Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Dying In The US? It'll Cost You More Now Than Pre-Pandemic
If anything is certain in life, it's death and taxes. And in some states, the former is a heck of a lot more expensive, according to data released by Self Financial. Using 2020 figures from the National Funeral Directors Association and the CDC, the group looked at the average 'cost of dying' across the U.S. based on the price of end-of-life care, funerals and cremations. (Reed, 5/12)
In other public health news 鈥
news reports and social media posts have documented visible changes in the nails of some covid-19 survivors, most commonly in the form of horizontal grooves. Dubbed 鈥淐OVID nails鈥 by a U.K.-based epidemiologist who tweeted about the markings earlier this month, the anecdotal reports have prompted assertions that it could be a way to tell whether you鈥檝e had the virus. Other experts, however, caution against relying on your nails as proof that you may have been infected. 鈥淲hether it comes to nail changes or skin rashes or hair loss, these are not necessarily things that covid does because it鈥檚 covid,鈥 said Jeffrey Weinberg, an associate clinical professor of dermatology at Mount Sinai in New York. Those symptoms, Weinberg said, 鈥渃ould happen with anything that perturbs the body.鈥 (Chiu, 5/12)
The Federal Aviation Administration announced this week that it had proposed a civil penalty of $10,500 against a JetBlue passenger whose disruptive behavior on a flight included coughing and blowing his nose into a blanket. 鈥淭he FAA alleges the passenger repeatedly ignored, and was abusive to, flight attendants who instructed him to wear a face mask,鈥 the agency said in a news release. 鈥淭he passenger鈥檚 disruptive behavior diverted flight crew members from their duties.鈥 (Sampson, 5/12)
KHN: Another Pandemic 鈥楾o Do鈥 On The List For Schools: Contact Tracing
Chris Hodges, the principal of Gaylord High School in Otsego County, Michigan, never thought he鈥檇 be a contact tracer. 鈥淚 definitely thought, you know, 鈥榃hy 鈥 why am I doing this?鈥欌 he said with a laugh. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not what I went to school for.鈥 In what has become a regular part of his school day, Hodges fields reports on his charges such as hearing from the Health Department of Northwest Michigan that a student had tested positive for the novel coronavirus and was in school for three days when she might have been contagious. (Dahlberg, 5/13)
Also 鈥
Even as overdose deaths rose nationwide last year, new prescriptions for buprenorphine -- widely considered the gold standard for opioid addiction treatment -- were lower than usual, a Princeton University study has found. The study, published recently in JAMA Network Open, projected what prescribing levels for buprenorphine and opioid painkillers would have been in 2020 had the COVID-19 pandemic not taken place, based on prescribing data from previous years. (Whelan, 5/12)
A report about the stunning lack of action at the University of Michigan while a rogue doctor was sexually assaulting hundreds of young men has cast an unflattering light at one of the school's giants, the late football coach Bo Schembechler, whose bronze statue stands on campus. Schembechler, who led the team from 1969-89, was vividly told by at least four people that Robert Anderson had molested them during routine physicals or other exams, according to the report commissioned by the university. Yet, the report says, he took no direct steps and even told one man to "toughen up." (White and Householder, 5/12)
KHN: Behind The Byline: The Quest To Bring Spanish Language To KHN聽
About 37 million people in the United States speak Spanish at home and consume information in Spanish, according to one estimate. Knowing this, and building on decades of experience as a health journalist, ethnic media editor Paula Andalo developed a strategy to bring KHN鈥檚 coverage to Spanish speakers. She has forged partnerships with Spanish-language news outlets across the United States and in Latin American countries. (Andalo, 5/13)