Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
More Than A Quarter Of Americans Are Depressed
More than a quarter of American adults are depressed, a 10% surge from nearly a decade ago, according to the latest Gallup survey. The data come as the Biden administration tries to overhaul mental health care costs and boost the number of health care workers licensed to practice behavioral health care. Congress in this year鈥檚 budget also allotted hundreds of millions of dollars to mental health care grants and programs, many of them trained on children or substance misuse. (Owermohle, 5/17)
There are more new cases of chronic pain among US adults than other common long-term conditions like diabetes, depression and high blood pressure, according to a new study. The researchers say their findings 鈥渆mphasize the high disease burden of chronic pain in the US adult population and the need for early management of pain.鈥 (Dillinger, 5/16)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Study Reveals Staggering Toll Of Being Black In America: 1.6M Excess Deaths Over 22 Years
Research has long shown that Black people live sicker lives and die younger than white people. Now a new study, published Tuesday in JAMA, casts the nation鈥檚 racial inequities in stark relief, finding that the higher mortality rate among Black Americans resulted in 1.63 million excess deaths relative to white Americans over more than two decades. (Szabo, 5/16)
Many types of soft contact lenses available in the U.S. could contain toxic 鈥渇orever chemicals,鈥 new research has found. All 18 sets of soft contacts evaluated in a recent聽consumer study聽came back with various levels of organic fluorine 鈥斅燼n indicator for the presence of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).聽(Udasin, 5/16)
Federal researchers are launching a major study of how genes, lifestyle and other factors influence how the body responds to diet, to come up with better interventions when it comes to what we eat. Why it matters: Poor nutrition is a key driver of chronic disease in the United States. Yet, there remains little understanding of precisely how it impacts us on an individual level. (Reed, 5/16)
When researchers at a nonprofit that studies social media wanted to understand the connection between YouTube videos and gun violence, they set up accounts on the platform that mimicked the behavior of typical boys living in the U.S. They simulated two nine-year-olds who both liked video games. The accounts were identical, except that one clicked on the videos recommended by YouTube, and the other ignored the platform鈥檚 suggestions. The account that clicked on YouTube鈥檚 suggestions was soon flooded with graphic videos about school shootings, tactical gun training videos and how-to instructions on making firearms fully automatic. (Klepper, 5/16)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Lawyer Fees Draw Scrutiny As Camp Lejeune Claims Stack Up聽
David and Adair Keller started their married life together in 1977 at Camp Lejeune, a military training base on the Atlantic Coast in Jacksonville, North Carolina. David was a Marine Corps field artillery officer then, and they lived together on the base for about six months. But that sojourn had an outsize impact on their lives. Forty years later, in January 2018, Adair was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia. She died six months later at age 68. There鈥檚 a chance her illness was caused by toxic chemicals that seeped into the water military families at the base drank, cooked with, and washed with for decades. (Andrews, 5/17)