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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Aug 27 2021

Full Issue

Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed

Each week, KHN finds longer stories for you to enjoy. This week's selections include stories on abortion, ADHD, horseshoe crabs, hot dogs and more.

The battle plays out in dueling soundtracks. On one part of the sidewalk, longtime antiabortion demonstrator Coleman Boyd belts out a steady stream of Christian music, with lyrics about Jesus鈥檚 love for the unborn. 鈥淵our precious baby is going to be murdered in this place,鈥 Boyd, a physician, preaches between songs. Nearby, supporters of the Jackson Women鈥檚 Health Organization, the last abortion clinic in Mississippi, turn up their own playlist of 鈥淛agged Little Pill,鈥 by Alanis Morissette, and other female empowerment anthems. (Wax-Thibodeaux and Cha, 8/24)

Jessica McCabe crashed and burned at 30, when she got divorced, dropped out of community college and moved in with her mother. Eric Tivers had 21 jobs before age 21.Both have been diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and both today are entrepreneurs who wear their diagnoses 鈥 and rare resilience 鈥 on their sleeves. With YouTube videos, podcasts and tweets, they鈥檝e built online communities aimed at ending the shame that so often makes having ADHD so much harder. Now they鈥檙e going even further, asking: Why not demand more than mere compassion? Why not seek deeper changes to create a more ADHD-friendly world? (Ellison, 8/21)

It鈥檚 one of the stranger, lesser-known aspects of U.S. health care 鈥 the striking, milky-blue blood of horseshoe crabs is a critical component of tests to ensure injectable medications such as coronavirus vaccines aren鈥檛 contaminated. To obtain it, harvesters bring many thousands of the creatures to laboratories to be bled each year, and then return them to the sea 鈥 a practice that has drawn criticism from conservationists because some don鈥檛 survive the process. (Kinnard, 8/20)

The videos are difficult to watch. In one, a man dangles over the edge of an Oklahoma City overpass, his legs swinging in midair as police grab his arms and pull him from the brink. In another, a woman hangs high above the Los Angeles Harbor as a half-dozen officers drag her, head-first, up the side of the bridge. The panicked voices of cops cry out, 鈥淲e got you, we got you!鈥 just before they pin her to the ground and pull out handcuffs. The short clips were posted on official law enforcement social media accounts, part of a longstanding practice by police agencies to showcase their lifesaving efforts online 鈥 especially in 2021 as desperation grows for positive press amid accusations of excessive force and racism following George Floyd鈥檚 murder, and rising gun violence and killings. But with renewed attention on officer interactions with people who are suffering from mental health issues, experts and advocates are taking another look at these posts with an eye toward whether they exploit the very victims law enforcement just saved. (Dazio, 8/23)

Blair Fox awoke with a jolt as she realized that her 2-day-old son was no longer in her hospital room. While she was napping, Teddy Joe Fox, born Sept. 18, 2018, in Los Angeles, had been taken for a routine heart test in preparation for discharge, then transferred to the neonatal intensive care unit. Doctors, she was told, had found something that merited further investigation, although nurses tried to reassure her that 鈥渋t most likely wasn鈥檛 anything to be concerned about.鈥 鈥淚t felt very scary and confusing,鈥 recalled Blair, now 37, as she and her husband Adam, 36, waited anxiously for the results of their son鈥檚 echocardiogram. The ultrasound of the newborn鈥檚 heart revealed a small hole, a finding the couple was told was common and would probably close on its own. (Boodman, 8/21)

A lot of Americans have been fretting about the extra pounds they鈥檝e put on during the pandemic. But if you believe your sluggish middle-aged metabolism has been contributing to your weight gain, it鈥檚 time to rethink. Researchers who conducted a study recently published in Science have new and surprising insights into how metabolism actually works as we age. 鈥淥ur paper provides the first road map of metabolism across the life span,鈥 says study co-researcher Herman Pontzer, professor of evolutionary anthropology at Duke University in Durham, N.C., and author of 鈥淏urn.鈥 鈥淢etabolism is incredibly steady from 20 to 60 years old, despite the widespread perception of our metabolisms slowing as we age,鈥 Pontzer says. (Rosenbloom, 8/26)

Since Theranos Inc. began to unravel in 2016, the blood-testing company鈥檚 founder, Elizabeth Holmes, has sought to tell her side of the story, even pursuing the possibility of a lucrative book deal. Now, at her coming criminal fraud trial, Ms. Holmes finally will get her best shot to tell it. After Theranos began imploding five years ago鈥攚ith federal investigators building cases against her for allegedly misleading investors and patients about the company鈥檚 technology鈥擬s. Holmes remained convinced she had done nothing wrong, people close to her at the time recalled, and wanted a venue to profess her innocence. (Weaver and Randazzo, 8/26)

By his count, Joey Chestnut has eaten an average of 1,200 hot dogs a year for the last 16 years 鈥 but he insists he鈥檚 healthy overall. On Monday, the competitive eater who holds the world record for hot dog eating had a radish salad, some grilled chicken and a protein shake. 鈥淭he only way I can continue doing it is by being healthy,鈥 Chestnut, 37, told The Washington Post. 鈥淚f I start gaining weight and start having issues with my body, then I won鈥檛 be able to push my body.鈥 (Mark, 8/25)

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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