Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'Controlled Release' Of Toxic Chemical Fumes Used On Derailed Ohio Train
A rail operator on Monday released toxic fumes from several derailed train cars that it said were at risk of exploding in East Palestine, Ohio, after the authorities ordered residents on both sides of the state鈥檚 border with Pennsylvania to evacuate to avoid a deadly threat. ... 鈥淲e are ordering you to leave,鈥 Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio said on Monday at a news conference. 鈥淭his is a matter of life and death.鈥 He added that there was 鈥済rave danger鈥 of inhaling fumes from chemicals produced by the release, which the authorities identified as phosgene and hydrogen chloride. In high concentrations, both chemicals can cause severe and life-threatening respiratory issues. (Hauser and Albeck-Ripka, 2/6)
"We know the smoke looked alarming, but we are being told that everything was carried out according to plan," Pennsylvania's emergency management agency said on Monday evening. The agency said environmental monitors had "detected nothing alarming" in air and water measurements. Pennsylvania's governor urged those within the evacuation zone to stay inside. (Kim, 2/6)
On Medicaid coverage in Texas and Pennsylvania 鈥
One day, Alexandria Robertson鈥檚 carefully crafted life suddenly started falling apart. She returned from vacation in January 2020 to learn she鈥檇 been laid off from her corporate job in the Austin area. Her car was totaled in an accident. At the same time, she found out she was pregnant with her first child. 鈥淚 was pregnant. I had no job. I had no car. And I had no health insurance,鈥 Robertson said. 鈥淚 at the time just did not have money for the expenses of having a baby.鈥 (Klibanoff, 2/7)
The federal government鈥檚 pandemic-era prohibition against kicking people off Medicaid is ending, meaning that hundreds of thousands of people in Pennsylvania face losing the free health insurance in the coming year. Many people who stand to lose Medicaid coverage don鈥檛 know the changes are coming, say officials at advocacy organizations who do outreach to the poor. That could mean people 鈥 parents of school-age children, for instance 鈥 find out they have no coverage when they go to fill a prescription or see a doctor for a sick child. (Levy, 2/6)
In other health news from California, Wisconsin, and Texas 鈥
A double amputee who was armed with a knife and suspected of having stabbed a passerby had experienced a mental health crisis hours before Southern California police fatally shot him 11 times last month, his mother said in an exclusive interview. (Victoria Lozano, 2/6)
Milwaukee Health Commissioner Kirsten Johnson has been appointed Wisconsin Department of Health Services secretary, Gov. Tony Evers announced Monday. Monday is her last day with the city, according to the Mayor's Office. When she announced her resignation in early January, she said March 3 would be her last day. (Hess and Dirr, 2/6)
The 鈥渙ne pill can kill鈥 fentanyl epidemic has hit home. Three young Carrollton-Farmers Branch students are dead and six others have been hospitalized in a string of overdoses, most of them since December. Federal investigators say each of these tragedies traces back to a single Carrollton house, located just blocks from R.L. Turner High School, where juvenile dealers as young as 14 picked up the drugs and sold them to classmates. (Grigsby, 2/6)