Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Opioid Deaths Soar Among Black People On Chicago's West Side
Cook County residents continue to die at a staggering rate from opioid-related overdoses, and Black residents from Chicago鈥檚 West Side account for a disproportionate number of those deaths. County political and public health officials on Tuesday sounded the alarm about what they said was a preventable crisis that has been overshadowed by the COVID-19 pandemic. 鈥淲hatever crisis faces our communities, people of color bear the brunt of it,鈥 Toni Preckwinkle, the Cook County Board president, said at a news conference. (Eldeib and Sanchez, 7/14)
Immigrant leaders in Maine鈥檚 largest cities say the state has failed them as the nation鈥檚 whitest state sees some of the biggest racial disparities in coronavirus cases. Most states have seen some racial disparities, according to data compiled by the Covid Tracking Project. But nowhere is it greater than in Maine for Black and African American people. They are 24 times more likely to have tested positive for the virus than whites are here. (Piper, 7/22)
The release of the footage by Allentown police came days after activists tweeted a shorter, 26-second video, which has been viewed hundreds of thousand of times. Police say the man was taken into the hospital and, after treatment, was released. His name and medical details were not disclosed. Police also didn't release the names of the officers. (Booker, 7/14)
A 16-year-old boy in Kalamazoo, Michigan, died this spring after workers pinned him to the floor at the residential facility where he lived 鈥 after he鈥檇 thrown a sandwich at lunch. While held on the ground, he told them: 鈥淚 can鈥檛 breathe.鈥 At least 70 people have died in law enforcement custody in the last decade after saying the words 鈥淚 can鈥檛 breathe,鈥 a recent New York Times investigation found. But just as adults have died after being restrained, so have children. (Smith Richards and Cohen, 7/10)
All too often, health care workers are the target of biased or bigoted behavior from the patients they鈥檙e caring for 鈥 but many medical centers don鈥檛 have formal policies in place to help clinicians handle those incidents or the impact on staff. A new set of recommendations, published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine, offers health systems a blueprint for better responding to incidents of patient bias. They say a 鈥渙ne size fits all鈥 approach won鈥檛 work, and instead urge health systems to take a sweeping set of actions to make sure they鈥檙e prepared to handle such problems, which have long been documented. (Spinelli, 7/13)