Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Texas Leads US In Dementia Mortalities
Texas has the greatest dementia burden score in the country, highlighting a lack of support received by loved ones of dementia patients, according to a report published by聽Seniorly Resource Center. According to the report, Texas averaged 41.9 deaths from Alzheimer鈥檚 per 100,000 people in 2021, with numbers expected to rise by 22.5 percent by 2025.聽(Holmes-Brown, 4/18)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
States are increasingly looking to restrict access to a powerful animal tranquilizer showing up in supplies of illicit drugs and contributing to a growing number of human overdose deaths. Pennsylvania鈥檚 governor said Tuesday that his administration will add xylazine to the state鈥檚 list of controlled substances, tightening regulations on the drug and allowing authorities to charge people who violate those rules. (Levy, 4/18)
Oregon鈥檚 pioneering experiment with legalized magic mushrooms took a step closer to reality as the first 鈥渇acilitators鈥 who will accompany clients as they experience the drug received their state licenses, authorities said Tuesday. Voters approved the regulated use of psilocybin in a 2020 ballot measure, and anticipation has been building over the past 2 1/2 years for the day 鈥 expected to come later this year 鈥 when people can gain access to the drug that studies indicate has therapeutic value. (Selsky, 4/18)
On Tuesday the House joined the Senate in approving Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte's amendatory veto to a bill that would ban some gender-affirming care for transgender minors in Montana. The legislation is Senate Bill 99, from Sen. John Fuller, a Whitefish Republican. It passed through the House and Senate largely along party lines, with all its support coming from Republicans. A few GOP legislators, along with all Democrats, have opposed it. It's now heading back to Gianforte. (Michels, 4/18)
A coalition of anti-hunger groups are urging Gov. Kim Reynolds to veto a bill that would subject Iowans to a new asset test to receive food benefits. Matt Unger, CEO of the Des Moines Area Religious Council, said his network of food pantries is already providing Iowans with record assistance. He believes Senate File 494 will make it more difficult for Iowans to receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. (Gruber-Miller, 4/18)
An Anchorage civil rights law firm filed a class-action lawsuit Monday against the state Department of Health over delays processing applications for a program that provides assistance for thousands of vulnerable Alaskans. (Maguire, 4/18)
Workers at a northwest Michigan paper mill shuttered by a deadly fungal outbreak may never know how the outbreak started, according to the head of their union local. Gerald Kell, president of the United Steel Workers Local 21, told CBS News on Tuesday the fungus afflicting the plant, blastomycosis, is endemic to the area, but pinpointing the source could be impossible. (Tin and Nelson, 4/18)
Purchases of soda and other sugary drinks dropped 27% in Oakland in the first 2陆 years after the city adopted a tax on sugar-sweetened beverages, according to a new study by UCSF researchers.聽(Ho, 4/18)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: California鈥檚 Medicaid Experiment Spends Money To Save Money 鈥 And Help The Homeless聽
Sporting a bright smile and the polished Super Bowl ring he won as a star NFL player in the late 1980s, Craig McEwen doesn鈥檛 fit the archetype of someone teetering on the brink of homelessness. Evicted from his San Diego County apartment last July, McEwen 鈥 who endured repeated concussions during his six seasons in the NFL 鈥 scoured housing listings for anything he could afford. (Hart, 4/19)