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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Jun 7 2021

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Can We Slow Down The Aging Process?; US Mental Health Care Needs Serious Overhaul

Editorial pages tackle these public health issues.

Phil Mickelson just won the PGA Championship at age 50. Tom Brady won the Super Bowl at 43. Serena Williams is a top tennis star at 39. Joe Biden entered the presidency at 78. Last year Bob Dylan released an excellent album at 79. Clearly, we鈥檙e all learning to adjust our conception of age. People are living longer, staying healthier longer and accomplishing things late in life that once seemed possible only at younger ages. And it鈥檚 not just superstars. The fraction of over-85s in the U.S. classified as disabled dropped by a third between 1982 and 2005, while the share who were institutionalized fell by nearly half. (David Brooks, 6/7)

Our mental health system has failed my daughter. Again. Actually, that鈥檚 not true. There is no system, no real help for her. My 20-year-old daughter tried to kill herself three weeks ago. She took a lot of pills all at once and, afraid that wouldn鈥檛 do the trick, drove toward the American River to drown herself. Her boyfriend happened to drive past her car and waved her down. That serendipity is the only reason she鈥檚 alive today. My family isn鈥檛 alone in being affected by the failures of a non-system. Of our rising mental health problems 鈥 suicides, homelessness 鈥 doctors use the word 鈥渢sunami.鈥 On average, says the National Alliance on Mental Illness, one person dies by suicide in the U.S. every 11 minutes. (Jasmin Iolani Hakes, 6/7)

鈥淗ave you ever seen a six-month old baby with exaggerated startle response?鈥 One of my colleagues who works on our telephone counseling service was calling me for advice on how to respond to several distraught mothers asking her how to help their babies who had started showing such distressing symptoms of trauma during the recent bombing. Our telephone service was back and responding to callers on the third day of the attacks on Gaza, though of course with certain difficulties. (Yasser Abu Jamei, 6/4)

Writing about the future of abortion rights inevitably entails discussing precedent and the importance of sticking with it. That鈥檚 the easy part. The harder questions are these: Does the Constitution protect a right to abortion? Or is abortion a matter of public policy best left in the hands of individual states? (Ruth Marcus, 6/4)

You couldn鈥檛 design a better stress test for the healthcare system than the COVID-19 pandemic. And on some fundamental levels, the system failed 鈥 witness, for example, the racial and ethnic disparities in outcomes that the virus laid bare. Most fundamentally, the disease and the resulting shutdowns caused millions of Californians to lose their jobs, and in many cases, their employer-sponsored health insurance. And there couldn鈥檛 have been a worse time to lose one鈥檚 coverage than in the midst of a deadly pandemic. (John Healy, 6/6)

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began early last year, governments at all levels have struggled to adopt and adjust policies that limited the spread of the virus that causes the disease. This year, though, the delivery of millions of safe, highly effective vaccines has caused numbers of new infections and deaths to plunge, and prompted the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to issue an advisory on May 13 saying that in most circumstances, people who are fully vaccinated didn鈥檛 need to wear face masks, including at most workplaces. Some criticized the step as being premature. But three weeks later, the communities that followed the CDC鈥檚 advice have seen no negative fallout and the science the CDC cited is significant: infections and transmissions are rare among vaccinated people, and the vaccines seem to be effective against variants. (6/4)

As a Black woman growing up in the South, I was taught at a young age to fear the police and to limit interactions with them whenever possible. I never imagined a world in which they were not present. I was an undergraduate in college when I marched after 12-year-old Tamir Rice was killed by a police officer. And then in medical school for Michael Brown. And then once more for Laquan McDonald. And then again, and again. Childhood fears of law enforcement morphed into justified anger. I protested for change. But a world without police didn鈥檛 seem a possibility. As I continued my journey into medicine, I knew that my work as a physician demanded I address how racism in all forms, including police brutality, led to the health disparities in patients who look like me. (Erinma Ukoha, 6/7)

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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