Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Are Colonoscopies Effective?; Pandemic Had Negative Consequences For Girls
Many people in the US may now be thinking that they鈥檝e received a blessed reprieve from a middle age rite of passage: the colonoscopy. (Lisa Jarvis, 10/11)
Early on, back in 2020, gender equity advocates warned that the pandemic was already threatening to derail the progress toward goals for girls. (Sheila Mulrooney Eldred, 10/11)
Article after article shows us that America鈥檚 teenagers aren鈥檛 doing well, without putting their finger on what is wrong beyond issues of individual 鈥渕ental illness鈥 and the usual bugbears trotted out 鈥 social media, video games, the weakening of the family unit. But what are the teenagers telling us is wrong? (Jamieson Webster, 10/11)
After pushing for several hours, my patient looks exhausted but happy, clutching her seconds-old newborn to her chest. She doesn鈥檛 know that this birth would have happened by C-section at most American hospitals, something that would have put her at risk for a host of complications and virtually guaranteed that any future births would also be by C-section. But I do. (Ann Ledbetter, 10/12)
The spread of anti-vaccine misinformation and disinformation has become one of the defining public health challenges of our time 鈥 so dangerous that it prompted the California legislature to make the practice grounds for revoking a doctor鈥檚 license. But what can we do when this pseudoscientific claptrap comes from an agency of a state government, dressed up as a public health recommendation? (Michael Hiltzik, 10/10)
During a Little League World Series game in August, a hitter was accidentally beaned by the opposing pitcher. His helmet and cap flew off as he crumpled to the ground, his hands pressed to his head. (Renee Graham, 10/11)
Can price transparency meaningfully reduce the outrageous cost of health care and coverage? I believe it can. So do the last several presidential administrations, led by Democrats and Republicans, and nearly 90% of Americans, according to numerous recent polls. (Cynthia A. Fisher, 10/11)