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
âA Pressure Campaignâ: Beverly Hills Settles After Allegedly Blocking Abortion Clinic
California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced a settlement with Beverly Hills after finding city officials pressured the landlord to cancel DuPont Clinicâs lease. Itâs the stateâs first enforcement action under Proposition 1, which enshrined abortion rights in the state constitution.
In Montana, Conservative Groups See Chance To Kill Medicaid Expansion
Conservative groups are working to undermine support for Montanaâs Medicaid expansion ahead of a political fight over whether to keep the program.
Can a $10 Billion Climate Bond Address Californiaâs Water Contamination Problem?
California voters will decide in November whether to approve a $10 billion climate bond that supporters say is needed to jump-start water system repairs for residents without safe drinking water. Opponents say those repairs should be prioritized in the state budget, not put on a credit card.
Ghosts, Ghouls, and Ghastly Drug Prices in Winning Halloween Haikus
Entries for our sixth annual Halloween haiku contest gave us shivers. Based on a review by our panel of judges, hereâs the winner and runners-up â plus the original artwork they inspired.
Political Cartoon: 'Ghost of Wrinkles Past?'
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Ghost of Wrinkles Past?'" by Yaffle.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
NO TRICKS, JUST TREATS ON HALLOWEEN đ
The contest is done,
â Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News Staff
but keep sending us haikus!
Your rhymes are sweet treats đ
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Health Law
Speaker Johnson Says Obamacare In For 'Massive Reform' If Trump Wins But Denies Repeal Accusation
House Speaker Mike Johnson told a crowd of supporters Monday night that there will be "no Obamacare" if former President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans win the upcoming election on Nov. 5. Republicans will propose âmassive reformâ to the Affordable Care Act if they win control of both chambers in Congress and the presidency, Johnson, R-La., said at a campaign event for Republican House candidate Ryan Mackenzie in  Pennsylvania on Monday evening.  âHealth-care reformâs going to be a big part of the agenda,â Johnson said about Republicans' plans. He added that the GOP wants to take a âblowtorch to the regulatory state,â with healthcare among the key sectors they plan to focus on. (Waddick, 10/30)
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) is disputing Democratsâ assertion that he wants to repeal ObamaCare after Vice President Harrisâs campaign seized on comments he made at a campaign stop this week. âDespite the dishonest characterizations from the Harris campaign, the audio and transcript make clear that I offered no such promise to end ObamaCare, and in fact acknowledged that the policy is âdeeply ingrainedâ in our health care system,â Johnson said in a statement to The Hill. (Brooks and Weixel, 10/30)
Former President Donald Trump's campaign quickly tried to separate itself from the speaker's comments. A spokeswoman told the New York Times that they were ânot President Trumpâs policy position.â (Peller, 10/30)
Mr. Trump and an all-Republican Congress already tried unsuccessfully to repeal the law, and the fierce backlash to those efforts helped Democrats win control of the House in 2018. In 2020, the Justice Department under Mr. Trump asked the Supreme Court to overturn the law. After threatening a renewed repeal push late last year, Mr. Trump has kept his position vague, a sign of what a political liability the issue has become for his campaign. (Karni, 10/30)
Over the past two months, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has made appearances throughout the country to share his story on the state of Americansâ health, one that he says is characterized by corrupt regulatory agencies, children sickened by âultra processedâ foods and Americans burdened by chronic disease. His game plan to address these challenges appears to start with HHS and its agencies. ... Kennedy also asserted that former President Barack Obamaâs signature health care law incentivized insurers to increase premiums by capping the amount of money they could take from premiums at 15 percent. Â (DeGroot, 10/30)
In other election news â
In this election, presidential campaigns are offering proposals on home care and the child tax credit, speaking to parents and caregivers more directly than ever before. But there is one policy proposal that has been conspicuously absent: What would Kamala Harris or Donald Trump do about paid medical and family leave? (Carrazana, 10/30)
One of former president Donald J. Trumpâs final television ads before Election Day reprises an old talking point. The segment, released Oct. 17, declares that Vice President Kamala Harris âwants struggling seniors to pay more Social Security taxes while she gives Medicare and Social Security to illegals.â The first half of the statement is inaccurate. Ms. Harris has not suggested raising Social Security taxes for seniors; instead, she has said she supports eliminating the $168,000 income cap on the taxes workers pay to fund Social Security, a threshold above which income becomes exempt. ... The latter half of the adâs claim â that Ms. Harris supports giving taxpayer-funded health benefits to illegal immigrants â is a misrepresentation of Ms. Harrisâs current proposals. (Baumgaertner and Sanger-Katz, 10/30)
After Roe V. Wade
California Catholic Hospital To Provide Emergency Abortions As Suit Proceeds
A Catholic hospital in Eureka has agreed to provide emergency abortion services after a state lawsuit said it had refused to give abortions to pregnant patients in life-threatening emergencies. The lawsuit alleges that, in February, Providence St. Joseph Hospital denied a patient emergency care when her water prematurely broke while she was 15 weeks pregnant with twins. It allegedly placed her life at risk by telling her to drive to Mad River Community Hospital, a smaller critical access hospital 12 miles away, armed with a bucket and towels, while she was hemorrhaging. (Harter, 10/30)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: âA Pressure Campaignâ: Beverly Hills Settles After Allegedly Blocking Abortion Clinic
The city of Beverly Hills has agreed to train its employees on abortion clinic protections after local officials interfered with the opening of an abortion clinic in âblatantâ violation of state law, according to a proposed settlement to be unveiled Thursday by California Attorney General Rob Bonta. Bontaâs office said the cityâs then-mayor, city attorney, and city manager pressured DuPont Clinicâs landlord last spring to cancel the lease and that city officials also delayed permits to the clinic. (Mai-Duc, 10/31)
Avery Davis Bell was 18 weeks pregnant with a little boy. ... Bell was suffering a second-trimester miscarriage as she said her medical team at Emory Decatur delayed treatment, navigating her care around Georgia's strict abortion laws. "Your baby is dead or dying inside you, you're just waiting to crash," Bell told USA TODAY, days after she received a life-saving D&E, or dilation and evacuation. "And I wanted to live, of course, for myself and for my existing child, and the baby wasn't going to live no matter what." (Walrath-Holdridge, 10/30)
More than 80 percent of abortions in the United States happen before 10 weeks, in the embryonic stage of pregnancy. But in the politics of abortion, the arguments and almost all of the ads focus on the other end, on the much rarer abortions later in pregnancy. This has never been more evident, or consequential, than this year. Itâs the first presidential election year since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Ten states are voting on abortion rights ballot measures, including states that are battlegrounds for the presidency and control of Congress, and polls show that abortion has newly energized Democrats and women. (Zernike, 10/31)
Soon after anti-abortion activists achieved their 50-year goal of overturning Roe v. Wade, financial support began pouring into an unexpected beneficiary: grassroots organizations that help people get abortions. According to the National Network of Abortion Funds, budgets grew an average of 88% nationwide in the 12 months that followed the 6-3 ruling that revoked the constitutional right to an abortion in June 2022. (Buller, 10/30)
Abortion updates from the campaign trail â
Across the countryâs most competitive House races, Republicans have spent months trying to redefine themselves on abortion, going so far as to borrow language that would not feel out of place at a rally of Vice President Kamala Harris. Many Republicans who until recently backed federal abortion restrictions are now saying the issue should be left to the states. (McCann and Li, 10/30)
Kamala Harris is making abortion part of her closing argument. But some voters say they arenât worried about what a Donald Trump presidency would mean for abortion. (Kitchener, 10/30)
Just a week before an election in which Nebraska voters will decide on two competing ballot initiatives related to abortion rights, the state health department sent doctors an alert about what it called "misleading information" in radio and TV ads. Nebraskaâs chief medical officer, Dr. Timothy Tesmer, wrote in the alert that recent ads had generated confusion about Nebraskaâs law restricting abortions after 12 weeksâ gestation, though he did not specify which ads. (Bendix, 10/31)
Pennsylvania Democrats believe their path to expanding power in the state Legislature runs through the suburbs â and theyâre hammering the importance of protecting reproductive rights to pull it off. Two and a half years after Dobbs, ensuring that voters continue to be swayed by abortion messaging is critical for Democrats in Harrisburg, where the party holds a single-seat majority in the state House and Republicans control the Senate. Thatâs why Democrats are spending a record amount on abortion-focused campaign ads and knocking on thousands of doors making the case for protecting reproductive rights. (Crampton, 10/30)
The groups promoting ballot measures to add amendments to the constitutions in nine states that would enshrine a right to abortion have raised more than $160 million. Thatâs nearly six times what their opponents have brought in, The Associated Press found in an analysis of campaign finance data compiled by the watchdog group Open Secrets and state governments. The campaign spending reports are a snapshot in time, especially this late in the campaigns, when contributions are rolling in for many. (Mulvihill, 10/30)
Outbreaks and Health Threats
US Confirms 1st Case Of Bird Flu In Pig
A pig in Oregon has tested positive for the H5N1 bird flu virus, the Agriculture Department said Wednesday. It's the first time the virus has been detected in swine in the United States. Test results are pending for two other pigs found on the farm in Crook County, Oregon, the USDA said, while two others tested negative. ... The case is concerning as pigs can become infected with both bird and human viruses at the same time, which can give rise to mutated strains that can more easily infect humans. Officials said there are no concerns about the safety of the nation's pork supply. (Lovelace Jr. and Edwards, 10/30)
The U.S. Department of Agriculture will soon begin testing bulk raw milk across the country for bird flu, a significant expansion of the agency's efforts to stifle the rapid spread of the virus, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told Reuters. The move comes after livestock and veterinary groups pushed the USDA to strengthen its current surveillance approach, calling it inadequate to contain the virus, according to state records and industry documents reviewed by Reuters. (Douglas, 10/30)
On E. coli, flu, and pneumonia â
Federal officials on Wednesday reported more cases of E. coli poisoning among people who ate at McDonaldâs, as government investigators seeking the outbreakâs source identified an âonion grower of interestâ in Washington state. The Food and Drug Administration said 90 people across 13 states have fallen ill in the outbreak, up from 75 at the end of last week. The number of people hospitalized increased by five, to 27 people. One death has been tied to the outbreak. (Perrone, 10/30)
More than 100,000 people are hospitalized and 4,900 people die from flu complications annually in the U.S. Vaccines, which target last yearâs dominant flu strains, can help you avert serious illness or death. The study published Tuesday in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report showed the risks seasonal flu still poses, especially to people who haven't been vaccinated. (Cuevas, 10/30)
A multistate study of publicly insured children diagnosed as having pneumonia found that one in five did not receive antibiotics, researchers reported yesterday in JAMA Network Open. But while children who didn't receive antibiotics had slightly higher rates of treatment failure than those who did, severe outcomes were rare regardless of antibiotic treatment, the researchers found. (Dall, 10/30)
On the spread of mpox â
The United Kingdom today reported its first imported clade 1b mpox case, a patient who recently traveled to countries in Africa that are experiencing infection in community settings. In a statement, the UKâs Health Security Agency (HSA) said the case was detected in London and that the patient has been transferred to the Royal Free Hospitalâs High Consequence Infectious Diseases unit. (Schnirring, 10/30)
A World Health Organization (WHO)Â analysis of global mpox surveillance from 1958 to 2024 reveals highly mobile clade 1 viruses in Central Africa, sustained human-to-human spread of clade 2b lineage A in the Eastern Mediterranean, distinct mutations that can distinguish between sustained transmission among humans with that among animals, and unique clade 1 sequences from Sudan that suggest local circulation in Eastern Africa. For the study, published last week in Nature Medicine, the team extracted 6,585 mpox sequences from GenBank and 3,914 from GISAID from 64 countries from the past 67 years. (Van Beusekom, 10/30)
Public Health
More Adults In Their 20s And 30s Are Being Diagnosed With Autism
Four times as many children have been diagnosed with autism in the past two decades amid improved awareness and screening and evolving definitions. A new study suggests diagnoses have increased at a faster clip among younger adults over the past decade. Autism spectrum disorder spiked 175% among people in the U.S. from 2.3 per 1,000 in 2011 to 6.3 per 1,000 in 2022, researchers found. Diagnosis rates climbed at a faster rate among adults in their mid-20s to mid-30s in that period, according to a study published Wednesday in JAMA Network Open. (Alltucker, 10/30)
Teens getting four or more hours of screen time each day are more likely to experience anxiety and depression, according to a new report from the National Center for Health Statistics. In a brief shared by the agency Wednesday, data showed about half of teenagers aged 12 to 17 had 4 hour or more of daily screen time between July 2021 and December 2023. 22.8% had 3 hours of daily screen time, 17.8% had 2 hours, 6.1% had 1 hour, and only 3% had less than 1 hour. (Moniuszko, 10/30)
On daylight saving time â
While most people in the United States get ready to mark the end of daylight saving time for 2024 by turning their clocks back one hour at 2 a.m. Sunday, a group based in the western suburbs is working to put an end to daylight saving time altogether. The Coalition for Permanent Standard Time in Darien is advocating for the abolition of daylight saving time in favor of year-round standard time. The coalition of eight organizations insists that getting rid of daylight saving time would improve public health, safety, and overall well-being. (Fieldman, 10/29)
As winter approaches and daylight hours grow shorter, people prone to seasonal depression can feel it in their bodies and brains. âItâs a feeling of panic, fear, anxiety and dread all in one,â said Germaine Pataki, 63, of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Sheâs among the millions of people estimated to have seasonal affective disorder, or SAD. Her coping strategies include yoga, walking and an antidepressant medication. Sheâs also part of a Facebook group for people with SAD. (Johnson, 10/30)
Also â
The rate of firearms deaths in several U.S. states is similar to places around the world that are battling civil unrest or bloody gang wars, a new report shows. The report, published Wednesday by the Commonwealth Fund, an independent research group, found that the overall rate of firearms deaths in Mississippi was nearly twice that of Haiti, an impoverished Caribbean nation where violent gangs control large swaths of the country and whose president was assassinated by gunmen in 2021. (Pannett, 10/31)
Drug overdoses are already a leading cause of death for pregnant women in the U.S. Research shows as many as 1 in 20 women use addictive substances at some point during their pregnancies. A study by the National Institutes of Health found "substance use during pregnancy is prevalent." Opioid use by pregnant women had already quadrupled before fentanyl hit, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Now, public health experts warn that xylazine poses a fast-growing threat to women, their fetuses and newborns. (Mann, 10/31)
Vapes with screens first began to hit the market late last year, and only recently have become widely accessible. Online retailers sell vapes with screens that display what appear to be planets, rockets, and cars driving in outer space. The screens are smallâjust a few inches wide at mostâand they are cheap: These products run as little as $25, and can last for several months. ... I could see how adults like me might be enticed by the nostalgia of it all. The problem is that these vapes might also appeal to kids. (Florko, 10/30)
Science And Innovations
Study Suggests Failing Heart Valves Should Be Replaced, Stat
For decades, people with failing heart valves who nevertheless felt all right would walk out of the cardiologistâs office with the same âwait and seeâ treatment plan: Come back in six or 12 months. No reason to go under the knife just yet. A new clinical trial has overturned that thinking, suggesting that those patients would be much better off having their valves replaced right away with a minimally invasive procedure. (Mueller, 10/30)
More research and tech news â
Race and ethnicity are applied in inappropriate and even harmful ways in biomedical research, the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine said in a report issued Wednesday, calling on scientists, research funders, and publishers to transform the way they use â and donât use â the categories in research. (Palmer and McFarling, 10/30)
Apple this week officially released a batch of new health features for AirPods Pro that allow users to test their hearing and use the popular wireless headphones as hearing aids for milder forms of hearing loss. (Aguilar, 10/31)
In pharmaceutical developments â
The blockbuster drug semaglutide, sold as Ozempic for diabetes and as Wegovy for weight loss, now has a new proven benefit: It markedly soothed knee pain in people who are obese and have moderate to severe osteoarthritis, according to a large study. The effect was so pronounced that some arthritis experts not involved with the clinical trial were taken aback. (Kolata, 10/30)
All doses of Novo Nordiskâs blockbuster diabetes and obesity treatments are listed as available on the Food and Drug Administrationâs drug shortage list as of Wednesday, raising the possibility that the medications could soon be taken off the list entirely, a development that could affect compounding pharmacies and patients relying on compounded drugs. (Chen, 10/30)
Texas is now on the list of states where a baby powder potentially contaminated with asbestos was sold, according to an FDA release. The Dynarex Corporation, a New York medical manufacturer announced an expanded recall of their baby powder this week for possible health risks from asbestos. An additional 373 case items were found for the 14 oz Dynarex Baby Powder, as well as 647 cases for the 4 oz version. (Babbar, 10/31)
AstraZeneca disclosed Wednesday that Leon Wang, a high-ranking executive who oversees international operations and is also president of its subsidiary in China, is under investigation by Chinese authorities. The company added that it will cooperate, if asked to do so. (Silverman, 10/30)
Specialty pharmacy has emerged as a promising line of business for health insurance companies confronting challenges in their traditional operations. Cigna subsidiary Evernorth Health Services, Elevance Health subsidiary Carelon and Aetna parent company CVS Health have made big plays into the $400 billion market for medications that are too costly or complex for traditional pharmacies. (Berryman, 10/30)
Health Industry
CareTrust To Acquire Nursing Homes In Tennessee, Alabama In $500M Deal
CareTrust REIT and a joint venture partner inked a $500 million deal to buy 31 skilled nursing facilities in Tennessee and Alabama from American Health Partners in Franklin, Tennessee, the company announced Tuesday. The San Clemente, California-based real estate investment trust said in a news release the acquisition will include 3,290 licensed beds across 30 locations in Tennessee and one in Alabama. CareTrust expects the transaction to close in the fourth quarter of 2024. (Eastabrook, 10/30)
Accusing Good Samaritan Hospital and its parent company HCA Healthcare of jeopardizing patient care, registered nurses protested outside the facility on Wednesday, asserting the healthcare provider is failing to address staffing shortages and inadequate meal breaks. The California Nurse Association said the hospitalâs management has yet to adequately address more than 100 instances of unsafe staffing conditions or missed breaks, claiming the healthcare agency is putting profits over people. (Patel, 10/30)
Workers at Women & Infants Hospital plan to protest outside the facility on Nov. 12, citing staffing shortages as a key reason for their action. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) District 1199, which represents 4,000 employees, said on Wednesday more than 70 percent of its members voted to approve the protest. Workers plan to stand outside the hospital, chant, and hold signs to advocate for their issues, but have so far held back from a strike. (Mohammed, 10/30)
About 1,600 patients covered by Medicare Advantage plans are expected to lose insurance coverage at MD Anderson Cancer Center by the end of this week, officials at the cancer hospital said Wednesday. The patients have been covered by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas, which previously announced that its Medicare Advantage members would no longer receive "in-network" access to the hospital as of Nov. 1. That means those patients could not receive care at heavily discounted rates. The number of impacted patients has not been previously reported. (Gill, 10/30)
Aetna will no longer pay brokers for enrolling new members in some Medicare plans starting Friday. The CVS Health subsidiary notified third-party marketers on Tuesday that it will not compensate them for signing up customers for 25 Medicare Advantage products in California, Connecticut, Florida, Maryland, New York, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington and the District of Columbia, or for any Medicare Part D plans, said Ronnell Nolan, president and CEO of the trade group Health Agents for America. (Tepper, 10/30)
Medicare Shared Savings Program accountable care organizations generated $5.2 billion in savings last year, the highest level since the program launched more than a decade ago, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced Tuesday. These ACOs saved Medicare $2.1 billion in 2023, up 16.7% from the $1.8 billion in savings recorded the previous year, CMS said in a news release. (Berryman, 10/30)
On medical debt and health care costs â
Jessica Hurley eyed the stack of medical bills in her purse as she held one of her twin babies, blue from lack of oxygen, in the neonatal intensive care unit. She prayed that the boys, Perry and Kinser â born prematurely at 32 weeks â would survive. ... On top of that was another source of dread: How would they afford the mounting costs of the birth? And why were the bills already so high when they had insurance? (Bendix, 10/30)
Child care has become one of the biggest expenses for parents no matter where they live in the country. A new Bankrate analysis finds that full-time center-based care for one infant costs at least 10% of a typical familyâs annual income in 48 states and the District of Columbia. In some states, like New York and Hawaii, infant care costs can take up roughly 20% of a typical familyâs yearly income. And some of the more affordable states in the country, such as New Mexico and Kansas, are surprisingly expensive when it comes to infant care. (Gailey, 10/30)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Ghosts, Ghouls, And Ghastly Drug Prices In Winning Halloween Haikus
Entries for our sixth annual Halloween haiku contest gave us shivers. Based on a review by our panel of judges, hereâs the winner and runners-up â plus the original artwork they inspired. (10/31)
State Watch
Texas Attorney General Sues Second Doctor Over Gender-Affirming Care
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing a second doctor for allegedly violating state law and providing gender-affirming medical care to minors. Dr. Hector Granados is an El Paso pediatric endocrinologist. Paxton accuses him in the lawsuit of prescribing puberty blockers and hormone therapy to more than 20 minors to treat gender dysphoria, or the distress someone can feel when their gender identity doesnât match their physical appearance. (Klibanoff, 10/30)
A House subcommittee has referred former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York to the Justice Department for potential prosecution, accusing him of lying to Congress about his involvement in a state Covid report on nursing home deaths. Mr. Cuomo was accused of engaging in a âconscious, calculated effortâ to avoid accountability for his handling of nursing homes where thousands of people died of Covid, according to the referral from the Republican-led House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic. (Ashford and Oreskes, 10/30)
Floridaâs First Coast has seen a marked increase in an already-high infant mortality rate. A report released Tuesday by the Northeast Florida Healthy Start Coalition shows infant deaths rising almost 19% over the past five years. Thatâs despite a decline in deaths from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS. (Corum, 10/30)
Over the past year, Palm Beach County's only needle exchange program served over 250 clients and reduced the overall syringe count by nearly 7,800. Itâs part of the ongoing effort to reduce opioid drug abuse, said Austin Wright, director of Syringe & Harm Reduction Services at Rebel Recovery Florida. (Brutus, 10/30)
Like many people and business owners in western North Carolina left to pick up the scattered pieces after the remnants of Hurricane Helene pummeled the region, dentists have had to pivot to tend to their patientsâ needs. Safe drinking water is critical to that care. And with key components of Ashevilleâs municipal water system blown to bits and its feeder reservoirs suffering from tenacious turbidity, the North Carolina Board of Dental Examiners issued an emergency order on Oct. 14 waiving some facility requirements related to piped water and functioning toilets to allow oral health care providers more flexibility. (Blythe, 10/31)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: In Montana, Conservative Groups See Chance To Kill Medicaid Expansion
Conservative groups are working to undermine support for Montanaâs Medicaid expansion in hopes the state will abandon the program. The rollback would be the first in the decade since the Affordable Care Act began allowing states to cover more people with low incomes. Montanaâs expansion, which insures roughly 78,800 people, is set to expire next year unless the legislature and governor opt to renew it. Opponents see a rare opportunity to eliminate Medicaid expansion in one of the 40 states that have approved it. (Houghton, 10/31)
Health news from California â
Public health officials have reported two more locally acquired cases of the mosquito borne illness dengue in Los Angeles County, bringing the total to 11 cases in recent weeks. One of the cases was reported in Baldwin Park, where health officials are currently investigating a cluster of cases. It's now the seventh discovered in the area. (Fioresi, 10/30)
Santa Cruz County will prohibit the sale of filtered cigars and cigarettes, an effort to slash waste from cigarette butts which proponents said litter the coastal countyâs beaches and harm marine life. The ordinance, passed by the countyâs board of supervisors Tuesday, is the first county-level filtered cigarette ban in the country, according to Supervisor Justin Cummings, who introduced the measure. The ban will apply to the countyâs unincorporated areas, where more than half of the countyâs roughly 270,000 residents live, according to the countyâs website. (Ellis, 10/30)
San Francisco balloon artist Korene Tom had not been to the dentist in more than 20 years â a gap she made up for with vigorous brushing, which was all the dental care she could afford after she lost her job as an office administrator. But that changed this week when the free Clinic by the Bay moved into the historic Alemany Emergency Hospital building, newly renovated after sitting vacant for nearly half a century in the Excelsior District. The nonprofit clinic, which has served uninsured, low-income patients for 14 years in the city, now offers extended hours and expanded services â including dental care. (Whiting, 10/30)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Can A $10 Billion Climate Bond Address Californiaâs Water Contamination Problem?
When Cynthia Ruiz turns on her kitchen faucet, she hears a slight squeak before cloudy fluid bursts out of the spout. The water in her Central Valley town of East Orosi is clean enough most of the time to wash dishes, flush toilets, and take showers, but itâs not safe to swallow. Drinking water is trucked in twice a month. âThere are times where the water is so bad you canât even wash dishes,â said Ruiz, who is advised not to drink the tap water, which is laden with nitrates â runoff from orange and nectarine fields surrounding the town of roughly 400. (SĂĄnchez, 10/31)
Health Policy Research
Research Roundup: Antibiotic Therapy; Stem Cell Transplants; Paxlovid; More
A study of two different strategies for optimizing antibiotic therapy in intensive care unit (ICU) patients with pneumonia found that both provided high rates of appropriateness in empiric antibiotic selection, but one was better at reducing antibiotic overuse, researchers reported today in Open Forum Infectious Diseases. (Dall, 10/30)
New research into the long-term dynamics of transplanted stem cells in a patient's body explains how age affects stem cell survival and immune diversity, offering insights that could make transplants safer and more successful. (Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, 10/30)
A new retrospective cohort study conducted in Dubai shows that the antiviral nirmatrelvir plus ritonavir, sold as Paxlovid, is tied to a 61% reduction in COVID-19 hospitalization and a 58% lower rate of long COVID. (Soucheray, 10/29)
In patients with PIK3CA-mutated, hormone receptorâpositive, HER2-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer, inavolisib plus palbociclibâfulvestrant led to significantly longer progression-free survival than placebo plus palbociclibâfulvestrant, with a greater incidence of toxic effects. The percentage of patients who discontinued any trial agent because of adverse events was low. (Turner et al, 10/30)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Bird Flu Is Moving Faster Than A Potential Vaccine; Why Is Medicare So Hard To Navigate?
H5N1 bird flu is here. Itâs moving from animals to people in ways not seen before. Itâs spreading to new species and new places, and this spread is largely happening under the radar. (Maggie Fox, 10/30)
Open enrollment season for Medicare, which began Oct. 15 and ends Dec. 7, triggers a deluge of information about various options. Since Iâm a health care consultant and researcher as well as a Medicare beneficiary, Iâve looked critically at what weâre told and what weâre not. Unfortunately, information crucial both for the individual and for the broader policy goal of moving toward a âvalue-basedâ care system is often difficult to find or not available at all. (Michael L. Millenson, 10/31)
Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.âs campaign to âMake America Healthy Againâ gets some things right: Our country is beset by chronic disease, environmental risks, and dangerous and inappropriate corporate influence on health decisions. But to make America healthier, we need an accurate diagnosis and an effective prescription. (Tom Frieden, 10/31)
For decades, the healthcare industry has been talking about the need to transition away from the traditional fee-for-service reimbursement model, which pays doctors for every piece of care they provide, rather than the quality, value or outcome of that care. (Dr. Bruce Meyer, 10/31)
Nearly 50 years ago, I wrote a published letter objecting to the release of Gerald Fordâs full physical, including genitalia and rectal exam. I thought that was unseemly, and that expecting that level of disclosure would make it harder for women â and for a man with some irrelevant abnormality â to run for office. But I expected continuing disclosure of conditions that actually affected job performance or survival. (Joanne Lynn, 10/30)