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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Aug 1 2024

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 3

  • Bird Flu Cases Are Going Undetected, New Study Suggests. It's a Problem for All of Us.
  • Montana Designs New Hurdles for Abortion Clinics Ahead of Vote To Protect Access
  • GOP Charge That Harris Backed Taxpayer-Funded Care for All Immigrants Overlooks Details
  • Political Cartoon: 'Medical Marinara?'

Cancer 1

  • Younger Generations At Greater Risk Of Developing Cancer Than Baby Boomers

Veterans' Health Care 1

  • Pentagon Sets Out To Woo Patients, Doctors Back To Military Health System

Health Industry 1

  • 4.2% Medicare Pay Raise Coming To Nursing Homes In Fiscal 2025

Elections 1

  • In Controversial Interviews, Trump Stirs Up Issues Of 'Birtherism,' Racism

Capitol Watch 1

  • Older Americans Act Renewal Wins Bipartisan Support Of Senate Panel

Health Care Costs 1

  • Private-Equity Firms Are Gutting US Health Care Facilities, Study Says

Mental Health 1

  • Nearly Half Of Dementia Cases Can Be Prevented Or Delayed: Study

Pharmaceuticals 1

  • Drugs Like Wegovy Can Cause Some To Develop Eating Disorders, Doctors Say

Reproductive Health 1

  • Republicans Pressing To Give Fetuses Same Rights As People

State Watch 1

  • As Covid Surges in California鈥檚 Bay Area, Vaccines Are Becoming Scarce

Health Policy Research 1

  • Research Roundup: Depression; Covid; Hearing Loss; Trust In Doctors; More

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Mental Health Care Needs An Overhaul; Why Is FDA Stalling On New Sunscreens?

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

Bird Flu Cases Are Going Undetected, New Study Suggests. It's a Problem for All of Us.

Dairy workers in Texas show signs of prior, uncounted bird flu infections in a new study. Without labor protection and better health care, cases are bound to quietly rise as the outbreak among livestock blazes in the United States. ( Amy Maxmen , 7/31 )

Montana Designs New Hurdles for Abortion Clinics Ahead of Vote To Protect Access

Proposed regulations would require clinics providing abortions in the state to meet sweeping new health standards, despite a likely vote in November on a constitutional amendment to protect abortion access. ( Matt Volz , 8/1 )

GOP Charge That Harris Backed Taxpayer-Funded Care for All Immigrants Overlooks Details

Hoping to portray presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris as extreme on immigration, former President Donald Trump and his supporters have said she wanted to give free health benefits, paid by taxpayers, to immigrants in the country without legal permission. But this statement overlooks key details. ( Stephanie Armour , 8/1 )

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Political Cartoon: 'Medical Marinara?'

麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Medical Marinara?'" by Wayno & Piraro.

Here's today's health policy haiku:

WE NEED TO AVOID A CRISIS

Hospitals forced to
ration blood culture bottles 鈥
FDA must act!

鈥 Anonymous

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:

Cancer

Younger Generations At Greater Risk Of Developing Cancer Than Baby Boomers

However, American Cancer Society researchers found that the risk of dying from the disease has stabilized or declined in Gen X and Millennials. In a separate study, researchers found the survival rate for cancer patients who undergo a double mastectomy is the same as for patients who don't.

Generation X and millennials are at an increased risk of developing certain cancers compared with older generations, a shift that is probably due to generational changes in diet, lifestyle and environmental exposures, a large new study suggests. In a new study published Wednesday in the Lancet Public Health journal, researchers from the American Cancer Society reported that cancer rates for 17 of the 34 most common cancers are increasing in progressively younger generations. (Bever, 7/31)

A new study published in JAMA Oncology followed more than 650,000 women with breast cancer in one breast for up to 20 years and found that women who underwent double mastectomy were less likely to develop cancer in the other breast, but didn't live any longer, on average, than women who didn't undergo double mastectomy. In other words, women who had a lumpectomy or a mastectomy on the affected side but kept their other breast did just as well from a survival benefit as women who had both breasts removed. They say this may not apply to women with the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes which puts them at much higher risk of breast cancer. (Marshall, 7/31)

In President Biden鈥檚 address to the nation after dropping out of the election race, he said he would 鈥渒eep fighting for my Cancer Moonshot.鈥 He will, at least, for his remaining six months in office. Biden鈥檚 impending exit from the political stage leaves uncertainty hanging over the future of this signature health initiative, which Biden began first as vice president under Barack Obama and later renewed as president. (Chen, 8/1)

On the hack of Ruth Bader Ginsburg's cancer records 鈥

A 34-year-old man was convicted Wednesday of illegally accessing the private medical data of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 2019 but acquitted of posting the information to an online message board where conspiracists falsely claimed Democratic politicians were covering up her death. Trent J. Russell testified in his own defense near the end of a two-day trial in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., repeatedly asserting that he never viewed or posted the justice鈥檚 confidential medical information, which showed details of her cancer treatments at George Washington University Hospital. (Rizzo, 7/31)

Veterans' Health Care

Pentagon Sets Out To Woo Patients, Doctors Back To Military Health System

The Defense Health Agency has been tasked with building a top-notch workforce and regaining the trust of service members around the globe. Separately, although veterans' benefits are on the line, Senate conservatives are reluctant to get behind a bill to address the VA's budget shortfall.

The Defense Department is taking a four-pronged approach to improve military hospitals and clinics following a drop in patient load that has caused providers' skills to deteriorate. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Dr. Lester Martinez-Lopez said Tuesday that, with roughly 60% of Defense Department medical care now provided through the civilian Tricare network, the DoD is working to attract staff and bring back patients. (Kime, 7/31)

Senate conservatives are showing early resistance to expediting legislation to address a roughly $3 billion budget shortfall for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), as officials warn millions of veterans鈥 benefits are at risk in the coming weeks. Some senators had been hopeful of passing the bipartisan bill this week amid growing concern over the shortfall. However, the effort is getting pushback from some conservatives, as Republicans have raised scrutiny over the issue. (Folley, 7/31)

Out-of-pocket costs for mental health care appointments for patients in the military health care system would be capped under a bill introduced in Congress on Wednesday. Under the Stop Copay Overpay Act, Tricare users' out-of-pocket fees for outpatient behavioral and mental health visits would not be allowed to cost more than those for primary care visits. The limitation could cut patients' costs by an average of 48%, according to a news release from the office of Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, D-Pa., one of the bill's sponsors. (Kheel, 7/31)

On veteran suicide and PTSD 鈥

Members of the military's combat specialties experienced higher suicide rates than other troops -- and the broader American public -- in the waning years of the War on Terror, according to numbers delivered by the Pentagon to Congress this month. The worst-hit jobs included career fields with high operational tempo and occupational exposure to explosions. Between 2011 and 2021, the enlisted job groupings with the highest suicide rates were armored and amphibious vehicle crew members, infantry, combat engineers, explosive ordnance disposal and divers, combat operations control troops, and artillerymen assigned to both guns and rocket units, according to the data. All of those specialties saw suicide rates at least 50% higher than the general population during that period. (Winkie, 7/31)

It鈥檚 a pivotal moment: By August 11, the Food and Drug Administration is expected to make a landmark decision on whether to approve MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD. Supporters may face an uphill battle. In June, a panel of advisors to the FDA poked holes in the research from the drugmaker Lykos Therapeutics and voted overwhelmingly to reject the evidence. (Stone, 8/1)

If you need help 鈥

Health Industry

4.2% Medicare Pay Raise Coming To Nursing Homes In Fiscal 2025

The rate is higher than the 4.1% the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services proposed in March. Also in the news: Humana predicts losing a few hundred thousand Medicare Advantage members next year; Google is not renewing its contract with Amazon One Medical for staff care; and more.

Medicare rates for skilled nursing facilities will increase 4.2% in fiscal 2025 under a final rule the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services published Wednesday. That's higher than the 4.1% reimbursement increase CMS proposed in March. Payments for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 are based on a 3% increase in the skilled nursing facility market basket minus a 0.5 percentage point productivity adjustment and plus a 1.7 percentage point boost to correct previous forecasts. (Eastabrook, 7/31)

Medicare Advantage giant Humana expects to lose a 鈥渇ew hundred thousand鈥 members in its marquee business next year, after seriously shrinking its benefits and exiting markets for 2025 in a bid to boost profits, the insurer disclosed Wednesday. It鈥檚 the first time Humana has estimated membership losses from culling its plans, and squares with past guesses from market watchers.聽(Pifer, 7/31)

GE HealthCare cut its year-end revenue growth estimates, citing headwinds in the Chinese market 鈥 but executives pointed to potential U.S. regulatory changes as reasons for optimism. Proposed Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reimbursement updates could help GE HealthCare's business lines, especially regarding products often used for cancer, cardiovascular problems and neurological disorders, said President and CEO Peter Arduini on the company's second-quarter earnings call Wednesday. (Perna, 7/31)

Also 鈥

Google will not renew its contract with Amazon鈥檚 primary care subsidiary One Medical,聽ending a longstanding agreement that gave Google employees access to discounted medical care,聽the companies confirmed to Healthcare Dive. The contract loss is a major blow for the provider. Google was One Medical鈥檚 largest customer, accounting for 10% of its revenue in 2020. That figure dipped slightly in 2021, after which One Medical stopped disclosing its finances publicly. (Pifer, 7/30)

Massachusetts could face a "public health crisis" if bankrupt Steward Health Care cannot quickly complete a sale of six hospitals, an attorney for the state said Wednesday. Steward has binding purchase agreements in place for all six properties, but the sale has been delayed by a dispute between Steward and its landlords, Medical Properties Trust (MPT) and Macquarie Asset Management, a lawyer representing the office of attorney general and other state agencies said at a U.S. bankruptcy court hearing in Houston, Texas. (Knauth, 7/31)

CVS Health is doubling down on offering primary care, with plans to open 25 Oak Street Health clinics in its stores, including three in the Chicago area 鈥 a move that comes as competitors Walgreens and Walmart pull back on the idea. (Schencker, 7/31)

On Saturday, barring any last-minute hiccups, Intermountain Health鈥檚 Lutheran Medical Center in Wheat Ridge will shut down its current location and move 3 miles west to a brand new, $680 million campus. It鈥檚 the first major hospital relocation in Colorado in years, and the new facility showcases how the COVID-19 pandemic has forced health systems to rethink what a hospital must be able to do. (Ingold, 8/1)

Indigenous peoples around the country have a new opportunity to enter the medical field for free. It鈥檚 a way to funnel tribal members into careers while filling healthcare gaps. Health Tech Academy, a company that offers online medical training and fills staffing shortages, is partnering with the Jackson, Wyoming-based nonprofit Native American Jump Start, which helps 鈥渏umpstart鈥 tribal members鈥 college and employment careers. (Merzbach, 7/31)

Elections

In Controversial Interviews, Trump Stirs Up Issues Of 'Birtherism,' Racism

In recent days, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has attacked Vice President Kamala Harris' racial identity and religious views. Health research has shown that experiencing racism can dramatically impact a person's health, and many cities have declared racism a public health crisis.

Donald Trump's audacious lie about Vice President Kamala Harris' race confirmed what many had long suspected: running against a Black woman could summon the former president's worst impulses. Trump's political rise began with a yearslong crusade to delegitimize the nation's first Black president, Barack Obama. Much has changed since 2011, but Trump has never strayed far from the conspiratorial and racist roots of the birther movement. (Basu, 8/1)

Former President Donald Trump in an interview on Tuesday claimed Vice President Kamala Harris, who is married to a Jewish man, 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 like Jewish people鈥 and seemed to agree with a radio host who called second gentleman Doug Emhoff 鈥渁 crappy Jew.鈥 (7/30)

The audacity of Donald Trump, a white man, questioning how much a Black woman truly belongs to Black America was particularly incendiary. And it evoked an ugly history in this country, in which white America has often declared the racial categories that define citizens, and sought to determine who gets to call themselves what. (Lerer and King, 7/31)

The former president falsely accused Vice President Kamala Harris of 鈥渙nly promoting鈥 her Indian heritage, among other inaccurate claims. Here鈥檚 a fact check. (Qiu, 7/31)

In case you missed it: Why racism is a public health crisis 鈥

In 2020, hundreds of communities agreed racism is a public health crisis. But experts say progress has been slow and the issue has become polarizing. Racial and ethnic minority groups have significantly lower life expectancies and experience higher rates of illness and death from conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity, asthma and heart disease. (Bragg and Nurse, 5/25)

Scientists know that Black people are at a greater risk for health problems like heart disease, diabetes and Alzheimer's disease than white people. A growing body of research shows that racism in health care and in daily life contributes to these long-standing health disparities for Black communities. Now, some researchers are asking whether part of the explanation involves how racism, across individual interactions and systems, may physically alter the brain. (Hamilton, Carlson and Ramirez, 1/24)

In other news from the campaign trail 鈥

With less than 100 days until the presidential election, Democratic candidate Kamala Harris is expected to name her pick for vice president as early as this week. The pool of potential VP picks share some traits: They are largely white men from battleground or conservative-leaning states who can boast working across the aisle and bridging gaps with moderate voters. (Owermohle, 8/1)

麻豆女优 Health News: GOP Charge That Harris Backed Taxpayer-Funded Care For All Immigrants Overlooks Details

Attacking Vice President Kamala Harris on immigration, Republicans and allies of former Donald President Trump鈥檚 are saying the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate supported using taxpayer dollars to provide free health coverage to immigrants who are in the country without legal permission. Senate and House candidates, an American political action committee supporting Trump, and the Republican National Committee have made similar assertions in recent days. (Armour, 8/1)

JD Vance endorses the ideas of Kevin Roberts, leader of Project 2025, as a 鈥渇undamentally Christian view of culture and economics鈥 and a 鈥渟urprising 鈥 even jarring鈥 path forward for conservatives, the Republican vice-presidential nominee writes in the foreword of Roberts鈥 upcoming book. The foreword was obtained and published in full by the New Republic on Tuesday. Roberts鈥 book is out in September. Its title was watered down recently to remove references to 鈥渂urning down鈥 Washington. (Leingang, 7/30)

Capitol Watch

Older Americans Act Renewal Wins Bipartisan Support Of Senate Panel

The $15 billion measure, which bumps up spending more than 40%, now heads to the full Senate.

The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee took the next step Wednesday in reauthorizing the expiring Older Americans Act, sending the $15 billion measure to the full Senate. The bill would increase funding for investigating abuse and poor services at long-term care facilities and includes enhanced measures聽for caregivers, alongside money for items such as senior centers and the Meals On Wheels program. (McAuliff, 7/31)

Rep. Bill Pascrell remains hospitalized but is no longer receiving breathing assistance, according to his office. (Friedman, 7/30)

Congress is likely to get a new doctor next year. Maxine Dexter, a pulmonologist at Kaiser Permanente and Oregon state representative, won a crowded primary to replace Rep. Earl Blumenauer鈥檚 (D-Ore.) Portland-area seat after he decided not to seek reelection. Dexter bested progressive Susheela Jayapal, the sister of Congressional Progressive Caucus chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), in a heavily Democratic district. (Leonard, 8/1)

Health Care Costs

Private-Equity Firms Are Gutting US Health Care Facilities, Study Says

Hospitals are finding it harder to care for patients when equipment, information technology, and other assets are taken away after private equity buys hospitals. Separately, surprise medicals bills and insurance denial fights are also in the news.

After private-equity firms acquire hospitals, the facilities鈥 assets and resources diminish significantly, leaving the facilities less equipped to care for patients, according to a new study by physician researchers at the University of California at San Francisco, Harvard Medical School and the City University of New York鈥檚 Hunter College. Published Tuesday in the聽Journal of the American Medical Association,聽the research highlights a pattern of asset stripping at health care facilities purchased by private-equity firms, its researchers said, and is the first study to analyze the activity nationwide. (Morgenson, 7/31) 聽

Nearly half of Americans with health insurance said they received a recent medical bill or a charge that "should have been free or covered by their insurance," according to a survey released Thursday. The survey, from the Commonwealth Fund in New York City, found 45% of working-age consumers last year were erroneously billed, however, fewer than half of those patients challenged their health insurance company or a medical provider about the unexpected charges. (Alltucker, 8/1)

Despite laws in states like Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware that aim to ensure people have access to affordable health care services, research shows that patients still receive unexpected medical bills and face insurance denials 鈥 and few of them choose to take action. A new national survey report released Thursday by the Commonwealth Fund shows that fewer than half of people who experienced insurance denials and billing issues actually fought the decisions. (Leonard, 8/1)

North Carolina will offer enhanced Medicaid reimbursements to hospitals that forgive medical debt and adopt policies designed to prevent further debt from accruing, North Carolina Gov.聽Roy Cooper said in a press release Monday. North Carolina is one of at least 17 states, cities and counties that have passed policies attempting to erase debt or block future medical debt from increasing, according to a recent analysis from center-left think tank the Third Way. (Vogel, 7/31)

Mental Health

Nearly Half Of Dementia Cases Can Be Prevented Or Delayed: Study

In the new research, published in the Lancet medical journal, scientists found that addressing problems including vision loss, high cholesterol, and depression may help head off dementia. Also in the news: red meat and dementia risk; a 24/7 mental health care center in Maryland; and more.

Almost half of dementia cases can be prevented or delayed by addressing health issues such as vision and hearing loss along with depression, researchers said, offering potential relief as cases of the condition continue to rise. Wearing head protection in contact sports and controlling levels of cholesterol, a blood fat that鈥檚 also been linked to dementia, are among 14 actions that should be encouraged by health officials and doctors to slow growth of the condition in the population, according to a report in the Lancet medical journal. (Mannion, 7/31)

Untreated vision loss and high LDL cholesterol have been added as two new potentially modifiable risk factors for dementia in a report released Wednesday by the Lancet Commission. (Rajeev, 7/31)

Dementia risk rose by 14% when people ate about 1 ounce of processed red meat a day 鈥 the equivalent of slightly less than two 3-ounce servings a week 鈥 compared with people who only ate about three servings a month, a preliminary new study found. (LaMotte, 7/31)

More mental health news 鈥

The Dyer Care Center, named for inventor Leonard Dyer, is a first-of-its kind behavioral health crisis stabilization center in Maryland that has been in the works for four years. Funded by a $23 million grant from the Health Services Cost Review Commission, the center located in Clinton, Md., will be open to patients within the next 30 days. Once at the Dyer Care Center, patients can spend 23 hours there receiving specialized behavioral care that meets their immediate needs. (Uber and Mettler, 7/31)

Jennifer鈥檚 been a foster parent in Keene for about six years. In that time, they鈥檝e taken in a dozen kids, ranging from toddlers to teens. Being removed from home and placed in foster care can be traumatizing in itself, and one of the first things Jennifer typically does with a new foster child is try to set them up with a therapist. (Cuno-Booth, 7/31)

A federal judge in 2019 ordered Mississippi to effectively stop cycling people in and out of psychiatric institutions and instead offer more community services. While some states, including California, are moving to make it easier to order mentally ill people into confinement, Mississippi is now trying to keep them out. It has been slow going. (Frosch and Evans, 7/31)

Hazelden Betty Ford has launched a free virtual program that helps Native American community members address generational trauma and the various struggles that come with it.聽Jason Delmont, a descendant of the Mendota Dakota helps lead the program. (Littlefield, 7/31)

Pharmaceuticals

Drugs Like Wegovy Can Cause Some To Develop Eating Disorders, Doctors Say

Even as some doctors warn that people who take weight loss drugs may risk developing disorders like anorexia, researchers separately find that Eli Lilly's weight loss drug Zepbound dramatically lowered patients' heart failure risks.

Over the past six months, psychologist Tom Hildebrandt has seen an increase in patients with eating disorders who are taking popular weight loss drugs like Wegovy or Zepbound. 鈥淭hey start using this drug and next thing you know, they鈥檝e developed what looks very much like anorexia nervosa,鈥 said Hildebrandt, who leads Mount Sinai鈥檚 Center of Excellence in Eating and Weight Disorders in New York City. (Szabo, Kopf and Syal, 7/31)

Eli Lilly & Co.鈥檚 blockbuster Zepbound improved the long-term health of patients with obesity-related heart failure in a study, illuminating the cardiovascular benefits of the weight-loss shot. The risk of death, hospitalization and other bad outcomes was 38% lower in patients given Zepbound compared to those who received a placebo, Lilly said Thursday. The drug also significantly reduced heart failure symptoms, including shortness of breath, fatigue and an irregular heartbeat. (Muller and Garde, 8/1)

Hims & Hers Health Inc., a telehealth company that offers prescriptions for knockoff weight-loss drugs, will provide quality reports about the shots starting next month, the company said in a press release Wednesday. Shortages of Novo Nordisk A/S鈥檚 and Eli Lilly & Co.鈥檚 blockbuster brand-name weight-loss drugs have given rise to what could be a $1-billion-a-year market of alternatives made by compounding pharmacies, which are allowed to produce the drugs but receive less government oversight. (Swetlitz, 7/31)

In other pharmaceutical news 鈥

More consumers appear to be ditching tampons for menstrual cups and discs.The growing shift follows a study earlier this month that showed concerning levels of lead and other toxic metals in tampons. According to The Flex Co., a maker of menstrual discs and cups, the study led to the sell-out of its period products in hundreds of Target Corp. stores across the US. (Patton, 7/31)

Malaria is one of our most ancient foes 鈥 and one of the wiliest. Caused by parasites that certain mosquitoes spread through their bites, malaria overwhelms us, establishing an infection before we can put up a fight. It can go on to destroy red blood cells, batter organs, and even damage the brain. (Joseph, 8/1)

Reproductive Health

Republicans Pressing To Give Fetuses Same Rights As People

Missouri Rep. Brian Seitz, a Republican, wants to reintroduce a fetal personhood bill, with possibly dramatic consequences for reproductive health treatments like abortion and IVF, Stateline reports.

When Missourians head to the polls in November, they may get to vote on whether to overturn their state鈥檚 near-total abortion ban and legalize abortions up to the point of fetal viability. But one lawmaker says the results of that vote may not matter if his colleagues approve his bill declaring that fetuses are people. Missouri state Rep. Brian Seitz, a Republican, plans to reintroduce a bill in January that would grant 鈥渦nborn children鈥 the same rights as newborns, building on a similar Missouri law that has been on the books since the 1980s. (Claire Vollers, 7/31)

麻豆女优 Health News: Montana Designs New Hurdles For Abortion Clinics Ahead Of Vote To Protect Access

Montana is proposing wide-ranging rules for licensing abortion clinics under a disputed state law, raising a new potential obstacle for patients even as a constitutional amendment to protect access appears headed for the November ballot. The proposed rules, released July 26 by the state Department of Public Health and Human Services, would set requirements for facilities that perform abortions for or provide medication abortion to at least five patients a year, excluding hospitals and outpatient surgical centers. (Volz, 8/1)

More news about maternal and infant health 鈥

Last year, Ashley St. Clair, a Fox News commentator, described childless Americans this way: 鈥淭hey just want to pursue pleasure and drinking all night and going to Beyonc茅 concerts. It鈥檚 this pursuit of self-pleasure in replace of fulfillment and having a family.鈥 Researchers who study trends in reproductive health see a more nuanced picture. The decision to forgo having children is most likely not a sign that Americans are becoming more hedonistic, they say. For one thing, fertility rates are declining throughout the developed world. (Rosenbluth, 7/31)

Led by Morgan State University and supported by a聽$50 million federal grant designed to be paid out over five years, a coalition of colleges across the nation is researching maternal health disparities. (Munro, 7/31)

Babies who have a peanut allergy are now being offered聽potentially life-changing treatment at hospitals across Australia in a world-first program aimed at building tolerance to them. (Kolirin, 7/31)

State Watch

As Covid Surges in California鈥檚 Bay Area, Vaccines Are Becoming Scarce

Positive test rates are at a 30-month high, the San Francisco Chronicle reports, and because of dwindling availability, it鈥檚 harder to find places to get a shot. Meanwhile, a new study highlights the risks from the rate of undetected bird flu infections in people.

The Bay Area is in the midst of a summer COVID wave that has seen test positivity rates climb to a 30-month high and hospitalizations at their highest rate since the winter coronavirus surge waned in March. But some people trying to get a protective shot are having trouble finding them, as supplies of the existing version dwindle ahead of the fall update. Walgreens is one of at least two major health care providers in the Bay Area that no longer offers the 2023-24 COVID-19 vaccine at all its locations. (Wilson and Ho, 7/31)

On bird flu and farmworker health care 鈥

麻豆女优 Health News: Bird Flu Cases Are Going Undetected, New Study Suggests. It's A Problem For All Of Us

A new study lends weight to fears that more livestock workers have gotten the bird flu than has been reported. 鈥淚 am very confident there are more people being infected than we know about,鈥 said Gregory Gray, the infectious disease researcher at the University of Texas Medical Branch who led the study, posted online Wednesday and under review to be published in a leading infectious disease journal. 鈥淟argely, that鈥檚 because our surveillance has been so poor.鈥 (Maxmen, 7/31)

At the end of the workday, a line of farm workers here make their way down a well-trodden road to a bus that serves as a mobile health clinic. Inside, they get their blood pressure taken, talk about whatever ailments they may have, and in some cases, get prescribed medications. It is a typical doctor鈥檚 visit. Except the Wellness on Wheels bus is surrounded by tobacco fields, the tall green leaves stark against the open blue sky. (Jimenez, 7/31)

In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥

It鈥檚 been nearly two weeks since Twin Cities-based Rainbow Health suddenly announced it was shutting down due to financial problems. The closure of the LGBTQ+ and HIV health clinic opens a huge gap in services like housing programs, benefits counseling, legal services and case management. Many of those services operated with funding from state and local governments, which are now looking for different organizations to run them. The Aliveness Project, another HIV services organization in the Twin Cities, is taking on state contracts to offer financial assistance. (Wurzer, Timar-Wilcox, Haecherl and Elder, 7/31)

The South Carolina Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that death by firing squad and other forms of execution commonly held to be cruel and unusual are legal in the state if the inmate requests the method of execution. The ruling comes after the state passed a law in 2021 allowing executions by firing squad and electrocution in addition to lethal injection, in response to a shortage of lethal injection drugs and a rise in mishaps during executions. (Robertson, 7/31)

Health Policy Research

Research Roundup: Depression; Covid; Hearing Loss; Trust In Doctors; More

Each week, 麻豆女优 Health News compiles a selection of health policy studies and briefs.

Depression and cognitive symptoms worsen in the years following hospitalization for Covid-19, according to a new study into the long-term effects of the disease. People who were admitted to hospital for a Covid-19 infection still experienced 鈥渟ubstantial鈥 symptoms years later, with new ones also emerging, researchers from several British universities found. (Furlong, 7/31)

A study today involving 46 million adults in England shows that the incidence of both heart attacks and strokes dropped following COVID-19 vaccination compared to the incidence before or without vaccination. The study authors said the incidence of common cardiovascular diseases dropped after every COVID-19 vaccination, but COVID-19 vaccination was associated with slightly increased rates of myocarditis and pericarditis following mRNA-based vaccines, and vaccine-induced thrombotic thrombocytopenia following adenovirus-based vaccines such as the AstraZeneca vaccine. (Soucheray, 7/31)

The risk of hearing loss (HL) and聽sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL) in young adults rose after COVID-19 infection from 2020 to 2022, according to a聽study by South Korean researchers, who urge cautious interpretation of the results due to a lack of objective audiologic data and other limitations. (Van Beusekom, 7/30)

Trust in US physicians and hospitals fell from 71% to 40% during the COVID-19 pandemic in across sociodemographic groups, a Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)鈥搇ed survey聽study suggests. (Van Beusekom, 7/31)

A University of Oxford-led聽study links a healthy pre-infection lifestyle to a 36% lower risk of long COVID, a 41% lower odds of death, and 22% lower chance of hospitalization. The researchers assessed the association of modifiable lifestyle factors (eg, smoking, alcohol use, body mass index, physical activity, time spent in sedentary activities, sleep duration, diet) with long COVID, death, and hospitalization among 68,896 adults in the UK Biobank cohort who tested positive for COVID-19 from March 2020 to March 2022. (Van Beusekom, 7/29)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Mental Health Care Needs An Overhaul; Why Is FDA Stalling On New Sunscreens?

Editorial writers discuss these issues and others.

In the late 1960s, there was a mass deinstitutionalization of psychiatric care in the United States. Hundreds of psychiatric hospitals (so-called 鈥渁sylums鈥) were closed in the name of freedom and human rights for their populations. In those asylums, mentally ill patients were kept in locked wards, often involuntarily, and sometimes in inhumane conditions, making it more of a mass incarceration than a compassionate treatment program. (Charles Murchison, 7/30)

A decade after Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) authored the Sunscreen Innovation Act, which became law in 2014, Americans are still waiting for newer, more effective sunscreen products due to the Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 chronic inaction. (Darrell Rigel, 8/1)

Of all the dangers that Donald Trump both threatens and embodies, from seedy criminality to sprawling authoritarianism, perhaps no threat is more acute than the one he poses to public health. 鈥淚 will not give one penny to any school that has a vaccine mandate,鈥 Trump said at a rally in Minnesota last weekend. The former president used the same language 鈥 not 鈥渙ne penny鈥 for schools that require vaccines or masks 鈥 at a rally in May. (Francis Wilkinson, 8/1)

The Federal Trade Commission presents on Thursday聽its interim staff report, 鈥淧harmacy Benefit Managers: The Powerful Middlemen Inflating Drug Costs and Squeezing Main Street Pharmacies.鈥 It reveals how pharmacy benefit managers intentionally force people onto high-cost, high-rebate drugs. (Juliana M. Reed, 8/1)

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