Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Health Implications Unknown After Train Derailment; Adoption Is Not An Abortion Substitute
It鈥檚 impossible to know what environmental and health challenges the residents of East Palestine, Ohio, will face in the years to come, but my worry is that they will know what I experienced from childhood onward: unease, loved ones getting sick and a fear of natural landscapes that should be local treasures. (Vanessa Ogle, 3/3)
"But aren鈥檛 you grateful to be alive鈥? That鈥檚 a question adoptees like me are often asked when we speak out against the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. Like other adoptees, I hesitate to answer, feeling the pressure to respond as we鈥檝e been trained to by society, 鈥淵es, I鈥檓 grateful, so very grateful.鈥 Adding anything else opens the door to the complexities of adoption that few people are willing to hear: that adoption isn鈥檛 a happy ending 鈥 it鈥檚 one family being torn apart to piece together another. And that adoptees are being used as pawns against reproductive rights while their own rights are denied. (Laura Goetz, 3/3)
Wellness programs don鈥檛 work 鈥 at least, not in the way that increases actual physician wellness. What they do instead is keep physicians indentured to the system that burns them out in the first place. (Though my focus in this essay is on physicians, my concerns about wellness programs also apply to nurses and other health care workers.) (Mark G. Shrime, 3/3)
Also 鈥
News that the US Department of Energy now believes that the virus that causes聽Covid-19聽escaped from a laboratory in Wuhan, China, won鈥檛 resolve the ill-tempered debate over how a pandemic that has killed nearly 7 million people began. But it should spur policymakers and scientists to stop politicizing the issue and get serious about preventing another catastrophe. (3/2)
Americans were surprised to learn this week that the U.S. Energy Department has changed its initial assessment on the origins of the virus that sparked the covid pandemic. The department鈥檚 analysts now believe that a lab-related accident was most likely, albeit with 鈥渓ow confidence.鈥 (Josh Rogin, 3/3)
My column this week focused on the need to shift from single-mindedly pursuing covid-19鈥檚 origins to preventing the next pandemic, whether it is caused by laboratory accidents or animal-to-human spillover. I believe our energy is better spent shoring up future defenses than finger-pointing over the past. (Leana S. Wen, 3/2)