Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Newly Tested DNA Confirms Notorious Murderer Ted Bundy Killed Utah Teen
Mr. Bundy had confessed to killing Laura Ann Aime before he was executed in 1989. Investigators said DNA testing provided conclusive proof. (Levenson, 4/1)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Texans who use the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program will no longer be allowed to purchase sweetened drinks and candy beginning this Wednesday, April 1. In 2025, Gov. Greg Abbott requested that the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food and Nutrition Service prohibit those purchases using SNAP to "help ensure the health and well-being of Texans." (Brown and Myers, 4/1)
Gov. Jared Polis wants to prohibit Coloradans from using food-assistance benefits to purchase soda and other sugary drinks that are bad for their health.聽But getting buy-in from other state leaders to put the ban in place now hinges on the governor鈥檚 broader plan for curbing soda drinking not just for low-income people, but for all Coloradans, starting with those attending taxpayer-funded events. (Brown, 4/1)
Kevin DeRonde stepped into a suite of empty offices at Mahaska Health in Oskaloosa. 鈥淭his will all be gutted, and the PET CT will be housed over here,鈥 said DeRonde, the hospital's CEO, motioning to a room filled with various cardboard boxes, storage tubs and office furniture. 鈥淐ontrol room will be here, and then the patient intake rooms will be back behind us.鈥 In January, the hospital found out it will receive more than $3 million from the state鈥檚 rural health transformation program fund to buy a new PET scanner, which is typically used to check for cancer. (Krebs, 4/1)
When pollution gets bad enough in the rivers supplying Iowa鈥檚 largest city with drinking water, it costs Des Moines around $16,000 a day to run a special system to filter out dangerous nitrates. It鈥檚 a fact of life in the agriculture-dependent state 鈥 and climate change is making the water quality problem even worse. The nitrates come from fertilizer and pesticides that make their way into the soil and then waterways like the Raccoon and Des Moines rivers. It鈥檚 not usually a problem in winter, but this year Iowa鈥檚 capital had to filter in January and February 鈥 just the second time that鈥檚 happened in more than 30 years. (Walling, 4/1)
A Trump-appointed federal judge in South Texas this week dismissed a lawsuit filed by a woman in the Rio Grande Valley who alleged that her rights were violated after prosecutors charged her with murder in a controversial case that made global headlines after she self-induced an abortion. (Kriel, 4/1)
On the substance abuse epidemic 鈥
Results of a voluntary wastewater monitoring program showed a highly potent opioid was found in two dozen Missouri schools, four of them in the Kansas City region. (Bauer, 4/1)
More than three years after Michigan communities began receiving millions of dollars to fight the opioid epidemic, some have yet to spend a dime. Michigan is set to receive at least $1.6 billion over 18 years from a national lawsuit settlement with drug manufacturers, distributors and pharmacies that were deemed partly responsible for the opioid crisis. The state is getting half that money, with the rest split between Michigan counties, townships and cities. The funds began arriving in January 2023. (French, 4/1)
Standing in the doorway of her new San Francisco apartment, Amber Richmond felt like her luck had finally changed. It was the summer of 2020, just before her 28th birthday. After years cycling between homeless shelters, hotels and the streets as she struggled with opioid addiction, she was finally moving into a studio in Lower Nob Hill thanks to a federal housing voucher. (Hodgman, 4/1)