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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, May 22 2023

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Increasing Work Visas Would Boost Nursing Industry; Impacts Of Abortion Laws Are Devastating

Editorial writers discuss these public health topics.

The US nursing workforce is shedding workers. About 100,000 nurses quit or retired during the pandemic, while another 800,000 have signaled an 鈥渋ntent to leave鈥 by 2027. And yet, the country is failing to tap an available group of qualified health-care workers: immigrants. (5/19)

Baby Milo鈥檚 grandfather thought he might have hiccups. Instead, the newborn was gasping for air. Born without kidneys and his lungs underdeveloped, Milo Evan Dorbert lived for all of 99 minutes. The cause of death was Potter syndrome, discovered at 23 weeks of pregnancy. The cause of unnecessary suffering, for Milo and his family, was a Florida law that doctors said prevented them from terminating the pregnancy, even though it was clear the condition would be fatal. (Ruth Marcus, 5/19)

Adolescent depression and suicidality have quickly become the 鈥渂read and butter鈥 of pediatrics. Teens without signs of depression or suicidal thoughts or attempts are so rare in our well-visit clinic that they are memorable. I can鈥檛 recall a single shift in our emergency room without multiple listings of 鈥渋ntentional overdose鈥 or 鈥渂ehavioral/mental health problem鈥 on the patient tracking board. (Rose Bayer, 5/19)

By the time someone has symptoms of ovarian cancer, it is usually in an advanced state. Treatment is extraordinarily difficult, and, sadly, most people will die. One in 78 women will develop ovarian cancer, and more than 230,000 women in the U.S. are currently affected. (Joseph V. Sakran, Kara Long Roche and Rebecca Stone, 5/21)

Three years ago, as I stood at the bedside of my first patient with the coronavirus, I struggled to understand why someone relatively young and healthy had become so sick. The unknown of the virus was frightening enough 鈥 to think that severe illness could strike at random was untenable. Even in my personal protective equipment, I held my breath, suddenly aware of my own vulnerability. The air itself felt dangerous. (Daniela J. Lamas, 5/21)

To reinforce that 鈥渂reast is best鈥 for babies and that formula feeding is inferior, in 2022, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) affirmed its decades-long stance in favor of exclusive breastfeeding (EBF), meaning nothing but breastmilk, arguing for this in the first six months and calling breastfeeding and human milk 鈥渘ormative鈥 and 鈥渁 public health imperative.鈥 (Kavin Senapathy, 5/21)

I once saw a patient who came to the emergency room with injuries that were clearly related to domestic violence. Instead of offering a compassionate ear and a blanket to cover her exposed body after an assault, her intake nurse rushed through a checklist intended to screen her for social needs. While facing the computer screen, the nurse asked the patient a series of sensitive questions, including one about whether she had experienced domestic violence. The patient, feeling put off by the nurse鈥檚 impersonal manner, denied having ever experienced any abuse. (Sanjay Basu, 5/22)

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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