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
Rural Patients Face Tough Choices When Their Hospitals Stop Delivering Babies
More than 100 rural hospitals have stopped delivering babies since 2021, including a South Dakota hospital that serves small towns, farming communities, and a Native American reservation. Patients there now travel at least an hour to give birth.
Trump鈥檚 DOJ Accuses Medicare Advantage Insurers of Paying 鈥楰ickbacks鈥 for Primo Customers
The Department of Justice alleges that several major health insurers paid brokerages 鈥渉undreds of millions of dollars in kickbacks鈥 to get agents to steer consumers into their Medicare Advantage plans, allegations the insurers strongly dispute.
Housing, Nutrition in Peril as Trump Pulls Back Medicaid Social Services
About half of states have broadened Medicaid, the state-federal low-income health care program, to pay for social services such as housing and nutritional support. The Trump administration, however, views these experiments as distractions from the core mission to provide health care.
Journalists Unpack Drug Prices, Threats to Medicaid, and the Fluoridation of Water
麻豆女优 Health News journalists made the rounds on national and local media recently to discuss topical stories. Here鈥檚 a collection of their appearances.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
WHEN FREE ISN'T FREE
Not preventative
鈥 Barbara Skoglund
if diagnosis present.
Just free for tip-top.
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.
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Summaries Of The News:
Cancer
Joe Biden And His Family Are Reviewing Cancer Treatment Options
Former President Joe Biden is reviewing treatment options after he was diagnosed with an 鈥渁ggressive form鈥 of prostate cancer that has metastasized to his bones, his office said Sunday. Biden, 82, had experienced urinary symptoms that led to the discovery of a prostate nodule, according to his personal office, and he was diagnosed with cancer on Friday. (Altimari, 5/18)
Biden鈥檚 office said his cancer has a Gleason score of nine out of ten. To calculate the Gleason score, clinicians take multiple samples of the tumour, called biopsies. To obtain each sample, a small needle is inserted into the tumour and a sliver of tissue (usually around 12 millimetres long) is extracted for testing. Because the different regions of the tumour can have different cancer cells present, pathologists then pick two different sections of the tumour biopsy they think best represent the whole tumour. Then, they grade each of the two sections with a score from 1 to 5. Grade 1 means the cancer cells present look a lot like normal, healthy cells. Grade 5 means the cancer cells look very abnormal. To get a patient鈥檚 Gleason score, the two grades are added together. (Diepstraten and La Marca, 5/19)
President Donald Trump, who has constantly attacked Biden鈥檚 health and cognitive ability from the 2024 campaign trail to the present, sent well-wishes to Biden in a post on his social media platform Truth Social. 鈥淢elania and I are saddened to hear about Joe Biden鈥檚 recent medical diagnosis,鈥 Trump said, referencing the First Lady. 鈥淲e extend our warmest and best wishes to Jill and the family, and we wish Joe a fast and successful recovery.鈥 (de Guzman, 5 /19)
Also 鈥
Biden is likely to fight prostate cancer for the remainder of his life, specialists said.聽But men in advanced stages can live years or a decade longer, prostate cancer specialists said. Some 37% of patients diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer are alive after five years, based on data from patients diagnosed between 2014 and 2020, according to the American Cancer Society. Biden鈥檚 physicians didn鈥檛 publicly address his diagnosis. 鈥淥nce it spreads to the bone, it鈥檚 usually not curable, but it is very treatable,鈥 said Dr. Jason Efstathiou, a prostate-cancer radiation oncologist at Mass General Brigham. (Abbott and Whyte, 5/18)
"Nobody has done more to find breakthrough treatments for cancer in all its forms than Joe," former President Obama said. (Falconer, 5/19)
Medicaid
After Medicaid Concessions, House GOP Hardliners Let Megabill Advance
A key House committee advanced President Donald Trump鈥檚 giant tax and spending package after Republican hardliners won agreement from party leaders to speed up cuts to Medicaid health coverage. The House Budget Committee approved the legislation late Sunday night after a weekend of negotiations with four ultraconservatives on the panel who on Friday joined with Democrats to reject the legislation. Those hardliners instead abstained on Sunday and voted present, allowing the bill to advance. (Birnbaum, Dillard, and Dennis, 5/19)
Doctors, patients and health experts are bracing for massive coverage losses as House Republicans are poised to impose Medicaid work requirements as part of the 鈥渂ig, beautiful bill鈥 encompassing many of President Trump鈥檚 legislative priorities.聽They are warning that a blizzard of red tape and administrative hurdles will strip people of needed health care. (Weixel, 5/18)聽
The expansion of Medicaid has saved more than 27,000 lives since 2010, according to the most definitive study yet on the program鈥檚 health effects. Poor adults who gained Medicaid coverage after the Affordable Care Act expanded access were 21 percent less likely to die during a given year than those not enrolled, the research shows. By analyzing federal records on 37 million Americans, two economists found that deaths fell not only among older enrollees but also among those in their 20s and 30s 鈥 a group often assumed to have few medical needs, and who would have been far less likely to qualify for Medicaid before the expansion. (Kliff and Sanger-Katz, 5/16)
Active-duty service members face food insecurity at higher rates than the civilian population. While about 25% of service members were considered food insecure in 2018 and 2020, just about 10% of civilian adults were food insecure in the same time period, according to a 2024 study from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Congress has taken steps in recent years to alleviate food insecurity in the military, including approving a massive pay raise for junior enlisted troops that took effect in April and creating a new benefit called the Basic Needs Allowance for service members near the federal poverty line. But many military families rely on SNAP, more colloquially known as food stamps. (Kheel, 5/16)
Key components of the bill to fund President Donald Trump's agenda looks to provide major tax breaks by cutting spending elsewhere, including massive cuts to Medicaid. Medicaid is a joint federal and state health insurance program for disabled and low-income Americans. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) works with state programs to administer Medicaid, under which more than 71.2 million people are enrolled. (Kekatos, 5/16)
麻豆女优 Health News: Housing, Nutrition In Peril As Trump Pulls Back Medicaid Social Services
During his first administration, President Donald Trump鈥檚 top health officials gave North Carolina permission to use Medicaid money for social services not traditionally covered by health insurance. It was a first-in-the-nation experiment to funnel health care money into housing, nutrition, and other social services. Some poor and disabled Medicaid patients became eligible for benefits, including security deposits and first month鈥檚 rent for housing, rides to medical appointments, wheelchair ramps, and even prescriptions for fresh fruits and vegetables. (Hart, 5/19)
麻豆女优 Health News: 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 鈥極n Air鈥: Journalists Unpack Drug Prices, Threats To Medicaid, And The Fluoridation Of Water
C茅line Gounder, 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 editor-at-large for public health, discussed the FDA鈥檚 phasing out of fluoride drops and tablets for children on CBS鈥 鈥淐BS Mornings鈥 on May 15. (5/17)
In related news 鈥
State officials are poised to legally exceed Connecticut鈥檚 spending cap for the first time in nearly two decades to avert a crisis in paying Medicaid bills 鈥 and to pave the way for a new two-year budget. Both Gov. Ned Lamont鈥檚 administration and House Speaker Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, confirmed a tentative understanding to resolve the Medicaid shortfall expected to approach or exceed $300 million this fiscal year. (Phaneuf, 5/16)
Democratic governors in states offering health insurance coverage for immigrants without legal status are proposing to roll back coverage that they signed into law. As states grapple with budget holes, efforts to limit access to the programs are becoming a common thread. Debates about rolling back coverage or eliminating it entirely come as Congress considers a proposal that would reduce state Medicaid funds from 90% to 80% if they offer health insurance coverage to immigrants without proper authorization. (Ferguson and Fitzgerald, 5/18)
Families of children with disabilities were nearly twice as likely to report financial hardships as families of those without disabilities, according to a recent study published in JAMA Network Open. Analyzing data for 22,670 children ages 5 to 17 from the 2019-2022 National Health Interview Survey, researchers recently found that some 22.3 percent of families with children who have disabilities experienced financial hardship. In comparison, about 12.6 percent of families with children who don鈥檛 have disabilities faced such difficulties. (Docter-Loeb, 5/19)
Administration News
Judge Indefinitely Halts Trump's Effort To Nix $11B In Public Health Funds
A federal judge on Friday indefinitely blocked the Trump administration from pulling back more than $11 billion in public health funding from state and local health departments. The ruling from Judge Mary McElroy of the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island extends a temporary restraining order she issued in April that stopped the administration from wiping out the pandemic-era funding to a group of 23 Democratic-led states and the District of Columbia.聽(Weixel, 5/16)
The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court on Friday to allow it to immediately proceed with its plan to lay off tens of thousands of workers across federal agencies. In an emergency appeal, the administration urged the justices to quickly lift a lower-court order that has temporarily blocked the layoffs. (Ali Kanu, 5/16)
Labor unions say layoffs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) are threatening science even as some employees get their jobs back. In a statement released Friday, the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) said the layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) 鈥済ut frontline science and shut down life-saving public health programs.鈥 (Choi, 5/16)
The grant termination letters sting. Study after study gets spiked because it 鈥渘o longer effectuates agency priorities.鈥澛營f the research hints at diversity, equity, or inclusion, the wording gets a little nasty, in the view of neurologist Charles DeCarli, chair in Alzheimer鈥檚 research at the University of California, Davis. His $53 million inquiry into how vascular factors contribute to dementia among white, Black, and Hispanic people was terminated in March. But a month later, his grant was back. (Cooney, 5/19)
Elon Musk鈥檚 Department of Government Efficiency tried to place a downsizing team at the Government Accountability Office, but the congressional watchdog rebuffed the intrusion, according to an internal bulletin viewed by POLITICO鈥檚 E&E News. DOGE recently contacted the congressional watchdog with plans to 鈥渁ssign a team鈥 to the office, according to the bulletin sent to all GAO staff on Friday. (Richards, 5/16)
Also 鈥
On the heels of a production-tinged executive order earlier this month, the Trump administration is doubling down on efforts to boost medicine manufacturing in the U.S. In a new public-private partnership spearheaded by the administration, the Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS') Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR) and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) are linking up with several universities and companies in a bid to improve manufacturing for essential medicines using technologies such as artificial intelligence, machine learning and informatics. The project is dubbed Equip-A-Pharma. (Kansteiner, 5/16)
Earlier this week, Lisa Blunt Rochester asked a seemingly simple question of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. during his testimony to the Senate鈥檚 Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee: 鈥淲ho is the acting CDC director?鈥 (Branswell, 5/16)
Reproductive Health
Authorities Say Alleged Calif. IVF Clinic Bomber Was Critical Of Procreation
A 25-year-old man the FBI believes was responsible for an explosion that ripped through a Southern California fertility clinic left behind 鈥渁nti-pro-life鈥 writings before carrying out an attack investigators called terrorism, authorities said Sunday. Guy Edward Bartkus of Twentynine Palms, California, was identified by the FBI as the suspect in the apparent car bomb detonation Saturday that damaged the clinic in the upscale city of Palm Springs in the desert east of Los Angeles. His writings seemed to indicate anti-natalist views, which hold that people should not continue to procreate, authorities said. (Raza and Tucker, 5/18)
鈥淲e believe he was the subject found by the vehicle,鈥 said Akil Davis, assistant director in charge of the FBI鈥檚 Los Angeles Field Office, referencing a 2010 silver Ford Fusion sedan near the explosion site. Davis said investigators believed the suspect was attempting to livestream the attack, which he described as probably 鈥渢he largest bombing scene that we鈥檝e had in Southern California,鈥 eclipsing the 2018 bombing of a day spa in Aliso Viejo. (Jany, St. John, Jarvie, Winton and Wick, 5/18)
The father of the man accused of setting off a bomb outside a fertility clinic in Palm Springs, California, has said he does not recognize the person accused of the attack. Richard Bartkus, who hasn鈥檛 spoken to 25-year-old suspect Guy Edward Bartkus in more than a decade, gave an emotional interview to CBS News Los Angeles where he described how he remembered his son as someone who always 鈥渢ried to help people.鈥 (Palmer, 5/19)
In other reproductive health news 鈥
More babies are being admitted to neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) across the country, according to a data brief from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The brief analyzed NICU admissions data between 2016 and 2023. (Thorp, 5/16)
Reproductive health advocates are sounding the alarm over the case of a pregnant woman in Georgia who was declared brain dead months ago but must now stay on life support, according to her family, because of the state鈥檚 strict abortion ban law. (Panetta and Rodriguez, 5/16)
Convenience stores are aptly named. They鈥檙e stocked with essentials people need at all hours of the day or night, everything from a quart of milk to a package of condoms. But they haven鈥檛 stocked contraception for women. That鈥檚 slowly and steadily changing as an Oakland, California-based company, Cadence, has spent the last year stocking highway gas stations, corner delis and 24-hour convenience stores with its own emergency contraception brand called 鈥淢orning After Pill,鈥 which prevents pregnancy by delaying ovulation if taken within 72 hours of unprotected sex or a birth control mishap. (Varney, 5/18)
Among women with low-risk, early-stage cervical cancer, long-term survival outcomes were similar following simple, modified radical, or radical hysterectomy, according to an observational cohort study. For more than 2,600 patients, 7-year survival rates were 93.9% with simple hysterectomy versus 94.2% with modified radical hysterectomy and 95.4% with radical hysterectomy (P=0.15), reported Kathleen M. Darcy, PhD, of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Annandale, Virginia, and colleagues. (Bassett, 5/16)
麻豆女优 Health News: Rural Patients Face Tough Choices When Their Hospitals Stop Delivering Babies
Sophie Hofeldt planned to receive prenatal care and give birth at her local hospital, 10 minutes from her house. Instead, she鈥檚 driving more than three hours round trip for her appointments. The hospital, Winner Regional Health, recently joined the increasing number of rural hospitals shuttering their birthing units. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a lot more of a stress and a hassle for women to get the health care that they need because they have to go so much further,鈥 said Hofeldt, who has a June 10 due date for her first child. (Zionts, 5/19)
Public Health
First Diagnostic Blood Test For Alzheimer's Cleared By FDA
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared the first blood test on Friday to help diagnose Alzheimer's disease. The test, manufactured by Fujirebio Diagnostics, is for those aged 55 and older who are already exhibiting signs and symptoms of the disease, the agency said. (Benadjaoud, 5/16)
More health and wellness news 鈥
It鈥檚 a common response to the neurological symptoms that signal a T.I.A., a transient ischemic attack or ministroke. At least 240,000 Americans experience one each year, with the incidence increasing sharply with age. ... Now, a large epidemiological study by researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, published in JAMA Neurology, points to another reason to take T.I.A.s seriously: Over five years, study participants鈥 performance on cognitive tests after a T.I.A. drops as steeply as it does among victims of a full-on stroke. (Span, 5/17)
Incredible. Amazing. Miraculous. There have been many ways to describe a 2-year-old boy surviving a 15-story free fall off an outdoor balcony into a small bush last week in Montgomery County, Maryland. But any discussion quickly gives way to the question: How? 鈥淭he first thing to realize is that it鈥檚 not the fall, it鈥檚 the landing,鈥 said Anette Hosoi, a physicist and mechanical engineering professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (Morse, 5/18)
Toxic heavy metals like arsenic are found in high levels in rice brands sold across the United States, according to a recent report 鈥 but experts say there are ways to reduce your exposure.聽The report, from聽Healthy Babies, Bright Futures, an organization focused on babies' exposure to toxic chemicals, says testing found arsenic in 100% of 145 rice samples purchased from stores across the U.S.聽One in four rice samples also exceeded the federal limit of 100 parts per billion of inorganic arsenic set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for infant rice cereal in 2021, according to the report. (Moniuszko, 5/16)
Publix, a national supermarket chain, is voluntarily recalling baby food that could be contaminated with lead, the company announced this week.聽...聽It鈥檚 the second recall of baby food for potential lead contamination in recent weeks 鈥 and in both cases, the Food and Drug Administration didn鈥檛 issue its own news release to warn the public, which safety experts and advocates said surprised them. (Khimm, 5/16)
An Iowa-based ice cream manufacturer has recalled nearly 18,000 containers of ice cream and frozen yogurt over concerns they could contain pieces of plastic. Wells Enterprises issued the voluntary recall last month, according to recently released information from the Food and Drug Administration. (5/18)
Covid-19
Novavax鈥檚 Covid Jab Wins FDA Backing For People 65 And Older, Those At Risk
The Food and Drug Administration has issued a long-awaited approval of Novavax鈥檚 COVID-19 vaccine but with unusual restrictions. Novavax makes the nation鈥檚 only traditional protein-based coronavirus vaccine 鈥 and until now it had emergency authorization from FDA for use in anyone 12 and older. But late Friday, the FDA granted the company full approval for its vaccine for use only in adults 65 and older 鈥 or those 12 to 64 who have at least one health problem that puts them at increased risk from COVID-19. (Neergaard, 5/18)
The Department of Health and Human Services last week announced a new standard for testing the safety of vaccines, a 鈥渞adical departure from past practices.鈥 All new vaccines will be evaluated against a placebo, an inert look-alike that serves as a point of comparison, the department said. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., as well as many anti-vaccine groups, has long argued that placebo-controlled trials were the only way to fully understand vaccine side effects. (Rosenbluth, 5/16)
The Covid-19 pandemic was a turning point for Tracy Beth H酶eg.聽Before March 2020, H酶eg was a sports medicine physician focused on ultramarathon runners. Then, she rose to prominence by challenging school closures, mask mandates, and the approval of booster shots for children.聽Now, she鈥檚 been tapped for a top role at the Food and Drug Administration, working closely with two fellow Covid contrarians 鈥 Marty Makary, the agency鈥檚 commissioner, and Vinay Prasad, the head of a key center 鈥 and advising on vaccines. (Lawrence, 5/19)
More on covid 鈥
Five years since the pandemic began, millions of people are still grappling with long covid, even as new patients are joining their ranks. 鈥淐onsidering how far along we are and how tens of millions of people are suffering, we鈥檝e done very little,鈥 said Eric Topol, a professor of translational medicine and the executive vice president of Scripps Research. (Sima, 5/16)
The World Health Organization on Monday opened its annual meeting of government ministers and other top envoys facing one of the most serious crises of its 77-year history in the wake of Trump administration funding cuts and plans to withdraw the United States. The U.N. health agency this year has seen a plunge in its ability to carry out its sweeping mandate to do everything from recommend reductions in sugar levels in soft drinks to head the global response to pandemics like COVID-19 or outbreaks like polio or Ebola. (Keaten, 5/19)
On bird flu, influenza, measles, and mpox 鈥
Health officials are making a renewed call for vigilance against bird flu, but some experts are puzzling over why reports of new human cases have stopped. Has the search for cases been weakened by government cuts? Are immigrant farm workers, who have accounted for many of the U.S. cases, more afraid to come forward for testing amid the Trump administration鈥檚 deportation push? Is it just a natural ebb in infections? 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 know why there haven鈥檛 been cases,鈥 said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University. (Stobbe and Aleccia, 5/19)
US flu activity is low and declining further, according to the latest FluView update today from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The percentage of outpatient visits for influenza-like illness (ILI), or respiratory illness, dropped slightly from 2.1% the previous week to 1.9% last week (see CDC graph at left). The number of patients hospitalized for flu dropped from 2,336 to 2,008. As with the previous week, no state reported moderate, high, or very high ILI activity. (Wappes, 5/16)
The US measles picture grew by 23 cases this week, according to today's update from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). A total of 1,024 confirmed measle cases have been reported from 31 jurisdictions, with 14 outbreaks (defined as 3 or more related cases). Ninety-two percent of confirmed cases are outbreak-associated. (Dall, 5/16)
A study conducted in UK hospitals聽found mpox virus (MPXV) clade 1b DNA in 73%聽of surface samples and 7% of air samples from infected patients' rooms, as well as live virus in 19% of surface samples that underwent viral isolation. Scientists at the UK Health Security Agency sampled the rooms and anterooms of seven of the first eight mpox clade鈥1b patients admitted for clinical observation at centers dedicated to airborne high-consequence infectious diseases from October 2024 through January 2025. (Van Beusekom, 5/16)
Health Industry
Compounding Pharmacies Again Skirt Crackdown On GLP-1 Knockoffs
A government crackdown on cheaper copies of Ozempic and similar diabetes and weight-loss drugs was intended to shut the door on that booming market. It hasn鈥檛 exactly worked out that way. Instead, some compounding pharmacies and telehealth companies that make the copies have found new ways in. They are making and selling dosages slightly different from the standard, FDA-approved amounts or including additives such as vitamins B3 and B12. Others have changed how the drug is taken, switching from injectables to under the tongue drops or pills. (Janin, 5/18)
In other health care and pharma news 鈥
Rite Aid confirmed Thursday that it had secured a series of deals to sell off more than 1,000 of its stores to multiple pharmacy competitors, including CVS Health and Walgreens. The grocers Albertsons, Kroger and Giant Eagle鈥攚hich operate pharmacies at their stores鈥攚ill buy assets from Rite Aid as well, according to the announcement. The news follows media reports that these companies were looking to scoop up stores put up for sale by Rite Aid. (Minemyer, 5/16)
Thursday鈥檚 ruling earned a warm reception from hospital associations, which used the moment to lobby the administration for a continued hard stance against the rebate models. 鈥淗RSA has rightfully seen through these proposals, which undermine hospitals鈥 ability to fulfill [340B] program intent,鈥 Bruce Siegel, M.D., president and CEO of America鈥檚 Essential Hospitals, said in a statement. 鈥淭hey are not attempts to improve compliance but rather money grabs to reduce access to discounts. 鈥 There is certainly adequate justification for rejecting these proposals, and we are confident HRSA鈥檚 final decisions for four manufacturers and reconsideration of Sanofi will demonstrate that.鈥 (Muoio, 5/16)
When Megan Bent and her mother won the last appeal against UnitedHealth鈥檚 denial of care for her father, she remembered the reason given: it was unsafe for him to come home. Bent鈥檚 father had been recovering at a rehabilitation facility after brain surgery to remove a melanoma metastasis. Three days later, his condition hadn鈥檛 changed, but Bent and her family received another denial of care. It was their third denial and, this time, they lost. (Chen, 5/19)
Epic Systems is facing another legal battle as a healthcare company filed a lawsuit alleging anti-competitive practices and illegal interference in its business. CureIS Healthcare, founded in 2006, offers technology and managed services for government programs like Medicare, Medicaid and state healthcare initiatives. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, alleges that Epic engaged in a multi-pronged 鈥渟cheme to destroy鈥 its business. Epic is the largest electronic health record software company in the U.S. (Landi, 5/17)
Cleveland Clinic, Oracle and G42, have partnered to develop an artificial intelligence-based healthcare delivery platform.聽A launch date for the platform has not yet been announced. The platform will be released first in the U.S. and the United Arab Emirates, with plans to eventually be available globally. The partnership is part of a nonbinding agreement between the three organizations, according to a Friday news release.聽(DeSilva, 5/16)
麻豆女优 Health News: Trump鈥檚 DOJ Accuses Medicare Advantage Insurers Of Paying 鈥楰ickbacks鈥 For Primo Customers
When people call large insurance brokerages seeking free assistance in choosing Medicare Advantage plans, they鈥檙e often offered assurances such as this one from eHealth: 鈥淵our benefit advisors will find plans that match your needs 鈥 no matter the carrier.鈥 About a third of enrollees do seek help in making complex decisions about whether to enroll in original Medicare or select among private-sector alternatives, called Medicare Advantage. (Appleby, 5/19)
On The Bright Side
A Dose Of Upbeat And Inspiring News
Paul Jenkinson isn鈥檛 a therapist. He doesn鈥檛 write in a notebook, charge by the hour or offer solutions. Instead, he sits in parks, coffee shops and community centers, with a sign that says: 鈥淵ou are not alone. I will listen.鈥 Jenkinson, 70, is a retired social worker from Nova Scotia, and he is on what he calls a 鈥渓istening tour鈥 across Canada. (Page, 5/17)
Oklahoma cardiologist Dr. TJ Trad was fast asleep on his flight from Uganda last month when a member of his team woke him up to say someone needed a doctor. (Galgano, 5/18)
The Gathering Place, a nonprofit organization committed to supporting individuals and families impacted by cancer, has long been a source of hope for those they serve. Now it has launched a physical, made-to-move embodiment of HOPE. (Piorkowski, 5/13)
Plus 鈥
Surgeons in Southern California have performed the first human bladder transplant, introducing a new, potentially life-changing procedure for people with debilitating bladder conditions. The operation was performed earlier this month by a pair of surgeons from the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Southern California on a 41-year-old man who had lost much of his bladder capacity from treatments for a rare form of bladder cancer. (Baumgaertner Nunn, 5/18)
For years, Ambrealle Brown was forced to put her dreams of becoming a nurse on hold due to a life-threatening kidney disease that left her temporarily incapacitated. Amid inner doubts about whether she would ever return to living a normal life, Brown鈥檚 mother stepped in and offered to donate her kidney. Doctors performed Louisiana鈥檚 first robotic kidney transplant, giving Brown a renewed chance at life and Nija Butler the opportunity to see her daughter thrive. Nearly two years after the successful transplant, the Louisiana mother and daughter shared another journey. Donning white caps and gowns, they walked across the stage together in Baton Rouge and graduated from nursing school. (Cline and Smith, 5/9)
Tim Andrews knew that he needed dialysis to manage his end-stage kidney disease, but over months of treatment, he started to wonder whether it was worth it. He was exhausted and hopeless. He missed his grandkids. It kept him alive, but it didn鈥檛 feel like living. Desperate for another option, he found a surprising alternative: an organ from a pig. (Christensen, 5/14)
The story of transplants has always been one of altruism. After all, organs can be neither sold nor purchased. They can only be donated as a gift of life. It is a story that started in 1954, when Dr. Joseph Murray performed the world鈥檚 first successful organ transplant at Boston鈥檚 Peter Bent Brigham Hospital between identical twin brothers Ronald and Richard Herrick. (Gupta, 5/16)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Surgeon General Pick's Glucose-Tracking Push Smells Fishy; Quantum Computing Shows Potential
Casey Means, a Stanford-trained physician and wellness influencer nominated by President Donald Trump for surgeon general, is convinced the US is experiencing an epidemic of metabolic dysfunction 鈥 a crisis silently unfolding inside the cells of millions of Americans. (Lisa Jarvis, 5/17)
One of the first and most promising uses scientists envision for the rapidly evolving technology of quantum computing is a new approach to drug development. A quantum computer could, in theory, eliminate much of the trial and error involved in the process to help researchers more quickly zero in on ways to treat aggressive cancers, prevent dementia, kill deadly viruses or even slow aging by sifting through the trillions of molecules that might potentially be synthesized to create pharmaceuticals. (F.D. Flam, 5/16)
The early months of Donald Trump鈥檚 presidency have brought sweeping changes to the country鈥檚 scientific and medical landscape. Deep cuts to research funding and widespread layoffs have threatened progress in medicine, energy, climate science and other key fields 鈥 areas where the United States has long been a global leader. (5/19)
Pelvic organ prolapse affects around half of all women, yet it is little understood and very rarely discussed. Here is what I found out after my diagnosis. (Emma Szewczak, 5/18)
Also 鈥
Imagine a world without lifesaving medicines, preventive care, or therapies 鈥 no insulin for diabetes, no vaccines for polio, and fewer (if any) options for treating cancer. What do these amazing medical achievements have in common? They all depended heavily on research using animals, the behind-the-scenes heroes of medical breakthroughs. (Carole LaBonne, 5/19)
The Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 recent decision to phase out animal use in preclinical testing of monoclonal antibodies 鈥 and eventually other drugs 鈥攚ith more advanced, human-relevant methods marks a transformative shift with profound implications for drug development. The FDA has now officially recognized that advancing science and technology have pushed us across a threshold: Animal models have become obsolete. (Ellen P. Carlin and Jason Paragas, 5/19)