Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Perspectives: Ideas To Finance New Medications; Narcan Isn't The Best Opioid Addiction Tool
This is a golden age for biomedicine. Over the past few years, mRNA vaccines have saved millions of lives and enabled business and social life to resume at much safer levels. There are pending vaccines for malaria and for dengue, both showing good signs of working. There is serious talk of using Crispr to fix sickle cell anemia. An mRNA vaccine against some forms of cancer is more speculative, but seems possible. (Tyler Cowen, 4/11)
When you receive a scary diagnosis 鈥 for cancer, heart disease or other serious illness 鈥 one of your first calls is probably to a doctor who can offer the full range of evidence-based care. But if your diagnosis were for opioid addiction and you came to see me, an addiction specialist, federal regulations written half a century ago would bar me from prescribing the most effective treatment: methadone. (Ashish Thakrar, 4/10)
After a string of overdoses left three Carrollton-Farmers Branch students dead in recent months, the district ramped up an awareness campaign and made Narcan available on every one of its campuses, according to news reports. (4/9)
Medication abortion, also known as pharmaceutical abortion or abortion with pills, is a pregnancy termination protocol that involves taking two different drugs, mifepristone and misoprostol, that can be safely used during the first 10 weeks of pregnancy. Since its approval, mifepristone has been used by many millions of women in the United States and elsewhere to safely induce early abortions. (Lisa Kearns and Arthur L. Caplan, 4/11)
When federal Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk suspended the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the drug mifepristone on April 7, he significantly jeopardized access to abortion. In addition to dealing an immediate blow to accessing an essential and time-sensitive health care service, this decision also upended a drug approval system that for decades has been based on scientific evidence and expert medical opinions. (Liz Borkowski and Julia Strasser, 4/10)
A Texas federal judge鈥檚 ruling to remove the 23-year old drug mifepristone from the market not only threatens abortion access in the US 鈥 it鈥檚 also an appalling sideswipe at the Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 authority and expertise. (Lisa Jarvis, 4/11)
If 鈥渟afety鈥 is Kacsmaryck鈥檚 concern, will he be coming after penicillin next?聽You can bet he won鈥檛 try to outlaw Viagra; even Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito would put the brakes on that one. So let鈥檚 cut the crap. Opposition to mifepristone isn鈥檛 about safety.聽(Dale Butland, 4/11)
A Texas federal judge has chosen to 鈥渃herry-pick鈥 the facts around mifepristone 鈥 a pill that is demonstrated to be聽safer than Tylenol 鈥 and ban it. Lisa says it sets an extremely dangerous precedent for the FDA. The pharmaceutical industry, to a certain degree, conducts聽research under the assumption that someday, if proven safe, their drug聽will be available at a local CVS. (Jessica Karl, 4/11)