Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Biogen Should Reevaluate Expanded ALS Drug Access; US Unprepared For Synthetic Pandemic
It鈥檚 been two weeks since Lisa Stockman Mauriello passed away and a lingering question, in my mind, is whether she died in vain. I鈥檇 like to think not. During her final months, the 52-year-old former public relations executive battled Biogen, one of the world鈥檚 largest biotech companies, for access to an experimental treatment for ALS, a fatal neurological disease that gradually causes muscle weakness and paralysis. (Ed Silverman, 8/19)
In 1988, as Russian scientist Nikolai Ustinov worked in the VECTOR lab, part of a Russian program to develop viral weapons, he accidentally infected himself with the Marburg virus, a deadly pathogen related to Ebola. He died weeks later. During his autopsy, a pathologist accidentally stuck himself with a needle and died as well. At its peak, the VECTOR lab was thought to be able to produce two tons of Variola virus (the microbe that causes smallpox) per year. The lab was eventually transitioned into a research institute after the Cold War and recently helped develop the Russian Covid-19 vaccine, Sputnik V. It currently holds one of the world鈥檚 two official repositories of smallpox. (Abraar Karan and Stephen Luby, 8/19)
Race has long been a key determinant of public health in this country, and as U.S. Surgeon General under President Bill Clinton, I saw those disparities 鈥 and worse outcomes for Black Americans 鈥 every day. In 1998, I released the first Surgeon General鈥檚聽report聽on 鈥淭obacco Use Among U.S. Racial/Ethnic Minority Groups,鈥 detailing how every one of our country鈥檚 major racial and ethnic minority groups were using tobacco at alarming rates, impacting their long-term health. At the time, I wrote, 鈥淎frican-Americans currently bear the greatest health burden鈥 from cigarette smoking. Unfortunately, African-Americans today continue to die at high rates from tobacco-related diseases like lung cancer, heart disease and stroke. (Dr. David Satcher, 8/18)