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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Jun 24 2021

Full Issue

Florida Bill Protects Students With Disabilities From Dangerous Restraints

The new bill, signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis requires schools to follow stricter punishment guidelines, and prohibits using "seclusion" punishments and face-down restraints. Hospice programs, dentistry, medical pot and counseling for AIDS patients are also in the news.

Schools across Florida must soon follow stricter guidelines when it comes to restraining students with cognitive, developmental and behavioral disabilities. Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday signed a bipartisan bill that will prohibit staff from forcing K-12 students with disabilities to isolate in a room, a practice known as seclusion. (Crowder, 6/23)

Florida health care regulators announced this year that the state needed an additional four hospice programs by July 2022 to care for people who are dying. This week, though, the state Agency for Health Care Administration gave tentative approval to twice that many. The decisions, announced Monday, could bring additional hospice programs to seven counties, including Broward, Lee and Manatee, which were not included in a Feb. 5 published list of areas that needed new programs. (Sexton, 6/23)

Officials in Manatee County, Florida, were able to identify the patient zero in a recent outbreak of the coronavirus that swept through a government building and left two employees dead and several hospitalized, all of whom were unvaccinated. Officials learned through contact tracing that the patient, an employee in the IT department, was infected by an unknown contact, Manatee County Administrator Scott Hopes said during a virtual news conference on Wednesday. (Lynch and Maxouris, 6/24)

In news from Illinois and Pennsylvania 鈥

A company whose northern Illinois chemical plant was heavily damaged in a fire last week defended its use of firefighting foam containing toxic chemicals Wednesday, saying crews had taken steps to contain the material. An industrial team hired by Lubrizol Inc., parent company of Chemtool, used foam containing PFAS compounds June 15 before switching to another foam without them on orders of the fire chief in Rockton, a town near the Wisconsin border. (Flesher, 6/23)

Add to the toll of COVID-19 oral health. 鈥淭ooth pain and periodontal abscesses and face swelling,鈥 said Kari Hexem, chief dental officer at Philadelphia FIGHT Family Dentistry, in Center City, listing some of the conditions that have worsened in people who avoided the dentist for more than a year due to fear of COVID-19. 鈥淪ome people lost teeth they wouldn鈥檛 have lost if they had come in,鈥 said Bernadette Logan, a suburban dentist at Paoli Smiles. 鈥淒efinitely harder cleans, more tartar, broken teeth.鈥 (Laughlin, 6/23)

In news from South Dakota, Utah, Arizona and Nevada 鈥

Medical marijuana won鈥檛 be allowed on the campuses of South Dakota鈥檚 public universities, the Board of Regents announced Wednesday. The board, which oversees the state鈥檚 six public universities, changed its policy on medical marijuana as the state prepares for the drug to be legalized on July 1. It reasoned that it had to stay in compliance with federal law, which still outlaws the drug. (6/23)

In addition to helping people living with HIV with their physical health, the聽Utah AIDS Foundation聽(UAF) is about to begin helping them with their mental health. Beginning July 1, UAF will expand its services to include long-term mental health counseling. It is the first new program the organization has added in more than a decade. It comes in response to 鈥渢he persistent need and the long-term trauma experienced by clients living with HIV,鈥 said UAF executive director Ahmer Afroz. Although UAF is based in Salt Lake City, its staff works with people living with HIV across the state of Utah. The new program will offer this 鈥渆xtremely marginalized population鈥 individualized, long-term mental health therapy 鈥 the first program of its kind in Utah. (Pierce, 6/23)

Arizona Department of Health Services officials announced Wednesday that dispensaries are voluntarily recalling eight marijuana products because of possible contamination. They said no illnesses have been reported so far, and the move is just a precaution after Salmonella bacteria and Aspergillus fungus were detected in some samples. (6/24)

Gov. Steve Sisolak on Wednesday marked the disbanding of a Nevada COVID-19 private sector task force by praising the lengths to which it went to find personal protective equipment for medical workers and to increase coronavirus testing early in the pandemic. 鈥淚n March of 2020, none of us knew what toll this pandemic would take on the world, especially on the state of Nevada,鈥 Sisolak said at an afternoon news conference. 鈥淲e were deeply affected, but for all that we suffered, we had a distinct advantage in tackling our needs and shoring up our resources,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he private sector is an advantage Nevada had that no one else did. (Hynes, 6/23)

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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