Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Flesh-Eating Bacteria Found In Seaweed Bloom Nearing Florida
Most people were already aware of the 5,000-mile long sargassum bloom making its way toward Florida 鈥 and possibly Alabama 鈥 beaches, but thanks to a new study, there鈥檚 more to be concerned about than just the stench which accompanies the bloom. Florida Atlantic University has released a study which found that sargassum bloom contains both the Vibrio bacteria and plastic marine debris, creating what the study鈥檚 authors called a 鈥減erfect pathogen storm鈥 with significant health risks to both humans and marine life. (6/1)
The effort to legalize recreational marijuana in Florida crossed a major hurdle but still faces a likely challenge from the state鈥檚 attorney general. Florida鈥檚 Department of State reported that the proposed ballot measure to legalize recreational marijuana gathered enough signatures to put it on the ballot in 2024. (Ritchie, 6/1)
The Ohio Supreme Court declined a request Thursday from two anti-abortion activists to require that the Ohio Ballot Board divide the abortion rights constitutional amendment into two or more separate proposals, which would make it harder to pass at the ballot box. Thursday鈥檚 decision is one less hurdle for backers of the constitutional amendment proposal, who must collect roughly 413,000 signatures by July 5 to get on November ballots. (Hancock, 6/1)
State-by-state emergency plans aimed at minimizing the impacts of natural disasters overwhelmingly understate extreme heat as a hazard to human health, according to a Duke University analysis. The recently released policy brief, 鈥淒efining Extreme Heat as a Hazard: A Review of Current State Hazard Mitigation Plans,鈥 highlights the need for states to better evaluate the growing threat of extreme heat as the climate changes, identify populations of people most vulnerable to high temperatures, and implement plans to educate and assist those populations. (Talton, 6/2)
Almost 800 police officers around the state have filed duty disability claims for PTSD since 2019. Many of these officers, said Rep. Kaohly Vang Her, DFL-St. Paul, were leaving their departments with this serious diagnosis without receiving medical treatment.聽鈥淲e want to ensure they get the treatment they need,鈥 Her said, adding that there鈥檚 a need to destigmatize that treatment. (Collins, 6/1)
After Coloradans voted to legalize psilocybin in 2022, "magic mushrooms" are now becoming more mainstream, with a first-of-its-kind study and a national psychedelic conference on the horizon. The University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora this month announced it would launch the first modern-era psilocybin clinical trial for depression this fall. (Hernandez, 5/31)
On April 25, four disability rights organizations sued California state agencies and officials in an attempt to overturn the End of Life Option Act, a seven-year-old law that allows doctors to prescribe lethal medication to people who have six months or less to live. The plaintiffs assert that the law violates the Americans With Disabilities Act and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act鈥攚hich form the foundation for disability rights law in the United States. (Luterman, 5/31)