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
'Dying Broke' Special Report: Extra Fees Drive Assisted Living Profits
The add-ons pile up: $93 for medications, $50 for cable TV. Prices soar as the industry leaves no service unbilled, out of reach for many families.
New Social Security Report Shows Growing Overpayment Problem Tops $23B
Social Security has been overpaying recipients for years, then demanding the money back, leaving people with bills for up to tens of thousands of dollars or more.
US Military Says National Security Depends on 鈥楩orever Chemicals鈥
PFAS chemicals are found in hundreds of products and weapons used by the U.S. military. Defense Department officials say a blanket ban on these man-made substances would threaten military readiness.
Is Novavax, the Latecomer Covid Vaccine, Worth the Wait?
People with special medical considerations are hoping the Novavax shot will bring fewer headaches, fevers, and less fatigue than have been reported by those taking mRNA vaccines.
麻豆女优 Health News on Air: Journalists Delve Into Open Enrollment, School Nurse Shortages, and More
麻豆女优 Health News and California Healthline staff made the rounds on national and local media this week to discuss their stories. Here鈥檚 a collection of their appearances.
Summaries Of The News:
Outbreaks and Health Threats
Turkey With A Side Of Flu: Cases On The Rise Ahead Of Holiday Season
The U.S. flu season is underway, with at least seven states reporting high levels of illnesses and cases rising in other parts of the country, health officials say. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted new flu data on Friday, showing very high activity last week in Louisiana, and high activity in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, New Mexico and South Carolina. It was also high in the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, the U.S. territory where health officials declared an influenza epidemic earlier this month. (Stobbe, 11/17)
The percentage of outpatient visits for flulike illness, at 3.5%, is above the national baseline for the second week in a row and is at or above baselines in 5 of 10 US regions. The percentage of respiratory specimens that were positive for flu rose to 4%, up from 3% the week before. Among positive samples at public health labs, 75.8% were influenza A, and, of subtyped specimens, 87.2% were the 2009 H1N1 strain. (Schnirring, 11/17)
Meanwhile, in news on other respiratory illnesses 鈥
In the depths of the Covid-19 pandemic, something strange happened: For a year or two, illnesses that used to emerge like clockwork when fall and winter arrived 鈥 flu, RSV, and the myriad viruses that cause colds 鈥 did not sicken us. (Branswell, 11/20)
After declining trends since the end of September, US COVID indicators rose slightly last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today in its latest updates. The rise comes just ahead of Thanksgiving gatherings and as other respiratory viruses such as flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) continue to increase. In a survey update today, the Kaiser Family Foundation (麻豆女优) found that Americans' concerns about COVID-19 are lagging, which it says may explain lukewarm uptake of the updated vaccine. (Schnirring, 11/17)
In news on covid shots 鈥
About 6 in 10 adults who previously got a COVID-19 vaccine have not received an updated shot this fall 鈥 and about half of them don't plan to get one, according to a new 麻豆女优 survey. The survey shows decreasing public concern about COVID near the beginning of respiratory virus season, including among people who've previously protected themselves against COVID. (Millman, 11/17)
麻豆女优 Health News: Is Novavax, The Latecomer Covid Vaccine, Worth The Wait?
Erin Kissane, a co-founder of the COVID Tracking Project, rolled up her sleeve for the Novavax covid-19 vaccine in mid-October soon after it was finally recommended in the United States. Like many people with autoimmune diseases, she wants to protect herself from a potentially devastating covid infection. Kissane鈥檚 autoimmune arthritis seems to make her susceptible to unusual vaccine side effects. After getting an mRNA booster last year, her joints ached so painfully that her doctor prescribed steroids to dampen the inflammation. She still considers the mRNA vaccines 鈥渕iraculous,鈥 knowing covid could be far worse than temporary aches. (Maxmen, 11/20)
Reproductive Health
Iowa, Florida Republican Governors Try To Brush Off Ohio Abortion Rights Vote
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis pledged to continue their efforts to restrict abortion, regardless of recent elections that revealed a groundswell of support for abortion rights even in Republican-led states. Over a Saturday night brisket dinner, attendees of the Pulse Life Advocates Christmas Gala heard speeches from activists who oppose abortion rights, Reynolds and Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird, and DeSantis and Florida first lady Casey DeSantis. (Akin, 11/19)
California Gov. Gavin Newson is sending a warning shot at Florida鈥檚 Ron DeSantis over abortion ahead of their anticipated clash on Fox News later this month. On Sunday, Newsom is debuting a new TV ad that accuses the Republican governor and presidential candidate of pushing policies that criminalize women and doctors who pursue abortions after six weeks. The ad, narrated by Newsom, shows pictures of a woman and a doctor under a 鈥淲anted鈥 sign and states that their possible arrest is 鈥渂y order of Governor Ron DeSantis.鈥 (Cadelago, 11/19)
GOP presidential candidate Chris Christie took aim Sunday at Republican National Committee (RNC) Chair Ronna McDaniel for suggesting that abortion is more than a state鈥檚 issue. NBC鈥檚 Kristen Welker pressed Christie on 鈥淢eet the Press鈥 over McDaniel鈥檚 abortion comments on the show last week, where she said 鈥渢here鈥檚 a lot of discussion to be had, but we can鈥檛 just say it鈥檚 a state鈥檚 issue and be done.鈥 Christie pushed back on these remarks, saying 鈥渆very state and its people should make its own judgment on this issue.鈥澛(Sforza, 11/19)
Also 鈥
Increasing numbers of young women applying to colleges are avoiding schools in states that ban or severely restrict abortion, according to polls, scholarly research, and interviews with Philadelphia-area students, their families, and college consultants. 鈥淭his is one of the big issues for us,鈥 said Rosanna Kahn, 48, an MBA student at Drexel University, and the mother of a 20-year-old daughter who鈥檚 a sophomore studying public health at Gwynedd Mercy University in Montgomery County. 鈥淢y daughter was very concerned about abortion access when she applied to schools. (Lubrano, 11/20)
Capitol Watch
Senators Ask Drugmakers To Explain Shortages Of RSV Drug For Infants
In a letter led by Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) sent Friday, the lawmakers asked manufacturers AstraZeneca and Sanofi for more information about the current supply of nirsevimab, when the companies first became aware of the shortage, and why they were so unprepared for the demand. 鈥淎s our nation braces for the 2023-2024 RSV season, we are concerned that health care providers and families are having difficulty accessing this new immunization product that can be used to prevent severe RSV infections in infants,鈥 the senators wrote. (Weixel, 11/17)
From the White House 鈥
At the Democratic National Committee鈥檚 September fundraiser retreat, a donor pressed Joe Biden鈥檚 deputy campaign manager, Quentin Fulks, about one of the more oft-discussed topics in party circles: the president鈥檚 age. How, the person asked during a question-and-answer session on the 2024 campaign, should donors handle the stream of concerns they鈥檝e heard about it? Fulks acknowledged the obvious: You can鈥檛 change the age of the president, who will turn 81 on Monday. Instead, he advised the donor to focus on Biden鈥檚 historic accomplishments. (Schneider, Otterbein and Lemire, 11/19)
President Biden on Friday said he plans to appoint cancer researcher and doctor Kimryn Rathmell to lead the National Cancer Institute. Rathmell will assume leadership of the $7.3 billion agency amid the administration鈥檚 efforts to relaunch Biden鈥檚 Cancer Moonshot initiative with an emphasis on screening, prevention, and better treatment. Her work over the years has focused primarily on kidney cancer and its underlying drivers. (Owermohle, 11/17)
In news concerning the FDA 鈥
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a Medtronic device to lower blood pressure, the company announced Friday evening. The decision comes after an advisory panel narrowly voted against the device in August. The FDA approved a similar product, part of a device class called renal denervation, from startup Recor Medical earlier this month. (Lawrence, 11/17)
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved the use of Medtronic's (MDT.N) treatment device in a surgery called renal denervation in patients whose high blood pressure cannot be controlled by drugs, the company said. The agency's decision is in contrast with the recommendation of a panel of independent experts, who narrowly voted against allowing the use of the device in August. (11/18)
A federal court ordered the brand Balance of Nature to stop producing and selling its dietary supplement products this week, after the Food and Drug Administration accused the two Utah-based companies behind it of repeatedly breaking the law in how they made and marketed their supplements. The FDA says the company marketing Balance of Nature, Evig LLC, and its CEO Lex Howard had flouted years of federal warnings about overstepping limits in what they could claim about diseases their supplements could cure or prevent. (Tin, 11/17)
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Friday said it had identified the recall of B. Braun Medical Inc's medicine-delivering pump system as most serious. The Pennsylvania-based company had recalled some models of its Infusomat Space Volumetric infusion pump system in September due to faulty occlusion alarms, which may cause the pump to stop the delivery of medications pre-emptively or cause interruption. (11/17)
Advisers to the U.S. health regulator said on Friday that data on Merck's (MRK.N) chronic cough drug does not provide sufficient evidence to prove its clinical benefit for patients. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) panel voted 12 to 1 against the late-stage data submitted by Merck for the drug gefapixant, which showed a small reduction in cough frequency compared to a placebo. (Mandowara and Santhosh, 11/17)
Also 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News: US Military Says National Security Depends On 鈥楩orever Chemicals鈥
The Department of Defense relies on hundreds, if not thousands, of weapons and products such as uniforms, batteries, and microelectronics that contain PFAS, a family of chemicals linked to serious health conditions. Now, as regulators propose restrictions on their use or manufacturing, Pentagon officials have told Congress that eliminating the chemicals would undermine military readiness. (Kime, 11/20)
Rosalynn Carter, First Lady And Advocate For Mental Health, Dies At 96
Rosalynn Carter, the Georgia-bred former first lady and humanitarian who championed mental health care, provided constant political counsel to her husband, former President Jimmy Carter, and modeled graceful longevity for the nation, died Sunday,聽according to the Carter Center. She was 96. (Arkin, 11/19)
Rosalynn Carter, a close political and policy adviser to her husband, President Jimmy Carter, who created the modern Office of the First Lady and advocated for better treatment of the mentally ill during her years in the White House and for four decades afterward, died Nov. 19 at her home in Plains, Ga. She was 96. (Holley and Sullivan, 11/19)
More than 15 years before Mrs. Clinton caused a stir by leading President Clinton鈥檚 effort to overhaul the nation鈥檚 health care system, Mrs. Carter sought to upgrade the mental health system and expand services and protections for older Americans. Barred by statute from serving in an official capacity, Mrs. Carter was named honorary chairwoman of her husband鈥檚 mental health commission and led the White House Conference on Aging. She conducted nationwide hearings on both topics, testified before Congress and pressed for legislation. (Seelye, 11/19)
The former first lady's death triggered many responses 鈥
First lady Jill Biden on Sunday remembered former first lady Rosalynn Carter for her efforts with mental health, caregiving and women鈥檚 rights while meeting with service members and their families in Norfolk, Va. 鈥淸Rosalynn] was well known for her efforts on mental health and caregiving and women鈥檚 rights,鈥 Biden said, standing alongside President Biden. (Nazarro, 11/19)
Vice President Kamala Harris also spotlighted Carter's work bringing the "issue of mental health out from the shadows into the national spotlight." "After leaving the White House, Mrs. Carter continued to serve our nation and the world鈥攊n particular, through her leadership of the Carter Center, which she founded with President Jimmy Carter to promote peace, improve public health, and support freedom and democracy around the globe," Harris said in a statement. (Chasan, 11/19)
Pharmaceuticals
Ozempic Set To Change This Year's Thanksgiving Food-Fest
Thanksgiving this year will look very different for Julissa Alcantar-Martinez and her family. The Houston-area realtor has been taking the appetite suppressing medication Mounjaro for one-and-a-half years following fifteen months on Ozempic. She has lost 115 pounds after years of struggles with dieting and diet-related disease. Her son, 17, has lost 65 pounds on Ozempic, and her 21-year-old daughter has lost 50 on it. (Shanker, 11/19)
For most of her life, Claudia Stearns dreaded Thanksgiving. As a person who struggled with obesity since childhood, Stearns hated the annual turmoil of obsessing about what she ate 鈥 and the guilt of overindulging on a holiday built around food. Now, after losing nearly 100 pounds using medications including Wegovy, a powerful new anti-obesity drug, Stearns says the 鈥渇ood noise鈥 in her head has gone very, very quiet. (Aleccia, 11/20)
More on weight loss drugs 鈥
Whether you鈥檙e a fan of the drug name Zepbound or, like one X user, think it sounds like 鈥渁n off brand bus line,鈥 you鈥檙e likely to have some opinion about the new moniker for Eli Lilly鈥檚 blockbuster diabetes drug Mounjaro. The company announced the new name on Nov. 8 following the Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 approval of the drug for weight loss as well. (Merelli, 11/20)
Booming demand for newer weight-loss and diabetes drugs is expected to accelerate the rise in medical expenses for employers in the United States next year, staff health benefits consultant Mercer said on Friday. GLP-1 medications approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration could contribute between 50 and 100 basis points to the trend, Mercer's Chief Health Actuary, Sunit Patel, told Reuters in an interview. (Leo and Mandowara, 11/17)
On diet culture and mental health 鈥
The fact that diet culture all over social media targets grown women is bad enough, but such messaging also trickles down to tweens and teens. (And let鈥檚 be honest, a lot is aimed directly at young people too.) It couldn鈥檛 happen at a worse time: There鈥檚 been a noticeable spike in eating disorders, particularly among adolescent girls, since the beginning of the pandemic. (Hurley, 11/18)
Global Watch
Another Hospital Surrounded By Fighting In Northern Gaza
Heavy fighting erupted Monday around a hospital in northern Gaza where thousands of patients and displaced people have been sheltering for weeks, as Israeli forces focus on clearing medical facilities that they say Hamas militants use for cover. A shell struck the second floor of the Indonesian Hospital, killing at least 12 people, according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza and a medical worker inside the facility. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military. (Jobain and Magdy, 11/20)
Meanwhile, patients, staff leave Gaza's biggest hospital 鈥
A humanitarian assessment team visited Al Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza and saw signs of shelling and gunfire in what was described as a "death zone," the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Sunday. The WHO-led team, which included public health experts, logistics officers and security staff from various U.N. departments, was able to spend only an hour inside the hospital on Saturday due to security concerns, WHO said in a statement. (11/19)
Hundreds of patients, medical staff and people displaced by Israel鈥檚 war against Hamas left Gaza鈥檚 largest hospital Saturday, with one evacuee describing a panicked and chaotic scene as Israeli forces searched and face-scanned men among those leaving and took some away. ...Elsewhere in northern Gaza, dozens of people were killed in the urban Jabaliya refugee camp when what witnesses described as an Israeli airstrike hit a crowded U.N. shelter in the main combat zone. (Jobain, Mroue and Magdy, 11/18)
Four days after it was seized by Israeli troops, the Gaza Strip鈥檚 largest hospital has become a 鈥渄eath zone,鈥 the World Health Organization said, as 31 premature babies in extremely precarious health there were evacuated on Sunday. Emergency medical workers from the Palestine Red Crescent Society and the W.H.O., a United Nations agency, transported the babies by ambulance from the hospital, Al-Shifa in Gaza City, to the neonatal intensive care unit of a hospital in the city of Rafah, about 25 miles away in southern Gaza. (Yee, Shankar, Kershner, and Levenson, 11/19)
Also 鈥
Health care workers in New Jersey are calling for the protection of hospitals in Gaza. A surgeon who worked at Al-Shifa Hospital this past summer says she's still in contact with many of her colleagues, who say they are under siege. "Despite a shortage of medical supplies and ... antiseptics, they preserved immense challenges, such as lack of electricity, oxygen and water," she said. (11/18)
Science And Innovations
Analysis Debunks Idea That Women Aren't Good Clinical Test Subjects
Women鈥檚 body temperatures are no more variable than men鈥檚, despite menstrual cycles and hormonal variability, a recent monitoring study suggests. The analysis, published in the journal Biology of Sex Differences, casts doubt on an idea that has long colored biomedical research 鈥 that ovarian cycles make females unsuited for drug trials and other clinical experiments. (Blakemore, 11/18)
For the 30% of children who have problems falling or staying asleep 鈥 their genes may be to blame. That鈥檚 according to a 15-year study recently published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, which found that certain genetic variants can have an impact on children鈥檚 sleep quality and quantity. Researchers from the Department of Sleep and Cognition at the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience in Amsterdam analyzed the sleep patterns of 2,458 children, as reported by their mothers. (Rudy, 11/17)
A cat-borne parasite that infects about 40 million people in the United States may cause adults to be more frail as they age, according to a new University of Colorado Boulder study. The parasite is already associated with risk-taking behavior and mental illness, according to a release, and the CU Boulder study found it may also contribute to signs of frailty including exhaustion and loss of muscle mass. The parasite, called Toxoplasma gondii, affects about 11% of people in the United States. (Doak, 11/17)
Black women who reported experiencing racism may be at an increased risk of having a stroke, a new study finds. Participants who said they experienced racism in employment, housing and interactions with police had an estimated 38% higher chance of experiencing all types of strokes compared to Black women who didn鈥檛 perceive experiencing racism, the study found. (Bellamy, 11/17)
People who have large amounts of fat stored around their organs as they age may be at higher risk of developing Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, a new study suggests. This type of fat isn鈥檛 necessarily reflected in a high body-mass index. Visceral fat, which can accumulate around the organs of even people at healthy BMIs, is associated with changes in the brain potentially decades before any symptoms of cognitive decline are seen, according to the study presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America on Monday. (Carroll, 11/20)
The revolution started in silence. Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier, now Nobelists, published their first paper announcing a new enzyme for editing DNA in Science in June 2012. It was called CRISPR-Cas9. It wasn鈥檛 until January 2013 that the first paper showing the enzyme would work in cells, from Feng Zhang, was published, also in Science. A similar paper from George Church came out at the same time. (Herper, 11/19)
An analysis of US national data finds a flu vaccine effectiveness (VE) against severe outcomes of 48% overall in kids in 2022-23, 53% among preschoolers, and 38% among children aged 9 to 17 years. The study was published yesterday in Clinical Infectious Diseases. The 2022-23 flu season saw the highest influenza-associated pediatric hospitalization rate in the United States since 2010-11. Most of the illness was caused by the H3N2 strain. (Soucheray, 11/17)
On research into covid 鈥
New research from Jefferson Health in Philadelphia suggests that a procedure called stellate ganglion block is somewhat effective at reducing parosmia in patients who suffered from the condition for at least six months after their Covid illness and didn鈥檛 respond to pharmaceutical or topical therapies. (Bendix, 11/20)
Results from a randomized clinical trial today of 1,208 participants show that high-dose (100-milligram [mg]) fluvoxamine did not improve time to sustained recovery in people with mild to moderate COVID-19 infections. Fluvoxamine, known as Luvox, is a selective-serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Its potential use for COVID-19 was considered as part of the Accelerating Coronavirus Disease 2019 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines (ACTIV-6) platform, which aims to investigate repurposed medications in the outpatient setting for mild to moderate COVID-19. (Soucheray, 11/17)
A systematic review by Brown University researchers of studies on countering COVID-19 misinformation finds that only 18% included public health measures such as vaccination, and some seemed to give credence to conspiracy theories and other unproven claims. The review also revealed challenges in studying health misinformation, including a need for more study of measures aimed at stemming video-based misinformation. The team also said inconsistent definitions of misinformation make it hard to evaluate intervention studies. (Van Beusekom, 11/17)
Also 鈥
Gathering health data remotely is a pain. Forgetting to slip on a wearable is easy, and hooking yourself up to a large monitor is intrusive. Celero Systems has another idea: What if your remote patient monitor was small enough to swallow? (Lawrence, 11/17)
Shortly after a baby is born, doctors clamp the umbilical cord linking the infant to the placenta, which is still inside the mother鈥檚 uterus, and then cut it. New research shows that if doctors wait at least two minutes after the birth to clamp the cord, they significantly improve in-hospital survival rates for premature infants. Delayed cord clamping 鈥 an intervention that can be introduced at relatively little cost 鈥 is believed to help because it allows umbilical cord blood, which is rich in iron, stem cells and antibodies, to flow back to the baby. Some experts say that it鈥檚 not entirely clear why the strategy seems to help, but that the data is convincing. (Caryn Rabin, 11/17)
Health Industry
Bayer Must Pay $1.56 Billion Over Claims Roundup Caused Cancer
A Missouri jury ordered Bayer (BAYGn.DE) to pay $1.56 billion to four plaintiffs who claimed the company's Roundup weedkiller caused injuries including cancer, a verdict that could intensify investor pressure on the German drugs and agricultural chemicals company to change its legal strategy. The Cole County, Missouri jury found on Friday that Bayer's Monsanto business was liable for claims of negligence, design defects and failing to warn plaintiffs of the potential dangers of using Roundup, according to court documents. (Hals, 11/19)
Germany's Bayer (BAYGn.DE) has aborted a large late-stage trial testing a new anti-clotting drug due to lack of efficacy, dealing a fresh blow to the embattled drugmaker and throwing its most promising development project in doubt. Its shares slid 16.4% at 0903 GMT on Monday to their lowest in 12 years, with separate news overnight the company had been ordered to pay $1.56 billion in the latest U.S. lawsuit over its commonly-used Roundup weedkiller also hitting sentiment. (Burger, 11/20)
In other industry news 鈥
CVS Health Corp.鈥檚 plans to transform into a 21st century health care organization is running smack into a twin reality: There are not enough pharmacists in the pipeline, and the ones the company employs are reaching a breaking point. CVS pharmacists recently staged a three-day walkout along with colleagues at Walgreens and Rite Aid, a sign of intensifying unease about working conditions. Pharmacists across the country have reported widespread staffing shortages, safety problems, and overloaded work schedules. (Lee, 11/19)
For years, vital decisions about who got medical care coverage took place in back offices at health insurance companies. Now, some of those life-altering decisions are being made by artificial intelligence programs. At least that's the contention of the two families who sued UnitedHealth Group this week, saying the insurance giant used emerging technology to deny or shorten rehabilitation stays for two elderly men in the months before they died. (Alltucker, 11/19)
On financial matters across the industry 鈥
Tenet Healthcare has agreed to sell three South Carolina hospitals and related facilities to Novant Health in a $2.4 billion cash deal, the health systems said Friday. The deal, expected to close in the first quarter of 2024, involves Coastal Carolina Hospital in Hardeeville, Hilton Head Hospital on Hilton Head Island and East Cooper Medical Center in Mount Pleasant, plus affiliated physician practices and operations. (Hudson, 11/17)
Tenet Healthcare (THC.N) said on Friday it would sell three of its hospitals and related operations in South Carolina for about $2.4 billion in cash, in a move aimed at reducing its debt. (11/17)
Amid a challenging venture capital market for digital health, AI remains a bright spot and an area of enthusiasm. According to a survey published in October from venture capital company GSR Ventures, 87% of healthcare investors are altering their strategies due to ChatGPT and other generative AI models. Investors see the potential of AI to improve efficiencies in healthcare and increase access for underserved patients. But VCs also recognize that AI can exacerbate issues of health equity. As a result, they want to know if portfolio companies are using unbiased AI datasets. (Perna, 11/17)
Health systems whose budgets were squeezed dry during the pandemic are creeping back into the black, but they鈥檙e far from the days when they had cash to blow on flashy tech pilots that might never pan out. (Ravindranath, 11/20)
The Federal Trade Commission will sue to聽block John Muir Health鈥檚 proposed $143 million acquisition of San Ramon (California) Regional Medical Center, alleging that it would increase costs and lower care quality.聽In January, Walnut Creek, California-based John Muir signed a definitive agreement to acquire San Ramon Regional from Tenet Healthcare Corp., a majority owner of the hospital also聽located in the East Bay near San Francisco. (Kacik, 11/17)
UCLA Health is suing Mattel Inc. over a $49 million pledge it alleges the toymaker聽failed to honor. Mattel, the company behind Barbie and Fisher-Price聽brands, agreed in 2017 to donate $49 million incrementally over 12 years to the Regents of the University of California, on behalf of UCLA Health, and the UCLA Foundation to expand care at UCLA's children's hospital in west Los Angeles. Mattel paid $2 million in 2017, and the health system renamed the facility UCLA Mattel Children鈥檚 Hospital, according to a lawsuit filed Nov. 9 by UCLA in the Superior Court of California. (Hudson, 11/17)
Also 鈥
AstraZeneca Plc has formed a health-technology unit that strives to bring digital solutions and artificial intelligence to clinical trials. The unit, dubbed Evinova, will reduce the cost and time of clinical trials, Astra said Monday. Parexel and Fortrea, two of the world鈥檚 biggest drug-testers, have agreed to work with Evinova. (Mulier, 11/20)
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is rolling out a new plan for health care organizations and hospitals trying to fend off an influx of ransomware and nation-state cyberattacks, an agency official first shared with Axios. Hospitals and health care organizations have become prime targets for ransomware hackers who are eager to steal sensitive patient information and shut down critical services in order to get a payout. (Sabin, 11/17)
Hospitals鈥 list prices for surgeries, therapies, and other procedures always come with massive discounts. Financial documents at a prominent hospital system in Los Angeles show just how large those discounts are 鈥 and how raw of a deal uninsured patients could be getting. (Herman, 11/20)
A US shortage of the new generic version of Vyvanse, an ADHD medication, is due in part to federal limits on production, according to an industry group representing generic drug makers. Manufacturers haven鈥檛 been able to secure enough raw material 鈥渢o launch their products at full commercial scale,鈥 according to a letter from the Association for Accessible Medicines addressed to the Drug Enforcement Administration, which sets the limits on production that the industry must follow. (Swetlitz, 11/17)
Public Health
As More Kids Fall Ill From Lead, FDA Screens Imported Cinnamon
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is screening imports of cinnamon from multiple countries for toxic lead contamination after growing reports of children who were sickened after eating pouches of applesauce and apple puree. Cinnamon from a manufacturer in Ecuador is the 鈥渓ikely source鈥 of high levels of lead found in recalled pouches of applesauce puree linked to illnesses in at least 34 children in 22 states, the FDA said Friday. (Aleccia, 11/17)
The Food and Drug Administration has begun screening incoming shipments of cinnamon from multiple countries, the agency announced this week, as reported illnesses have climbed to 34 in the investigation of lead poisonings linked to pouches of cinnamon-flavored applesauce. The FDA has ramped up its investigation in recent weeks, after authorities in North Carolina first warned of the possible link to applesauce when investigating cases of lead poisonings in the state. (Tin, 11/17)
Meanwhile, salmonella is also sickening people 鈥
U.S. health officials are warning consumers not to eat certain whole and cut cantaloupes and pre-cut fruit products linked to an outbreak of salmonella poisoning. At least 43 people in 15 states have been infected in the outbreak announced Friday, including 17 people who were hospitalized. Several brands of whole and pre-cut cantaloupes and pre-cut fruit have been recalled. They include Malichita brand whole cantaloupe, Vinyard brand pre-cut cantaloupe and ALDI whole cantaloupe and pre-cut fruit products. (Aleccia, 11/17)
Impacted fruit includes whole cantaloupes sold between Oct. 16 and Oct. 23 and pre-cut Vinyard brand cantaloupe sold between Oct. 30 and Nov. 10. The risk also includes Aldi brand whole and pre-cut cantaloupe sold between Oct. 27 and Oct. 31 in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, and Wisconsin. The CDC has asked consumers to throw out recalled fruits and to wash their food carefully. (Robertson, 11/18)
In other public health developments 鈥
Against a backdrop of a burgeoning neurodiversity movement portraying wide variations in human behavior as differences, not deficits, many autistic adults have come to see their traits as a gift and source of pride. Yet parents such as Maria Leary, the mother of two autistic, nonverbal sons 鈥 one of whom frequently injured himself and others before his death in 2018 鈥 fear the neurodiversity revolution is leaving her family behind. (Ellison, 11/18)
Already recognized as one of the leading public health threats facing humanity today, it is feared that a warming world is making it harder to stop the insidious spread of drug-resistant superbugs. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR), which the World Health Organization has referred to as the 鈥渟ilent pandemic,鈥 is an often overlooked and growing global health crisis. (Meredith, 11/20)
While the 988 Lifeline has likely helped millions of people in crisis since its launch in July 2022, mental health experts say the nationwide public health program is far from perfect. The lack of stable funding, lack of awareness and the absence of mental health resources have prevented the lifeline from realizing its full potential, experts say. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an entry point for people who haven鈥檛 had access before, but it鈥檚 ultimately still limited,鈥 said Angeleena Francis, ...executive director of AMFM Healthcare (Rodriguez, 11/20)
Also 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News: Extra Fees Drive Assisted Living Profits
Assisted living centers have become an appealing retirement option for hundreds of thousands of boomers who can no longer live independently, promising a cheerful alternative to the institutional feel of a nursing home. But their cost is so crushingly high that most Americans can鈥檛 afford them. (Rau, 11/20)
State Watch
Fentanyl-Laced Suspicious Letters Trigger Officials To Stock Naloxone
The suspicious letters sent to vote centers and government buildings in six states this month were undeniably scary, some containing traces of fentanyl or white powder, accompanied by not-so-veiled threats and dubious political symbols. Harkening back to the anthrax attacks that killed five people in 2001, the mailings are prompting elections officials already frustrated with ongoing harassment and threats to reach out to local police, fire and health departments for help stocking up on the overdose reversal medication naloxone. (Johnson and Komenda, 11/18)
The number of U.S. seniors who report using cannabis has climbed in recent years, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health. In 2022, 8.4% people age 65 or older said they used marijuana in the past year, a significant increase from about 0.4% of seniors who reported using it in the past year when polled in 2007. (Knutson, 11/17)
With the seismic shift in Ohio鈥檚 attitudes toward marijuana -- from a felony-level drug to one that voters made completely legal last week -- might we see a growing acceptance of other long villainized drugs with medical promise? We鈥檙e talking about psychedelic drugs like LSD, ketamine, and magic mushrooms. (Kroen, 11/19)
Florida鈥檚 first syringe exchange program will mark its seventh anniversary on Dec. 1, and Emilie Ashbes is a testament to its success in helping people avoid contracting infectious diseases, like HIV and hepatitis C, and conquer drug addiction. Ashbes, 34, overcame her drug addiction and is now helping others in Miami do the same through the program founded at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. (Zaragovia, 11/17)
Oregon鈥檚 first-in-the-nation law that decriminalized the possession of small amounts of heroin, cocaine and other illicit drugs in favor of an emphasis on addiction treatment is facing strong headwinds in the progressive state after an explosion of public drug use fueled by the proliferation of fentanyl and a surge in deaths from opioids, including those of children. 鈥淭he inability for people to live their day-to-day life without encountering open-air drug use is so pressing on urban folks鈥 minds,鈥 said John Horvick, vice president of polling firm DHM Research. 鈥淭hat has very much changed people鈥檚 perspective about what they think Measure 110 is.鈥 (Rush, 11/19)
In Medicaid news from across the states 鈥
If not for Medicaid, the majority of residents of Robeson County wouldn鈥檛 have health insurance. Fifty-four percent of people in this rural community 鈥 home to 116,530 at the 2020 Census 鈥 are beneficiaries of the government-funded program. The county had 63,549 Medicaid enrollees in October, the eighth highest number recorded of the state鈥檚 100 counties. (Baxley, 11/20)
The largest-ever purge of the nation's Medicaid rolls has exposed major cracks in the system for covering the poorest Americans 鈥 and is prompting some states to rethink how they connect vulnerable residents to benefits they're entitled to receive. Millions have been booted from the safety-net program seven months after the expiration of pandemic-era protections, most often due to bureaucratic reasons and not necessarily because they no longer qualify. (Goldman, 11/20)
Some big changes are coming to Medi-Cal, California鈥檚 Medicaid health care program for low-income people, next year. Starting Jan. 1, two groups of people that had not been eligible for full-scale Medi-Cal will gain access: low-income adults ages 26-49 and some people who are disabled or older than 64. On the other hand, some current Medi-Cal enrollees will lose coverage as the state finishes unwinding the federal 鈥渃ontinuous coverage鈥 program that kept people on Medicaid in the pandemic, even if they no longer qualified. (Pender, 11/19)
On other health news developments across the country 鈥
For most of his life, Joe Hutchison has been known as 鈥淒r. Joe鈥 around these parts. Hutchison was a dentist in Perry County, about 90 minutes south of St. Louis, for 50 years. Last year, he retired from his practice. This year, he decided to try his hand at public service. (Messenger, 11/19)
Prospect Medical Holdings, the Los Angeles-based private equity firm that operates two Rhode Island hospitals, was sued this month by Attorney General Peter Neronha for a series of violations that Neronha said raise 鈥渟ignificant concerns鈥 about the financial viability of the hospitals. Prospect owes tens of millions of dollars to vendors, according to court documents that state Superior Court Judge Brian Stern unsealed on Friday. (Gagosz, 11/17)
The top health official in one of Michigan's largest counties is asking a judge to uphold a $4 million settlement in exchange for her resignation, coming after months of conflict with local conservative leaders who were elected in response to COVID-19 restrictions. Ottawa County leaders had attempted to fire Adeline Hambley in January after they took majority control of the county's board of commissioners. Finding themselves unable to, the board opted to offer her $4 million 鈥 equivalent to a quarter of the health department's 2024 budget 鈥 in return for her resignation. She also would have had to drop her lawsuit against the county. (11/17)
Public health vending machines equipped with first aid essentials are now available in five locations across the city. The Chicago Department of Public Health officially kicked off the program Friday morning as part of a new initiative to keep residents safe.聽...The machines are free to anyone in Chicago. They'll be stocked with Narcan, fentanyl test strips, general hygiene kits, socks, and underwear. (11/17)
Also 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News: Journalists Delve Into Open Enrollment, School Nurse Shortages, And More
麻豆女优 Health News and California Healthline staff made the rounds on national and local media this week to discuss their stories. Here鈥檚 a collection of their appearances. (11/18)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Current Method For Helping Struggling Teens Is Backfiring; Why Is Organ Donation So Difficult?
Ever since the pandemic, when rates of teenage suicide, anxiety and depression spiked, policymakers around the world have pushed to make mental-health resources more broadly available to young people through programming in schools and on social media platforms. (Darby Saxbe, 11/18)
For many years I debated: Should I be an organ donor? As a faith leader who regularly speaks about the value of life, and as a healthy individual with an interest in organ donation, I was genuinely excited about the possibility to save another person. Nonetheless, it was a very big decision and one I did not take lightly. (Shmuly Yanklowitz, 11/20)
While booking a medical appointment for our dog recently at a large veterinary practice, I held out for a time with a doctor who鈥檇 seen the dog before, reasoning that the vet knew her background and my dog might recognize the doctor. The two had, I guessed, a relationship. (Mary Ellen Podmolik, 11/20)
As a transgender neurologist, I advocate for the improved health care of other transgender people. I present my research findings to professional organizations and medical colleges throughout the U.S. While doing so, the most frequent criticism I receive from neurologists is: 鈥淲hat does being transgender have to do with neurology, the branch of medicine focused on the nervous system?鈥 (Z Paige L'erario, 11/17)
As a pediatrician, I am well aware of the toll that gun violence is taking on the youth of America. The statistics are frightening. According to provisional 2022 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention analyzed by the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions, guns remain the leading cause of death for children and teens ages 1 to 19, climbing 87% in the decade from 2013 to 2022 and accounting for 4,590 deaths in 2022. Gun violence continues to have a disproportionate impact on Black children and teens, who have a gun homicide rate 20 times higher than their white counterparts. (Beryl Rosenstein, 11/20)
In January of 2016, Aja Newman went to the emergency room at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City for discomfort in her right shoulder. What should鈥檝e been a routine visit instead unfolded as a harrowing, grotesque distortion of the doctor-patient interaction. (Helen Ouyang, 11/20)
Ever since a series of studies showed semaglutide鈥檚 effectiveness for weight loss, Novo Nordisk has developed a problem. The Danish company simply cannot make enough Ozempic and Wegovy鈥攊ts other brand name for the drug. In September, Novo Nordisk overtook the luxury-goods retailer LVMH to become Europe鈥檚 most valuable company. Its market capitalization鈥攁n estimated $450 billion as of Friday鈥攚as higher than Denmark鈥檚 annual GDP. (Helen Lewis, 11/19)
Cell and gene therapies are the next frontier in medicine and promise long-sought hope for people living with incurable and fatal conditions. As their promise increasingly becomes reality, the FDA鈥檚 gatekeeping role is important. To truly serve the people who need these medications, the FDA must be a good-faith partner and deploy the tools my fellow congressional lawmakers and I helped secure. (Richard Burr, 11/20)