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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, May 6 2026 9:05 AM

Full Issue

EpiPen Makers Agree To $4.5M Deal With Maryland Over Its Pricing, Marketing

The settlement comes after the makers were accused of using a monopoly to increase prices, requiring injectors to be purchased in a two-pack, and restricting generic versions of the EpiPen.

Maryland reached a $4.5 million settlement with the makers of the potentially life-saving EpiPen over what the Office of the Attorney General鈥檚 Antitrust Division called 鈥渁nticompetitive conduct鈥 regarding the cost, marketing, and availability of the product. (Byrne, 5/5)

A Missouri appellate court has upheld a $495 million verdict against north suburban-based Abbott Laboratories in a case over whether its formula for premature infants caused a girl to become seriously ill. (Schencker, 5/5)

Officials said they were examining the shooting of Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez last summer during a Chicago-area crackdown on illegal immigration. (Smith, 5/6)

After a long negotiation period, nearly 170 employees in Chisago County, Minnesota, went on strike Friday. This comes after Teamsters Local 320 鈥 the union that represents workers from the county government center and health and human services sector 鈥 filed an unfair labor practice against the county. Those on the picket line Tuesday told WCCO at this rate, it's over their health insurance premium. Strikers aren't only outside the county government center building in Center City, but they're also picketing across town. (McLister, 5/5)

Justin Smarsh and his family used to kayak a few times a year on the rivers and creeks near their home in Cherry Tree, Pennsylvania. High on the Appalachian Plateau, northeast of Pittsburgh, he spent hours in the woods and taught his two sons to hunt. Today, Smarsh said, he gets 鈥渟uffocated just walking.鈥 He has a constant dry cough, and he loses his breath if he bends down to tie his shoes.聽A few years after he graduated from high school and got married, Smarsh went to work in a coal mine in his home county, just as his father and grandfather had. 鈥淚t was the best-paying job around,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t still is.鈥 Now Smarsh, 42, has progressive massive fibrosis 鈥 the most severe form of coal workers鈥 pneumoconiosis, or black lung. (Kate Morgan, 5/6)

Health news from California 鈥

A group representing thousands of Bay Area physicians is urging San Francisco officials to revise a proposal to expand drug-free supportive housing. The San Francisco Marin Medical Society has asked Supervisor Matt Dorsey to make changes to his legislation that it says are necessary to protect patients. Dorsey has criticized the requested changes, saying they mischaracterize the intent of the proposal. (Waxmann and Angst, 5/5)

New rules aimed at phasing out certain natural gas appliances across the Bay Area could be reconsidered, as regulators weigh possible exemptions that could ease the transition for some residents. The proposed changes by the Bay Area Air Quality Management District would affect the cost of replacing furnaces and water heaters across all nine Bay Area counties, drawing both support and criticism. (Choi, 5/5)

From Texas 鈥

As far back as the Stone Age, humans started digging asbestos from cliffs or riverbeds. They mixed the fibrous silicate mineral into clay for pottery that could better withstand heat, and northerners stuffed it between rocks to insulate their shelters against the winter cold. The ancient Greeks and Romans wove asbestos fibers into cloth for garments, tablecloths and wicks that took advantage of the mineral鈥檚 ability to handle heat. By the peak of the industrial revolution, thanks to its extraordinary physical properties, asbestos was mined at sites across the US and used widely in daily life鈥攆rom kitchen tiles to toothpaste, surgical thread to cement pipes. It could resist fire, stretch without breaking and tolerate abrasive or caustic cleaning chemicals. (Marx, 5/5)

Fort Worth Fire Captain Brandon Rodriguez has spent the past three years battling terminal brain and throat cancer.聽Despite his suspicion that his cancer diagnosis could be traced back to his 29 years of fighting fires, his disease was not covered by workers' compensation insurance. He said this has cost him tens of thousands of dollars worth of both money and sick time. (Allen and Salazar, 5/5)

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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