Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
From Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News - Latest Stories:
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News Original Stories
Republican States Claim Zero Abortions. A Red-State Doctor Calls That âLudicrous.â
In several red states, officials say few or no abortions happened in 2023, raising alarm among researchers about the politicization of vital statistics.
Montana Looks To Regulate Prior Authorization as Patients, Providers Decry Obstacles to Care
Patients and providers say health insurersâ preapproval requirements lead to delays and denials of needed medical treatments. Insurers argue that prior authorization keeps costs down.
Top California Democrats Clash Over How To Rein In Drug Industry Middlemen
Frustrated by spiraling drug costs, California lawmakers want to increase oversight of pharmaceutical industry intermediaries known as pharmacy benefit managers. Itâs unclear whether they can persuade Gov. Gavin Newsom to get on board.
Political Cartoon: 'Always Awake at Work?'
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Always Awake at Work?'" by Mike Flanagan.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
PERILOUS POLICY
CDC info
â Anonymous
essential for good health care.
Adrift without it.
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Summaries Of The News:
Capitol Watch
Vaccine Skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Confirmed As Next HHS Secretary
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the vaccine skeptic and former presidential candidate who fled his familyâs party and threw his âmedical freedomâ movement behind President Trump, has been confirmed by the Senate as the nationâs next health secretary. The vote 52-48, capped a remarkable rise for Mr. Kennedy and a curious twist in American politics. He was confirmed by a Republican Senate, without a single Democratic vote, in a chamber where his father, Robert F. Kennedy, and his uncles, John F. Kennedy and Edward M. Kennedy, all held office as Democrats.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.âs expected Senate confirmation on Thursday to lead the nationâs health agencies threatens upheaval for Americaâs $4 trillion health care industry. The industry is doing little and hoping for the best. From drugmakers to doctorsâ organizations, groups thought to have the clout to steer policy and funding in Washington because they enjoyed bipartisan support and huge lobbying budgets have remained silent about Kennedy. They havenât spoken up even though he has accused them of fraud and conspiracy, and promised to hold them accountable. (Payne, 2/12)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has tapped a retired border patrol chief to be one of his senior advisers, in a sign of the outsized role that the governmentâs health department could once again play in managing the fallout of President Donald Trumpâs deportation policies. Chris Clem, a longtime U.S. Border Patrol agent who supported Kennedyâs 2024 run for president, joined the Health and Human Services Department in recent weeks, two people familiar with the appointment said and an HHS spokesperson confirmed. (Cancryn, 2/12)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. spent the first day of his back-to-back confirmation hearings deftly avoiding questions about his views on vaccines. On the second day, when a prominent Republican senator insisted there was no link between vaccines and autism, Mr. Kennedy shot back that a new study âshowed the opposite.â âI just want to follow the science,â Mr. Kennedy declared. (Gay Stolberg and Jewett, 2/12)
Medicaid
Medicaid And SNAP Might Suffer Deep Budget Cuts If GOP Plan Proceeds
House Republicans on Wednesday unveiled a broad outline of their plans for the federal budget, using cuts to social programs to help pay for trillions of dollars in tax cuts. The budget outline indicates Republicans are planning $4.5 trillion in tax cuts over ten years. Spending cuts would offset part of that cost, but only part, so that meeting the blueprintâs goals would add trillions of dollars to the countryâs deficit. The document doesnât specify exactly what programs to cut. But analysts say the clear implication is that Republicans are looking for deep reductions in programs like Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, both of which serve low-income Americans, given the GOP ruling out cuts to Medicare or Social Security. (Cohn, Delaney and Bobic, 2/12)
It was always going to be tough for House Energy and Commerce Chair Brett Guthrie to rally his members around cuts to Medicaid; his job could soon get even harder. The House GOP budget blueprint unveiled Wednesday would direct several congressional committees to achieve at least $1.5 trillion in spending cuts across programs under their panelsâ purviews â necessary to offset a party-line, budget reconciliation bill to enact President Donald Trumpâs domestic agenda. ... The bulk of those savings would have to come from making changes to Medicaid, which currently insures more than 70 million Americans. And, in an interview Wednesday, Guthrie acknowledged that one major savings option probably wonât have the support to pass the House. (Leonard, 2/12)
Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters Wednesday evening that heâs not planning to make changes to his budget plan, despite hard-liner demands for deeper spending cuts and other adjustments. Several hard-liners on the Budget Committee told GOP leaders Wednesday they want at least $500 billion more in guaranteed spending cuts and a series of other changes. The current budget resolution, which leaders are hoping to pass through the committee Thursday, includes a minimum of $1.5 trillion in spending cuts. (Hill, 2/12)
Democrats and Republicans on the House Ways & Means Health Subcommittee appeared to hold two different hearings Tuesday on improving healthcare -- or at least it might have seemed that way to anyone watching the event. (Frieden, 2/12)
Updates on Medicaid expansion in Idaho and Wisconsin â
By one vote, the Idaho House Health and Welfare Committee on Wednesday advanced a bill critics said would repeal Medicaid expansion. House Bill 138, by Rep. Jordan Redman, R-Coeur dâAlene, requires Idaho to enact 11 Medicaid policy changes or repeal Medicaid expansion â a policy that lets more low-income Idahoans be eligible for the health insurance assistance program. If any of those policies arenât in effect by July 2026, the bill would repeal Medicaid expansion, a law passed in 2018 by nearly 61% of Idaho voters. (Pfannenstiel, 2/12)
Members of the Wisconsin Senate Health Committee expressed support on Wednesday for a bill that would extend Medicaid coverage for postpartum mothers to a year after the birth of a child. Typically, people in Wisconsin are only eligible for Medicaid coverage if they make up to 100% of the federal poverty level, but pregnant women can receive Medicaid coverage in Wisconsin if they have an annual income of up to 306% of the federal poverty level. While a newborn whose mother is a Medicaid recipient receives a year of coverage, mothers risk losing their coverage after 60 days if they donât otherwise qualify for Medicaid. The bill â SB 23 â seeks to change this by extending Medicaid coverage for postpartum mothers from 60 days to a full year after childbirth. (Spears, 2/13)
In Medicare news â
Unscrupulous insurance marketers vexed by a federal push against Medicare Advantage fraud found a more hospitable environment on the health insurance exchanges, brokers say. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services implemented regulations earlier this decade to address concerns that beneficiaries shopping for private Medicare plans were being misled and victimized. Meanwhile, health insurers became more bullish about the growing marketplaces, and leading carriers began offering commissions for exchange plan sales, making this market more attractive to brokers and other third-party marketing firms. (Tepper, 2/12)
The U.S. agency that oversees Medicare is taking out questions on enrollment application forms that ask people about their sexual orientation and gender identity. (Herman, 2/12)
Administration News
No. 2 NIH Official Suddenly Resigns As Institutes Face Staff, Funding Cuts
The No. 2 official at the National Institutes of Health abruptly resigned and retired from government service on Tuesday, in another sign that the Trump administration is reshaping the nationâs public health and biomedical research institutions. The official, Dr. Lawrence A. Tabak, a dentist and researcher, was long considered a steadying force and had weathered past presidential transitions. ... One person familiar with the decision said Dr. Tabak had been confronted with a reassignment that he viewed as unacceptable. (Gay Stolberg, 2/12)
A federal judge is allowing the Trump administration to move forward with its plan to downsize the federal workforce by offering employees the option to resign now but stay on the payroll through September. U.S. District Judge George OâToole, an appointee of Bill Clinton, did not address whether the deferred-resignation program is legal. Instead, the judge ruled Wednesday that several unions that sued over the program lack legal standing to pursue the issue in court. (Gerstein, 2/12)
The Education Department terminated a swath of its civil service workforce on Wednesday, according to multiple people familiar with the matter. The precise number of affected employees was not immediately clear. Firing notices were distributed to workers in the departmentâs offices for civil rights, federal student aid and communications, as well as its legal department, according to people who relayed details and documents that substantiated the terminations to POLITICO on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive personnel matters. (Perez Jr. and Quilantan, 2/12)
Roughly 75,000 federal workers across government have accepted a buyout offer, taking an unusual deal spearheaded by the Trump administration as it looks to reduce the federal workforce. A senior administration official confirmed the figure in the hours after a court rejected a bid by unions to quash the program. (Beitsch, 2/12)
Proposed cuts by the Trump administration to a type of federal funding from the National Institutes of Health would pose a credit challenge to universities that receive the funds, analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co. said. The NIH has been ordered to slash funding for research at universities and hospitals, though on Monday a federal judge temporarily paused the change. A hearing date is scheduled for Feb. 21. (Rembert, 2/12)
A torrent of disruptive Trump administration policies is alarming scientists who fear the current political climate is weakening researchersâ resolve to stick with careers in academic science. Already, the anxiety is so deep that many scientists say it could undermine the countryâs enduring position as the world leader in biomedicine. (Chen and Wosen, 2/12)
For the first month of the Trump administration, it appeared that there was little organized resistance to its attacks on the existing system of biomedical research. But resistance is starting to form. Unions representing fellows at the NIH and several universities are planning a protest at the headquarters of the Department of Health and Human Services next week. Simultaneously, a grassroots group of scientists is planning a protest in Washington, D.C., and state capitals around the country in March. (Oza, 2/13)
After learning the hard way that government data may not always be available or reliable, the research community is finding alternative ways to host important government health data and guidance online. The Alt CDC Bluesky account posted about one notable archive of CDC datasets hosted on the nonprofit Internet Archive. It houses hundreds of CSV files, metadata files, zip files, PDFs of infographics, and more -- uploaded before Jan. 28, 2025 -- available to download. Alt CDC also gave a shout out to the data archivists who made it possible. (Robertson, 2/12)
Talk to us â
Weâd like to speak with personnel from the Department of Health and Human Services or its component agencies about whatâs happening within the federal health bureaucracy. Please or contact reporter Arthur Allen directly by email or Signal at ArthurA@kff.org or 202-365-6116.
Also â
The World Health Organization wants to establish a $50 billion endowment fund in a bid to diversify the global health agencyâs finances, which have been threatened by the looming exit of the US. The âearly-stageâ idea could generate $1.5 billion to $2.5 billion annually to add to contributions from member states and the WHO Foundation, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday in a call with journalists. (Wind, 2/12)
Between 2011 and 2020, 10 of the worldâs largest pharmaceutical companies paid a combined $1.34 billion in fines to the U.S. government for bribing foreign officials in order to boost purchases of their medicines. The law that made it possible is the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which has been credited with making changes in long-standing industry business practices. (Silverman, 2/12)
After Roe V. Wade
Louisiana Seeks Extradition Of NY Doc Accused Of Shipping Abortion Pills
Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill signed an extradition form Wednesday for a New York physician, she announced in a news release. Her action comes less than two weeks after a Louisiana grand jury indicted the doctor for prescribing and shipping abortion pills to the state. âWe will take any and all legal actions to enforce the criminal laws of this state,â Murrill wrote in her statement, adding that the extradition form was sent to Gov. Jeff Landryâs office for his approval. (O'Neil, 2/12)
Four bills related to abortion and reproductive rights failed Wednesday in the North Dakota House. A so-called personhood bill would have allowed women who get abortions to be charged with murder. Two others sought to protect access to contraception and in vitro fertilization, while a fourth bill proposed what the sponsor called a âcommon-senseâ approach to abortion access. All failed with significant margins, with the pro-IVF bill garnering the most support. (Achterling and Dalrymple, 2/12)
Minnesota House Republicans advanced a pair of anti-abortion bills Wednesday through a committee, underscoring their intention to press ahead with measures now that could languish if power shifts to shared control next month. (Masters, 2/12)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Republican States Claim Zero Abortions. A Red-State Doctor Calls That âLudicrousâ
In Arkansas, state health officials announced a stunning statistic for 2023: The total number of abortions in the state, where some 1.5 million women live, was zero. In South Dakota, too, official records show zero abortions that year. And in Idaho, home to abortion battles that have recently made their way to the U.S. Supreme Court, the official number of recorded abortions was just five. (Varney, 2/13)
On fertility treatments for troops â
The Pentagon will continue to reimburse service members who travel to get fertility treatments, the department confirmed this week, walking back its earlier move to fully repeal its reproductive health care travel policy. Late last month, the Pentagon quietly updated its travel regulations to remove all the language allowing service members to get travel and transportation allowances for trips related to reproductive health care. That meant travel was no longer covered for either abortion or fertility treatments. (Kheel, 2/12)
Outbreaks and Health Threats
Flu Season Still To Peak; Experts Say Expect More Illnesses, Deaths To Come
If you havenât caught the flu this season, perhaps you know someone who has, or are concerned about the virus infiltrating your household. We are, by at least one measure, in the midst of the nationâs worst flu season in recent decades. At least 24 million illnesses, 310,000 hospitalizations, and 13,000 influenza-linked deathsâincluding 57 childrenâhave plagued the U.S. this season, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Flu-related emergency department visits necessitated the CDCâs most severe âvery highâ ranking as of Feb. 7, as did influenza virus activity in national wastewater samples. (Leake, 2/12)
California is grappling with an unusually severe flu season this winter, with hospitalizations rising and concerns that the outbreak could last for weeks. The situation is particularly dire in the Bay Area, where Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease expert at UCSF, said flu activity has reached alarming levels. â2025 is the year of flu in the Bay Area,â he said, highlighting the overwhelming number of cases impacting emergency departments. (Vaziri, 2/12)
Later this month influenza experts from around the world will gather at the Crick Worldwide Influenza Center in London to pour over data in a multi-day effort, led by the World Health Organization, to decide which specific viruses next winterâs flu shot should target. For now, the WHO doesnât know if U.S. government representatives will show up. Whether they do so could have an impact on the composition, and ultimately the effectiveness, of flu vaccines throughout the Northern Hemisphere and beyond. (Branswell, 2/13)
On measles, mpox, and Oropouche â
"It is troubling, because this was completely preventable," Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease physician and senior scholar at Johns Hopkins, told CBS News on Wednesday. "What we're seeing is, one of the places in Texas â it has the lowest vaccination rates, the highest school exemption rates from measles vaccination â having a measles outbreak, including hospitalizations of individuals who've been infected with measles." (Moniuszko and Higgins, 2/12)
New research on the epidemiologic and genomic evolution of the clade 1b mpox outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) suggests 83% of cases were linked to sex work, three healthcare workers contracted the disease, and infected pregnant women frequently miscarried. ... In related news, New York state officials have confirmed clade 1b in a resident, the first such case in New York state and the fourth clade 1b case confirmed in the United States. (Soucheray, 2/12)
In an update on Oropouche virus activity, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) yesterday said in the first four weeks of the year, 3,765 cases have already been reported from six Americas countries, most of them from Brazil. Other countries reporting local cases include Panama, Peru, Cuba, and Guyana, as well as an imported case from Canada. ... Of countries reported importing cases, the United States reported 108, all involving travel to Cuba. (Schnirring, 2/12)
Health Industry
Health Insurance Customers Who Appeal Their Claims Often Win
After three years of doctorsâ visits and $40,000 in medical bills didnât cure their daughterâs rare condition, April and Justin Beck found a specialist three states away who offered a promising treatment. They set out before dawn last spring for the nine-hour drive to Arkansas Childrenâs Hospital in Little Rock, where Dr. Aravindhan Veerapandiyan explained how infusions of antibodies could help Emily, now 9 years old, and her misfiring immune system. (Wernau, 2/12)
Few people realize how worthwhile appealing a denied health-insurance claim can be. Insurers in the U.S. process more than five billion payment claims annually, federal figures show. About 850 million are denied, according to health-policy nonprofit KFF. Among the fewer than 1% of people who appeal, up to three-quarters are successful. Here are five things you can do to appeal a denied health-insurance claim. (Wernau and Mathews, 2/12)
More health industry updates â
Union workers at Washington Hospital have reached a contract, avoiding a strike. The union says the contract includes average raises of 12% over three years. UPMC Washington confirmed the three-year collective bargaining agreement with SEIU Healthcare has been ratified. (Behanna, 2/12)
VillageMD, the health care clinic chain backed by Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., is working with Evercore Inc. for assistance as explores options that include a sale or restructuring of its operations, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The health care provider is also working with Alvarez & Marsal Inc. for operational help, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing a private matter. (Basu, 2/12)
Tenet Healthcare's portfolio transformation toward ambulatory care is paying off. For-profit Tenet added nearly 70 new and acquired ambulatory surgery centers last year through its United Surgical Partners International business, CEO Dr. Saum Sutaria said on a Wednesday earnings call with investors. The health system plans to invest another $250 million this year into ambulatory care, including plans to add 10 to 12 de novo ASCs, he said. (Hudson, 2/12)
Fairview Health Services is not looking for a merger partner right now. Minneapolis-based Fairview said Wednesday it does not support merging with Duluth, Minnesota-based Essentia Health as part of a larger plan with the University of Minnesota to form a nonprofit entity that would boost financial support for the school. (Hudson, 2/12)
States' fight to clamp down on private equity deals in healthcare isn't over, despite recent setbacks. Proposed legislation in states including California, Connecticut and Minnesota fell flat last year, raising questions about future oversight efforts affecting private equity transactions. However, the new year brought renewed support for state legislation ranging from stricter reporting requirements to stipulations on certain operational models. (Hudson, 2/12)
Public Health
San Francisco Declares Fentanyl State Of Emergency, Plans Crisis Center
San Francisco is ramping up its efforts to battle a deadly fentanyl crisis with the city's new mayor declaring a state of emergency because of the drug's impact. Mayor Daniel Lurie on Wednesday afternoon signed an ordinance declaring a fentanyl state of emergency to address the crisis after the city's Board of Supervisors approved the ordinance Tuesday evening. (CastaĂąeda, 2/12)
Canada's newly appointed fentanyl czar says his goal is to bring the already low percentage of the deadly opioid smuggled south into the United States down to zero. "Getting the number to zero is in fact our goal and should be our goal," Kevin Brosseau told reporters Wednesday, his first full day in the position. (Tunney, 2/12)
The drug supply is constantly evolving, and some experts suggest that a âfourth waveâ of the opioid epidemic is underway, in which illicit fentanyl is more frequently mixed with other drugs. New research shows high levels of one unexpected addition: BTMPS, an industrial chemical used as an adhesive in the production of plastics, was found in the illicit fentanyl supply in the US. (Mukherjee, 2/12)
VCU's John Freyer has spent years training students and residents how to use the life-saving overdose reversal spray to fight the opioid crisis. (Moreno, 2/13)
On marijuana â
South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley highlights one illegal substance in particular when discussing marijuana laced with opioids or other drugs. âWe have seen this before,â Jackley said Monday. âItâs not very common in relation to marijuana. Weâll oftentimes see it with heroin or other dangerous controlled substances, but we have seen it before with marijuana.â (Santella, 2/10)
A legal loophole is allowing children who access social media to see enticing advertisements for marijuana with potentially dangerous consequences, according to experts. (LaMotte, 2/12)
In other health and wellness news â
A small number of patients taking GLP-1 weight loss medications have experienced loss of vision, but researchers say they have not established a direct link to the drugs. A new study published in JAMA Opthalmology focused on patients using semaglutide, which is marketed under the brand names Wegovy and Ozempic, and tirzepatide, which is marketed as Mounjaro and Zepbound. (Whiteside, 2/12)
Yogurt has often been touted as good for gut health. Now, in a new study, researchers at Mass General Brigham in Boston have found it may be beneficial in the fight against cancer. The study released Wednesday found that people who ate two or more servings of yogurt per week tended to have lower rates of a particularly aggressive form of colorectal cancer. (Riley, 2/12)
State Watch
Nearly 300 Gun Seekers Blocked Since Michigan Passed Red Flag Law
Nearly 300 people in Michigan were barred from possessing guns in 2024 under a new law that empowers courts to intervene if thereâs evidence they could harm themselves or others, according to a report released Wednesday. Michigan joined at least 20 states in passing a so-called red flag law, which allows police, health professionals, family members or roommates to ask local judges to ban someone from possessing guns for a year. (White, 2/12)
A bipartisan coalition of mayors, lawmakers and law enforcement in Alabama endorsed a public safety package on Thursday that would ban the devices that convert semi-automatic weapons into machine guns â a rare consensus on gun restrictions and a departure from years of conflict about how to stem gun violence. Conversion devices that speed the firing of semi-automatic weapons are already banned under federal law, but thereâs currently no state law prohibiting possession. (Riddle, 2/12)
More health news from across the U.S. â
Macon State Prison has become one of the bloodiest correctional facilities in Georgia, and no one knows that better than the men and woman who work for Macon County EMS. As the violence at the prison just south of Oglethorpe has intensified, so, too, have the calls for ambulance service. And because of those calls, the county now finds itself dealing with an unexpected and costly burden: more than $100,000 in unpaid bills. (Robbins and Teegardin, 2/13)
Lawyers for 25,000 people incarcerated in Arizona have asked a judge to take over health care operations in state-run prisons and appoint an official to run them, saying the state is not capable of fixing deep failures in care even though it has been required to do so over the last decade. In a filing Tuesday, the attorneys said a takeover is urgently needed because the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry lacks the leadership to comply with changes ordered by a judge in a 2012 lawsuit over the quality of medical and mental health care for prisoners. (Billeaud, 2/12)
Coloradoâs spending on highly effective but costly weight-loss drugs for state workers more than quadrupled from 2023 to 2024 â and costs have been doubling every six months. Now, the state wants to scrap the benefit, arguing that itâs financially unsustainable. (Hooper, 2/12)
Pharmacies in Minnesota are closing their doors because of lower reimbursement rates for prescription drugs and dwindling profit margins â especially for pharmacies with a large customer base on public insurance. This lack of access creates problems, but some small towns are finding possible solutions by working together to get medications delivered right to their doorstep. (Yang, 2/13)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Montana Looks To Regulate Prior Authorization As Patients, Providers Decry Obstacles To Care
When Lou and Lindsay Volpeâs son was diagnosed with a chronic bowel disease at age 11, their health insurer required constant preapproval of drugs and treatments â a process the Volpes say often delayed critical care for their son. âYou subscribe to your insurance policy, you pay into that for years and years and years with the hope that, if you need this service, it will be there for you,â Lou Volpe said. âAnd finally, when you knock on the door and say, âHey guys, we need some help,â they just start backpedaling.â (Dennison, 2/13)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Top California Democrats Clash Over How To Rein In Drug Industry Middlemen
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and state legislators in Sacramento seem to agree: Prescription drug prices are too high. But lawmakers and the second-term governor are at odds over what to do about it, and a recent proposal could trigger one of the biggest health care battles in Sacramento this year. A California bill awaiting its first hearing would subject drug industry intermediaries known as pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, to licensing by the state Department of Insurance. And it would require them to pass along 100% of the rebates they get from drug companies to the health plans and insurers that hire them to oversee prescription drug benefits. (Mai-Duc, 2/13)
Health Policy Research
Research Roundup: The Latest Science, Discoveries, And Breakthroughs
A blood test for early-stage pancreatic cancer performed well in preliminary studies involving samples from patients with known diagnostic status. In a blinded retrospective study, the test achieved 98% specificity and 73% sensitivity across all stages of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). The test demonstrated 100% accuracy for distinguishing PDAC from non-cancer pancreatic conditions. Combining the test with assessment of the CA 19-9 cancer biomarker increased the sensitivity to 85% with a specificity of 96%. (Bankhead, 2/12)
A blood test identified clinically relevant Alzheimer's disease pathology in several clinical syndromes, a clinicopathological study showed. Plasma phosphorylated tau 217 (p-tau217) detected Alzheimer's pathology across neurodegenerative syndromes with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.95, reported Lawren VandeVrede, MD, PhD, of the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), and co-authors in JAMA Neurology. (George, 2/10)
New research could transform how broken bones are treated, with the development of a special zinc-based dissolvable material that could replace the metal plates and screws typically used to hold fractured bones together. (Monash University, 2/12)
A meta-analysis of 37 studies involving 3 million people suggests that those with long COVID are much more likely to experience chest pain, heart palpitations, and high blood pressure than their uninfected counterparts. (Van Beusekom, 2/11)
A study of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals found that collaboration between antimicrobial stewardship physicians and pharmacists and use of local antibiotic prescribing guidelines were associated with less antibiotic use at discharge, researchers reported today in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology. (Dall, 2/12)        Â
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Steps We Can Take To Mitigate The Spread Of Bird Flu; Why Is Life Expectancy Lower In US?
As a physician, I have been closely following our countryâs bird flu crisis. I am especially concerned about the recent revelation that a second type of bird flu has been detected in dairy cows in Nevada and a new strain of the bird flu virus, H5N9, was found in California. These developments are precisely what many public health officials have been most concerned about as it means that bird flu is transforming in a way that could allow it to spread more easily in humans. (Asha Subramanian, 2/12)
According to an analysis from the AAMC Research and Action Institute that we co-authored, if we could eliminate deaths from just three external causes of injury and death âalcohol, drugs, and firearms (including firearm suicides) â we would increase the average U.S. life expectancy at birth by about 1.6 years. That would nearly close the life expectancy gap between the United States and other developed countries. (Atul Grover and Megan L. Ranney, 2/13)
The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that about 6% of American adults have a serious mental illness. That amounts to more than 15.4 million people and includes such afflictions as mood disorders, anxiety orders such as posttraumatic stress and impulse control. If anything, experts suspect thatâs an underestimate â individuals with no fixed address, for example, arenât usually covered by government behavioral health surveys. But itâs safe to say the numbers are substantial and cover the gamut from men and women, white and minorities, young and old. And itâs not uncommon for co-occurring afflictions such as alcoholism or addiction to be part of the equation. (2/12)
U.S.A.I.D. employees, who mostly joined the agency in hopes of making the world a better place, are in agony. âWeâre just paralyzed,â an agency employee in Africa told me. âNo one is in charge.â (Nicholas Kristof, 2/12)
When Christen Whiteâs brother had his first psychotic episode thinking Steven Spielberg was stalking him, it was a shocking and overwhelming experience for loved ones. âMy brother lived with schizophrenia for 10 years,â White wrote to me in an email, âand our biggest battle was ensuring his safety and trying to keep him well. Unfortunately, the failures of the mental health care system compounded the challenges we faced.â This led her to becoming involved with The Angry Moms, a grassroots effort advocating for the safe use of clozapine, an antipsychotic medication. (Daniel X. Pham, 2/13)
In 2024, I was forced to take a hard look at my life. Sitting in my doctor's office, I gripped the arms of the chair as I heard the words no one ever wants to hear: "We need to rule out cancer." I had two kids, a demanding career, and a husband who counted on me. I had spent years pushing myself to be the best at work, the best dad, the best providerâbut in the process, I had completely neglected my own health. For years, I ignored the warning signs: I was 100 pounds overweight with high blood pressure, sky-high cholesterol, chronic plantar fasciitis and irregular heart rhythms that put me at risk of stroke. (David Graham, 2/12)