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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Feb 9 2023

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Congress Must Act Quickly Creating New Antifungals; What Makes Ultraprocessed Foods So Addictive?

Editorial writers tackle these public health topics.

Fungus-caused infections 鈥 real ones, not the ones sparking the zombie apocalypse on the popular show 鈥淭he Last of Us鈥 鈥 pose a growing threat in the United States and around the world. Mississippi has become the latest state to report residents infected with Candida auris, a highly contagious fungus that thrives in hospitals and nursing homes. It won鈥檛 be the last and, without dedicated effort, infections and deaths will continue to pile up. (Henry Skinner, 2/9)

In the US, a whopping 58% of adults鈥 daily calories, and 67% of kids鈥 daily calories, come from ultraprocessed foods, according to cancer epidemiologist Fang Fang Zhang. But when we reach for that bag of Doritos in the larder, do we realize we are indulging in an ultraprocessed snack? What about when we toss plant-based meat alternatives into a stir fry? Do we truly understand what makes a food 鈥渦ltraprocessed鈥? (Kirsi Goldynia, 2/8)

Three years after the federal government officially declared COVID-19 both a public health and national emergency, the White House is ready to relinquish the extra powers that came with those proclamations. Last week, the Biden administration announced that it will end the twin emergencies on May 11, a move that would trigger some major changes in how people access COVID vaccines, treatments, and testing. (2/9)

President Biden鈥檚 2023 State of the Union address outlined the administration鈥檚 plan to reduce health care costs for Americans, including lowering health insurance premiums and expanding the $35-a-month cap on insulin costs to anyone who needs it. He boldly declared that cuts to Medicare and Social Security are off the table, and said he would veto any attempt to repeal the Inflation Reduction Act or institute a national ban on abortion. (Steven Lane, 2/8)

Perhaps we can blame Covid fatigue for numbing us to the risks of other viruses. But it should be bigger news that a bird flu has mutated to spread through mammals and is ominously appearing among wild and domesticated animals around the globe. (Faye Flam, 2/8)

Last week, the Biden administration announced that it will end the COVID-associated national and public health emergencies on May 11. That means stopping payments for COVID-19 tests and vaccines for some Americans depending on their insurance status, other people losing benefits such as Medicaid and some hospitals receiving less funding 鈥 placing higher burdens on our already depleted healthcare workforce. (Saad B. Omer, 2/9)

It is not yet known how many people have long covid, why and what their prospects for recovery are, let alone what the long-term impact on society will be. The U.S. government reported in August that 鈥渘o laboratory test can definitively distinguish鈥 long covid from other causes of illness. (2/8)

For many health-care workers watching the Super Bowl in recent years, the hardest hits have often come not during gameplay but in the commercial breaks. (Farzon A. Nahvi, 2/8)

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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