Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Coloradans May Soon Get Prescription Drugs That Came From Canada
Colorado has taken another step toward importing lower-cost prescription drugs from Canada, after signing contracts with companies on both sides of the border that will handle the transaction. (Ingold, 8/18)
The Biden administration may have signed a law designed to lower prescription drug prices, but Colorado state officials are pressing ahead with plans to win federal approval to import medicines from Canada 鈥 and have now signed contracts with two wholesalers as a key part of the effort. (Silverman, 8/18)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
The Washington Supreme Court says that under state law, it鈥檚 OK for judges to award extraordinary damages in so-called 鈥渨rongful life鈥 cases where a child has birth defects or disabilities that require extensive care. The unanimous decision Thursday came in the case of a woman who became pregnant in 2011 after a federally funded health clinic mistakenly gave her a shot of flu vaccine instead of the contraceptive Depo-Provera. Her child was born with a condition that causes cognitive delays, slowed speech and language skills, epilepsy and vision problems. (Johnson, 8/19)
A unique agreement Maryland made with federal regulators that affects how much everyone in the state pays for medical care, and how they get that care in the hospital or a doctor鈥檚 office, has been extended through 2026. (Cohn, 8/18)
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear鈥檚 administration has unveiled an initiative aimed at providing comprehensive, cost-effective care for people age 55 and older. People voluntarily enrolling will receive a variety of medical and social services. Beshear said it will expand services for people who otherwise qualify for placement in nursing homes. (8/18)
Over the last decade, more than half the country has moved to protect LGBTQ youth from 鈥渃onversion therapy,鈥 a widely discredited practice that aims to 鈥渃ure鈥 queer and transgender people. This week, Pennsylvania became the 27th state to restrict conversion efforts, in a move advocates and medical experts say could have a powerful impact on young LGBTQ people in the state and beyond. (Branigin, 8/18)
Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar and state Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston, have added their support to a yearslong call by some state legislators and women鈥檚 health care advocates to remove taxes on menstrual products like tampons, sanitary pads and pantyliners. Hegar and Huffman said they鈥檇 support efforts in next year鈥檚 legislative session to make such products nontaxable. (Melhado, 8/18)
Those figures, contained in a report released Thursday, reflect the Sisyphean nature of battling one of the city鈥檚 worst crises in some of the starkest terms ever. As dire as those numbers are, though, the report also shows the most significant headway in 17 years in reducing overall homelessness in San Francisco. (Fagan and Moench, 8/18)
In response to a national opioid epidemic, the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office said it will allow its deputies to carry a drug used to reverse the effects of an opioid overdose. The previous policy to not carry the medicine was an outlier in the state, where nearly two-thirds of the sheriff's offices issue Narcan and train their deputies, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. (Brutus, 8/18)