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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Jun 10 2022

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, covid, hospice, "emotional perfectionism," parental burnout, and more.

The American Civil Liberties Union, whose advocacy on reproductive rights is of more than a half-century vintage, recently tweeted its alarm about the precarious state of legal abortion: 鈥淎bortion bans disproportionately harm: Black Indigenous and other people of color. The L.G.B.T.Q. community. Immigrants. Young people. Those working to make ends meet. People with disabilities. Protecting abortion access is an urgent matter of racial and economic justice.鈥 This tweet encompassed so much and so many and yet neglected to mention a relevant demographic: women. (Powerll, 6/8)

When I was in high school, I learned a secret my grandmother had kept for decades: She鈥檇 had an abortion. The story came out after she passed away and my grandfather announced that, at her request, in lieu of flowers donations should be made to Planned Parenthood. For me, as a na茂ve teenager, it was a surprise that someone so maternal and loving would have had an abortion. I had been taught 鈥 through TV shows, movies and books 鈥 that abortion was something that irresponsible people do to avoid childbearing. I am sure this is how many people still see abortion. The story my grandfather told was that my grandmother became pregnant early in their marriage, during the Great Depression when she and my grandfather didn鈥檛 have the jobs, money and security to provide for a child. So she traveled from New York to Puerto Rico to get an illegal abortion. Later she went on to have three children: my dad, my aunt and my uncle. (Foster, 6/8)

Ravindra Gupta had studied drug-resistant H.I.V. for more than a decade when he first encountered Adam Castillejo, who would become known as the 鈥淟ondon patient,鈥 the second person in the world to be cured of H.I.V. Dr. Gupta, who goes by Ravi, was a professor at University College London straddling the clinical and academic worlds when Mr. Castillejo presented as both H.I.V.-positive and with relapsed lymphoma, after a previous transplant using healthy stem cells from Mr. Castillejo鈥檚 own body had failed. (Nagesh, 6/6)

Gloria Foster wasn鈥檛 ready for hospice, even though, with a prognosis of less than six months to live, she qualified for it. She was debilitated by diabetes and congestive heart failure, and was living with both a pacemaker and a device to help pump blood from her heart to the rest of her body. She also was tethered to an oxygen tank. But Foster didn鈥檛 want to enter hospice, if, as is normally required by Medicare, she would have had to forgo treatments that might, against all odds, reverse the course of her disease. 鈥淲hy did I need hospice?鈥 Foster, 73, asked in a phone interview recently from the home she shares with a grandson in Asbury Park, New Jersey. 鈥淗ospice is more or less when you鈥檙e ready to die. I just wanted to work my way back to doing as much as I could.鈥 (Ollove, 6/9)

Online mental-health startup Cerebral Inc. was just getting off the ground in early 2020 when it detected a potential problem in its business model. The company was focused on treating people experiencing depression and anxiety, charging a monthly fee to see a nurse practitioner online for prescription antidepressants. But patients tended to cancel their subscriptions after only a few months, making it more difficult for the company to recoup advertising and other costs, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal and people familiar with the matter. (Winkler, Safdar and Fuller, 6/8)

The term toxic positivity has gained popularity in recent years, referring to moments when people responded to others鈥 struggles with surface-deep assurances and cliched phrases such as 鈥淓verything happens for a reason鈥 or 鈥淗ave you tried yoga?鈥 But there is a similar, if lesser-known, concept that is more inner-directed: emotional perfectionism. ... Rather than encouraging others to look on the bright side (toxic positivity), they expect themselves to be unfailingly upbeat. (Mecking, 6/9)

Doctors took a look at Ian Mitchard鈥檚 body four years ago and assumed his career was over.聽That鈥檚 why Steph Davis brought him along to a talk she gave to doctors: She wanted them to see what was possible.聽To be fair, it鈥檚 probably the conclusion many would reach after Mitchard crashed while paragliding alone. He broke his back, ankles and a couple other bones. The worst damage was to his feet, which were crushed so badly that those doctors thought amputation was the only solution.聽The injuries were, of course, horrific, but the worst part of the ordeal was the doctors鈥 bleak outlook, Davis, Mitchard鈥檚 wife, said in a phone interview. (England, 6/8)

The past two-plus years have been relentless for working parents, who have frequently been placed in the impossible position of doing their jobs and parenting simultaneously. And a recent survey, by researchers with Ohio State University, suggests they have paid a steep emotional price. In 2021, 66 percent of working parents met the criteria for parental burnout 鈥 a nonclinical term that basically means they were so physically and mentally depleted that they may feel like bad parents or emotionally pull away from their children. (Pearson, 6/6)

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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