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Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Aug 21 2024

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 3

  • Patient Underwent One Surgery but Was Billed for Two. Even After Being Sued, She Refused To Pay.
  • Cautious Optimism in San Francisco as New Cases of HIV in Latinos Decrease
  • Listen to the Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

Note To Readers

Elections 2

  • Abortion Measures Make The Ballots In Arizona, Montana
  • Democratic Convention: Abortion, IVF At Top Of Speakers' Minds On Day 2

Pharmaceuticals 2

  • Zepbound Appears To Dramatically Lower Risk Of Developing Diabetes
  • J&J Treatment For Most Common Type Of Lung Cancer Wins FDA Approval

Health Industry 1

  • FTC Lacks The Authority To Ban Noncompete Deals, Federal Judge Rules

State Watch 1

  • New Jersey Forgives $100M In Medical Debt For Nearly 50,000 People

Lifestyle and Health 1

  • As Cancer Afflicts Younger Generations, Employers Wary Of Expenses Ahead

Outbreaks and Health Threats 1

  • Mpox Cases Suspected In Travelers To Argentina And Thailand

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Aging Doesn't Have To Mean Losing Cognitive Function; Cancer Shouldn't Bankrupt People

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

Patient Underwent One Surgery but Was Billed for Two. Even After Being Sued, She Refused To Pay.

A collection agency sought court authority to garnish a patient鈥檚 wages to pay a disputed surgery bill. But after the patient showed up in court to argue the bill was bogus, the judge declined to let the bill collector seize her money. ( Tony Leys , 8/21 )

Cautious Optimism in San Francisco as New Cases of HIV in Latinos Decrease

New HIV diagnoses have decreased among Latinos in San Francisco, potentially marking the first time in five years that the group hasn鈥檛 accounted for the largest number of new cases. Public health experts express cautious optimism, but outreach workers warn that many Latinos still struggle to find testing and treatment. ( Vanessa G. S谩nchez , 8/21 )

Listen to the Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

鈥淗ealth Minute鈥 brings original health care and health policy reporting from the 麻豆女优 Health News newsroom to the airwaves each week. ( 1/7 )

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Here's today's health policy haiku:

CUTTING BACK SODIUM

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Try front-of-pack labeling.
That step could save lives.

鈥 Micki Jackson

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Note To Readers

麻豆女优 Health News will host a full day of panels at the 2024 Texas Tribune Festival in Austin, Texas, on Sept. 6. Check out the program and聽.

Summaries Of The News:

Elections

Abortion Measures Make The Ballots In Arizona, Montana

Protections of abortion rights until fetal viability in the state constitutions of both states will be decided by voters this November after separate decisions by the Arizona Supreme Court and the Montana Secretary of State.

Voters in Arizona and Montana will be able to decide in November whether they want to protect the right to an abortion in their state constitutions. The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a 200-word summary that abortion advocates used to collect signatures for a ballot measure is valid, clearing the way for the issue to remain on the ballot. Montana Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen on Tuesday certified Montana鈥檚 constitutional initiative for the November ballot. Under both measures, abortions would be allowed until fetal viability 鈥 the point at which a fetus could survive outside the womb, typically around 24 weeks. (Govindarao and Hanson, 8/21)

More abortion updates 鈥

Former President Donald Trump gave his clearest answer to date on the federal regulation of abortion pills, and it鈥檚 not what conservatives wanted to hear. After months of avoiding specifics, Trump told CBS News on Monday that he would not use the 150-year-old Comstock Act to ban mail delivery of the drugs if elected in November, adding: 鈥淭he federal government should have nothing to do with this issue.鈥 Many prominent conservatives and anti-abortion activists were outraged by the remark, calling it 鈥渘onsensical鈥 and 鈥渃owardly,鈥 and warning that it could dampen turnout and enthusiasm on the right heading into a close election. (Ollstein, 8/20)

Vice President Harris on Tuesday ripped former President Trump for comments in a new interview in which he said he had no regrets about the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade. Harris rallied thousands of supporters in Milwaukee, roughly 90 miles up the road from the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, where she seized on comments Trump made to CBS News a day earlier. 鈥淵esterday, when he was asked if he had any regrets about ending Roe v. Wade, Donald Trump 鈥 without even a moment鈥檚 hesitation, you would think he would reflect on it for a second 鈥 said no. No regrets,鈥 Harris said. Trump told CBS News the issue of abortion should be handled by the states and suggested people were 鈥渧ery happy about it.鈥 (Samuels, 8/20)

In other election news 鈥

After he talked about his family's fertility struggles on the campaign trail, Democratic vice presidential nominee聽Tim Walz is facing criticism from his opponent for not accurately having identified the treatment his wife, Gwen, received. The Republican vice presidential nominee, Sen. JD Vance, of Ohio, accused Walz on Tuesday of lying about having conceived his children via in vitro fertilization. Vance seemed to be responding to an article in Glamour magazine, in which Gwen Walz said she had undergone a fertility treatment called intrauterine insemination. (Bendix, 8/21)

Democrats are hoping to wrestle veteran voters away from Republicans this year, and plan to highlight efforts to expand health care access in campaigns for some key seats.聽Central to the party鈥檚 argument is the 2022 law expanding access to health care for veterans exposed to toxins while serving overseas. That legislation has led to a sharp increase in demand at the Department of Veterans Affairs, with over 412,000 new veterans enrolled over the past year. That high level of interest has even led to a VA budget shortfall that lawmakers will be scrambling to fill in September. (Quigley, 8/20)

Democratic Convention: Abortion, IVF At Top Of Speakers' Minds On Day 2

Kate Cox, who made headlines after being forced to leave Texas to have an abortion, said during the Texas roll call that she is pregnant again. Plus, former President Barack Obama cracks a joke about the name of Obamacare.

Kate Cox, the Texas woman who fled the state to receive an abortion, made a brief appearance during the Democratic National Convention鈥檚 ceremonial roll call Tuesday to voice her support for Vice President Harris and warn of former President Trump鈥檚 risk to abortion rights. 鈥淚鈥檓 Kate Cox and I love being a mom. I have two beautiful children, and my husband and I have always wanted a third but when I got pregnant, doctors told us our baby would never survive, and if I didn鈥檛 need an abortion, it would put a future pregnancy at risk,鈥 Cox said during the roll call for Texas Tuesday night. 鈥淏ut Trump didn鈥檛 care and because of his abortion bans and I had to flee my home,鈥 she continued. 鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing pro family about abortion bans. There鈥檚 nothing pro-life about letting women suffer and even die today because I found a way to access abortion care.鈥 (Nazzaro, 8/20)

Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth has been public about her fertility struggles and her decision to conceive her two daughters through in vitro fertilization. But on Tuesday night, Duckworth, a former Army helicopter pilot who lost both legs in a 2004 rocket-propelled grenade attack in Iraq, put it in the starkest of terms as she sought to frame the far-reaching consequences of the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade two years ago. "My struggle with infertility was more painful than any wound I earned on the battle field," Duckworth said. (Messerly, 8/20)

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham knows health care. She's a former state health secretary, after all, whose name was once floated as a potential Health and Human Services secretary under Joe Biden. Now, she's using her credentials to boost Vice President Kamala Harris' profile on health care issues. Lujan Grisham said on the convention floor Tuesday evening that Harris took on drug companies that "jacked up prices" and hospitals that "overcharged patients," voted "hell no" on repealing the Affordable Care Act and cast the tie-breaking vote on legislation that capped insulin costs at $35 for Medicare beneficiaries. (Messerly, 8/20)

Former President Barack Obama spent much of his Tuesday remarks talking up the reasons Kamala Harris should win. But he did take a moment to remind Democrats gathered in the United Center about his signature domestic achievement: the Affordable Care Act. 鈥淲e should all be proud of the enormous progress that we've made through the Affordable Care Act providing millions of people access to affordable coverage, protecting millions more from unscrupulous insurance practices and notice,鈥 Obama said. Then he pointed out it's no longer referred to by its old nickname: 鈥淚鈥檝e noticed, by the way, that since it's become popular, they don't call it Obamacare no more.鈥 (Booker, 8/20)

Also 鈥

Messaging about abortion is playing a key role in much of the programming at the Democratic National Convention this week, and it particularly resonates with young people, women of color and women in general 鈥 including Republicans, said Jodi Hicks, chief executive officer and president of Planned Parenthood California. 鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely top of mind for folks. It鈥檚 a motivating issue, more importantly,鈥 Hicks said. 鈥淭hat ability to be able to be the full person that you want to be, have rights to have a family how you want 鈥 that鈥檚 not partisan.鈥 (Mehta and Pinho, 8/20)

Pro-life groups countered Planned Parenthood's mobile abortion clinic Tuesday morning by staging a protest against its services and presenting an alternative van equipped with an ultrasound machine and abortion pill reversal medication. John Mize, CEO of Americans United for Life, was one of the pro-life individuals outside the clinic just a few blocks away from the Democratic National Convention (DNC), attempting to talk to women going into the Planned Parenthood van about their options.聽(Joseph, 8/20)

Pharmaceuticals

Zepbound Appears To Dramatically Lower Risk Of Developing Diabetes

Eli Lilly says that its Phase 3 trial data show that people with prediabetes who took the company's obesity drug had a 93% lower risk of progressing to diabetes as opposed to the people in the study who took the placebo.

Eli Lilly鈥檚 obesity drug Zepbound significantly cut the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, showing the benefits of long-term use of the blockbuster therapy. In a Phase 3 trial that lasted over three years, people with pre-diabetes taking Zepbound had a 93% lower risk of progressing to diabetes compared with people on placebo, Lilly said Tuesday. The company did not report absolute risk rates. (Chen, 8/20)

Related news about weight loss drugs 鈥

A new study that found evidence of a higher rate of suicidal thoughts among patients taking Novo Nordisk A/S鈥檚 popular weight-loss and diabetes drugs is adding to a debate among doctors about the drugs鈥 safety. The study published Tuesday in JAMA Network Open is the first to mine the World Health Organization鈥檚 global database of suspected drug side effects for reports of suicidal thinking in patients who have taken the drugs. (Kresge, 8/20)

Eli Lilly & Co. is using its runaway success in obesity as a bridge into another lucrative area of medicine: immunology. This fall, the company will begin recruiting for trials to test its popular weight-loss shot Zepbound with psoriasis drug Taltz to see if the combination boosts effectiveness, Chief Scientific Officer Daniel Skovronsky said. The Indianapolis-based drugmaker is also exploring combination studies with Zepbound in inflammatory bowel disease, another immune disorder. (Muller, 8/20)

Employers are bracing for the largest surge in healthcare costs in more than a decade as pharmacy spending is expected to continue accelerating next year. Growing demand for pricey medications, including glucagon-like peptide-1 agonists, cancer treatments, and cell and gene therapies, has employers budgeting for a 7.8% increase in healthcare costs in 2025, according to the Business Group on Health鈥檚 annual survey, published Tuesday. (Berryman, 8/20)

Other news about diabetes 鈥

For sausage, salami and steak lovers, the news has not been good. Scientists have been consistently finding links between red and processed meat consumption and heart disease, some types of cancer and earlier death. And now, two recent studies have added to the growing body of evidence that a meat-heavy diet may increase the risk of Type 2 diabetes. (Callahan, 8/20)

J&J Treatment For Most Common Type Of Lung Cancer Wins FDA Approval

The treatment for non-small cell lung cancer is a non-chemotherapy combination of J&J's cancer drug Rybrevant and existing drug lazertinib. Meanwhile, a judge ruled that lawsuits claiming Tylenol causes ADHD in children of mothers who took the drug in pregnancy can't proceed.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday approved Johnson & Johnson's chemotherapy-free combination treatment for a type of non-small cell lung cancer, setting up a challenge for AstraZeneca's blockbuster drug Tagrisso. The approval allows the use of the cancer drug, Rybrevant, in combination with J&J's existing drug, lazertinib, as a first-line treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with a mutated form of a gene called EGFR. NSCLC is the most common type of lung cancer. (Satija and Santhosh, 8/20)

Plaintiffs claiming that Kenvue's popular painkiller Tylenol causes attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in the children of mothers who took it while pregnant have lost a last ditch bid to revive their claims after a judge rejected their last remaining expert witness. (Pierson, 8/20)

Johnson & Johnson said on Tuesday it would buy privately held V-Wave for up to $1.7 billion, the healthcare conglomerate's second deal this year aimed at boosting its presence in the market for heart disease devices. J&J said it will pay $600 million upfront, with potential payments of up to $1.1 billion contingent on regulatory and commercial milestones. (8/20)

Next week, the biopharma world will see eagerly awaited results from a trial that could shape care for patients with an increasingly common heart condition 鈥 and determine which companies stand to reap billions.聽(Chen, Joseph and Feuerstein, 8/20)

A bipartisan group of House lawmakers is scrutinizing hundreds of clinical trials they say U.S. drug companies conducted with medical centers connected to China's military over the last decade. (Goldman, 8/21)

Health Industry

FTC Lacks The Authority To Ban Noncompete Deals, Federal Judge Rules

Many health care organizations include noncompete agreements in job contracts, Modern Healthcare reminds us. Also in industry news: electronic health record company Epic; Steward Health; Baptist Health and Florida Blue; Molina Healthcare; and more.

The Federal Trade Commission does not have authority to enact its ban on noncompete agreements, a federal judge ruled Tuesday. Judge Ada Brown wrote the FTC's near-total ban is "unreasonably overbroad without a reasonable explanation," siding with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and tax firm Ryan LLC. Many healthcare organizations include noncompete agreements in employment contracts. (Hudson, 8/20)

Health IT news 鈥

Epic is planning to deepen its relationships with health insurance companies, the electronic health record giant said at its annual user group meeting Tuesday. The EHR company is working with health systems and large insurers such as CVS Health subsidiary Aetna, Elevance Health and multiple Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans to streamline prior authorization requests and ease provider appeals to payers, Epic founder and CEO Judy Faulkner said during a keynote address. (Turner, 8/20)

Hospital supply chain software company Clarium raised $10.5 million in a funding round, the startup said Tuesday. The round was led by venture capital firm General Catalyst, with backing from the venture arms of Oakland, California-based Kaiser Permanente and Houston-based Texas Medical Center. New Haven, Connecticut-based Yale New Haven Health also joined the round. Other investors included venture capital firms AlleyCorp, 1984 Ventures and Alumni Ventures. (Perna, 8/20)

More health care industry news 鈥

Steward Health Care filed a complaint Monday alleging Medical Properties Trust is interfering in its efforts to sell off assets, which the landlord denies. In Monday's complaint, Steward alleged Medical Properties Trust has undermined the bankruptcy sales process by talking to bidders without Steward's consent and pressuring bidders to allocate too much value to the landlord's real estate. (Hudson, 8/20)

A struggle between Northeast Florida鈥檚 largest health care system and its largest health insurance provider has left tens of thousands of people with uncertainty about their future health care. The three-year hospital-insurer agreement between Baptist Health and Florida Blue will expire Sept. 30. If the two do not come to a new agreement, as many as 50,000 people will be forced to find medical solutions or pay for out-of-network costs to use certain Baptist facilities, physicians or services. (Brown, 8/20)

All four candidates who pushed for "medical freedom" platforms and were critical of Sarasota Memorial Hospital have lost to Republican opponents in a primary race for the county's public hospital board seats on Tuesday. (Colombini, 8/20)

Joseph Zubretsky will remain at the helm for Molina Healthcare through at least 2027, the health insurance company announced in a news release Tuesday. The executive retains the same compensation package except for the addition of a stock grant that would vest at the close of 2027, Molina Healthcare disclosed in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Tuesday. (DeSilva, 8/20)

Home health services company Interim HealthCare has tapped Rexanne Domico as its president and chief operating officer, effective immediately. Interim HealthCare provides home health, non-medical home care, hospice and medical staffing services across 42 states. Domico will oversee operations of Interim鈥檚 more than 300 franchise locations and its clinical, quality, operations excellence, and growth and development divisions, a company spokesperson said Tuesday. (Eastabrook, 8/20)

Two years ago, President Joe Biden set out to tackle chronic safety and quality problems in the nursing home sector. Whether he succeeded won't be known until after he exits the White House. The nursing home campaign launched at the State of the Union address in 2022, in the aftermath of devastation that COVID-19 wrought on nursing homes. ... Considering these and other efforts, Biden oversaw the most consequential period in nursing home regulation since President Ronald Reagan enacted the Nursing Home Reform Act of 1987, said David Grabowski, a health policy professor at Harvard Medical School. (Early, 8/20)

麻豆女优 Health News: Patient Underwent One Surgery But Was Billed For Two. Even After Being Sued, She Refused To Pay

Jamie Holmes says a surgery center tried to make her pay for two operations after she underwent only one. She refused to buckle, even after a collection agency sued her last winter. Holmes, who lives in northwestern Washington state, had surgery in 2019 to have her fallopian tubes tied, a permanent birth-control procedure that her insurance company agreed ahead of time to cover. (Leys, 8/21)

State Watch

New Jersey Forgives $100M In Medical Debt For Nearly 50,000 People

The initiative, announced Tuesday by Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, will be one of the largest efforts by a state to help people unable to pay medical bills. Also in the news: how Maine's deadliest shooting could have been averted; another measles case in Georgia; and more.

Nearly 50,000 people in New Jersey will have $100 million in medical debt erased, Governor Phil Murphy said on Tuesday, in one of the largest cases of a state providing direct relief to people unable to pay medical bills. Murphy allocated $550,000 in federal American Rescue Plan funds and partnered with Undue Medical Debt, a non-profit that buys unpaid medical bills from hospitals at a discount, to execute the one-time debt abolishment. (Cui, 8/20)

Other health news from Maine, Montana, and Georgia 鈥

Both the Army Reserve and police missed opportunities to intervene in a gunman鈥檚 psychiatric crisis and initiate steps to seize weapons from the spiraling reservist responsible for the deadliest shootings in Maine history, according to the final report released Tuesday by a special commission created to investigate the attacks, which killed 18 people. The independent commission reiterated its earlier conclusion that Maine law enforcement officers had authority under the state鈥檚 yellow flag law, but didn鈥檛 use it, to seize reservist Robert Card鈥檚 guns and put him in protective custody weeks before the shootings. The 215-page report also pointed out that no one used New York鈥檚 red flag law to initiate steps to seize the gunman鈥檚 weapons when he was hospitalized last summer, even though the law had been used on non-New York residents before. (Whittle and Sharp, 8/20)

A health clinic in a Montana town that was polluted with deadly asbestos will ask a federal appeals court on Wednesday to reverse almost $6 million in fines and penalties after a jury determined it submitted hundreds of false claims on behalf of patients. The jury verdict came last year in a lawsuit brought by Texas-based BNSF Railway, which separately has been found liable over contamination in Libby, Montana, that鈥檚 sickened or killed thousands of people. Asbestos-tainted vermiculite was mined from a nearby mountain and shipped through the 3,000-person town by rail over decades. (Brown, 8/21)

The Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) yesterday reported a measles infection in an Atlanta resident who wasn't fully vaccinated, marking the state's fifth case of the year, according to a statement. The DPH said the patient was exposed to the virus during international travel, adding that it is working to identify people who had contact with the patient during the infectious period. (Schnirring, 8/20)

From California 鈥

Nearly $1 billion allocated for regional agencies that purchase supportive services for Californians with developmental disabilities went unspent in a recent year and was ultimately returned to the state, even as some disabled people and their families said they needed more help. California provides assistance to people with autism and other developmental disabilities through a system of nonprofits called regional centers, which are contracted with the California Department of Developmental Services. (Alpert Reyes, 8/20)

California in 2023 reported a record-high number of valley fever cases 鈥 a potentially debilitating infection caused by inhaling fungal spores in dirt or dust 鈥 and 2024 is on track to surpass that, state health officials said Tuesday. (Ho, 8/20)

A federal prison inmate and two other people were charged Tuesday with conspiring to mail drugs to a penitentiary in California where a mailroom supervisor died this month after opening a letter that prosecutors said was laced with fentanyl and other substances. According to prosecutors, Jamar Jones, a prisoner at the U.S. Penitentiary in Atwater, California, plotted with Stephanie Ferreira, of Evansville, Indiana, and Jermen Rudd III of Wentzville, Missouri, to send him drugs that he could sell at the prison. They disguised the shipment as 鈥渓egal mail鈥 from a law office, investigators said. (Sisak, 8/20)

麻豆女优 Health News: Cautious Optimism In San Francisco As New Cases Of HIV In Latinos Decrease

For years, Latinos represented the biggest share of new HIV cases in this city, but testing data suggests the tide may be turning. The number of Latinos newly testing positive for HIV dropped 46% from 2022 to 2023, according to a preliminary report released in July by the San Francisco Department of Public Health. The decrease could mark the first time in five years that Latinos haven鈥檛 accounted for the largest number of new cases, leading to cautious optimism that the millions of dollars the city has spent to remedy the troubling disparity is working. (S谩nchez, 8/21)

Lifestyle and Health

As Cancer Afflicts Younger Generations, Employers Wary Of Expenses Ahead

In terms of health care costs, catastrophic claims and specialty medications are driving up increases, a survey has found. Meanwhile, in a study conducted during the covid pandemic, researchers found that playing video games does indeed have health benefits.

Rising cancer rates among younger workers are a new factor clouding employers' health cost outlook, per a major benefits survey released Tuesday. Cancer was the most reported condition driving up health care costs in 2024, followed by musculoskeletal and cardiovascular conditions. (Reed, 8/21)

More health and wellness news 鈥

Playing video games for a couple of hours a day can improve mental health, according to a study on gamers in Japan during the COVID-19 pandemic. The research 鈥 which was done from December 2020 to March 2022 鈥 found that even just owning a game console increased life satisfaction and reduced psychological distress. The results were published today in Nature Human Behaviour. (8/19)

School districts across the country received the largest infusion of federal cash ever to pull themselves out of the throes of the pandemic. But now that money is set to expire and districts are slashing jobs, increasing class sizes and cutting programs to keep their schools afloat. Congress designed the aid 鈥 roughly $190 billion altogether 鈥 as a one-time distribution of cash primarily to tackle pandemic crises like learning loss, chronic absenteeism and worsening mental health. That鈥檚 more than one fifth of total U.S. K-12 education spending in 2022. Now, the last $122 billion runs out at the end of September. (Wilkes, 8/21)

Disney is no longer asking a Florida court to dismiss a wrongful death lawsuit on the grounds that the victim鈥檚 family had signed up for its streaming service Disney+. The company filed a notice in Orange County court on Tuesday to withdraw the motion, which had drawn swift backlash when it became public. Josh D鈥橝maro, chairperson of Disney鈥檚 theme park division, said in a statement emailed earlier to The Associated Press that the entertainment giant will waive its arbitration rights and allow the suit, brought by the husband of a New York doctor who suffered a fatal allergic reaction after eating at a restaurant in Disney Springs, to proceed in court. (Marcelo, 8/20)

More than 200 National Football League players have been using shock-absorbing helmets aimed at reducing concussions during the preseason 鈥 a trend that's reduced head injuries and could continue into the regular season. (Reed, 8/20)

麻豆女优 Health News: Listen To The Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

鈥淗ealth Minute鈥 brings original health care and health policy reporting from the 麻豆女优 Health News newsroom to the airwaves each week. (8/20)

Outbreaks and Health Threats

Mpox Cases Suspected In Travelers To Argentina And Thailand

Argentinian authorities have quarantined a cargo ship and Thai officials are monitoring dozens of people as both countries aim to stop the new fast-spreading variant of the disease. Meanwhile, Africa is almost ready to roll out mpox vaccinations.

Argentina quarantined a cargo ship over the first suspected case of mpox on the vessel, as an outbreak of a new fast-spreading variant triggered a global public health alert. The Liberian-flagged ship聽raised the alert after one of its crew members of Indian nationality showed 鈥渃yst-like skin lesions predominantly on the chest and face," the health ministry said. (Sharma, 8/21)

Thailand has reported a suspected first case of a new, more dangerous strain of mpox in a European traveler. The patient, a 66-year-old man who arrived from an unnamed African country on 14 August, is believed to be infected by the Clade 1 variant, which is deadlier and more transmissible and triggered a warning from the world health authority last week. (Muzaffar, 8/21)

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and other African countries could start vaccinating against mpox within days, Africa's top public health agency said on Tuesday. The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) has been working with countries experiencing mpox outbreaks on logistics and communication strategies to roll out vaccine doses that are due to arrive following pledges by the European Union, vaccine maker Bavarian Nordic BAVA.CO, the United States and Japan. (Miridzhanian, 8/20)

Roche is actively working to enhance laboratory testing capacity for mpox worldwide, the Swiss pharmaceutical company said on Tuesday. Roche said it is partnering with governments, healthcare providers and organizations to combat the outbreak, as well as providing training for labs across the African continent. (8/20)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Aging Doesn't Have To Mean Losing Cognitive Function; Cancer Shouldn't Bankrupt People

Editorial writers discuss these public health issues.

Rowe led research showing that in the six years after turning 75, about half of people showed little to no change in their physical, biological, hormonal and cognitive functioning, whereas the other half changed quite a lot. A longer-term study followed more than 2,000 individuals with an average age of 77 for up to 16 years. It showed that the three quarters who did not develop dementia showed little to no cognitive decline. (Lydia Denworth, 8/20)

Roughly 1.9 million Americans are diagnosed with cancer each year聽鈥 awful news not just for the person鈥檚 physical health and emotional state, but also for their finances. Out-of-pocket costs聽鈥 including copays, deductibles, hospital stays, doctor鈥檚 office visits, emergency services, and home health care services聽鈥 can wreak havoc. (Olajumoke Olateju, 8/20)

For years, Black Americans have been more likely to die of cancer than white Americans. There is a widespread belief that cancer screening 鈥 tests to detect hidden cancer 鈥 can reduce this Black-white disparity. While it is important to be attentive to racial disparities in health and health care, the belief in screening is misguided. More cancer screening primarily serves the interests of the health care system, not those of Black Americans. (Adewole Adamson, Vishal Patel and H. Gilbert Welch, 8/21)

Lawyers can own law firms. Bankers can own banks. But thanks to the Affordable Care Act, doctors are effectively banned from owning hospitals. At a time when the rapidly consolidating hospital market needs more competition, not less, keeping this poorly conceived provision on the books makes little sense. Congress should repeal it. (8/21)

Kansas ranked last in Mental Health America鈥檚 State of Mental Health in America 2023 report. The need for improved mental health care is impossible to ignore. To that end, our state took an important step to create social worker jobs and facilitate care across the state by joining the Social Work Licensure Compact in April. (Betsy Cauble, 8/21)

At the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Monday night, President Biden took the stage at 10:26 p.m. Central Time to a four-minute-long standing ovation.聽Throughout his historic 50-minute address, his voice was strong, albeit emotional at times. He was focused and able to connect the dots as he moved from topic to topic. Though he read from a teleprompter, he was able to improv, too. It was the last hurrah for a president who has spent more than half a century in public service. (Anand Kumar, 8/20)

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