Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:
麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories
Is Housing Health Care? State Medicaid Programs Increasingly Say 鈥榊es鈥
States are using their Medicaid programs to offer poor and sick people housing services, such as paying six months鈥 rent or helping hunt for apartments. The trend comes in response to a growing homelessness epidemic, but experts caution this may not be the best use of limited health care money.
Political Cartoon: 'Chicken Soup on Ice?'
麻豆女优 Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Chicken Soup on Ice?'" by Norman Jung.
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:
Health Industry
Hospitals Are In Peril Left And Right
Mission Hospital has been officially informed by the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that it is in 鈥渋mmediate jeopardy鈥 related to deficiencies in care, according to an internal email obtained by聽Asheville Watchdog. The finding is the most severe sanction possible for a hospital and starts a 23-day clock for Mission to produce a plan for fixing the problems or risk losing its Medicare and Medicaid funding. (Jones, 2/6)
Western Wisconsin residents are on the verge of losing many of their local health care facilities, sending lawmakers into panic mode. Wisconsin Congressman Derrick Van Orden, R-Eau Claire, sent a letter to Democratic Gov. Tony Evers Monday to call for state and federal resources to cushion the blow from the upcoming closures of hospitals in Eau Claire and Chippewa Falls operated by the Hospital Sisters Health System's Sacred Heart (HSHS), and Prevea Health's 19 facilities across the Chippewa Valley. (Swanson, 2/5)
More than a half million Californians won鈥檛 need to find new doctors, change their health plans or pay higher out-of-network medical fees after hospital chain UC Health and insurer Anthem Blue Cross settled a dispute over a new contract. 鈥淯C Health has reached a fair agreement with Anthem Blue Cross that will allow UCSF Health physicians, hospitals and clinics to remain in Anthem鈥檚 provider network,鈥 the health care provider announced on Monday. (Cabanatuan, 2/5)
UCSF Health has confirmed that its $100 million deal to acquire two struggling San Francisco community hospitals is just weeks away from closing. ... UCSF Health officials say the intent is to bring diversified care choices to consumers by investing in two underused hospitals that will augment UCSF Health鈥檚 academic medical system with community-based services.聽(Ho and Waxmann, 2/5)
The Connecticut Office of Health Strategy has denied Nuvance Health鈥檚 application to terminate labor and delivery services at Sharon Hospital, according to a final decision published Monday. (Golvala, 2/5)
Colorado hospitals saw a significant dip in profits in 2022, according to a new report, confirming what scattered financial filings have previously hinted at. One state health official called the downturn an 鈥渁berration鈥 and said it shouldn鈥檛 be used by hospitals to justify substantial increases in prices, while the Colorado Hospital Association pushed back and said hospitals鈥 financial outlook remains dreary. (Ingold, 2/6)
Prospect Medical Holdings has agreed to sell Crozer Health to a nonprofit organization as part of a court-approved deal.聽The private equity company聽announced its plans to offload Crozer in October 2023. On Thursday, Delaware County Court of Common Pleas Judge Cheryl L. Austin ordered a 270-day pause in ongoing litigation against Prospect Medical Holdings while it finds a buyer. The court order also approves the terms set out in a letter of agreement signed by representatives from Prospect and the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office limiting purchasers to nonprofit corporations. (DeSilva, 2/5)
Also 鈥
Private Medicare just isn鈥檛 the gold mine it once was. Case in point: Cano Health, a company once valued at $4.4 billion, is now bankrupt. The prospect of bankruptcy had stalked the Miami-based primary care provider for well over a year before its Chapter 11 filing on Sunday. (Bannow, 2/5)
The financial decline of Steward Health Care may serve as a cautionary tale for health systems and other providers considering private equity investment.聽At its peak, the Dallas-based for-profit national hospital chain operated 37 hospitals across 10 states.聽But over the past year, Steward, whose private equity owner exited four years ago, has sold five Utah hospitals and closed or announced plans to close hospitals in Texas and Massachusetts. It also faces聽lawsuits from vendors and fraud allegations from the Justice Department. (Kacik, 2/5)
Hospitals intensely lobbying to stop a bipartisan measure that would trim their Medicare payments are emphasizing how the policy may hobble already struggling rural hospitals. The hospitals' argument is apparently resonating in the Senate 鈥 raising further doubts about whether Congress can overcome pressure from a politically powerful lobby to enact modest Medicare savings. (Sullivan, 2/5)
Home care providers are split on whether the Labor Department鈥檚 fines against the industry for wage violations could force more business closures or attract more workers to the high-demand sector. As more care moved into the home during the COVID-19 pandemic, the department鈥檚 Wage and Hour Division targeted home care and home health providers in 2021 for overtime infractions, worker misclassification and other violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act. (Eastabrook, 2/5)
Nonprofit health insurance company Medica has laid off 162 employees. The job cuts represent about 6% of Medica's workforce of roughly 3,000 staff members. Minnetonka, Minnesota-based Medica declined to provide details on specific positions affected, but a company spokesperson said Monday the layoffs were spread across its offices and staff received severance packages and outplacement assistance. (Berryman, 2/5)
GoFundMe started as a crowdfunding site for underwriting 鈥渋deas and dreams,鈥 and, as GoFundMe鈥檚 co-founders, Andrew Ballester and Brad Damphousse, once put it, 鈥渇or life鈥檚 important moments.鈥 In the early years, it funded honeymoon trips, graduation gifts, and church missions to overseas hospitals in need. Now GoFundMe has become a go-to for patients trying to escape medical-billing nightmares. One study found that, in 2020, the number of U.S. campaigns related to medical causes鈥攁bout 200,000鈥攚as 25 times higher than the number of such campaigns on the site in 2011. (Rosenthal, 2/5)
After Roe V. Wade
Publisher Retracts Studies On Abortion Pill As Supreme Court Case Looms
Major scientific studies on the potential harm of abortion pills were retracted on Monday by their publisher, just weeks before the Supreme Court is set to hear arguments on the availability of such drugs. Three studies, including two on the potential harms of the abortion pill just, were retracted on Monday by Sage Publishing, an independent academic publishing company. The retraction notice states that an independent review of the studies was conducted due to a single reader鈥檚 complaint that the studies included misleading data and that the authors were affiliated with a pro-life organization, the Charlotte Lozier Institute, presenting a conflict of interest.聽(Le Mahieu, 2/5)
Read the details 鈥
In other abortion news 鈥
Florida abortion rights groups are heading to the state Supreme Court this week as part of their effort to put abortion protections on the ballot in November.聽The court will hear arguments Wednesday about whether the ballot measure language meets state rules, the final hurdle to clear before the question can be put to voters. It needs to issue a ruling by April 1. 聽(Weixel, 2/6)
A South Carolina woman who traveled elsewhere for an abortion just days after reaching six weeks of pregnancy wants a court to affirm that the state鈥檚 ban on the procedure 鈥 when a 鈥渇etal heartbeat鈥 can be detected 鈥 should not take effect until later in a pregnancy. In a lawsuit filed in state circuit court Monday, Taylor Shelton and Planned Parenthood South Atlantic鈥檚 chief medical officer Dr. Katherine Farris argued that the Republican-led state Legislature provided two different definitions of 鈥渇etal heartbeat鈥 in its law restricting abortions. They said the correct interpretation is that the ban begins around nine weeks, and not six weeks as currently practiced. (Pollard, 2/5)
A series of wins for abortion rights supporters have energized Democrats around the country 鈥 but abortion access itself won't be on the Texas ballot in November. Why it matters: Texas remains a deeply red state, and even as Democratic activists and politicians see abortion rights as a winning issue, they won't be able to put the sort of potentially galvanizing referendum on the ballot in November that could drive voters 鈥 especially swing suburban voters 鈥 their way. (Price, 2/5)
Bill Bradley, a former three-term New Jersey senator and presidential candidate, has opened up about his personal experience with abortion, both in a new documentary about his life and while speaking to Political Theater Friday. In his new film 鈥淩olling Along,鈥 Bradley, who sought the presidential nomination in 2000, describes how, in the 1960s while playing for the New York Knicks, a woman he was dating became pregnant unintentionally. The woman, he said, opted to have an abortion 鈥 which was illegal and difficult to find at the time. (Raman, 2/5)
The claim: ..."This is, in fact, a health care crisis and there is nothing about this that is hypothetical,"聽Harris told the crowd. "Today in America, 1 in 3 women of reproductive age live in a state with an abortion ban." PolitiFact ruling: True. About 21.5 million women of reproductive age 鈥 15 to 49 鈥 live in states that ban abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. That鈥檚 about 29% of U.S. women in this age group. (Putterman, 2/5)
Medicaid
Florida Sues To Allow It To Kick Kids Off Public Health Insurance
Florida is suing the Biden administration over a new policy limiting when states can remove children from public health insurance programs. The lawsuit challenges the implementation of a law requiring states to let kids remain eligible for Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program for 12 straight months before reviewing their status, regardless of life changes that mean they may no longer qualify. (Goldman, 2/5)
A coalition of groups that push for health care equity has begun to gather petition signatures supporting a Florida constitutional amendment to expand Medicaid. Florida Decides Healthcare needs roughly 1 million signatures to get its proposal on the ballot in Florida in 2026. (Zaragovia, 2/5)
Also 鈥
Californians aiming to sign up for health insurance through the state鈥檚 Covered California marketplace have a little extra time, with the open enrollment deadline extended until Friday, officials said.聽Covered California extended the Jan. 31 deadline after seeing 鈥渞ecord-breaking enrollment nationally鈥 and high demand in the state for health insurance, officials announced last week. The new deadline to sign up for 2024 coverage is midnight聽Feb. 9, with coverage effective from聽Feb. 1.聽(Flores, 2/5)
After a months-long fight with Texas Medicaid over coverage of a gene therapy, Afghan refugees now have a chance to save their infant son. After initially balking, Texas officials have agreed to pay for the costly treatment, the boy鈥檚 family and his doctor told STAT. (Molteni, 2/5)
Centene reported fourth quarter profits of $45 million as membership and premium revenue grew thanks to a big increase in Obamacare coverage, the health insurer said Tuesday. Centene, which sells an array of government subsidized health insurance including individual commercial insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act known as Obamacare, said total managed care membership increased slightly to 27.47 million, compared to 27.06 million at the end of the fourth quarter of 2022. Centene鈥檚 enrollment in individual coverage under the Affordable Care Act, which Centene calls its 鈥渃ommercial marketplace鈥 business nearly doubled to 3.9 million members from 2 million a year ago. (apsen, 2/6)
On housing and internet 鈥
A major purge of Tennessee's Medicaid rolls almost 20 years ago led to a big increase in evictions, according to a new Health Affairs study that may hold lessons for the ongoing "unwinding" of pandemic-era coverage protections. More than 16.4 million Americans have been disenrolled from Medicaid since April, when the end of the COVID-19 emergency meant states were no longer barred from terminating coverage. (Goldman, 2/6)
麻豆女优 Health News: Is Housing Health Care? State Medicaid Programs Increasingly Say 鈥榊es鈥櫬
States are plowing billions of dollars into a high-stakes health care experiment that鈥檚 exploding around the country: using scarce public health insurance money to provide housing for the poorest and sickest Americans. California is going the biggest, pumping $12 billion into an ambitious Medicaid initiative largely to help homeless patients find housing, pay for it, and avoid eviction. Arizona is allocating $550 million in Medicaid funding primarily to cover six months of rent for homeless people. Oregon is spending more than $1 billion on services such as emergency rental assistance for patients facing homelessness. Even ruby-red Arkansas will dedicate nearly $100 million partly to house its neediest. (Hart, 2/6)
The Federal Communications Commission on Thursday will stop accepting new enrollments for a government broadband internet subsidy program, used by nearly 23 million American households, which is set to run out of money in months. "The enrollment freeze is necessary to slow the depletion of the remaining funding and reduce volatility in the program," FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel wrote Congress last week saying after that the commission will finalize the projected end date of the program absent new funding from lawmakers. (Shepardson, 2/5)
Covid-19
Some Republicans Don't Want US To Join WHO Pandemic Treaty
The World Health Organization is rushing to finalize a treaty to prevent and combat future pandemics, but some House Republicans say the U.S. should not be a part of the global accord, arguing that the health group is infringing on the rights of American taxpayers. They鈥檙e concerned that the treaty will result in U.S. taxpayer dollars going toward abortion. They鈥檙e also concerned about threats to U.S. intellectual property rights. The sentiment underscores a large and growing Republican mistrust in the international body. (Cohen, 2/5)
On covid misinformation 鈥
As social media sites were flooded with misleading posts about vaccine safety, mask effectiveness, Covid-19鈥檚 origins and federal shutdowns, Biden officials urged platforms to pull down posts, delete accounts, and amplify correct information. Now the Supreme Court could decide whether the government violated Americans鈥 First Amendment rights with those actions 鈥 and dictate a new era for what role, if any, officials can play in combating misinformation on social media. (Owermohle, 2/6)
There is no evidence to suggest that residual DNA fragments in mRNA COVID-19 vaccines pose a health risk raised in statements by Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo. Social media posts are sharing screenshots of a letter Ladapo wrote to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Dec. 6 asking if the agencies had done tests to see if DNA fragments in mRNA COVID vaccines might integrate into the genomes of vaccine recipients, potentially destabilizing chromosomes or causing cancer. (2/5)
More on the spread of covid 鈥
If you鈥檝e presented the same arm for every dose of a particular vaccine, you may want to reconsider. Alternating arms may produce a more powerful immune response, a new study suggests. The researchers studied responses to the first two doses of Covid-19 vaccines. Those who alternated arms showed a small increase in immunity over those who got both doses in the same arm. For individuals who respond poorly to vaccines because of age or health conditions, even a small boost may turn out to be significant, the researchers said. (Mandavilli, 2/6)
Close to all new COVID-19 cases in the United States are now being caused by the JN.1 variant, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says, with an estimated 93.1% of infections now blamed on the聽highly mutated strain.聽The CDC's latest biweekly estimate of the variant's spread was published Friday. It comes as key trends reflecting COVID-19's spread are now showing signs of slowing, following a peak over the winter holidays. (Tin, 2/5)
A new study finds that having even a mild case of COVID-19 could cause you to lose sleep.聽Insomnia has been associated with COVID among hospitalized patients, but a team of researchers in Vietnam wanted to know whether it also affected people with mild illness.聽They looked at more than a 1,000 adults who had COVID within the past six months, but did not need to be hospitalized. They found that 76% of them reported experiencing insomnia. (Marshall, 2/5)
On the spread of flu 鈥
After a few weeks of decline, some measures show that flu activity is starting to pick up again and respiratory virus levels remain high overall in the United States. During the week ending January 27, more than 82,000 people who visited an emergency department were diagnosed with influenza, according to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 鈥 an 8% bump, or about 6,000 more than the week before. The test positivity rate for flu also ticked up in the US overall. (McPhillips, 2/5)
In Arnold Monto鈥檚 ideal vision of this fall, the United States鈥 flu vaccines would be slated for some serious change鈥攂ooting a major ingredient that they鈥檝e consistently included since 2013. ... To include it again now, Monto, an epidemiologist and a flu expert at the University of Michigan, told me, would mean vaccinating people 鈥渁gainst something that doesn鈥檛 exist.鈥 That probably nonexistent something is Yamagata, a lineage of influenza B viruses that hasn鈥檛 been spotted by global surveyors since March of 2020, shortly after COVID mitigations plummeted flu transmission to record lows. (Wu, 2/5)
Outbreaks and Health Threats
Experts: Don't Forget, Measles Is Actually Dangerous
As outbreaks of measles spread throughout the world, anti-vaccine activists aren鈥檛 just urging people not to get vaccinated 鈥 they鈥檙e taking a page from a well-worn playbook, falsely downplaying the dangers from the highly contagious respiratory disease. ... But national health agencies warn the fear of measles is well-founded. ... For every 1,000 cases of聽 measles, about 200 children may be hospitalized, 50 may get pneumonia, one child may develop brain swelling along with deafness or disability, and between one and three may die.聽(Zadrozny, 2/5)
Researchers show that the passage of a bill in New York state that banned nonmedical vaccine exemptions for school entry was associated with an increase in vaccine uptake outside of New York City, according to a study late last week in JAMA Network Open. The bill, Senate Bill 2994A, was passed by state lawmakers in June 2019 after two large measles outbreaks in the state almost removed the country's measles elimination status. The bill was effective immediately and did not excuse students with existing nonmedical exemptions from compliance. (Soucheray, 2/5)
Health officials in Ohio are warning of a possible measles exposure on Monday after a person traveled through the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport聽over a weekend last month. ... "ODH is working with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other state and local health officials to identify people who might have been exposed, including contacting potentially exposed passengers on specific flights," the agency said. (Sorace, 2/5)
UK health services are battling an outbreak of measles 鈥 causing alarm in a nation that had eliminated the disease in 2017. On January 19, the UK Health Security Agency, the public-health authority, declared a national incident over rising cases of measles. The agency has logged more than 300 cases in England since October 1. A decline in uptake of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine, which is given in two doses, during the COVID-19 pandemic has spurred the spread of the disease across England and the rest of Europe, while small outbreaks have occurred in a handful of US states. (Wong, 1/31)
In other outbreaks 鈥
Rio de Janeiro on Monday has declared a public health emergency because of an outbreak of mosquito-borne dengue fever, the city announced Monday, just days before Carnival celebrations kick off across Brazil. The outbreak wasn鈥檛 expected to derail Carnival, which officially starts Friday evening and runs until Feb. 14, but it has prompted a slew of special measures by the city in hopes of containing the illness. (Hughes, 2/5)
Government Policy
CMS To Tighten Rule For Organ Donations Earmarked For Research
The U.S. government is moving to tighten a regulation for the collection of human pancreases for research after a Senate committee and others complained the rule was being exploited by groups that also procure kidneys, hearts, livers and other organs for transplant. A rule issued in 2020 allows the nation鈥檚 56 nonprofit organ procurement organizations to collect human pancreases for research and count them toward benchmarks they must meet so they can retain government certification to operate. (Bernstein, 2/5)
On Medicare 鈥
Two Republican lawmakers who introduced legislation to water down the Inflation Reduction Act鈥檚 Medicare drug price negotiation program managed to find themselves a Democratic co-sponsor 鈥 even though every single Democrat in Congress in 2022 voted for the legislation. (Cohrs, 2/5)
Medicare Advantage insurers are likely to respond to a modest rate cut next year by adjusting premiums, benefits, provider reimbursements and other factors to emphasize profitability, financial analysts said. Although the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has downplayed the effects of its proposed 0.16% reduction in the Medicare Advantage benchmark rate for 2025, the rule issued last Wednesday is the latest in a string of policies that has Medicare insurers and their investors wary about the program. (Tepper, 2/6)
On the funeral industry's deal with the FTC 鈥
Unethical funeral homes have exploited grieving customers for decades. What consumers don鈥檛 know is that many of the industry鈥檚 bad actors have been hidden from the public thanks to a sweetheart deal struck between the Federal Trade Commission and the funeral industry more than 25 years ago. In that deal, unlike any known to exist between the FTC and any other industry, the names of funeral homes that violate rules requiring price transparency and fair practices aren鈥檛 made public to consumers, as long as they complete a virtual remedial program run by the funeral industry鈥檚 own lobbying group.聽 (Mosbergen, 2/5)
Pharmaceuticals
Pharmacies Finding It Hard To Recruit Next Generation Of Pharmacists
Pharmacy retail chains staking their future on expanding the health care services they offer are running into a big problem: It's getting harder to draw the next generation of pharmacists amid turmoil in the industry. (Reed, 2/6)
Also 鈥
More than half of the injector-pen patents for several widely used diabetes treatments 鈥 including Ozempic and Mounjaro 鈥 do not mention several important characteristics that should otherwise prevent them from being listed in a key federal registry, according to a new analysis. As a result, the researchers contend the patents may be unfairly used to preclude competition from companies that may want to market lower-cost generic products. (Silverman, 2/5)
Parents who say they overpaid for Abbott Laboratories' baby formula before one of its plants was shuttered for unsanitary conditions urged a federal appeals court on Monday to revive their lawsuit against the company. Kiley Grombacher of Bradley Grombacher, a lawyer for the parents, told a three-judge panel of the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that her clients would not have bought, or would have paid less, for Similac and other Abbott brands if they had known of the safety risks that led to the plant shutdown and a subsequent recall. (Pierson, 2/5)
Johnson & Johnson was sued by an employee who said the company鈥檚 health plan wasted workers鈥 money by paying inflated prices for prescription drugs. In one instance, the health plan agreed to pay more than $10,000 for a drug to treat multiple sclerosis, a chronic nerve condition, that鈥檚 available for as little as $40 at retail pharmacies, according to the suit filed Monday in federal court in Camden, New Jersey. (Tozzi and Dolmetsch, 2/5)
A U.S. appeals court on Monday refused to dismiss a Georgia doctor's lawsuit claiming that Bayer AG's Roundup weedkiller caused cancer, the latest setback in the German company's efforts to fend off thousands of similar cases carrying potentially billions of dollars in liability. A three-judge panel of the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Bayer's argument that federal regulators' approval of Roundup shielded the company from being sued under state law for failing to warn consumers of the product's risks. Several other appeals courts had previously reached the same conclusion in similar lawsuits. (Pierson, 2/5)
On weight loss drugs 鈥
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) website showed that three higher doses of Eli Lilly's tab diabetes drug, Mounjaro, would be available only in limited amounts through early March 2024, due to increased demand. According to the health regulator's website, 10, 12.5 and 15 milligram doses of the injection will have limited availability, while lower doses of Mounjaro were shown to be available. (2/5)
Sixteen billion dollars is a lot of money. But Monday鈥檚 announcement that the parent company of Novo Nordisk, the maker of the weight loss drug Wegovy, plans to buy Catalent, a company to which drugmakers outsource manufacturing, is probably even more important than it seems. (Herper, 2/5)
Last Thursday, the state decided not to pay for it any longer. Celebrities and people like Elon Musk who can afford $1,000 a month for Ozempic and Wegovy can still get them. However, a nurse in North Carolina told The New York Times that finding Wegovy is like winning the lottery. ... Injectible drugs like Ozempic help about half of users lose significant amounts of weight without making lifestyle changes, Caplan says. Like Viagra, the drugs put a Band-Aid over an underlying problem, he says. (Young, Miller-Medzon, and Hagan, 2/5)
Lifestyle and Health
Studies Document Health Impact Of Police Violence On Black Americans
The effect of police violence on Black Americans is tracked in two new studies, with one tying police-involved deaths to sleep disturbances and the other finding a racial gap in injuries involving police use of Tasers. The health effects of police violence on Black people 鈥渘eed to be documented as a critical first step to reduce these harms,鈥 three editors of JAMA Internal Medicine wrote in an editorial published Monday with the studies. (Johnson, 2/5)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
In recent years, there's been growing interest in psilocybin, the psychoactive ingredient in "magic mushrooms" or "shrooms" as a potentially beneficial therapy for mental health conditions. At the same time, drug busts of mushrooms went way up between 2017 and 2022, and the amount of the psychedelic substance seized by law enforcement more than tripled, according to a new study. "What I think the results indicate is that shroom availability has likely been increasing," says Joseph Palamar, an epidemiologist at NYU Langone Health and the main author of the new study published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence. (Chatterjee, 2/6)
Living a healthy lifestyle with a focus on a nutritious diet, regular exercise, minimum alcohol consumption and other healthy habits can help keep your brain sharp into old age, doctors say. But what if your brain already has signs of beta amyloid or tau 鈥 two of the hallmark signs of Alzheimer鈥檚 and other brain pathologies? Will a healthy lifestyle still protect you from cognitive decline? (LaMotte, 2/5)
Mental health practitioners are hiking, camping and braving the elements with their clients 鈥 all in an effort to help them connect with the Earth, and with themselves. (Caron, 2/5)
First responders and law enforcement agents have for decades used simulations to train for mass casualty events such as shootings or natural disasters, especially after the Columbine school shooting in 1999. But in recent years, as mass shootings have become increasingly common in the United States, the simulations have become more and more realistic. Now they feature visceral sound effects, trained actors, pyrotechnics and even virtual reality. The trainings also have become more and more expensive for public agencies. (Vasilogambros, 2/5)
In celebrity news 鈥
Country singer Toby Keith, known for hits such as 鈥淩ed Solo Cup鈥 and 鈥淪hould Have Been a Cowboy,鈥 has died. He was 62. The singer-songwriter 鈥減assed peacefully鈥 on Monday night, his family shared in a statement posted on X (formerly Twitter). Keith was diagnosed with stomach cancer in 2022. (Walcott, 2/6)
Bob Beckwith, the former New York City firefighter who famously stood alongside President George W. Bush atop a charred fire truck in the rubble of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, has died, according to聽the union representing New York firefighters聽and聽former US Rep. Peter King. He was 91. The cause of Beckwith鈥檚 death was not immediately released. He had malignant skin cancer, along with other health problems, he told Focus on the Family聽last year. (Yan and Rose, 2/5)
A patient checks into the hospital for a routine procedure to treat an enlarged prostate. And, unexpectedly, a test done in the hospital 鈥 perhaps a blood test or an X-ray or an examination of the urethra and the bladder 鈥 finds a cancer. Apparently, something like that happened to King Charles III. When the British monarch was treated for an enlarged prostate in January, doctors found a cancer that the palace said is not prostate cancer. Charles started treatment Monday. The palace did not disclose what had led to the king鈥檚 diagnosis. (Kolata, 2/6)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: An Economist Is Changing The Organ Transplant Process; Can We Fix Inadequate Mental Health Care?
Roth shared the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2012 for work he did on practical applications of game theory, including a brilliant system for increasing matches between kidney donors and recipients. He has also worked on better matching of medical students to hospital residencies, children to schools in New York City and Boston and newly minted Ph.D. economists to starting jobs at universities. (Peter Coy, 2/5)
Kids needing mental health treatment in Minnesota wait for days in emergency rooms. When kids and adults do get care, the providers are paid about 74% of what the government would pay for Medicaid patients. Woefully inadequate. (2/4)
With Donald Trump seemingly unstoppable in his bid for the Republican presidential nomination, the law professor Mary Ziegler considers what a second Trump term would mean for abortion rights. (Mary Ziegler, 2/6)
Missouri Gov. Mike Parson touted his accomplishments in his recent State of the State address. Huh? Of what is he so proud? Well, for one, it鈥檚 been six years since he took over after Eric Greitens resigned. OK, that is a good thing. That guy Greitens is bad news wherever he goes. However, the rest is not so great. For example, Parson suggested that he prevented 8,000 abortions in the state. Ha! Joke鈥檚 on him, as most of those desperate women, if they could afford it, went to neighboring states of Kansas and Illinois to get the health care they needed. Because abortion is health care. (Sue Homberg, 2/6)
Millions of Americans鈥 bedtime routine includes wearing a mask attached to a respiratory machine that pushes air into their lungs, supporting their breathing during sleep. These airway pressure machines, known as CPAP or BiPAP depending on their design, are sophisticated medical devices that have been used for decades by patients with sleep disorders like obstructive sleep apnea. In 2021, Philips Respironics recalled more than 15 million of these machines after it was revealed that internal foam components were degrading into debris and other particulates that propelled into patients鈥 lungs, exposing them to potentially toxic material. (Kushal T. Kadakia, Joseph S. Ross, and Vinay K. Rathi, 2/6)