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Wednesday, Sep 4 2024

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 3

  • As Interest From Families Wanes, Pediatricians Scale Back on Covid Shots
  • Breast Cancer Rises Among Asian American and Pacific Islander Women
  • Listen to the Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'

Note To Readers

Pharmaceuticals 1

  • Revamped Medicare Drug Prices Still Cost More Than In Other Rich Nations

Cancer 1

  • Mobile Phone Use Isn't Linked To Brain Cancer After All

Supreme Court 1

  • Court: Oklahoma Isn't Entitled To HHS Funds Intended For Abortion Referrals

Covid-19 1

  • House Panel Will Quiz Cuomo Publicly About Covid-Era Nursing Home Policies

Outbreaks and Health Threats 1

  • At Least 19 Valley Fever Cases Confirmed After California Music Event

Health Industry 1

  • AMA Accused Of Spreading Misinfo About Physician Associates

State Watch 1

  • Facing Patient Violence, Connecticut Hospital Workers Call For Security

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: Climate Change Is Making Mosquitoes More Dangerous; American Farmers Are Not OK

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

As Interest From Families Wanes, Pediatricians Scale Back on Covid Shots

Pediatricians want to vaccinate kids, but some say they鈥檙e keeping their stockpile of covid vaccines low to avoid being stuck with costly, unwanted shots. They can鈥檛 afford to stock up on costly shots that parents don鈥檛 want. ( Jackie Forti茅r , 9/4 )

Breast Cancer Rises Among Asian American and Pacific Islander Women

Asian American and Pacific Islander women once had a relatively low rate of breast cancer diagnoses. Now, researchers are scrambling to understand why it鈥檚 rising at a faster pace than those of many other racial and ethnic groups. ( Phillip Reese , 9/4 )

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:

DISABILITY RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS

鈥淗is voice is soft, but
[Garret] makes sure it is heard.鈥
We won鈥檛 be silenced.

鈥 Brittany Stapelfeld Lee, MSW

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颅颅麻豆女优 Health News will host a full day of panels at the 2024 Texas Tribune Festival in Austin, Texas, on Sept. 6. Drop by for discussions about health care policy, a live taping of our 鈥淲hat the Health?鈥 podcast, and more. Check out the program and .

Summaries Of The News:

Pharmaceuticals

Revamped Medicare Drug Prices Still Cost More Than In Other Rich Nations

A Reuters review found that Australia, Japan, Canada, and Sweden have negotiated much lower prices for the same drugs. In other pharmaceutical news: A decision on whether to reclassify marijuana won't come until after the November election.

The U.S. government's first-ever negotiated prices for prescription drugs are still on average more than double, and in some cases five times, what drugmakers have agreed to in four other high-income countries, a Reuters review has found. A Reuters review of publicly available maximum prices set by other wealthy nations 鈥 Australia, Japan, Canada and Sweden 鈥 show that they have negotiated far lower prices for the same drugs. (Beasley, 9/3)

On federal marijuana policy 鈥

A decision on whether to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug in the U.S. won鈥檛 come until after the November presidential election, a timeline that raises the chances it could be a potent political issue in the closely contested race. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration last week set a hearing date to take comment on the proposed historic change in federal drug policy for Dec. 2. The hearing date means a final decision could well come in the next administration. (Whitehurst and Peltz, 9/3)

In other pharmaceutical news 鈥

San Diego鈥檚 Dexcom began sales this week of Stelo, the industry鈥檚 first FDA-approved continuous glucose monitor that doesn鈥檛 require a prescription. With a two-pack of the biosensor costing just under $100 per month, the local company aims to tap a new market of users and increase access to this technology. Now, people without health insurance coverage for such devices have the option to buy Stelo directly from Dexcom鈥檚 website. (Rocha, 9/3)

An Edmond-based startup health care company is beginning to ship out its urinary incontinence products after receiving approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Yoni. Fit Bladder Support from Watkins-Conti Products hit pharmacy shelves in Oklahoma for the first time on Monday, the company announced. The product is a new prescription for women experiencing stress urinary incontinence (SUI). Allison Watkins, the company's founder and CEO, said plans call for expansion nationally by the fourth quarter of this year. (Heliot, 8/30)

A dark horse effort to treat Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, already marred by a data manipulation scandal, fell short in a randomized trial reported Tuesday afternoon. Athira Pharma said that Alzheimer鈥檚 patients who received its experimental injection fosgonimeton did not decline at a significantly slower rate than patients who received a placebo injection. (Mast, 9/3)

Recursion Pharmaceuticals announced results of a clinical trial for its lead drug candidate Tuesday that, while a success on paper, likely won鈥檛 satisfy many investors closely watching the AI drug developer.聽The Salt Lake City company鈥檚 treatment is for cerebral cavernous malformation, or CCM, a potentially life-threatening condition that causes vessels in the brain to become enlarged and irregular, sometimes causing blood to leak into the brain or spinal cord.聽(DeAngelis, 9/3)

Cancer

Mobile Phone Use Isn't Linked To Brain Cancer After All

A review, commissioned by the World Health Organization, looked at 28 years of research data. Backing up scientific consensus, the review has dismissed a long-standing concern that exposure to radio emissions from phones causes brain cancer.

A systematic review into the potential health effects from radio wave exposure has shown mobile phones are not linked to brain cancer. The review was commissioned by the World Health Organization and is published today in the journal Environment International. Mobile phones are often held against the head during use. And they emit radio waves, a type of non-ionising radiation. These two factors are largely why the idea mobile phones might cause brain cancer emerged in the first place. (Loughran and Karipidis, 9/3)

A U.K. researcher has used light to develop the first step towards a quicker, cheaper and less painful technique to detect cancer. (9/2)

Laurie H. Glimcher, chief executive of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, said she would step down next month, ending an eight-year run capped by her聽surprise split聽with Dana-Farber鈥檚 longtime partner, Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital, and decision to build a cancer center with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. (Edelman, 9/3)

麻豆女优 Health News: Breast Cancer Rises Among Asian American And Pacific Islander Women

Christina Kashiwada was traveling for work during the summer of 2018 when she noticed a small, itchy lump in her left breast. She thought little of it at first. She did routine self-checks and kept up with medical appointments. But a relative urged her to get a mammogram. She took the advice and learned she had stage 3 breast cancer, a revelation that stunned her. 鈥淚鈥檓 36 years old, right?鈥 said Kashiwada, a civil engineer in Sacramento, California. 鈥淣o one鈥檚 thinking about cancer.鈥 (Reese, 9/4)

A leading breast cancer surgeon claims many media reports that the supermodel Elle Macpherson treated breast cancer with alternative therapies have left out crucial information, risking people being misinformed. (Davey and May, 9/4)

Supreme Court

Court: Oklahoma Isn't Entitled To HHS Funds Intended For Abortion Referrals

The state had argued that helping women who were requesting information about abortion violates the law. Meanwhile, at the state level, Nebraska's Supreme Court has expedited a case challenging a November ballot measure to expand abortion rights.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected Oklahoma鈥檚 emergency appeal seeking to restore a $4.5 million grant for family planning services in an ongoing dispute over the state鈥檚 refusal to refer pregnant women to a nationwide hotline that provides information about abortion and other options. The brief order did not detail the court鈥檚 reasoning, as is typical, but says three justices 鈥 Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch 鈥 would have sided with Oklahoma. Lower courts had ruled that the federal Health and Human Services Department鈥檚 decision to cut off Oklahoma from the funds did not violate federal law. (Sherman, 9/3)

In other Supreme Court news 鈥

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson opened up about her struggles into parenthood, particularly as the mother of an autistic child, in her new memoir. The passage in 鈥淟ovely One,鈥 marks the first time Jackson has publicly disclosed her eldest daughter鈥檚 diagnosis.聽 (Daniels, 9/3)

More reproductive health news 鈥

The Nebraska Supreme Court has agreed to expedite a hearing on a lawsuit that could keep voters from deciding whether to expand abortion rights in the state. The court has set a hearing for next Monday for arguments over the suit filed by the conservative nonprofit Thomas More Society, according to court records. The secretary of state said last month that the measure had received enough signatures to appear on the November ballot. (Funk, 9/3)

The Harris campaign launched a bus tour on reproductive rights in the former president鈥檚 adopted home state of Florida, where abortion laws are a centerpiece of the forthcoming election. (Leonard, 9/3)

No one expected the 922-page policy document to go viral. The conservative Heritage Foundation quietly began working on Project 2025 in 2022, pulling together a wish list of far-right policy proposals the group hoped former president Donald Trump would enact if he won back the White House. The report was published with little notice in 2023. (Parker and Reston, 9/4)

More men are speaking out in defense of reproductive rights because of harrowing experiences that wives or partners have suffered when a pregnancy went awry. (Wax-Thibodeaux, 9/3)

A typical vending machine on a university campus might offer students the usual range of sodas, Sunchips, and Skittles. But a vending machine installed earlier this year at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New York, has a unique offering: Plan B pills. (Nayak, 9/4)

Preeclampsia, marked by a sudden increase in blood pressure, is on the rise. Yet there鈥檚 little research about the life-threatening disorder. (McKay, 9/3)

Covid-19

House Panel Will Quiz Cuomo Publicly About Covid-Era Nursing Home Policies

Transcripts from former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's private testimony in June will be released ahead of next week's hearing, which is examining the Democrat's advisory that prevented nursing homes from rejecting covid patients. Separately, Oregon is facing its largest spike in measles cases in 30 years.

Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo will testify publicly before Congress next week about his controversial nursing home advisory聽from the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, informed sources and a House subcommittee say. As CNN reported earlier, Cuomo, who testified in June behind closed doors before members of the House Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, will testify in front of the same panel on September 10. (Tapper, 9/3)

With COVID remaining at stubbornly high levels in California, some doctors are warning that transmission could again accelerate following the busy Labor Day holiday weekend 鈥 potentially prolonging a summer wave that has already proved more intense and enduring than some experts had anticipated. Doctors will be closely monitoring the data for any signs of a post-holiday bump, which could materialize due to a few factors. (Lin II, 9/3)

On vaccinations 鈥

With fall coming into view, public health officials across the country are turning to the annual task of persuading legions of Americans to get vaccinated against some combination of influenza, Covid-19, and respiratory syncytial virus, three bugs that sicken mass numbers of people over the winter months, often overwhelming hospitals and health care delivery in the process. (Branswell, 9/4)

麻豆女优 Health News: As Interest From Families Wanes, Pediatricians Scale Back On Covid Shots

When pediatrician Eric Ball opened a refrigerator full of childhood vaccines, all the expected shots were there 鈥 DTaP, polio, pneumococcal vaccine 鈥 except one. 鈥淭his is where we usually store our covid vaccines, but we don鈥檛 have any right now because they all expired at the end of last year and we had to dispose of them,鈥 said Ball, who is part of a pediatric practice in Orange County, California. 鈥淲e thought demand would be way higher than it was.鈥 (Forti茅r, 9/4)

A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)聽analysis finds that overall US teen vaccination uptake was similar in 2022 and 2023, with a decline in up-to-date human papillomavirus (HPV UTD) vaccination by age 13 among adolescents born in 2010 versus 2007. (Van Beusekom, 9/3)

On the measles outbreak in Oregon 鈥

Oregon's measles outbreak is now the largest in the state in over three decades, mirroring a trend of rising measles cases across the U.S. this year. Nearly one-third of measles cases since the pandemic occurred in the past three months, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The number of cases in Oregon's outbreak first tracked in mid-June grew to 31 as of Tuesday, surpassing the last outbreak in the state, in 2019, when 28 cases were reported. (Funk and Rodriguez, 9/4)

Oregon has one of the highest vaccine exemption rates for kindergartners in the country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Gebel and Reed, 8/28)

Outbreaks and Health Threats

At Least 19 Valley Fever Cases Confirmed After California Music Event

The potentially deadly fungal infection has hit attendees and workers of the Lightning in a Bottle music festival near Bakersfield. A study finds that climate change-induced drought conditions have been driving the recent surge in cases of the illness, also known as coccidioidomycosis.

The number of festivalgoers who developed a potentially deadly fungal infection after attending Lightning in a Bottle near Bakersfield has quadrupled, according to the California Department of Public Health.聽As of Aug. 21, there were at least 19 confirmed cases of Valley fever among attendees and workers at the festival, eight of whom were hospitalized. (Vaziri, 9/3)

Climate changed-induced drought conditions have been driving the dispersal of a dangerous airborne fungus across California in recent years, a new study has found. Cases of the flu-like disease coccidioidomycosis 鈥 also known as 鈥淰alley fever鈥 鈥 have risen dramatically over the past two decades, tripling from 2014 to 2018 and again from 2018 to 2022, according to the study, published Tuesday in聽The Lancet Regional Health 鈥 Americas. While the disease can cause grave or even deadly complications, the authors said they have identified certain seasonal patterns that could help public health officials prepare for future surges. (Udasin, 9/3)

On West Nile virus 鈥

Two more Massachusetts men have been exposed to the West Nile virus in Suffolk and Middlesex counties, taking the state from four to six human cases so far this year and matching the total reached in 2023, state health officials announced Tuesday. Risk levels for the mosquito-borne virus have been elevated in several communities throughout the state, the state Department of Public Health said in a statement. (Alanez, 9/3)

Health officials are urging people to take precautions after mosquitoes carrying West Nile virus have been identified in parts of Georgia. At least a half dozen聽Georgians聽contracted West Nile virus as of Aug. 27, according to the聽United States聽Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with at least two of the infected individuals living聽in Dekalb and Fulton聽counties. (Mador, 9/3)

Experts who spoke with ABC News said some of the uptick is due to the "randomness" regarding which seasons have a greater number of cases than others, coupled with the general rise in mosquito-borne viruses during the summer and early fall months. Here are some ways to tell the difference between West Nile, EEE, and dengue. (Kekatos, 9/3)

On Lyme disease 鈥

Diagnostics company ID-Fish Technology announced today that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has cleared its new Lyme disease test. The iDart Lyme IgG ImmunoBlot Kit is a stand-alone test for detecting Lyme-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies that includes 31 Lyme antigen bands, more than any other Lyme test on the market. (9/3)

Pfizer and Valneva may have about two more years to wait before they make the first approval filing to the FDA for a Lyme disease vaccine, but that hasn鈥檛 stopped the companies collecting more positive data in the meantime. The multivalent protein subunit vaccine, dubbed VLA15, is currently in a pair of phase 3 trials the companies hope will provide the backbone for a filing to the FDA and European regulators sometime in 2026. There are currently no approved vaccines for Lyme disease, a bacterial infection that is spread via the bite of an infected tick. (Waldron, 9/3)

Health Industry

AMA Accused Of Spreading Misinfo About Physician Associates

The accusation comes from the American Academy of Physician Associates, which also said in a public letter to the American Medical Association dated Tuesday, that the AMA was disparaging the profession. Also in the news: school nurse burdens, nursing union contract negotiations, and more.

The American Academy of Physician Associates is calling out the American Medical Association for allegedly spreading misinformation and making disparaging remarks about the profession. In a letter to the AMA dated Tuesday and made public, the trade group said the AMA has not responded to its request to meet to discuss "the impact of AMA鈥檚 disparaging rhetoric targeted at the physician associate profession." (DeSilva, 9/3)

In nursing news 鈥

Attorneys representing both living and deceased patients of an Oregon hospital filed a $303 million lawsuit against the facility on Tuesday after a nurse was accused of replacing prescribed fentanyl with nonsterile tap water in intravenous drips. The wrongful death and medical malpractice complaint accuses Asante Rogue Regional Medical Center in Medford of negligence. The suit says the hospital failed to monitor medication administration procedures and prevent drug diversion by their employees, among other claims. A spokesperson said the hospital had no comment. (9/3)

Tuesday is the first day of school for many students and school nurses in some areas of the state are facing pressures on staffing. Tara Cliff, health services supervisor at Eastern Carver County schools, said that turnover has been a challenge for her district so she鈥檚 spending the start of the school year getting new nurses ready. (Moini and Bui, 9/3)

Thousands of healthcare workers nationwide are negotiating for new contracts, and staff at some facilities are preparing for the possibility of strikes in the coming months. Nurses at HCA Healthcare鈥檚 MountainView Hospital in Las Vegas voted last week to authorize a strike if no progress is made in negotiating for a contract that ensures higher pay, meal breaks for nurses and better retention strategies. (Devereaux, 9/3)

More health industry updates 鈥

UnitedHealthcare is launching a program next month geared toward streamlining prior authorization for qualifying providers. The UnitedHealth Group subsidiary's "gold card" program, offered across its commercial, individual exchange, Medicare Advantage and Medicaid business lines, will allow certain providers to use a simplified process for about 500 procedure codes. (DeSilva, 9/3)

Since most Americans aren鈥檛 eligible for Medicare before age 65, many younger retirees rely on Marketplace health insurance, which offers lower monthly premiums through the end of 2025 thanks to boosted tax breaks. But retirees can face a costly tax surprise without proper planning, experts say. (Dore, 9/3)

Bill Walczak knows as much about community health care as anyone in Boston. And the closing last weekend of the Carney Hospital in Dorchester 鈥 his neighborhood 鈥 has left him gutted. Not just sad, but angry. 鈥淚 think the parts of state government that are responsible for our health care had an opportunity to save the parts of Carney that are essential 鈥 the emergency room, the psychiatric care, and the residency program,鈥 he said Tuesday. 鈥淎nd they chose not to.鈥 (Walker, 9/3)

Prime Healthcare has named Dr. Sunny Bhatia as its first systemwide president, the health system announced Tuesday.聽The cardiologist was most recently CEO of the health system's West Coast region. He joined Prime in 2011, serving as chief medical officer at its Sherman Oaks Hospital and Encino Hospital Medical Center, both in California.聽(DeSilva, 9/3)

A new Spotlight investigation reveals that as Steward Health spiraled toward bankruptcy, the CEO used its bank account as his own. (Krueger, Bartlett and McCarthy, 9/3)

State Watch

Facing Patient Violence, Connecticut Hospital Workers Call For Security

Rising aggressive behavior from patients triggered a demand for better security from workers at Bradley Memorial Campus of the Hospital of Central Connecticut. In other news from across the country: Medicaid for Floridians with disabilities; Matthew Perry's death; and more.

A handful of health care workers at the Bradley Memorial Campus of the Hospital of Central Connecticut gathered at the Southington facility on Tuesday morning to demand more security in response to what they describe as a patient population that鈥檚 grown increasingly agitated and aggressive since the start of the pandemic.聽Employees say aggressive behavior can range from 鈥渕inor incidents,鈥 like patients throwing cups of water or urine, to more serious incidents, like when a patient attempted to choke a nurse. (Golvala, 9/3)

Lauren Eakin is legally blind and confined to a wheelchair with cerebral palsy. For years, Eakin, 34, lived in her own apartment with the help of caregivers who assist her with nearly everything. This summer, she lost much of her relative independence when the state of Florida revoked her essential Medicaid coverage.聽... Eakin鈥檚 Medicaid coverage lapsed in June, a loss she discovered only when payment to her caregivers stopped. As a result, they substantially reduced their hours. (Kane, Kirsch and Obregon, 9/3)

Attorney General Ashley Moody wants the Florida Supreme Court to resolve a legal battle about whether hospital districts and school boards should be able to pursue opioid-epidemic lawsuits after she reached settlements with the pharmaceutical industry. (Saunders, 9/3)

A California doctor and a woman charged with illegally supplying the drug ketamine to "Friends" star Matthew Perry before his overdose death will face trial in March, according to court documents released on Tuesday. Dr. Salvador Plasencia, and Jasveen Sangha, whom authorities said was a drug dealer known to customers as the "ketamine queen," have pleaded not guilty to charges related to the October 2023 death of Perry. (Richwine, 9/3)

Adults age 65 and older make up a third of Glen Ullin's roughly 700 residents. The town's retired teachers, accountants and health care workers are making every effort to age at home, but one big obstacle for them is the ability to access medical care 鈥 without it, they are often forced to move to a larger city. Rural health care has been facing a crisis for years. But in rural towns such as Glen Ullin, older adults are getting help to manage, thanks to the handful of community members working to fill the gaps. (Kim and Evans, 9/4)

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

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Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: Climate Change Is Making Mosquitoes More Dangerous; American Farmers Are Not OK

Editorial writers tackle these public health topics.

Mosquito-borne illnesses pose a serious threat to Americans that is bound to become even more dire as climate change worsens. Yet public health officials don鈥檛 have a strong grasp on strategies to protect at-risk communities. That must change 鈥 and soon. (Leana S. Wen, 9/4)

Mental health problems and their most terrifying form 鈥 hurting oneself or others 鈥 know no boundaries. But the storm clouds find favorable winds in our most challenging industries, like family farms facing the many economic forces and personal dangers making it harder to get by each year. (Brian Reisinger, 9/2)

When you go to a website with a question pertaining to the care and maintenance of your newborn baby, you will almost certainly see this disclaimer attached to the advice: 鈥淎sk your pediatrician.鈥 The problem is that, in many cases, the answer depends on the pediatrician you ask. (Olga Khazan, 9/3)

PFAS exposure has been associated with fertility issues and developmental delays in children. And while lawsuits have been filed against some of the biggest manufacturers of PFAS, Ms. Brockovich says those suits aren鈥檛 the only 鈥 or even the best 鈥 solution. (Erin Brockovich, 9/4)

Across the U.S., kids are headed back to their classrooms鈥攋ust as COVID nears a fresh, late-summer peak. Somehow, four years into a viral pandemic that everyone now knows spreads through the air, most schools have done little to nothing to make sure their students will breathe safely. (Maggie Fox, 9/3)

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