Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: FTC Must Allow Distribution Of Cancer Screening Test; Fixing The Youth Mental Health Crisis
Medical research shows one in two women and one in three men in America will develop cancer in their lifetimes. Far too often, people in physicians' offices throughout the United States hear the following heartbreaking words from their doctor, "I'm sorry, but it's too late." Amid all the cancer research, there is now a breakthrough blood test that detects different types of cancer, most of which currently have no other means for early detection, that could be in patients' hands if the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) did not stand in the way. (Melanie Campbell, 12/17)
I wiped down tables at an inpatient child and adolescent psychiatric unit when the intercom rang. A few minutes later, four adult security guards arrived. Their purpose? To restrain an enraged teen. I felt conflicted, unsettled yet aware that the teenager posed a risk to self and others. I also wondered how these escalated situations were prevented in the past, recalling moments when a trusted staff member calmed patients on the verge of outburst. Unfortunately, personalized preventive measures like this are less feasible as mental health care workers for youth are in short supply across the U.S. (Tony Liu, 12/20)
Your neighbor鈥檚 kid is still sitting in jail for selling heroin 鈥 to people who were initially hooked by OxyContin. Your friend who lost both her brother and niece to addiction fueled by the false notion that OxyContin was virtually nonaddictive still struggles with misplaced guilt over their tragic deaths. Your local support group leader has to pick and choose which funerals to attend because there are so many: more than 1 million families have now lost loved ones to overdose death since 1996, the year OxyContin was introduced. (Paul Pelletier and Beth Macy, 12/19)
As the head of Bridges, which sponsors 25 ministries in six states (one in Germantown), I鈥檝e seen our local leaders learning how to live and function during a dangerous malady which is impacting millions of people. But I don鈥檛 mean COVID-19; I mean the PTSD that results from it. And it鈥檚 far from 鈥減ost.鈥 The PTSD we鈥檙e dealing with is ongoing, it鈥檚 Perpetual Traumatic Stress Disorder. (12/20)
The ongoing effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on primary care physicians are jarring. Fewer than 30% of primary care physicians are reporting that their practices are on solid financial footing. Coupled with worsening staffing shortages and burnout, the challenges facing physicians have never been more evident. The pandemic has compounded the financial strain caused by unbalanced and outdated Medicare payments. A big reason is that clinical labor pricing has not been updated in nearly 20 years. (Sterling N. Ransone, Jr., 12/20)
Each year, more than 650,000 people are released from state and federal prisons. Nine million others churn through local jails. For many, the transition back to the outside world poses an acute risk. Studies have shown a decline in the health of the recently released, who experience significantly higher rates of death and hospitalization compared to the general populace. The first two weeks can be especially dangerous. Among the most common killers of this population are suicide, cardiovascular disease, homicide and, topping the list, drug overdoses. A 2007 study published in The New England Journal of Medicine found that the formerly incarcerated in Washington State were around 129 times as likely to die of an overdose in the first two weeks after their release as other state residents. The opioid epidemic has hit this cohort extra hard. (Michelle Cottle, 12/20)
Entrepreneurs at tech startups are likely to hear the Mark Zuckerberg adage that it鈥檚 important to 鈥渕ove fast and break things.鈥 The concept that moving quickly to get ahead of competitors and get products in customer hands is appealing, but it doesn鈥檛 work across all industries. Health care is one of the fields where moving too fast and 鈥渂reaking鈥 things could have disastrous results. Theranos is just one example where this type of philosophy was a horrendous idea. (Elizabeth Ruzzo, 12/17)