Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
A Defendant's Medical Safety Shouldn't Factor Into Their Bail, NH Court Rules
Judges in New Hampshire are not allowed to consider whether denying bail to a defendant with medical conditions jeopardizes their safety while incarcerated, according to an unanimous opinion released Friday by the New Hampshire Supreme Court. (Bookman, 12/16)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Avon Products Inc. was ordered by a California jury to pay $10.3 million in punitive damages to a woman who blamed her cancer on talc in its cosmetics, in the first such case the company has lost in US litigation. (Feeley, 12/16)
When the pandemic prompted the U.S. Department of Agriculture to loosen the rules over its child nutrition programs, two churches quickly became the largest program sponsors in Missouri. (Barker, 12/18)
With cases of monkeypox 鈥 or mpox, as it鈥檚 now being called 鈥 slowing to a trickle, is the outbreak over? 鈥淚 can鈥檛 say it鈥檚 eradicated,鈥 Cassius Lockett with the Southern Nevada Health District said of the once-rare virus that has triggered outbreaks around the globe this year. (Hynes, 12/16)
Founded in 1988, the nonprofit Doorways has spent decades connecting people living with HIV/AIDS with housing. However, for much of its existence, the nonprofit resorted to placing clients in emergency or 鈥渇lex鈥 housing by renting rooms in motels and boarding houses until permanent housing could be found. But one night, Opal Jones, the nonprofit鈥檚 president and CEO, realized that the system needed to be more than just a decentralized collection of short-term living spaces. (Wicentowski, 12/16)
Amazon.com Inc. failed to record injuries and illnesses at warehouses around the US, according to federal workplace safety regulators, a finding that undermines the company鈥檚 pledges to improve worker safety in its facilities. (Soper, 12/16)