Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Low Rate Of Flu Shots Is Concerning; US Kids Need Help With Mental Health Care
After a two-year hiatus, the flu is back. An early uptick in cases in Australia has public health authorities there alarmed 鈥 and should prompt the US to put the familiar virus back on the public鈥檚 radar. (Lisa Jarvis, 6/11)
US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy issued a stark warning in December: America鈥檚 youth are in the midst of a 鈥渄evastating鈥 mental health crisis, suffering from skyrocketing rates of depression and anxiety. Our health care system, which for too long has slighted mental health care, is woefully unprepared for the heartbreaking surge in troubled kids arriving in emergency rooms and psychiatric facilities: Lower insurance reimbursement rates for mental health care providers and hospitals has translated into fewer providers and less access. And as weak as the mental health care system is for adults, for children and adolescents it鈥檚 even worse. (6/12)
As doctors, our work is to care for people. We hug and kiss our own children, then step into the fray to preserve life when it is slipping away, when someone has tried to take it. When a gun is fired and a bullet tears into a person, we stop the bleeding. We remove the bullets, reconstruct shattered bones and mend as our skill and training allow, to keep a gun from taking you, too. (Dr. Mary Tschida, 6/10)
My father died this year of cancer. In the end, he was brought home from the hospital to die with his family around him, and I鈥檓 grateful for that. He was resigned to his inevitable end, and we were able to say goodbye. Under the careful ministrations of hospice nurses, my father experienced his final day on a morphine-fueled trip that would have made psychedelic pioneer Timothy Leary jealous. As far as I know, it was his first and last extended psychedelic experience. None of the health care providers ever mentioned to us (or to him) that he鈥檇 be visiting the origin of the universe, seeing God and reliving his emotional childhood. But that鈥檚 what seemed to be happening as we sat around his bed. (Stephen Asma, 6/10)
Take a deep breath, America. We鈥檝e made serious progress against cigarette smoking. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 23% of adults were smokers in 2000. By 2020, the rate had fallen to 12.5%. Teen use of traditional cigarettes has plummeted from 22.5% in 2002 to 6% in 2019, according to the American Lung Assn. (6/13)
This year has seen an array of anti-transgender legislation. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis鈥 administration is pursuing policies to restrict transition-related care for transgender minors and to block Medicaid coverage of this care for anyone. In 2022, legislation in 20 states so far has been introduced purporting to 鈥減rotect鈥 trans youth 鈥 by criminalizing care that has been used safely worldwide for decades. (Christy Olezeski, Meredithe McNamara and Anne Alstott, 6/13)