Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Opioid Cutbacks Are Devastating For Chronic Pain Patients; Sexist Pregnancy Terms Due For Update
Doctors didn鈥檛 think Brent Slone would survive his gruesome 2011 car crash. His car flipped after he swerved to avoid a stalled vehicle. His spinal cord was compressed. He broke several ribs, a shoulder and a knee. One lung collapsed. A shattered pelvic bone ruptured his bladder and seriously damaged his spleen, kidney and colon. Miraculously, Mr. Slone avoided brain injury. However, he was paralyzed from the waist down. After months of painful physical rehabilitation, he went home to his wife, Sonya Slone, and their 6-year-old daughter. When he had appropriate pain care, Mrs. Slone said, he was able to be a loving and involved father. (Maia Szalavitz, 3/7)
鈥淵our cervix is in danger of effacing. You鈥檒l be tremendously lucky if your baby makes it to 24 weeks.鈥 I was staring at the doctor who had just delivered this news, but I was having trouble processing what she was saying. She nonchalantly added something about my 鈥渋ncompetent cervix.鈥 A wave of devastation swept over me and my face flushed with humiliation. My first thought was, 鈥淒id I somehow cause this?鈥 (Aileen Weintraub, 3/7)
鈥淗ow is your sleep?鈥 I鈥檝e posed this question to hundreds of patients. 鈥淭errible,鈥 I often hear in response. 鈥淚 always feel tired.鈥澛營 follow up with the questions I was taught in my medical training: Do you have difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or both? Do you wake up early? How long does it take to fall asleep? Do you snore? By following the script I inherited from doctors before me, I can recite the precise times a patient goes to bed and wakes up; the number of times they wake up at night; whether they use their continuous positive airway pressure machine to help them breathe at night; and more. I can report the severity of their symptoms on a scale from one to ten. But I can鈥檛 tell you how the insomnia makes them feel. And that鈥檚 important. (Rebecca Grossman-Kahn, 3/8)
The US population is growing older, and one reason for this trend is that we simply live longer than we used to. Although the COVID-19 pandemic has depressed life expectancy to its lowest point in two decades, Americans still enjoy lifespans far longer, on average, than in the more distant past. Since 1900, US life expectancy at birth has risen from about 47 years to just above 77 today. (Brooks Tingle, 3/7)
Like many other 3-year-old boys, Braxton Davis is lively and at times playfully mischievous. But he might not have survived to that age if states hadn鈥檛 temporarily loosened medical licensing requirements during the pandemic. And the road ahead for many other children and adults with potentially life-threatening health issues might be more difficult if the door closes on more flexible medical licensing. (Bret Mettler, 3/7)
As CEO of an independent, not-for-profit health system in California鈥檚 Bay Area, where healthcare giants are many, I am well aware of the assumption that smaller players are at an inherent disadvantage. But my experience tells me the opposite is true. (Dan Woods, 3/8)
If your car starts to smoke and sputter, you鈥檇 take it to an auto repair shop right away. The U.S. patent system 鈥 the engine driving the country鈥檚 innovation economy for more than 200 years 鈥 is sputtering and smoking. Yet its path to the mechanic is being blocked by an inane Supreme Court ruling. American innovators are no longer promised reliable and effective rights for the fruits of their labors. (Adam Mossoff, 3/8)