgical center, you want to get the best care possible. Much of the care you would receive would most likely come from a nurse or multiple nurses. Nurses are on the front line of delivering and assuring quality care, as they are typically the person that you would interact with most during your time there. (Ileana Garcia, 1/19)
The diverse stories and backgrounds of the residents I've cared for have enriched my life. However, my passion for the job can be overshadowed by the harsh realities of the nursing home industry, particularly the persistently low wages that contribute to an alarming rate of turnover among caregivers like me. (Therese Mondembe, 1/21)