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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, May 20 2022

Full Issue

Different Takes: Study May Have Found Cause Of SIDS; How Concerned Should We Be About Monkeypox?

Editorial writers delve into these public health issues.

A visceral memory from my first months as a parent is the sensation of waking in a panic. I鈥檇 slept too soundly; the baby monitor was too quiet. I鈥檇 rush to the crib to listen for my daughter鈥檚 soft breath and feel the gentle rise of her belly, then stumble back to bed. Those moments were brought on, of course, by anxiety over sudden infant death syndrome, which in 2019 caused nearly 1,250 deaths in the US. (Lisa Jarvis, 5/19)

While we no longer worry as much about the severity of Covid, there are questions about whether the pandemic has left us more exposed to other serious illnesses. Massachusetts officials reported a rare case of a virus related to smallpox, called monkeypox, on Wednesday. A small number of cases has also been reported in the UK, Canada, Spain and Portugal. Bloomberg Intelligence senior pharmaceutical analyst Sam Fazeli spoke to Therese Raphael about聽what we know so far. (Sam Fazeli, 5/19)

On Sept. 24, 1955, President Dwight Eisenhower suffered a massive heart attack that required him to be hospitalized for months. This was the first time in US history when a health threat to a sitting president was publicly reported. It was also a pivotal turning point in medicine. President Eisenhower recruited Dr. Paul Dudley White from Massachusetts General Hospital to guide his care as he recovered, and White used the resulting publicity to advocate for the importance of preventive measures to avoid heart attacks. In the ensuing decades, cardiology shifted from a largely reactive discipline to one primarily focused on prevention. We think something similar can happen with childhood cancer. (Vijay G. Sankaran and Melissa A. Burns, 5/20)

Social media and news sites are filled with headlines expressing discontent about the health care system, particularly聽a sense that doctors don't listen and don't care. Reading these articles hurts my heart聽because, as a physician, I know聽doctors do care deeply. But a broken health care system has turned us into assembly-line "providers"聽and data-entry clerks without time to show the empathy that we feel and that our patients need. (Dr. Rebekah Bernard, 5/20)

Covid-19 may be receding, but it鈥檚 leaving a quiet menace lurking in hospitals in its wake. In a Perspective essay in The New England Journal of Medicine, four senior physicians with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned of a 鈥渟evere鈥 post-Covid decline in patient safety. The Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology reached a similar conclusion, warning of a rise in 鈥渃ommon, often-deadly鈥 infections. To help reverse this troubling trend, the federal physician leaders called for 鈥減romoting radical transparency.鈥 Though they didn鈥檛 detail what that should entail, our years working in safety and quality strongly suggest that 鈥渞adical transparency鈥 must be radically different from current efforts in both form and content in order to successfully catalyze genuine change. (Michael L. Millenson and J. Matthew Austin, 5/20)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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