Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Climate Change Means Fungal Infections Will Be More Common
鈥淲e鈥檙e definitely seeing disease in locations that we previously have not,鈥 said Dr. George Thompson, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California, Davis. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 concerning, because if we鈥檙e recognizing those locations, where are the places it鈥檚 occurring that just have not been recognized quite yet?鈥 (Yang and Bendix, 11/21)
On the importance of health screenings 鈥
Early one afternoon in 2000, Monique Shields, just a few weeks shy of her 30th birthday, left her busy day as an executive assistant at Starbucks鈥 corporate headquarters to go to her routine prenatal checkup. Following standard care practice, the nurse checked Shields鈥 blood pressure. It was sky-high. Her health care team sent her to the emergency department for monitoring. (Courage, 11/22)
Anthony Patterson got lucky 鈥 twice. His first stroke of good fortune came in 2011, when a fall led him to the emergency room of a local hospital. While he was there, doctors noticed his heart wasn鈥檛 beating as it should. A pacemaker was implanted, potentially saving his life. (Jordan Shamus, 11/21)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
As the days grow colder and daylight becomes more scarce, some Americans are oversleeping, overeating, experiencing聽weight gain and social withdrawal or hibernating. The symptoms are part of a condition called seasonal affective disorder, also known as SAD or seasonal depression. (Martin, 11/22)
Audrey Pirri, 16, had been terrified of vomiting since she was a toddler. She worried every time she shared a meal with family or friends, restricting herself to 鈥渟afe鈥 foods like pretzels and salad that wouldn鈥檛 upset her stomach, if she ate at all. She was afraid to ride in the car with her brother, who often got carsick. She fretted for hours about an upcoming visit to a carnival or stadium 鈥 anywhere with lots of people and their germs. But on a Tuesday evening in August, in her first intensive session of a treatment called exposure therapy, Audrey was determined to confront one of the most potent triggers of her fear: a set of rainbow polka dot sheets. (Hughes, 11/21)
Did too much water kill Bruce Lee, the martial-arts legend known for saying, 鈥淏e water, my friend鈥? That鈥檚 the notion put forth in a new research paper by a group of kidney specialists from Spain. (D'Zurilla, 11/21)
Deepak Palakshappa became a pediatrician to give poor kids access to good medical care. Still, back in his residency days, the now-associate professor at Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Winston-Salem was shocked to discover that a patient caring for two young grandchildren was food insecure. 鈥淥ur clinic had set up one of those food drive boxes, and near the end of a visit, she asked if she could have any of the cans because she didn鈥檛 have food for the holidays,鈥 he recalls. Thirteen years later, Palakshappa鈥檚 clinic team now asks two simple questions of every patient to ascertain whether they鈥檒l run out of food in a given month. (Nargi, 11/20)