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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Jul 18 2024

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 3

  • Tennessee Agrees To Remove Sex Workers With HIV From Sex Offender Registry
  • Trump Is Wrong in Claiming Full Credit for Lowering Insulin Prices
  • Montana鈥檚 Plan To Curb Opioid Overdoses Includes Vending Machines
  • Political Cartoon: 'Insurance Piggy Bank?'

Note To Readers

Covid-19 1

  • President Biden Has Covid: Isolating With 'Mild Symptoms,' Taking Paxlovid

Reproductive Health 1

  • Democrats Would Suspend Filibuster To Codify Abortion Rights If They Win Congress

Health Care Costs 1

  • With N.C. Budget Adjustment Delayed, DHHS Braces For Medicaid Shortfall

Capitol Watch 1

  • Doctor's Assessment Weighs Heavily On Whether Biden Will Stay In Race

Public Health 1

  • Millions Of Bacteria Discovered In Sealed Bottles Of Tattoo Ink

Science And Innovations 1

  • Scientist's MRIs Highlight Psilocybin Boosting Brain Plasticity

Health Industry 1

  • Mark Cuban Aims At A Temporary Fix For Penicillin Shortages, Via Imports

State Watch 1

  • Illinois Reports Its First West Nile Case This Year

Health Policy Research 1

  • Research Roundup: H5N1 Vaccines; Memory Loss; Psilocybin; Mental Health

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Home Caregivers Deserve A Living Wage; Chicago's Emergency Medical Services Severely Lacking

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

Tennessee Agrees To Remove Sex Workers With HIV From Sex Offender Registry

For years, Tennessee has required anyone convicted of prostitution while HIV-positive to register as a sex offender for life. In response to DOJ and ACLU discrimination suits, the state has agreed to reverse course. ( Brett Kelman , 7/17 )

Trump Is Wrong in Claiming Full Credit for Lowering Insulin Prices

Though the Trump administration established a voluntary, temporary program lowering insulin costs for some older Americans on Medicare, the mandatory price caps implemented through Biden鈥檚 Inflation Reduction Act go significantly further. ( Jacob Gardenswartz , 7/18 )

Montana鈥檚 Plan To Curb Opioid Overdoses Includes Vending Machines

Details about where the machines would go 鈥 and how they would help those most at risk 鈥 are sparse. The state has proposed using them to distribute naloxone and fentanyl testing strips. ( Mara Silvers, Montana Free Press , 7/18 )

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Political Cartoon: 'Insurance Piggy Bank?'

麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Insurance Piggy Bank?'" by Bannerman / Xunise / Konar / Lawton / Patrinos / Piro.

Here's today's health policy haiku:

THEY DIDN'T ASK FOR THIS

When gun violence
is a health care cost crisis,
we are failing folks.

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.

Note To Readers

Trouble Finding Your Own Medical Insurance at 26? Now that you鈥檙e not on your family鈥檚 health plan, what did you do? How has it impacted your physical or mental health? 麻豆女优 Health News and the New York Times want to hear your stories聽.

Summaries Of The News:

Covid-19

President Biden Has Covid: Isolating With 'Mild Symptoms,' Taking Paxlovid

President Joe Biden's positive test comes amid another summer surge of the virus. Also, studies look at vaccines and the risk for long covid.

President Joe Biden tested positive for COVID-19 while traveling Wednesday in Las Vegas and is experiencing 鈥渕ild symptoms鈥 including 鈥済eneral malaise鈥 from the infection, the White House said. Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden will fly to his home in Delaware, where he will 鈥渟elf-isolate and will continue to carry out all of his duties fully during that time.鈥 The news had first been shared by UnidosUS President and CEO Janet Murgu铆a, who told guests at the group鈥檚 convention in Las Vegas that president had sent his regrets and could not appear because he tested positive for the virus. (Madhani, 7/18)

鈥淚鈥檓 sick,鈥 the president said in a post on the social platform X Wednesday after the White House said Wednesday evening that the president had tested positive for COVID-19. 鈥淥f Elon Musk and his rich buddies trying to buy this election,鈥 Biden said in a reply to his post after a two-minute delay, alongside a link to a fundraising webpage. 鈥淎nd if you agree, pitch in here.鈥 (Suter, 7/17)

President Biden tested positive for the coronavirus Wednesday, placing a renewed spotlight on covid-19 and the precautions the broader public can take as a summer wave of the disease sweeps over much of the United States. ... When sick with symptoms of a respiratory virus, such as the coronavirus, the CDC advises individuals to stay home and isolate until both their overall symptoms have improved and they have been fever-free without using fever-reducing medication for 24 hours. (Ables and Nirappil, 7/18)

Also 鈥

Vaccination lowers the chance of developing long Covid, according to a large new study that also found that the risk of serious complications has diminished but not disappeared as new coronavirus variants emerged. (Cooney, 7/17)

A summer Covid wave is hitting the country, but there鈥檚 one consolation: Your chances of developing long Covid have fallen since the start of the pandemic.聽That鈥檚 the finding from a new study in the New England Journal of Medicine. It concluded that about 10% of people infected with the virus鈥檚 original strain developed long Covid. By contrast, the risk of developing long Covid dropped to 3.5% with the virus鈥檚 Omicron variant among vaccinated people. For the unvaccinated, the risk was 7.7.%. (Reddy, 7/17)

A summer wave of Covid is surging in many parts of the nation. Infections, emergency room visits and hospitalizations are all on the upswing. Recognizing that Covid is now a permanent respiratory threat, as are influenza and respiratory syncytial virus, federal officials have recommended that everyone 6 months and older receive the newest vaccine this fall. (Mandavilli, 7/17)

Reproductive Health

Democrats Would Suspend Filibuster To Codify Abortion Rights If They Win Congress

"We have the votes" to suspend the filibuster to codify Roe v. Wade, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts said Wednesday, announcing the Democrats' plan if they win the House and Senate in the November elections. Meanwhile, it's reported that Republican vice presidential nominee J.D. Vance has pushed the Justice Department to crack down on abortion pills via the 151 year-old Comstock Act.

Progressive Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) announced Wednesday that there are currently enough votes in the Senate to suspend the filibuster to codify Roe v. Wade and abortion rights if Democrats win control of the House and keep the Senate and White House. 鈥淲e will suspend the filibuster. We have the votes for that on Roe v. Wade,鈥 Warren said on ABC鈥檚 鈥淭he View.鈥 (Bolton, 7/17)

Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), newly tapped as the GOP vice-presidential nominee, last year joined an effort to enforce the Comstock Act, the 151-year-old federal law that has become a lightning rod in the nation鈥檚 abortion debate. The Comstock Act, which bans the mailing of abortion-related materials, has not been invoked for that purpose in about a century. The Biden administration maintains that its provisions are outdated today. (Diamond and Kornfield, 7/17)

In abortion news from across the country 鈥

The chances that a woman can see a doctor while pregnant 鈥 or during a time when she might become pregnant 鈥 have fallen significantly since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, according to a new report released Thursday. The findings, from The Commonwealth Fund, a nonpartisan health care research foundation, show that women living in states with a history of health disparities 鈥 often in the Southeast 鈥 are affected the most. They are not only less likely to be able to afford a doctor鈥檚 appointment; they鈥檙e less likely to be able to find an OB/GYN in their area. (Edwards, 7/18)

A Florida panel approved language that will accompany a November ballot initiative on abortion, saying the initiative will have a negative impact on the state budget, a move the amendment鈥檚 supporters decried as a politically motivated 鈥渄irty trick.鈥澛燭he amendment would result in 鈥渟ignificantly more abortions and fewer live births per year,鈥 and there is uncertainty about whether the amendment will require the state to subsidize abortions with public funds, according to the financial impact statement. (Weixel, 7/17)

Health Care Costs

With N.C. Budget Adjustment Delayed, DHHS Braces For Medicaid Shortfall

The department is staring down a $100 million shortfall by the end of this fiscal year, officials say. Separately, Maryland and Colorado also are making decisions about health care costs.

NC Medicaid costs fluctuate each year. The state Department of Health and Human Services forecasts how costs might change and asks the legislature for funding adjustments based on those predictions. (Vitaglione, 7/18)

A Maryland board approved $148.3 million in state spending reductions on Wednesday to balance the budget while directing more money to pay for child care and Medicaid 鈥 two priorities that Democratic Gov. Wes Moore鈥檚 administration hopes will help improve a stagnant state economy. The Board of Public Works, which Moore chairs, made cuts across a variety of state agencies to address larger-than-expected demand for Medicaid and a state child care program. (Witte, 7/17)

Health insurance premiums for people who buy coverage on their own in Colorado look set to increase 5.5% overall next year, slightly below average for recent years, according to preliminary numbers released Wednesday. (Ingold, 7/18)

Vermont's attorney general on Wednesday sued two of the largest U.S. pharmacy benefit managers, accusing them of driving up prescription drug prices for patients in order to enrich themselves, joining other states that have brought similar claims against the drug industry middlemen. (Pierson, 7/17)

Capitol Watch

Doctor's Assessment Weighs Heavily On Whether Biden Will Stay In Race

No doctor has told the president that he is physically unfit to hold office, and Biden believes he has the wisdom and experience to do the job. Meanwhile, GOP nominee Donald Trump is mum about his physical and mental health after he was wounded in an assassination attempt.

President Biden said in an interview released on Wednesday that he would re-evaluate whether to stay in the presidential race if a doctor told him directly that he had a medical condition that made that necessary. Mr. Biden has said repeatedly that none of his doctors have told him he has a serious medical condition. Dr. Kevin O鈥機onnor, the White House physician, wrote after the president鈥檚 physical in February that Mr. Biden is 鈥渁 healthy, active, robust, 81-year-old male who remains fit to successfully execute the duties of the presidency.鈥 (Shear, 7/17)

Four days after a gunman鈥檚 attempt to assassinate former President Donald Trump at a Pennsylvania rally, the public is still in the dark over the extent of his injuries, what treatment the Republican presidential nominee received in the hospital, and whether there may be any long-term effects on his health. Trump鈥檚 campaign has refused to discuss his condition, release a medical report or records, or make the doctors who treated him available, leaving information to dribble out from Trump, his friends and family. (Riccardi and Colvin, 7/18)

Four days after former president Donald Trump was shot in the ear at a rally in Pennsylvania, his medical team has yet to release detailed records of his condition or treatment. And while his campaign has pronounced him to be in good health, numerous experts on gunshot trauma and emergency medicine interviewed by STAT said there could still be outstanding questions. (McFarling and Rajeev, 7/17)

麻豆女优 Health News: Trump Is Wrong In Claiming Full Credit For Lowering Insulin Prices

Former President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that he聽鈥 and not President Joe Biden 鈥 deserves credit for lowering older Americans鈥 prescription drug prices, specifically for insulin. In a June 8 post on Truth Social, the former president鈥檚 social platform, Trump wrote: 鈥淟ow INSULIN PRICING was gotten for millions of Americans by me, and the Trump Administration, not by Crooked Joe Biden. He had NOTHING to do with it.鈥 (Gardenswartz, 7/18)

In other policy news 鈥

During his short time in the Senate, GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance has made his opposition to abortion access and transgender health care well known 鈥 but all the while the Ohio Republican has been quietly introducing and supporting bills to try to shape America鈥檚 public health apparatus. (Cohen, 7/17)

The Biden administration鈥檚 push to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug won an endorsement Wednesday from Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, who said 鈥渢he jury is no longer out鈥 on its medical uses as an alternative to opioids that ravaged the Bluegrass State with overdose deaths. The Democratic governor called the proposal a 鈥渟ignificant, common-sense step forward,鈥 especially for people with serious medical conditions. Beshear laid out his support in a letter to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. (Schreiner, 7/17)

Also 鈥

A聽fact sheet published by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) yesterday highlights a 20% rise in hospital-onset infections caused by antimicrobial-resistant pathogens and a fivefold increase in Candida auris infections during the COVID-19 pandemic compared with 2019. A Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA)聽statement following the release of the fact sheet calls for continued investment in CDC programs that fight antimicrobial resistance (AMR). (Van Beusekom, 7/17)

The government is giving away money! So say ads on a variety of social media platforms. Consumers, the ads claim, can qualify for $1,400 or even $6,400 a month to use on groceries, rent, medical expenses, and other bills. Some mention no-cost health insurance coverage. But that鈥檚 not the whole story. And here鈥檚 the spoiler 鈥 no one is getting monthly checks to help with these everyday expenses. (Appleby, 7/18)

Drugmaker Ardelyx (ARDX.O) said on Wednesday that it has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) over their plan to include its kidney disease drug in the Medicare payment bundle system. The lawsuit claims that CMS's plan to include the drug, Xphozah, along with all other oral-only phosphate lowering therapies in the End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System (ESRD) will "significantly and negatively impact patient choice of and timely access to important medications." (7/17)

The Biden administration is cracking down on companies that make edible THC products that too closely mimic well-known snack brands, warning of the risk such products could pose to young children. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) issued letters to five companies Wednesday 鈥渇or illegally selling copycat food products containing delta-8 THC and introducing them into the marketplace,鈥 according to a press release. (Fortinsky, 7/17)

Officials do not have the authority to compel workers to get tested, and there is no way for workers to test themselves. In the current outbreak, just four dairy workers and five poultry workers have tested positive for H5N1, the bird flu virus, but experts believe that many more have been infected. The Covid-19 pandemic and the mpox (formerly monkeypox) outbreak in 2022 revealed deep fissures in the U.S. approach to testing for emerging pathogens. (Mandavilli, 7/17)

Public Health

Millions Of Bacteria Discovered In Sealed Bottles Of Tattoo Ink

According to the FDA, the bacteria were also found in sealed bottles of permanent makeup ink. Other news on public health covers two deaths in Canada from contaminated milk substitutes, a ranking of states with regard to women's health, tips for staying hydrated in extreme heat, and more.

Sealed bottles of tattoo and permanent makeup ink, including some marked as sterile, contained millions of potentially dangerous bacteria, according to new research by the US Food and Drug Administration. (LaMotte, 7/18)

Two Canadians died from infections caused by listeria after drinking popular milk substitutes based on almonds, oats, cashews and coconuts that were sold under the Silk and Great Value brands, the country鈥檚 health department said Wednesday night. Another 10 infections, most of them affecting residents of Ontario, have been confirmed by laboratory tests, the department, Health Canada, said in its health notice. (Austen, 7/18)

In other public health news 鈥

Women in the United States face a growing number of threats to their health and well-being, a new report says, and there are vast disparities from state to state. (Howard and McPhillips, 7/18)

Earlier this month, the Biden administration announced a new rule that, if finalized, would become the first federal regulation specifically designed to protect workers from extreme heat both indoors and outdoors. It would trigger requirements for access to drinking water and rest breaks when the heat index reaches 80 degrees Fahrenheit. At 90 degrees, it would mandate 15-minute breaks every two hours and require employers to monitor for signs of heat illness. (Kutz, 7/17)

When it鈥檚 hot outside, your body keeps cool by sweating. But you don鈥檛 just lose water in the process: You also lose electrolytes like sodium, calcium and potassium that are crucial to keep your body functioning well. Sports drinks, hydration powders and tablets promise to help you replenish your electrolytes. But when do you actually need them, and are they the best source? 鈥淧eople always say 鈥榡ust drink Gatorade,鈥欌 said Dr. Elan Goldwaser, a sports medicine physician at NewYork-Presbyterian. 鈥淏ut the truth is, it鈥檚 so much more than that.鈥 (Mogg, 7/17)

Women are likelier to die from breast and cervical cancer in a cluster of southern states where screenings and other preventive care lag behind the rest of the country. (Goldman, 7/18)

鈥淪ome studies show that some antioxidants, such as vitamins A, C, E and carotenoids and selenium, can help prevent some skin cancers,鈥 says Dr. Tanya Nino, a double board-certified dermatologist and the melanoma program director at the Center for Cancer Prevention and Treatment at Providence St. Joseph Hospital in Burbank, California. 鈥淭hese vitamins are antioxidants that work by neutralizing free radicals in cells. Free radicals are unstable molecules that can damage the DNA in our cells.鈥澛(Maher, 7/18)

If you want to increase your odds of living a long and healthy life, watch less television and become more physically active, because even a small amount of physical activity can improve overall health, according to an observational study published last month in JAMA Network Open. While there have been many studies showing that moderate to vigorous physical activity is associated with healthy aging, researchers wanted to know if light physical activity compared with sedentary behaviors also improves healthy aging, and if not, how can people鈥檚 time be reallocated. (Chesler, 7/17)

Digging in sand might seem innocent, but if the hole is deep enough and collapses on a person, it is extremely difficult to escape. Research suggests more people die from sand burial suffocation than shark attacks. (Leatherman, 7/17)

As medical tourism becomes increasingly popular, Turkey has emerged as a destination of choice for balding American men seeking a cure to their receding hairlines. (Saric, 7/17)

Science And Innovations

Scientist's MRIs Highlight Psilocybin Boosting Brain Plasticity

NPR reports on fascinating research that shows how taking the psychedelic drug psilocybin changes brain process, producing mind-altering effects and temporary boosts to the brain's ability to adapt and change. In other research news, CBD may protect skin from the sun.

In the name of science, Dr. Nico Dosenbach had scanned his own brain dozens of times. But this was the first time he'd taken a mind-bending substance before sliding into the MRI tunnel. "I was, like, drifting deeper into weirdness," he recalls. "I didn't know where I was at all. Time stopped, and I was everyone." Dosenbach, an associate professor of neurology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, had been given a high dose of psilocybin, the active substance in magic mushrooms, by his colleagues. (Hamilton, 7/18)

An active ingredient in marijuana could help shield skin from sun damage, according to new research in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. (Goldman, 7/17)

Also 鈥

New research makes the case for educating women in their 40s 鈥 who've been caught in the crossfire of a decades-long debate about whether to be screened for breast cancer with mammograms 鈥 about the harms as well as the benefits of the exam. After a nationally representative sample of U.S. women between the ages of 39 and 49 learned about the pros and cons of mammography, more than twice as many elected to wait until they turn 50 to get screened, a study released Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine found. (Cohen, 7/17)

The risk of developing ovarian cancer appears to jump about fourfold among women with endometriosis, compared with women who haven鈥檛 been diagnosed with the condition, a new study finds. (Howard, 7/17)

As a hematologist-oncologist in Miami, Mikkael Sekeres always hopes his patients will find a perfect match for the bone marrow transplant they need to save their lives 鈥 but he doesn鈥檛 expect it. Most of his patients are Latino or African American, and rates of perfect matches are much lower for racial or ethnic minorities. That gloomy picture could soon change. (Chen, 7/17)

Researchers who conducted a large study of adults in Denmark, published on Wednesday in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, found something they had not expected: Adults who moved frequently in childhood have significantly more risk of suffering from depression than their counterparts who stayed put in a community. In fact, the risk of moving frequently in childhood was significantly greater than the risk of living in a poor neighborhood, said Clive Sabel, a professor at the University of Plymouth and the paper鈥檚 lead author. (Barry, 7/17)

As many as 1 in 4 U.S. adults with depression and anxiety can't pay their medical bills 鈥 a situation that could be limiting their ability to get timely psychiatric care, Johns Hopkins researchers found. (Bettelheim, 7/18)

A Novartis executive on Thursday said 鈥渋t鈥檚 too early to say鈥 whether the company would still submit an experimental myelofibrosis drug for regulatory approval this year, amid questions about the medicine鈥檚 data profile and whether it鈥檚 sufficient for filing. (Joseph, 7/18)

Health Industry

Mark Cuban Aims At A Temporary Fix For Penicillin Shortages, Via Imports

Cuban's Cost Plus Drug Company is working with the FDA to import and distribute penicillin temporarily to offset the shortage of Pfizer supplies. Humana, Ardent Health, Novartis, and more are also in health industry news.

Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drug Company said on Wednesday that it is working with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to import and distribute penicillin in the country temporarily. The online pharmacy, which offers low-cost common medications, will immediately import and distribute 1.2 million units of penicillin to mitigate the shortage of Pfizer's (PFE.N) Bicillin L-A. Last year in June, Pfizer had warned that the pediatric version of the drug, used to treat syphilis and other bacterial infections, could run out by the end of the quarter due to a spike in syphilis infections in adults. (7/17)

In other industry news 鈥

Humana announced Wednesday it had acquired a minority stake in Healthpilot, which offers consumers artificial intelligence-driven guidance in selecting Medicare plan options. Healthpilot focuses on Medicare Advantage plans, along with supplementary Medicare and Part D prescription drug plans. Humana said in a news release Healthpilot will remain payer-agnostic, meaning the tool will provide relevant suggestions to users regardless of carrier. (Turner, 7/17)

The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard is perhaps best known for the trailblazing work coming out of the labs of its core members; CRISPR tools like David Liu鈥檚 prime and base editors, Feng Zhang鈥檚 virus-like drug delivery particles, or Pardis Sabeti鈥檚 network of low-cost diagnostics designed to catch the next pandemic before it starts. But the largest of the institute鈥檚 operations isn鈥檛 a lab at all. (Molteni, 7/18)

Digital health companies interested in going public must convince potential investors that their companies will succeed where others have faltered. During the early 2020s venture capital funding boom, more than two dozen digital health companies that achieved "unicorn" valuations of more than $1 billion had initial public offerings. Many of those companies have struggled to achieve profitability and have laid off employees, sold lagging businesses, been taken private or filed for bankruptcy. (Turner, 7/18)

Healthcare provider Ardent Health said on Wednesday it has set the pricing of its initial public offering below its targeted range to raise around $192 million. The Nashville, Tennessee-based company which was aiming to price its offering between $20 and $22 apiece, sold about 12 million shares at $16 per share. The IPO values Ardent Health at about $2.3 billion. (7/18)

Swiss drugmaker Novartis (NOVN.S) raised its 2024 earnings guidance for the second time on Thursday, driven by a gain in prescriptions for drugs including heart failure treatment Entresto and arthritis drug Cosentyx. It said in a statement that full-year adjusted operating income is expected to grow by a "mid- to high teens" percentage, where it had previously seen a "low double-digit to mid-teens" percentage. (Burger, 7/18)

Wall Street鈥檚 reaction was swift Wednesday after Elevance Health said that the amount of care its Medicaid members are getting is outpacing what states are paying the insurer to treat those members. (Bannow, 7/17)

A prevention-focused co-founded by the head of a Stanford research lab is making an expensive bet with its latest fundraise: that it can build a better full-body scanner than medical device behemoths selling MRIs to health systems. (Ravindranath, 7/18)

Cassava Sciences is imploding 鈥 and as it crumbles, a dark, ugly corner of the Alzheimer鈥檚 disease world is being exposed and will hopefully get cleaned up. (Feuerstein, 7/17)

Activist investor Politan Capital has filed a lawsuit against medical device maker Masimo Corp (MASI.O), seeking to have the company hold its annual meeting as soon as possible. In the lawsuit, filed in a Delaware court, Politan also sought a declaration that Masimo will not reject Politan's nominees to the board. Politan has a near 9% stake in Masimo and has nominated two candidates to be elected to the company's five-member board. Only two board seats will be voted on this year. (7/17)

YesCare and its backers reached a $75 million settlement of hundreds of personal-injury lawsuits, paving the way to resolve a bankruptcy filed to manage the prison healthcare provider鈥檚 legal liabilities. The proposed settlement would compensate litigation plaintiffs and other creditors of YesCare through a chapter 11 plan for Tehum Care Services, a bankrupt former affiliate. Committees of tort claimants and unsecured creditors in Tehum鈥檚 bankruptcy support the proposed agreement, which requires court approval. (Matsuda, 7/17)

State Watch

Illinois Reports Its First West Nile Case This Year

In other news from across the country, Massachusetts House and Senate negotiators compromised on a gun bill that cracks down on "ghost guns;" two people die from heat-related causes in Baltimore City; extreme heat hits Phoenix, Sacramento, and Portland, Oregon; and more.

Illinois鈥 first human case of West Nile virus this year was identified in suburban Cook County, the state鈥檚 Department of Public Health announced Wednesday. The mosquito-borne illness typically causes fever, headaches, body aches, vomiting and diarrhea, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Atkins, 7/17)

Massachusetts House and Senate negotiators have released a compromise version of a sweeping gun bill that supporters say builds on the state鈥檚 existing gun laws, including a crackdown on difficult to trace 鈥済host guns,鈥 while safeguarding the rights of gun owners. The bill 鈥 which must be given final approval by both chambers before being sent to Gov. Maura Healey for her signature 鈥 is part of an effort by the state to respond to a 2022 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that citizens have a right to carry firearms in public for self-defense. (LeBlanc, 7/17)

In other news from across the country 鈥

In scorching Baltimore City last week two people died of heat-related causes. There have been nine heat-related deaths in Maryland in 2024, matching the total for 2023, according to the Maryland Department of Health. All nine victims were 45 or over, according to data from the department. (Mullan, 7/17)

We usually talk about summertime heat in terms of how hot the air is, but there鈥檚 another metric that matters: the temperatures of roads, sidewalks, buildings, parking lots and other outdoor surfaces. Hot surfaces can make the places people live and work more dangerous, and can increase the risk of contact burns. (Zhong and Rojanasakul, 7/17)

The infection Bill Berberich developed following his hip replacement surgery at Saint Luke鈥檚 Hospital of Kansas City a couple years ago has cost him plenty. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just been a long road trying to recover,鈥 he said, reflecting with his wife Barb Berberich on the last two years of their lives. (Pilling, 7/17)

Missouri Medicaid began covering teeth cleanings, and almost no other routine dental work, for adults a few years ago. But the bill for the dentist actually peering in your mouth to check teeth and gums went to the patient. While some dentists wrote off the cost of the dental exam, many patients just stayed away from the dental chair and the potential bills it represented. That changed July 1, when routine dental exams for adults were added to the state鈥檚 Medicaid coverage. (King, 7/18)

Also 鈥

Wistar Institute is investing $24 million to open a new center dedicated to researching how to equip the immune system to fight HIV by developing new treatment options, including potentially a vaccine. The HIV Cure and Viral Diseases Center will be located at 3675 Market St., marking the 130-year-old research institution鈥檚 first offices outside its Spruce Street headquarters in West Philadelphia. Wistar was founded in 1892 as the nation鈥檚 first independent biomedical research institution. It is designated by the National Cancer Institute as a cancer research institute, and also specializes in vaccine development and infectious disease. (Gantz, 7/17)

麻豆女优 Health News: Tennessee Agrees To Remove Sex Workers With HIV From Sex Offender Registry

The Tennessee government has agreed to begin scrubbing its sex offender registry of dozens of people who were convicted of prostitution while having HIV, reversing a practice that federal lawsuits have challenged as draconian and discriminatory. For more than three decades, Tennessee鈥檚 鈥渁ggravated prostitution鈥 laws have made prostitution a misdemeanor for most sex workers but a felony for those who are HIV-positive. (Kelman, 7/17)

麻豆女优 Health News: Montana鈥檚 Plan To Curb Opioid Overdoses Includes Vending Machines

Before she stopped using drugs for good, Cierra Coon estimates that she overdosed eight times in a span of two weeks in the fall of 2022. One of those times, the opioid overdose reversal drug naloxone helped save her life. She was riding in a car on the back roads of the Flathead Indian Reservation in western Montana when she lost consciousness. Someone in the car grabbed a small bottle of naloxone, sprayed it up her nose, and performed CPR until she came to. Coon said having quick access to the overdose reversal agent, also known by the brand name Narcan, was incredibly lucky. (Silvers, 7/18)

Health Policy Research

Research Roundup: H5N1 Vaccines; Memory Loss; Psilocybin; Mental Health

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

Though federal health officials are moving ahead with a plan to produce 4.8 million doses of H5N1 avian influenza vaccine that targets the clade (strain) circulating globally and infecting US dairy herds and some farm workers, older H5N1 vaccines in the Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) might be useful in a pinch. (Schnirring, 7/17)

Researchers have established new criteria for a memory-loss syndrome in older adults that specifically impacts the brain's limbic system. It can often be mistaken for Alzheimer's disease. (Mayo Clinic, 7/17)

Researchers report that psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, destabilizes a critical network of brain areas involved in introspective thinking. The findings provide a neurobiological explanation for the drug's mind-bending effects. (Washington University School of Medicine, 7/17)

A聽study聽of 7,800 teens aged 16 to 18 years in Norway ties stringent COVID-19 public health protocols and quarantine with mental distress, particularly among 16-year-olds and those with less-educated parents and a lower genetic susceptibility to depression. (Van Beusekom, 7/17)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Home Caregivers Deserve A Living Wage; Chicago's Emergency Medical Services Severely Lacking

Editorial writers tackle home health care, emergency medical services, AI in health care, and clinical trials.

Group homes that care for Texans with intellectual and developmental disabilities are state contractors, and it鈥檚 the Legislature that sets their Medicaid reimbursement rates. Last year, lawmakers raised caregivers鈥 minimum wage to $10.60 an hour from what was $8.11 hourly, but advocates say the average wage should be $15 an hour. The Legislature should revisit the reimbursement rate in the 2025 session. (7/17)

There is a serious long-standing crisis in the Chicago Fire Department鈥檚 Emergency Medical Services, and it has a simple solution. The city needs to make EMS a priority once and for all, and that not only means increasing ambulances, but also creating a Bureau of EMS within CFD under its own command. Chicago鈥檚 long-neglected investment in EMS has cost the city lives and income. (Paul Vallas, 7/17)

If data represents the next gold rush for health care, a vast treasure trove of it slips away every day. The increased enthusiasm for AI has led to significant investments in novel solutions for health care, with data coming from a variety of sources such as medical charts, imaging, literature, guidelines, and the like. A largely untapped source of valuable data is staring health care practitioners like myself right in the face: monitors that track vital signs. (Julio La Torre, 7/18)

Thousands of people volunteer for clinical research trials in the United States every year. They put their bodies on the line, often seeking benefits from experimental treatments because existing care is ineffective. For most clinical trials, independent institutional review boards (IRBs) are legally required to review the protocol before enrollment can begin. (Spencer Phillips Hey and Michael S. Wilkes, 7/18)

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