Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Illinois Lawmakers Ban Manufacture, Sale Of Assault Weapons
On the first full day of his second term, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday signed a bill banning the sale, distribution and manufacture of high-power assault weapons, .50 caliber rifles and ammunition, and large-capacity magazines while still allowing people who already own such weapons to keep them. (Hancock, 1/10)
Local researchers and scientists have been testing wastewater for COVID-19 since 2020, even recently turning to use tampons in order to swab human waste in sewers. Now, Illinois residents will be able to keep an eye on the levels of COVID-19 in their community as measured by 75 wastewater treatment plants in the state. (Perez, 1/10)
Carbon Health, a San Francisco company that provides urgent and primary care through clinics in California and elsewhere, will lay off more than 250 people, company CEO and co-founder Eren Bali tweeted. 鈥淲e鈥檙e unwinding major initiatives like public health, (remote patient monitoring), hardware, chronic care programs to focus on our core primary care & urgent care service. And we鈥檝e reduced our global work force by more than 200 people,鈥欌 Bali wrote. He said he was still optimistic about the future, but that 鈥渢he current market conditions force us to be more diligent.鈥 (DiFeliciantonio, 1/9)
Grant Heinrich was working in the office on his family鈥檚 farm when he got a text message from one of his closest friends and farm hands. A suicide note. Heinrich jumped in his truck and sped to the barn. The West Texas roads seemed like a tunnel with blurred walls of crops curving around him. (Lozano, 1/11)
It was a dreary scene from the High Bridge in St. Paul late Tuesday morning, as what鈥檚 usually a stellar view of downtown, the State Capitol and the Cathedral of St. Paul was instead mostly obscured by the winter smog. What鈥檚 behind this sudden turn to poor air quality that has prompted an alert from state officials through Wednesday 鈥 and left many Minnesotans with coughs, irritated eyes and burning throats? (Krueger, 1/10)
The Crisis Center of Tampa Bay, along with much of the nation, is dealing with a shortage of emergency medical technicians. The organization recently launched an apprenticeship program that offers incentives to new recruits. (Colombini, 1/10)
The owner of a former vermiculite mine in northwestern Montana that spread harmful asbestos in and around the town of Libby has offered $18.5 million to settle the last of the state鈥檚 claims for environmental damages, Gov. Greg Gianforte announced Tuesday. (1/11)
A federal judge who previously concluded Arizona was providing inadequate medical and mental health care to prisoners said she will give the state three months to ensure it has enough health care professionals to meet constitutional standards. (Billeaud, 1/10)
An Indianapolis apartment fire left a 28-year-old man and four children ages 1, 3, 12 and 14 unconscious, in cardiac arrest and hospitalized in critical condition, authorities said Tuesday. Indianapolis firefighters performed CPR on the five victims and transported them to hospitals, Battalion Chief Rita Reith said. (1/10)