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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Jun 24 2022

Full Issue

In Privacy Lawsuit, Michigan To Destroy 3 Million Baby Blood Samples

The heel-prick blood spot tests have been kept in storage, and the decision was made during a lawsuit addressing consent and privacy. Mental competence of prisoners in Mississippi, a reprimand for a Health Commissioner at the Virginia Board of Health, and more are also reported.

The state of Michigan has agreed to destroy more than 3 million dried blood spots taken from babies and kept in storage, a partial settlement in an ongoing lawsuit over consent and privacy in the digital age. At the state’s direction, hospitals have routinely pricked the heels of newborns to draw blood to check for more than 50 rare diseases. That practice, which is widespread across the U.S., isn’t being challenged. Rather, the dispute is over leftover samples. (White, 6/23)

In other health news from across the U.S. —

Prisoners on death row in Mississippi will no longer have to be mentally competent in order for their post-conviction review process to go forward, after a state supreme court decision Tuesday. The court's ruling, which overturned 26 years of precedent in the state,Ā involvedĀ Stephen ElliottĀ Powers, who was convicted ofĀ murder and attempted rape in 2000 and sentenced to death. On June 13, 1998, Powers killed 27-year-oldĀ Elizabeth "Beth" Lafferty in Hattiesburg. Evidence pointed to attempted rape, a charge thatĀ elevated the crimeĀ to capital murder. Powers admitted to shooting Lafferty five times but denied that he everĀ tried to rape her. (Perlis, 6/24)

Virginia Board of Health members on Thursday told Health Commissioner Colin Greene that his comments dismissing evidence of structural racism in health outcomes and calling gun violence a political talking point damaged the health department, its employees and marginalized communities. After questioning Greene for nearly an hour, the board passed a resolution expressing members’ ā€œembarrassmentā€ over his views and advised him not to publicly question ā€œbasic scientific facts regarding disparities.ā€ (Portnoy, 6/23)

At his State of the Union speech in March, President Joe Biden urged Congress to fund a new federal agency that would ā€œsuperchargeā€ breakthrough medical research and ā€œend cancer as we know it.ā€ Congress responded two weeks later by approving $1 billion for the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, or ARPA-H, which will tackle projects that are seen as too costly, risky or time-intensive for the private sector and traditional public research. In Maryland, research institutions, labs, pharmaceutical companies and biotech startups have long had a close, symbiotic relationship with the numerous federal health agencies already located here, but federal leaders and lawmakers think it might be time now for some distance. (Bologna and Cohn, 6/24)

California’s record wildfire season two years ago dished up some of the worst and most memorable air pollution in modern times - the smoke, the dark skies, the eerie orange glow of the sun. But just how bad it was, and what the toll of the unhealthy air will be on people and communities, is a matter that’s still coming to light. A new report finds that California was home to 19 of the 20 worst counties in the nation for particulate pollution in 2020. If sustained, these pollution levels could shave months, if not years, off the lives of residents, according to the Air Quality Life Index, published this month by the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago. (Alexander, 6/23)

Baltimore’s water system, which serves 1.8 million homes and businesses in the city and Baltimore County, contains measurable levels of so-called ā€œforever chemicalsā€ that the EPA said last week pose health risks even at minute levels. The chemicals known as PFAS, used in firefighting foams and in consumer products for their nonstick and stain-resistant properties, were found in the system at a concentration of 4.93 parts per trillion, according to a city Department of Public Works report. (Dance, 6/23)

The Museum at the Bighorns in Sheridan is hosting a temporary exhibit that tells the story of healthcare and healing practices on the Crow and Northern Cheyenne reservations in Montana. It’s from the collection from of the Western Heritage Center in Billings, Mont. ā€œBaĆ” Hawassiio & ƈnomóhtĆ„hĆ©seh: Healthcare on the Crow & Northern Cheyenne Reservationsā€ has been on display at other museums and will continue to make the rounds after it leaves Sheridan. ā€œOne of the reasons why we wanted to get this exhibit was because it’s a topic that people don’t know anything about,ā€ said Jessica Salzman, Collections Manager for the Museum at the Bighorns. ā€œYes, the Crow and Northern Cheyenne reservations are technically across the Montana border [but] the people that live there came to Sheridan to shop, they were part of the community here, and they still are.ā€ (Cook, 6/23)

The number of Utahns experiencing homelessness for the first time rose last year, and state officials believe pandemic-fueled turmoil and surging housing prices may be to blame. The Utah Office of Homeless Services’ annual report, released Wednesday, found the number of first-time homeless Utahns jumped by 14% from fiscal 2020 to 2021, representing the first time in five years that metric has spiked. (The federal fiscal year runs from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30.) Joseph Jensen, data manager of the state office, said officials are studying the extent to which the pandemic and housing costs are affecting homelessness. Utah, he said, is still seeing more people access assistance programs — even if they aren’t experiencing homelessness. (Apgar, 6/22)

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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