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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Dec 12 2024

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 1

  • Patients Couldn鈥檛 Pay Their Utility Bills. One Hospital Turned to Solar Power for Help.
  • Political Cartoon: 'IRL second opinion?'

Gun Violence 1

  • Man Accused In UHC Slaying Saw It As 'Symbolic Takedown,' NYPD Says

Administration News 1

  • The Biden Administration's Final Days: FDA Proposes Nicotine Limits

Outbreaks and Health Threats 1

  • White House Defers Decision To Authorize Human Bird Flu Vaccine

LGBTQ+ Health 1

  • House Passes Bill Banning Tricare From Providing Gender-Affirming Care

Pharmaceuticals 1

  • CVS, Cigna, UnitedHealth Forced To Sell Pharmacies If Drafted Bill Passes

Mental Health 1

  • First-Time ADHD Diagnoses On The Rise In People Over 30

Health Industry 1

  • Inaccurate Provider Listings May Become Legal Headache For Insurers

State Watch 1

  • Dallas Approves Ordinance To Include Vaping In Citywide Smoking Ban

Health Policy Research 1

  • Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Here's How To Improve Health Insurance; Will SCOTUS Uphold Anti-Trans Legislation?

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

Patients Couldn鈥檛 Pay Their Utility Bills. One Hospital Turned to Solar Power for Help.

Doctors in Boston got tired of writing letters to utility companies asking for assistance for their medically vulnerable patients who need power and heat to stay healthy. So a hospital decided to share the power its solar panels generate with patients who needed help with their electricity and gas bills. ( Martha Bebinger, WBUR , 12/12 )

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Political Cartoon: 'IRL second opinion?'

麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'IRL second opinion?'" by Fran.

Here's today's health policy haiku:

LONG-TERM CONSIDERATIONS

GPL-1 cuts
pounds and scripts permanently.
Bargain in long run.

鈥 Barbara Skoglund

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:

Gun Violence

Man Accused In UHC Slaying Saw It As 'Symbolic Takedown,' NYPD Says

Police now have possession of a notebook that reportedly describes the alleged suspect's rationale. Plus, more of the latest details in the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

Luigi Mangione, who has been charged with killing the chief executive of UnitedHealthcare outside a company investors鈥 day in Manhattan, was arrested with a notebook that detailed plans for the shooting, according to two law enforcement officials. The notebook described going to a conference and killing an executive, the officials said. (Southall and Cramer, 12/11)

The suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare鈥檚 CEO appears to cite two prominent critics of the U.S. health care system in his handwritten manifesto 鈥 journalist Elisabeth Rosenthal and filmmaker Michael Moore 鈥 although neither of their works focused on the insurance company. (Herman and Bannow, 12/11)

The suspect in the killing of the UnitedHealthcare CEO plans to fight extradition to New York to face murder charges, but officials hope to get him back with what鈥檚 called a governor鈥檚 warrant. The process could happen quickly or take more than a month. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul鈥檚 office on Wednesday had not yet asked Pennsylvania for the warrant after murder charges were filed against Luigi Mangione late Monday in New York. (Dale, 12/11)

New York Police Department Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, may have filed an insurance claim for back pain last year. 鈥淪o we鈥檙e looking into whether or not the insurance industry either denied a claim from him or didn鈥檛 help him out to the fullest extent.鈥 He added that investigators believe Mangione鈥檚 injury may have been sustained on July 4, 2023. (Fields, 12/11)

What a difference a fraction of an inch can make. Having one of the 33 bones in his spine out of alignment by less than half an inch apparently diminished Luigi Mangione鈥檚 quality of life to the point that his lower legs felt like they were on fire. At other times, the 26-year-old charged with murdering the chief executive of UnitedHealthcare seesawed between pain and numbness in his lower back and genital area. (Kaplan, 12/11)

More reaction from the health industry 鈥

The fatal shooting last week of an executive on the streets of New York City plunged his family members and colleagues into grief. For rank-and-file employees across the health insurance industry, the killing has left them with an additional emotion: fear, with many frightened for their own safety and feeling under attack for their work. One UnitedHealthcare worker who processes claims described being cleareyed about the American health care system鈥檚 shortcomings, but also believes that she and her colleagues did their best to help patients within the limits of that system. Like most workers interviewed, she did not want to be named because, given the reaction after Mr. Thompson鈥檚 killing, she feared for her own safety. (Abelson, Smith, Benner and Harris, 12/11)

Senator Elizabeth Warren said Tuesday that while 鈥渧iolence is never the answer,鈥 the outrage directed at health insurers after the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson should be 鈥渁 warning鈥 to the health care industry that 鈥減eople can be pushed only so far.鈥 鈥淭he visceral response from people across this country who feel cheated, ripped off, and threatened by the vile practices of their insurance companies should be a warning to everyone in the health care system,鈥 Warren, a longtime critic of the US health care system, said in an interview with HuffPost. (Vega and Puzzanghera, 12/11)

UnitedHealth Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer Andrew Witty called slain colleague Brian Thompson 鈥渙ne of the good guys鈥 in a note to employees Wednesday, as he sought to reassure them amid a torrent of online hate. 鈥淲e owe it to Brian to make good on our promise to make health care work better for everybody, in every way,鈥 Witty said in the note, which was viewed by Bloomberg. The letter acknowledges the company is in a 鈥渟tate of mourning鈥 a week after Thompson, 50, was killed in New York on his way to an investor conference. Thompson was chief executive of UnitedHealthcare Inc. (Tozzi and Muller, 12/12)

Allegheny Health Network and Highmark Health removed leadership pages from their websites a week after the deadly shooting of the UnitedHealthcare CEO. A spokesperson confirmed to KDKA-TV on Wednesday that they took the pages down out of an abundance of caution. UPMC's CEO still has a bio on its website but no photo.聽(Borrasso, 12/11)

Also 鈥

Like many Americans, Holden Karau said she was fed up with health insurance. The software engineer鈥檚 disillusionment began in 2019, when her insurer, UnitedHealthcare, balked at covering physical therapy after she was hit by a car and could not walk. She said the hassles piled on stress, forced her to pay more out of pocket, and delayed access to care she needed to recover from multiple broken bones. (Ross, 12/12)

A week after the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, a book criticizing the U.S. health care industry skyrocketed to the top of an Amazon bestseller list. Author Jay Feinman's "Delay, Deny, Defend: Why Insurance Companies Don't Pay Claims and What You Can Do About It" is second on the site's nonfiction bestseller list Wednesday. The words "delay," "deny" and "depose" were found etched on bullet casings at the site of the CEO's killing. (Habeshian, 12/11)

Administration News

The Biden Administration's Final Days: FDA Proposes Nicotine Limits

As the Biden administration winds down, the FDA proposes nicotine limits on tobacco products to help people quit. Also: progress in women's health research; a large drop in overdose deaths; and more.

As the Biden administration winds down, the US Food and Drug Administration has submitted a proposed rule that could significantly lower the amount of nicotine in tobacco products and potentially prompt more people to quit smoking. (Christensen, 12/11)

President Biden and first lady Jill Biden hosted the first-ever White House Conference on Women's Health Research on Wednesday, showcasing progress in women's health initiatives to close the gender gap in health care. Last year, the president and first lady introduced a White House initiative to undertake what they said would be the "most comprehensive" effort any administration has taken to support women's health research. (Pound, 12/11)

Drug deaths are falling for the first time in recent memory, representing a rare glimmer of hope after years of record overdose mortality. On Wednesday, to the surprise of some experts, Biden administration officials sought to take credit for the decrease. (Facher, 12/11)

Donald Trump is eager to appoint dozens of new judges once he becomes president. Joe Biden has other plans. The president threatened to veto a bill to expand the number of federal judges because he doesn鈥檛 want to give the president-elect new appointment opportunities, one of the outgoing president鈥檚 closest allies said in an interview. The move dooms legislation spearheaded by Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), who had spent months pushing for the creation of 63 new judgeships. (Cancryn, 12/11)

In related news about the Affordable Care Act 鈥

Andrea Deutsch, the mayor of Narberth, Pennsylvania, and the owner of a pet store in town, doesn鈥檛 get health care coverage through either of her jobs. Instead, she is enrolled in a plan she purchased on Pennie, Pennsylvania鈥檚 health insurance exchange. ... The 57-year-old, who is diabetic, pays $638.38 per month for health care coverage 鈥 about half of the $1,272.38 she鈥檇 owe without the enhanced federal subsidies Congress and the Biden administration put in place in 2021. (Chatlani, 12/11)

Outbreaks and Health Threats

White House Defers Decision To Authorize Human Bird Flu Vaccine

Officials are monitoring the U.S. outbreak but say a vaccine isn't yet warranted. The incoming Trump administration will decide how to proceed. In related news, The New York Times explores whether cats could help the H5N1 virus evolve into a more dangerous form.

Biden administration officials said Wednesday they have no current plans to authorize a stockpiled bird flu vaccine, despite an escalating outbreak among livestock in the U.S. and at least 58 human infections across seven states.聽The move means any decisions about a bird flu vaccine will likely be left to health officials in the incoming Trump administration, who may be led by anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom Trump has picked to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. (Lovelace Jr., 12/11)

Health officials in Marin County, California are warning against raw milk consumption after a child there was suspected to have contracted bird flu after consuming raw milk. However, in an update Wednesday, the child appears to have tested negative for bird flu, a source close to the investigation told ABC News. "The child has recovered, and no other family members became sick, indicating no person-to person transmission," Marin County Public Health officials said in their initial statement. (Salzman and Benadjaoud, 12/11)

Domestic cats could provide an unexpected new route for the bird flu virus H5N1 to evolve into a more dangerous form, according to a new study published on Monday. In the year since the virus began circulating in dairy cattle, it has killed many cats, primarily on farms with affected herds. It has also sickened at least 60 people, most of whom had close contact with infected dairy cows or poultry. (Anthes and Mandavilli, 12/11)

In covid news 鈥

President Joe Biden is commuting the sentences of roughly 1,500 people who were released from prison and placed on home confinement during the coronavirus pandemic and is pardoning 39 Americans convicted of nonviolent crimes. It鈥檚 the largest single-day act of clemency in modern history. The commutations announced Thursday are for people who have served out home confinement sentences for at least one year after they were released. Prisons were uniquely bad for spreading the virus and some inmates were released in part to stop the spread. At one point, 1 in 5 prisoners had COVID-19, according to a tally kept by The Associated Press. (Long, 12/12)

US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra today signed the 12th amendment to the declaration under the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness (PREP) Act (PREP) Act for COVID-19 countermeasures, a step that provides liability immunity through December 31, 2029. The declaration provides immunity, except for willful misconduct, for certain claims, including loss caused by or related to administration or use of countermeasures to diseases, threats, or conditions, according to information from the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR), which is part of HHS.聽(Schnirring, 12/11)

Telehealth聽industry groups are urging聽Congress to extend COVID-19聽pandemic-era reimbursement flexibilities before the clock strikes midnight on Dec. 31.聽Multiple COVID-19-era temporary policies and regulations are set to expire at the end of the year unless Congress acts.聽These provisions include removing geographic site restrictions for telehealth, permitting audio-only telehealth services and delaying the in-person requirement for mental health patients seeking treatment through telehealth. (Turner, 12/11)

Fewer grandparents were living with and taking care of grandchildren, there was a decline in young children going to preschool and more people stayed put in their homes in the first part of the 2020s compared to the last part of the 2010s, according to U.S. Census Bureau data released Thursday, reflecting some of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The latest figures from the most comprehensive survey of American life compares the years of 2014-2018 and 2019-2023, timeframes before the COVID-19 pandemic and during the virus鈥 spread. The American Community Survey data show how lives were changed and family relationships altered by the pandemic and other occurrences like the opioid crisis. (Schneider, 12/12)

LGBTQ+ Health

House Passes Bill Banning Tricare From Providing Gender-Affirming Care

Meanwhile, Montana protects health care for transgender minors; Florida prison reverses care for transgender inmates; and more.

A divided House on Wednesday passed a defense policy bill that would direct $895 billion to the Pentagon and other military operations, moving over the opposition of Democrats who objected to a provision denying coverage for transgender health care for the children of service members. ... The provision in question would bar TRICARE, the military鈥檚 health care plan, from covering 鈥渕edical interventions for the treatment of gender dysphoria that could result in sterilization鈥 for children under 18. (Demirjian, 12/11)

A Montana law banning gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors will remain temporarily blocked, the state Supreme Court ruled Wednesday, after justices unanimously agreed with a lower court judge who found the law likely violates the state鈥檚 constitutional right to privacy. The case against the Montana law now goes to trial before District Court Judge Jason Marks in Missoula. (Hanson, 12/11)

Earlier this fall, Florida officials ordered transgender women in the state鈥檚 prisons to submit to breast exams. As part of a new policy for people with gender dysphoria, prison medical staff ranked the women鈥檚 breast size using a scale designed for adolescents. Those whose breasts were deemed big enough were allowed to keep their bras. Everyone else had to surrender theirs, along with anything else considered 鈥渇emale,鈥 such as women鈥檚 underwear and toiletry items. (Schwartzapfel, 12/11)

Also 鈥

The United Kingdom on Wednesday indefinitely banned new prescriptions of puberty blockers to treat minors for gender dysphoria. The announcement comes a week after the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case involving state bans on puberty-suppressing medication and other forms of transition-related care for minors. Puberty blockers are commonly prescribed to transgender children in countries throughout the Western world to delay the onset of puberty or pause it as it is transpiring. (Lavietes, 12/11)

Pharmaceuticals

CVS, Cigna, UnitedHealth Forced To Sell Pharmacies If Drafted Bill Passes

The bill, drafted by a bipartisan coalition of lawmakers, would force prescription drug middlemen to sell off all pharmacies they own. Other news stories cover once-a-year HIV prevention shots, gene therapy to reverse heart failure, and more.

A bipartisan coalition of US lawmakers has drafted legislation that would force prescription drug middlemen to divest pharmacies they own. Some of the largest US health-care companies own pharmacy benefit management units that negotiate drug prices for employers and other customers. If enacted, the policy would compel CVS Health Corp., Cigna Group and UnitedHealth Group Inc. to shed drug-dispensing operations that have become profit centers for the vertically integrated conglomerates. (Tozzi, 12/11)

In other pharma and tech news 鈥

Gilead said Tuesday that it will soon begin Phase 3 testing for a drug it believes could prevent HIV infection with just a single shot every year. Such a medicine, if proven effective, would be the closest thing to a vaccine the HIV field has produced in four decades of research. The company plans to begin the trial next year, with an eye toward regulatory filings in late 2027. (Mast, 12/11)

Labcorp has completed its acquisition of select non-hospital lab assets from Ballad Health, the independent laboratory company said Wednesday. A purchase price was not immediately available. Johnson City, Tennessee-based Ballad Health will retain operations of its inpatient and emergency department laboratory services, as well as lab services for hospital-based practices, according to a news release. (DeSilva, 12/11)

The drug potassium chloride has been on the market for decades, widely prescribed to help the nerves and muscles 鈥 including the heart 鈥 function properly in patients with low potassium. Too much of it, however, can kill you. At high doses, it is so effective at stopping the heart that some states have used injections of it for executions. So the danger was obvious in May, when Indian drugmaker Glenmark Pharmaceuticals recalled nearly 47 million capsules for a dire flaw: The extended-release medication wasn鈥檛 dissolving properly, a defect that could lead to a perilous spike in potassium. (Callahan, Cenziper and Rose, 12/12)

Heart failure has historically been irreversible, but the outcome of a new study suggests that could someday change. At the University of Utah, scientists used a new gene therapy that was shown to reverse the effects of heart failure in a large animal study. In the study, pigs with heart failure were found to have low levels of cardiac bridging integrator 1 (cBIN1), a critical heart protein. (Rudy, 12/11)

Mental Health

First-Time ADHD Diagnoses On The Rise In People Over 30

Since 2021, the number of people getting diagnosed with ADHD for the first time has risen significantly. In other news: Americans live with diseases longer than people from other countries; some foods make fighting cancer harder; and more.

An analysis by Truveta, a health care data and analytics company, shows that the rate of first-time A.D.H.D. diagnoses has been on the rise since 2021, but the increase has occurred only among people 30 and older. From January 2021 to October 2024, the rate of first-time diagnoses rose about 61 percent among those ages 30 to 44 and 64 percent among those ages 45 to 64. As a result, about 31 percent of first-time diagnoses are now among people ages 30 to 44, the largest proportion of any age group. (In 2018, younger adults took the top spot.) (Caron, 12/11)

In other health and wellness news 鈥

Americans spend more time living with diseases than people from other countries, according to a new study. On Wednesday, the American Medical Association published its latest findings, revealing that Americans live with diseases for an average of 12.4 years. Mental and substance-use disorders, as well as musculoskeletal diseases, are main contributors to the years lived with disability in the US, per the study. (Yang, 12/11)

The food you eat may be affecting your body鈥檚 ability to fight cancer cells in the colon, according to a new study. The potential culprit: an overabundance of certain omega-6 fatty acids 鈥 perhaps from ultraprocessed foods in your diet 鈥 that may hinder the anti-inflammatory and tumor-fighting properties of another essential fatty acid, omega-3. (LaMotte, 12/11)

Researchers at Stanford University believe a newly developed AI tool could help in the fight against cancer and other diseases. Olivier Gevaert, a biomedical data scientist at Stanford Medicine, showed CBS News Bay Area an example of a breast cancer tissue. Identifying and understanding the prevalence of specific genes within that tissue is just one hurdle in the fight against certain cancers. (Choi, 12/11)

The rate of medical assistance in dying - also known as euthanasia - has grown in Canada for the fifth straight year, albeit at a slower pace. The country released its fifth annual report since legalising assisted dying in 2016, which for the first time included data on the ethnicity of those seeking euthanasia. Around 15,300 people underwent assisted dying last year, accounting for 4.7% of deaths in the country. Canada lawmakers are currently seeking to expand access to euthanasia to cover people with mental illnesses by 2027. (Yousif, 12/11)

Health Industry

Inaccurate Provider Listings May Become Legal Headache For Insurers

Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of New York is facing a class-action lawsuit that alleges that the insurer intentionally includes out-of-network providers in its lists. The insurance industry will be watching closely as others have been accused of promoting "ghost networks."

Health insurers have long faced criticism over inaccurate provider directories, and a recent lawsuit suggests more scrutiny could be on the horizon. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of New York, an Elevance Health subsidiary, is battling a trio of policyholders seeking class action status who allege the insurer deliberately includes out-of-network providers in its lists. These alleged "ghost networks" can deter patients from seeking care or increase their costs and can cause headaches for providers. (Berryman and Early, 12/11)

More health industry updates 鈥

Community Health Systems signed a definitive agreement to sell a North Carolina hospital to Duke Health for about $280 million. The deal involves the 123-bed Lake Norman Regional Medical Center聽in聽Mooresville, North Carolina, and related businesses. It is expected to close in the first quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approval, according to a Wednesday news release.聽(Hudson, 12/11)

Longitude Health will launch an initiative next year to help providers improve care for Medicare Advantage beneficiaries and other patients covered by outcome-based reimbursement models. The health system-backed company on Tuesday appointed Dr. Craig Samitt to lead Longitude PHM, which aims to help health systems tackle population health and accelerate what has been a slow shift from fee-for-service to value-based payment models. (Kacik, 12/11)

The University of Minnesota is taking steps to restructure the M Health system by integrating its physicians within the university under a new leader. The announcement came in a Wednesday memo to medical faculty and staff from the university鈥檚 president and the medical school鈥檚 dean. (Zurek, 12/11)

麻豆女优 Health News: Patients Couldn鈥檛 Pay Their Utility Bills. One Hospital Turned To Solar Power For Help

Anna Goldman, a primary care physician at Boston Medical Center, got tired of hearing that her patients couldn鈥檛 afford the electricity needed to run breathing assistance machines, recharge wheelchairs, turn on air conditioning, or keep their refrigerators plugged in. So she worked with her hospital on a solution. The result is a pilot effort called the Clean Power Prescription program. The initiative aims to help keep the lights on for roughly 80 patients with complex, chronic medical needs. (Bebinger, 12/12)

Also 鈥

For most working Americans, paying their share of the taxes that fund Medicare is an unavoidable fact of life. It鈥檚 so automatic for many workers that they may not even realize it takes a bite out of every paycheck. In theory, everyone is required to contribute to the country鈥檚 health insurance program for seniors, no matter how poor or rich, from cashiers to CEOs. Not on Wall Street. There, some of the most powerful people in finance found a way to opt out. (Kiel, 12/11)

State Watch

Dallas Approves Ordinance To Include Vaping In Citywide Smoking Ban

In other news, Texas health advocates move to improve the Medicaid application process; North Carolina hospitals fight claims that they are not providing price transparency; and more.

The Dallas City Council on Wednesday approved a new ordinance banning vaping in all locations where smoking is already prohibited, effective Dec. 11, 2025. City officials said the measure is part of an effort to enhance air quality and safeguard public health. (Myers, 12/11)

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit Wednesday against chemical giants 3M and DuPont, accusing them of decades-long misrepresentations and omissions regarding the safety of PFAS, or 鈥渇orever chemicals,鈥 sold for use in countless consumer products. These products, sold under brand names such as Teflon, Stainmaster, and Scotchgard, have been staples in households across the nation despite mounting evidence that they contain chemicals that are harmful to human health. (Martinez, 12/11)

In Texas, health advocates often find themselves playing defense to encourage leaders to preserve the state鈥檚 relatively frugal public service offerings while also pushing for more. That鈥檚 why a $300 million ask to lawmakers next year from the state鈥檚 social services agency 鈥 the Texas Health and Human Services Commission 鈥 to improve the agency鈥檚 complicated Medicaid application process has thrilled the state鈥檚 nonprofit policy groups. (Langford, 12/11)

Across the country, hospitals are dispensing medications to patients in labor, only to report them to child welfare authorities when they or their newborns test positive for those same substances on subsequent drug tests, an investigation by The Marshall Project and Reveal has found.聽The positive tests are triggered by medications routinely prescribed to millions of birthing patients in the United States every year. The drugs include morphine or fentanyl for epidurals or other pain relief; anxiety medications; and two different blood pressure meds prescribed for C-sections. (Walter, 12/11)

Connecticut鈥檚 Medicaid program boasts lower costs and similar levels of access when compared to peer states, according to a report by independent consultants, leading to the conclusion that employing a model known as managed care would not likely save the state money. The findings were part of a report, commissioned by Gov. Ned Lamont, to explore the possibility of returning the state鈥檚 Medicaid program to a managed care model 鈥 a proposal that was met with fierce opposition from many advocates and legislators who said the move would increase costs and reduce access. (Golvala, 12/11)

When was the last time you knew the full cost of a medical procedure before going under? Hospital price transparency has been enforced by the federal Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services since 2021, but whether the law is functioning as intended is a topic of heated debate. (Sartwell, 12/12)

Public housing helped bring an end to Linda Gallagher-Garcia鈥檚 three years of intermittent homelessness in her hometown of Presque Isle, Maine, in 2020. With $200 in secondhand furniture, she made the apartment feel like home for her and her dog, Tex. But when she fell behind on her rent and was evicted two years later, the fact that she was in public housing made her future more dire: Maine public housing authorities鈥 rules bar evicted tenants from returning to government-subsidized units and from receiving other benefits that could help them relocate. (Loftus, 12/12)

Health Policy Research

Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs

Each week, 麻豆女优 Health News compiles a selection of the latest health research and news.

A briefing document from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says that enrollment for all clinical studies of vaccines for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in infants is on hold over concerns about potential safety findings from a clinical trial involving two vaccine candidates. (Dall, 12/11)

Patients are no longer being enrolled in the Study of Tecovirimat for Mpox (STOMP) randomized clinical trial (RCT) after an interim analysis showed that the antiviral drug (brand name, Tpoxx) didn't speed lesion healing or pain relief in adults with mild to moderate clade 2 mpox at low risk for severe illness, report the study sponsor, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), and Tpoxx developer Siga Technologies, Inc. (Van Beusekom, 12/11)

Currently, the results of CBC tests are analyzed using a one-size-fits-all reference interval, but a new study suggests that this approach can lead to overlooked deviations in health. In a retrospective analysis, researchers show that these reference intervals, or setpoints, are unique to each patient. The study revealed that one healthy patient's CBC setpoints can be distinguishable from 98 percent of other healthy adults. (Mass General Brigham, 12/11)

A new systematic review of 373聽studies reveals the detection of 22聽viruses in human semen following acute infection, including pathogens with pandemic potential. The study was published yesterday in The Lancet Microbe, and shows that only 9 of the 22 viruses had evidence of sexual transmission. The persistence of viruses in semen has far-reaching implications for ongoing disease transmission, embryonic development and fertility, and the development of drugs and vaccines, the authors said. Infectious semen has also contributed to recent outbreaks of Zika virus disease, Ebola virus disease, and mpox. (Soucheray, 12/11)

A derivative of the diuretic drug amiloride (Midamor) blocked key inflammatory pathways in mouse models of psoriasis, including xenografts of psoriatic human skin, as well as in cultured patient skin samples, researchers said. Skin cells taken from human psoriasis patients, reconstructed into tissue and grafted onto immunodeficient mice, "showed pronounced psoriasiform hyperplasia" when treated with a placebo solution, but when benzyl amiloride was applied, no such abnormal growth was seen, according to M. Peter Marinkovich, MD, of Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, and colleagues. (Gever, 12/11)

Researchers聽report that immunity against pertussis (whooping cough) was sustained 5 years after receipt of a recombinant vaccine in adolescents and young adults, a finding that they said supports its use as a booster in adolescents. (Van Beusekom, 12/5)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Here's How To Improve Health Insurance; Will SCOTUS Uphold Anti-Trans Legislation?

Editorial writers discuss these public health topics.

Last week鈥檚 shocking killing of UnitedHealthcare鈥檚 chief executive, Brian Thompson, reopened a national wound inflicted by the delay and denial of health coverage to countless Americans. This was a violent crime that won鈥檛 solve anything. But the ensuing organic and spontaneous outpouring of populist anger underscored how many Americans have been cruelly and unjustly denied medical treatment. (Jamie Court, 12/12)

Sadly, it appears that the Supreme Court is poised to uphold a Tennessee law that prohibits transgender youth from obtaining gender-affirming care. In a case heard last week, the six conservative justices expressed deference to the Tennessee legislature鈥檚 choice, indicating that the court is likely to reject the constitutional challenges to the law. (Erwin Chemerinsky, 12/11)

President Joe Biden proposed a policy last week that would allow Americans on Medicare and Medicaid to access obesity-fighting drugs like Wegovy and Ozempic.聽The White House is pitching the regulation as these new drugs are exploding in the health care arena, and which, so far, have been effective and in high demand. (Laura Washington, 12/11)

According to Harriet Torry in The Wall Street Journal, 鈥淭he number of male registered nurses in the U.S. has nearly tripled since the early 2000s,鈥 going 鈥渇rom about 140,000 in 2000 to about 400,000 in 2023.鈥 In health care, wage and market growth exceed the national average, and people still need emergency surgeries, even in recessions, CNN鈥檚 Bryan Mena notes. Health care jobs are particularly vital in rural parts of the country, where hospitals may be among the largest employers in their areas. (Jessica Grose, 12/11)

As a first-generation immigrant, much of my childhood was spent in a state of perpetual uncertainty. My family and I fixated on an ever-refreshing screen, patiently watching our status shift from 鈥淗-1B visa鈥 to 鈥済reen card鈥 holder to 鈥渃itizen鈥 over 14 long years. Yet amid this endless cycle of anxiety, one place surprisingly gave me solace: the hospital. As a long-time patient of Texas Children鈥檚 Hospital, I saw early on how health care stood apart 鈥 a field untouched by the grasp of immigration status, a space where humanity held precedence over nationality. (Akshara Ramasamy, 12/12)

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