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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Feb 15 2022

Full Issue

San Francisco Probing Misuse Of Rape Victims' DNA

News outlets cover moves by the city's district attorney to investigate and potentially prevent misuse of DNA from rape kits being used later to incriminate victims. Meanwhile, the megadrought affecting southwestern North America is now thought to be the worst in 1,200 years.

San Francisco鈥檚 district attorney said Monday that police used a database with DNA collected from victims of rape and sexual assault to connect some of them to crimes. Dist. Atty. Chesa Boudin said the San Francisco Police Department crime lab had been using the database to 鈥渁ttempt to subsequently incriminate鈥 victims of rape and sexual assault, a practice he called 鈥渓egally and ethically wrong.鈥 The district attorney called for an immediate end to the alleged practice, committed to working with police to address the allegations and urged changes to local and state laws, according to a statement by Boudin鈥檚 office. (Yee, 2/14)

The San Francisco Police Department is accused of using DNA from sexual assault victims to identify possible crime suspects in a practice that the city鈥檚 district attorney called 鈥渓egally and ethically wrong.鈥 San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin said in a statement Monday that his office had demanded an immediate end to the alleged practice, which he said 鈥渢reats victims like evidence, not human beings.鈥 (Stelloh, 2/14)

In news about the environment and health 鈥

The extreme heat and dry conditions of the past few years pushed what was already an epic, decades-long drought in the American West into a historic disaster that bears the unmistakable fingerprints of climate change. The long-running drought, which has persisted since 2000, can now be considered the driest 22-year period of the past 1,200 years, according to a study published Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change. (Leonard, 2/14)

A fox from Catron County near Reserve has tested positive for rabies. New Mexico Department of Health officials announced Monday. They said it鈥檚 the first positive fox rabies case in New Mexico so far this year. The fox was submitted to the state public health laboratory in Albuquerque for testing after it bit a person last Friday. Authorities said the unidentified victim is receiving treatment. They said rabies is a deadly viral disease that can be prevented, but not cured. (2/14)

A strain of influenza deadly to chickens and other fowl has spread to poultry flocks in Kentucky and Virginia, less than a week after an outbreak in Indiana prompted some countries to limit shipments from the state.聽Mexico is among countries that have banned or limited poultry imports from Indiana after the virus was detected there, and the wider spread raises the possibility of additional curbs. The U.S. Agriculture Department鈥檚 Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service said in a statement Monday that tests show the virus present in a flock of commercial broiler chickens in Fulton County, Kentucky, and a backyard flock of mixed species birds in Fauquier County, Virginia. (Dorning, 2/14)

In other public health news 鈥

The majority of children aged five and younger are not meeting screen-time guidelines, new worldwide analysis suggests. According to the study, only a quarter of children under two, and one in three aged two to five, are meeting international recommendations, highlighting the need for additional public health initiatives aimed at promoting healthy device use. On average, global guidelines suggest infants younger than two avoid screen time altogether, while children aged two to five years spend no more than an hour a day in front of a screen. (2/14)

The last time prices rose this fast, today鈥檚 seniors were in their prime and drawing paychecks. Now they鈥檙e older, retired, and feeling the crunch in a world where everything suddenly costs more. Higher rents and heating bills and steeper gas and prescription drug prices are pinching almost everyone. But older folks on fixed incomes are being squeezed hardest. Lately, seniors make up nearly half 鈥 more than in the past 鈥 of those stopping by a food pantry on Mission Hill run by Action for Boston Community Development, an antipoverty group, on the three days each week it distributes chicken, fruit, cereal, and other provisions. (Weisman, 2/14)

A state official is accused of faking multiple pregnancies and using at least one of those ruses to get out of work and be paid for the time off. A Fulton County grand jury indicted Robin Folsom, former director of external affairs for the Georgia Vocational Rehabilitation Agency, on three felony counts of making false statements. She鈥檚 also charged with one count of identity fraud, also a felony. Folsom, 43, had supervised the agency鈥檚 marketing and media communications. (2/14)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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