Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'Murder Hornet' Spotted In Washington State For First Time This Year
For the second time this year, a "murder hornet" has been spotted in Washington state, officials said Thursday. But it's the first confirmed report of a live Asian giant hornet in the state in 2021, the state department of agriculture said. The sighting in Whatcom County was reported Wednesday. Earlier this summer, a dead insect was found north of Seattle. (Helsel, 8/13)
In other news from across the U.S. 鈥
The National Abortion Federation has told doctors in Texas it will stop referring patients and sending money to clinics that offer abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. In North Texas, the Texas Equal Action Fund will likely 鈥減ause鈥 its ride share program that helps women reach abortion appointments. Dr. Bhavik Kumar, an abortion provider for Planned Parenthood, has cleared his schedule to fit in as many patients as he can before the end of the month. (Blackman, 8/12)
The ACLU of D.C. is suing the District and eight unnamed D.C. police officers for spraying chemical irritants and firing stun grenades at racial justice protesters and two photojournalists near Black Lives Matter Plaza last summer. The federal lawsuit filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Washington on behalf of Oyoma Asinor and Bryan Dozier, two independent photojournalists, seeks a trial by jury and compensation for their injuries. (Silverman, 8/12)
Members of the National Black Lung Association, the environmental group Appalachian Voices and the Appalachian Citizens鈥 Law Center, a Kentucky-based nonprofit law firm that represents coal miners on black lung and mine safety issues, urged Congress to permanently extend and raise by 25% an excise tax that coal producers must pay when coal they produce is first sold or used. The excise tax is the main source of revenue for the Federal Black Lung Program and the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund, which pays benefits to miners disabled by the disease as well as their eligible survivors and dependents when no responsible coal operator is identified or when the liable operator does not pay. (Tony, 8/12)
New Hampshire health officials recently reported the state's first Jamestown Canyon virus (JCV) case of the season, an adult who died from the infection. The patient is from Dublin, located in the east central part of the state, the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services (NHDHHS) said in a statement. The patient was hospitalized with worsening neurological symptoms and died, with JCV as a contributing cause. *8/12)
KHN: Veterans Push For Medical Marijuana In Conservative South聽
Each time Chayse Roth drives home to North Carolina, he notices the highway welcome signs that declare: 鈥淣ation鈥檚 Most Military Friendly State.鈥 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a powerful thing to claim,鈥 said Roth, a former Marine Corps gunnery sergeant who served multiple deployments to Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Now he says he鈥檚 calling on the state to live up to those words. A Wilmington resident, Roth is advocating for lawmakers to pass a bill that would legalize medical marijuana and allow veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and other debilitating conditions to use it for treatment. (Pattani, 8/13)
KHN: How A Hospital And A School District Teamed Up To Help Kids In Emotional Crisis
In 2019, the Rockville Centre school district in Long Island, New York, was shaken by a string of student deaths, including the suicides of a recent graduate and a current student. 鈥淲hen you get these losses, one after the other, you almost can鈥檛 get traction on normalcy,鈥 said Noreen Leahy, an assistant superintendent at the school district. To Leahy, the student suicides exposed a children鈥檚 mental health crisis brewing for years. She had observed a concerning uptick in depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation among students. Her school district had a team of mental health professionals, but Leahy said they couldn鈥檛 provide the kind of long-term care many students needed. (Chatterjee and Herman, 8/13)