Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Lead Levels In Some Michigan Water Must Be Made Safe, EPA Orders
The city of Benton Harbor must take immediate actions to improve the safety and reliability of its lead-tainted drinking water, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ordered Tuesday.聽The order comes as state and local officials continue聽to provide Benton Harbor residents with bottled water, and have embarked on a $30 million project intended聽to replace the city's thousands of lead service lines聽within 18 months.聽The city's municipal water system has tested for lead levels above聽the federal action limit of 15 parts per billion since 2018. But it was this September,聽when a group of 30 environmental and community organizations appealed to the EPA to intervene in Benton Harbor as the lead problems languished, that state and local response intensified. (Matheny, 12/2)
In news from Missouri, Texas and Tennessee 鈥
Missouri marijuana regulators received two federal grand jury subpoenas last fall, almost a year after authorities issued an initial demand for records from the state. The first demand for records, issued in November 2019, directs the Department of Health and Senior Services to provide 鈥渁ny and all records pertaining to medical marijuana applications鈥 for four individuals. Their names are redacted from the document. The second subpoena, dated Sept. 9, 2020, requires marijuana regulators to provide records, but what the records pertain to is redacted from the document. (Suntrup, 11/2)
A federal judge in Fort Worth has ruled for-profit businesses with sincerely held religious beliefs can be shielded from LGBTQ discrimination claims, carving out exceptions to sexual orientation and gender identity protections previously granted by the U.S. Supreme Court. The Sunday ruling by U.S. District Judge Reed O鈥機onnor held that Braidwood Management Inc., a Christian health care companies operator in Katy, can avoid LGBTQ anti-bias protections under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the First Amendment. The anti-bias protections stem from Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. (Wolf, 11/2)
The Tennessee Department of Health is urging the public to get a flu shot if they have not already received one. According to a news release, the department will hold 鈥淔ight Flu TN鈥 vaccine events that will offer free shots in every county on Nov. 9 to help boost the number of Tennesseans vaccinated against influenza. (11/3)
In news from Maryland 鈥
Inside a Maryland juvenile detention facility in Anne Arundel County, officials struggled to manage a girl who tried to injure herself and staffers on numerous occasions. She threatened to stab workers with colored pencils and attempted to assault them and other youth. After she tried hanging herself, staff at the Thomas J.S. Waxter Children鈥檚 Center in Laurel, not trained for the level of mental health care needed, put her in physical restraints inside her cell, one of several times they鈥檝e done so after she attempted to kill herself or harm others. (Davis, 11/3)
Public comment at Tuesday鈥檚 Harford County Council meeting lasted well after 11 p.m. with more than 60 speakers expressing a range of satisfaction and dissatisfaction with the termination of the county health officer, Dr. David Bishai, late last month. Bishai, a Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health adjunct professor with degrees in medicine and economics, has said he was not given a reason for his firing, which happened two weeks ago. He said he was called to an in-person meeting with officials from the Maryland Department of Health who informed him that the Harford County Council voted to remove him, and that state Health Secretary Dennis R. Schrader approved the vote. (Bateman, 11/3)