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
Black Women Weigh Emerging Risks of âCreamy Crackâ Hair Straighteners
Social and economic pressures have long compelled Black girls and women to straighten their hair. But mounting evidence shows chemical straighteners â products with little regulatory oversight â may pose cancer and other health risks.
'Epidemic' Podcast: Do You Know Dutta?
Who gets credit for wiping smallpox from the planet? American men have been widely recognized while the contributions of South Asian public health workers have been less celebrated. Episode 2 of the âEradicating Smallpoxâ podcast tells the story of Mahendra Dutta, an Indian public health leader, whose political savvy helped usher in a transformative approach to finding and containing smallpox cases.
Political Cartoon: 'No Brag Pills?'
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'No Brag Pills?'" by Dave Coverly.
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:
Covid-19
Biden Administration Targets Long Covid With New Office, Clinical Trial
The Biden administration announced Monday it is forming a new Office of Long COVID Research and Practice to study the condition and help those who have been diagnosed with it. The office, which will be under the Department of Health and Human Services, "is charged with on-going coordination of the whole-of-government response to the longer-term effects of COVID-19," according to a news release. (Kekatos, 7/31)
Up to 900 patients will be enrolled in the study, which is named RECOVER-VITAL â a smaller number than was previously planned. The trial's design has also been tweaked to test taking the pills for 25 days, a difference from another recent study from Stanford University that was stopped early. That study had failed to find evidence the drug benefited patients, MedPage Today reported earlier this year. (Tin, 7/31)
Mondayâs announcement from the NIHâs $1.15 billion RECOVER project comes amid frustration from patients whoâve struggled for months or even years with sometimes-disabling health problems â with no proven treatments and only a smattering of rigorous studies to test potential ones. âThis is a year or two late and smaller in scope than one would hope but nevertheless itâs a step in the right direction,â said Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly of Washington University in St. Louis, who isnât involved with NIHâs project but whose own research highlighted long COVIDâs toll. (Neergaard, 8/1)
In other covid developments â
Covid-19 hospitalizations are rising for the first time since the beginning of 2023, but public health experts and the White House appear confident the U.S. is well-positioned to manage the virus heading into the fall. It is more difficult than earlier in the pandemic to know how many infections are circulating in the U.S. due to the end of state data reporting requirements that were tied to the public health emergency, which ended in May. But a 10.3 percent increase in weekly Covid-19 hospital admissions in mid-July to 7,109 is a reminder that the virus is still a public health challenge. (Lim, 7/31)
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force will discuss recommending Covid-19 screening, the first step in requiring insurers to permanently cover the tests at no cost to patients. The national panel of experts will convene and âdetermine whether and how Covid-19 screening might be considered within the Task Forceâs scope,â chair Michael Barry wrote in a letter to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) exclusively shared with STAT. (Owermohle, 7/31)
A months-long investigation into a rural California warehouse uncovered an illegal laboratory that was filled with infectious agents, medical waste and hundreds of mice bioengineered "to catch and carry the COVID-19 virus," according to Fresno County authorities. Health and licensing said Monday that Prestige Biotech, a Chinese medical company registered in Nevada, was operating the unlicensed facility in Reedley, California â a small city about 24 miles southeast of Fresno. The company, according to Reedley City Manager Nicole Zieba, had a goal of being a diagnostics lab. (Nguyen and Martin, 7/31)
As the Florida Supreme Court prepares to decide a similar case, a federal appeals court Monday rejected a lawsuit alleging the University of Miami should refund money to students because of a campus shutdown early in the COVID-19 pandemic. A panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a district judgeâs ruling that sided with the private university in a potential class-action lawsuit filed by student Adelaide Dixon. The case was one of numerous filed in Florida and across the country after students were forced to leave campuses and learn remotely in 2020 to try to prevent spread of the virus. (Saunders, 7/31)
Again and again, Kennedy has made his opposition to vaccines clear. In July, Kennedy said in a podcast interview that âThereâs no vaccine that is safe and effectiveâ and told FOX News that he still believes in the long-ago debunked idea that vaccines can cause autism. In a 2021 podcast he urged people to âresistâ CDC guidelines on when kids should get vaccines. âI see somebody on a hiking trail carrying a little baby and I say to him, better not get them vaccinated,â Kennedy said. (Smith and Swenson, 7/31)
Medicare
White House Dementia Care Program Aims At Quality, But Not Drug Prices
The Biden administration on Monday rolled out a new Medicare pilot program aimed at improving the quality of life for people with dementia and reducing the burden on unpaid caregivers. The new payment model from Medicare's innovation lab will test a standardized approach to providing coordinated care to patients with dementia, who often have complex health care needs. (Millman, 7/31)
Medicare announced Monday a pilot program aimed at improving dementia care and reducing the strain on unpaid caregivers, but it does not deal with controlling the price of new Alzheimerâs drugs. (Wilkerson, 7/31)
Also â
Quest Diagnostics on Monday launched the first direct-to-consumer blood test to detect abnormal levels of beta amyloid, a key Alzheimer's disease protein that can appear years before dementia symptoms arise. The $399 test, called AD-Detect, uses the same technology as a blood test the company began selling for use by doctors in early 2022. (Seenhuysen, 7/31)
An estimated 11% of Arizona residents ages 65 and older have Alzheimer's disease, per a new study. It's critical for public health officials, policymakers and others to have a clear look at the number of Alzheimer's cases in a given area, authors say. Caring for those with the disease cost an estimated $321 billion nationwide last year, much of which came via Medicare and Medicaid. (Boehm, Beheraj and Fitzpatrick, 7/31)
California has one of the highest rates of Alzheimer's disease in the country, according to a new study. It's critical for public health officials, policymakers and others to have a clear look at the number of Alzheimer's cases in a given area, the authors say â in part because caring for those with the disease cost an estimated $321 billion nationwide last year, much of which came via Medicare and Medicaid. An estimated 12% of adults 65 or older in California have Alzheimer's disease, according to data published in the journal Alzheimer's & Dementia. (Fitzpatrick and Dickey, 7/31)
Personal Info For 612,000 On Medicare Exposed In Hack
The personal information of 612,000 Medicare beneficiaries were accessed in a sweeping data breach that affected what could be hundreds of organizations, including the government contractor, Maximus Federal Services. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced in a press release Friday that it is notifying people affected by the data breach, which could have affected information including beneficiaries, names, Social Security numbers, medical histories, diagnoses and other personal details. (Fortinsky, 7/31)
More Medicare updates â
Lobbying groups representing different camps of the healthcare industry have come together to urge the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Service (CMS) to reconsider âconflicting regulatory proposalsâ that require different electronic standards for electronic data exchanges during prior authorization. (Muoio, 7/31)
Martinâs Point Health Care Inc. will pay nearly $22.5 million to resolve allegations of submitting inaccurate codes for Medicare Advantage Plan enrollees to increase Medicare reimbursements, federal prosecutors said Monday. The U.S. attorneyâs office in Maine confirmed it was the largest Medicare fraud settlement in state history. A Martinâs Point representative didnât immediately return a phone call seeking comment on Monday. The company was accused of submitting the inaccurate diagnosis codes for Medicare Advantage Plan enrollees in Maine and New Hampshire between 2016 and 2019. (7/31)
Bon Secours Mercy Health and insurance company Anthem/Blue Cross Blue Shield didnât reach an agreement on reimbursement rates by their deadline Monday, leaving around 6,000 Hampton Roads residents who use Medicare out of network as of Tuesday. This means that most people who have an Anthem/BCBS-managed Medicare plan and use Bon Secours Mercy Health medical services will need to find new providers or pay out of pocket. (Dix, 7/31)
Health Industry
U.S. News & World Report Unveils New 'Honor Roll': How'd Your Hospital Do?
U.S. News and World Report on Tuesday released their latest âBest Hospitalâ rankings for the 34th consecutive year amid criticism from schools and public officials, and recent changes to their rating system. The report ranks 484 regional hospitals, evaluating them on 30 medical and surgical services. Of those facilities, 22 hospitals were named to the national âHonor Roll.â This year, the outlet decided to scrap ordinal rankings in favor of an âHonor Rollâ in no particular order. (Rodriguez, 8/1)
Rankings by region and specialty, with an honor roll of hospitals that excel in complex specialty care. (Harder, 8/1)
For the 29th year in a row, the Cleveland Clinic ranked first in the nation for cardiology and heart surgery in the U.S. News & World Report 2023-24 Best Hospitals rankings. But in a change this year, there are no rankings for best hospitals overall. (Kroen, 8/1)
On staffing shortages â
The Biden administration's new effort to improve insurance coverage for mental health services is on a collision course with the nation's shortage of behavioral health professionals. More than 160 million Americans live in areas lacking enough mental health professionals to meet the need. (Goldman, 8/1)
The University of Central Florida's Board of Trustees will consider approving nearly $700,000 dollars in matching funds from the state of to help boost its nursing program. The Florida Hospital Association estimates that by 2035, Florida will face a shortage of 59,000 nurses. The money would come from the Florida Board of Governors and would help pay for more equipment to train current nursing students. (Prieur, 7/31)
The nurses who answer the phone calls of concerned patients at Fox Chase Cancer Center filed paperwork to join a union last week. They would be the third group of workers at the Northeast Philadelphia hospital to unionize since June. The 21 nurses were excluded from the much-larger group of 350 registered nurses at Fox Chase who voted to unionize in June. (Gutman, 7/31)
More health care industry updates â
Amazon Clinic is expanding to all 50 states, including nationwide telehealth services to offer access to clinicians through its website and mobile app. The online retail giant unveiled Amazon Clinic back in November as a virtual medical clinic to provide care for 30 common health concerns like urinary tract infection, pink eye, and acid reflux. Launched as a message-based virtual consultation service, Amazon Clinic connects consumers with licensed clinicians who can diagnose, treat and prescribe medication for a range of common health and lifestyle conditions. (Landi, 8/1)
Last year was a grim one for people in California and elsewhere who needed to see a doctor. According to Gallup, nearly four in 10 Americans said they or a family member postponed medical treatment in 2022 because of the cost. (Kreidler, 7/27)
When Brooklyn McLinn nearly died of a heart attack in his kitchen, he felt a sense of peace that his health troubles â the open-heart surgeries, the pacemaker, the fear of the next big one â could finally be over. This is the sentiment the actor and former college basketball player, 50, has after surviving two heart attacks, a stroke and a heart transplant. The first heart attack happened a few years earlier while playing basketball in Los Angeles in 2016. He was home taking a quick break from filming as a cast member for Tyler Perryâs âThe Haves and Have Notsâ before he flew back to Atlanta. (Evans, 7/31)
Tenet Healthcare Corp. is the latest for-profit system benefiting from recovering patient volumes in the first half of 2023. Dallas-based Tenet said Monday same-hospital admissions in the second quarter grew by about 3% compared with a year ago, including a 5% growth in non-COVID-19 patients, while ambulatory surgical cases grew 6.6%. (Hudson, 7/31)
After Roe V. Wade
For Now, Idaho Can't Prosecute Doctors Over Out-Of-State Abortion Referrals
A U.S. judge on Monday blocked the state of Idaho at least temporarily from prosecuting doctors who refer patients out of state to get an abortion, finding that would violate a medical provider's right to free speech. District Court Judge B. Lynn Winmill of the District of Idaho agreed with a challenge led by Planned Parenthood that Republican Attorney General Raul Labrador's interpretation of the state's criminal abortion law was "chilling" to providers' First Amendment rights. (Trotta, 8/1)
Healthcare providers and an abortion rights group on Monday sued Alabama in an effort to block the state from criminally prosecuting people who help others travel out of state to get abortions. In a lawsuit filed in Montgomery, Alabama federal court, the West Alabama Women's Center, the Alabama Women's Center and its medical director Yashica Robinson said any such prosecutions would violate a basic right to travel between states under the U.S. Constitution. The Yellowhammer Fund filed a separate, similar lawsuit. (Pierson, 7/31)
Abortion news from Indiana, Illinois, Texas, and the campaign trail â
The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana asked the stateâs high court Monday to keep Indianaâs near-total abortion ban on hold while it pursues a narrower preliminary injunction in a trial court to address the scope of the banâs exemption allowing women facing serious health risks to obtain abortions. The petition seeking a rehearing will delay the ban from taking effect as soon as Tuesday while the Indiana Supreme Court considers the matter. The ACLU of Indianaâs request comes after the high court ruled on June 30 that Indianaâs Republican-backed ban doesnât violate the state constitution. (Callahan, 7/31)
A few weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, a 19-year-old woman traveled from Memphis to Chicago seeking an abortion. But medical providers at a local clinic told her the procedure would require hospital care due to scarring from a previous cesarean section. The unexpected complication added travel days and lodging costs the patient hadnât planned for, according to officials with the Chicago Abortion Fund, who scrambled to help the young woman find an abortion appointment a few days later at a Chicago hospital. The local nonprofit covered the cost of a hotel room, food and other necessities. (Lourgos and Petrella, 7/31)
Texas is one of 14 states that banned abortion after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade. The Texas ban includes an exception that allows physicians to end a pregnancy if it could result in the death of the woman or a âsubstantial impairment of a major bodily function.â But the plaintiffs in the case, more than a dozen Texas women, argue that doctors and hospitals denied them necessary care because the providers were afraid to run afoul of the law. Those who violate the ban could face up to 99 years in prison, a $100,000 fine and loss of their medical license. (Montgomery, 8/1)
The Susan B. Anthony List, a conservative anti-abortion group, is slamming Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis for his position on abortion and sidestepping of whether he would support a federal ban on abortion. âA pro-life president has a duty to protect the lives of all Americans,â said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America group, in a statement. She added that DeSantis should be the âNational Defender of Life.â (Nazzaro, 7/31)
In other reproductive health news â
Maternal mortality rates in Iowa increased between 1999 and 2019, according to a JAMA study providing the first state-level breakdowns by ethnic group. The overall number of deaths per 100,000 live births in Iowa increased from 10 to nearly 22 during the 20-year study period. (Clayworth and Gonzalez, 7/31)
Maternal mortality rates nationwide have risen across racial and ethnic groups over the past 20 years, according to a recent study co-authored by researchers at the University of Washington. The overall number of deaths per 100,000 live births in Oregon increased from 6.5 to 14 between 1999â2019. Researchers say most maternal deaths are preventable, yet the U.S. has one of the highest rates of such deaths among high-income countries. (Gebel and Gonzalez, 7/31)
Outbreaks and Health Threats
Leprosy Cases Growing In Florida; Reasons Are Unclear
Health officials say that cases of leprosy, also known as Hansenâs disease, are surging in Central Florida. In a news release Monday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said that Central Florida has accounted for 81 percent of reported cases in the state and almost one-fifth of reported cases nationwide. (Oshin, 7/31)
"Leprosy has been historically uncommon in the United States; incidence peaked around 1983, and a drastic reduction in the annual number of documented cases occurred from the 1980s through 2000," the letter's authors wrote. "However, since then, reports demonstrate a gradual increase in the incidence of leprosy in the United States. The number of reported cases has more than doubled in the southeastern states over the last decade." (Moniuszko, 7/31)
The number of reported leprosy cases across the country has doubled over the past decade, according to the CDC. Citing data from the National Hansenâs Disease Program, the CDC says there were 159 new cases reported in the U.S. in 2020. Nearly 70% of these new cases were reported in Florida, California, Louisiana, Hawaii, New York and Texas. (Girod and Crowley, 7/31)
On mpox, smallpox, and hep C â
Proctitis was the strongest predictor of clinically confirmed mpox in thousands of patients with suspected illness who presented for testing, according to a new study in Clinical Microbiology and Infection. (Soucheray, 7/31)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: 'Epidemic': Do You Know Dutta?Â
By the mid-1970s, Indiaâs smallpox eradication campaign had been grinding for over a decade. But the virus was still spreading beyond control. It was time to take a new, more targeted approach. This strategy was called âsearch and containment.â Teams of eradication workers visited communities across India to track down active cases of smallpox. Whenever they found a case, health workers would isolate the infected person then vaccinate anyone that individual might have come in contact with. (8/1)
Just 34 percent of Americans diagnosed with the most common type of hepatitis â hepatitis C â are being cured of the liver infection, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The finding stems from the analysis of data on more than 1.7 million people who tested positive for hepatitis C from 2013 through 2022. (Searing, 7/31)
Pharmaceuticals
Worries Over New Apellis Eye Drug Linked To Blindness In 5 People
Five elderly people have been blinded in one eye by a severe side effect after receiving injections of a newly approved treatment for eye disease from Apellis Pharmaceuticals. The frequency of this side effect â a severe type of eye inflammation â is low but its cause remains unknown. (Feuerstein, 7/31)
In other pharmaceutical developments â
CVS Health said it is shedding about 5,000 jobs to help reduce costs as the retail pharmacy giant sharpens its focus on healthcare services. The company on Monday said in a statement that the jobs affected are primarily corporate positions. CVS said it doesnât expect customer-oriented roles in stores, pharmacies and clinics will be affected in the layoff plan. (Yeung, 7/31)
STAT readers know Vivek Ramaswamy from his time as the founder of the biotech conglomerate Roivant â and for his role in some of its various subsidiaries and spinoffs. Of course, the world now knows Ramaswamy for a very different reason: Heâs running for president, and has made the cut to participate in the first debate of the Republican primary. Earlier this month, Ramaswamy posted a video on Twitter trading on his biotech bona fides to talk about his plans to âexpose and ultimately gutâ the Food and Drug Administration. (Feuerstein and Herper, 7/31)
Galleri, priced at $949, is the first of a wave of so-called multi-cancer early-detection tests, which analyze DNA fragments in the blood for abnormalities associated with cancer. Grail, the Menlo Park-based biotech company that created Galleri, says it checks more than a million specific DNA sites for cancer signals and can identify more than 50 types of cancer, including cervical, colon, breast and prostate. More than a dozen prospective rivals are developing their own cancer-screening products. (Kreidler, 7/31)
Flow Neuroscience, a small Swedish company treating depression with brain-stimulating headsets, released early data on Monday showing that its device relieved depressive symptoms in clinical trials. (Lawrence, 7/31)
The popularity of GLP-1s, such as Novo Nordiskâs Wegovy and Ozempic, has led to a growing number of weight loss entrants in the virtual health industry. In the last year, digital health companies such as Teladoc and Noom have launched virtual weight loss businesses with GLP-1 medication prescription offerings. Traditional weight loss company WeightWatchers acquired a telehealth company to begin prescribing the drugs. (Turner, 7/31)
Also â
The family of Henrietta Lacks agreed Monday to settle a lawsuit against Thermo Fisher Scientific, a Massachusetts-based biotechnology company that sold products derived from the Baltimore County residentâs cells, according to civil rights attorney Ben Crump. The terms of the settlement are confidential, Crump said in a statement shortly before midnight Monday. (Roberts and Belson, 8/1)
Marc Tessier-Lavigne, an internationally known neuroscientist, recently resigned as president of Stanford University after an investigation determined he had failed to correct errors in years-old scientific papers, and that labs he led had an unusual number of instances of manipulated data. Tessier-Lavigne said he would ask for three papers to be retracted and two corrected, a request the publications say they will honor or review. (Svrluga and Johnson, 7/31)
Public Health
Marijuana Addiction Often Met With Skepticism; Doctors Discourage Vaping
But as legal recreational sales have expanded â Maryland in July became the latest state to permit sale of marijuana products for recreational use â the suggestion that marijuana is addictive has often met with derision, especially because science isnât always clear on the benefits and harms. There can be reluctance to seek treatment. (Ovalle and Nirappil, 7/31)
Doctors are increasingly discouraging people from using e-cigarettes given the mounting evidence about the significant negative health impact of vaping-- even as a smoking cessation tool. For current smokers, "there are other very powerful, safe and FDA approved interventions," Dr. Petros Levounis, the President of the American Psychiatric Association and Chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, said. (Oje, 7/31)
The family of a woman who died after taking kratom, an herb with opioid-like effects, was awarded $11 million last week in a wrongful death lawsuit against a company that sold the substance. Krystal Talavera, a 39-year-old mother of four who lived in Florida, collapsed in her kitchen while preparing breakfast for her family in June 2021. By her side was an open package of kratom with a handwritten âSpace Dustâ label. (Bendix,7/31)
For the past two and a half years, Oregon has been trying an unusual experiment to stem soaring rates of addiction and overdose deaths. People caught with small amounts of illicit drugs for âpersonal use,â including fentanyl and methamphetamine, are fined just $100 â a sanction that can be waived if they participate in a drug screening and health assessment. The aim is to reserve prosecutions for large-scale dealers and address addiction primarily as a public health emergency. (Gale and Hoffman, 7/31)
In other health and wellness news â
Heat, humidity and the quest for air conditioning are a part of every summer. But Ashley Ward believes this summer is a wake-up call for many Americans. Ward directs the Heat Policy Innovation Hub at Duke Universityâs Nicholas Institute for Energy, Environment & Sustainability. Her work focuses on the health impacts of climate extremes and community resilience. âWeâre not talking about a heat wave anymore,â Ward said in a media briefing last week. âWeâre talking about a season. Weâre talking about a marker of a shift in our heat regime that we need to pay attention to.â (Henkel, 7/31)
There are a total of 9.2 million lead pipes across the country, with an estimated 1.16 million of them located in Florida, according to a recent report from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). These pipes potentially deliver contaminated drinking water to millions of households, the EPA said. While the adverse health effects of lead exposure are well-known, many physicians arenât aware of the link between heavy metal contaminants and cardiovascular issues. (Rudy, 7/31)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News: Black Women Weigh Emerging Risks Of âCreamy Crackâ Hair Straighteners
Deanna Denham Hughes was stunned when she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer last year. She was only 32. She had no family history of cancer, and tests found no genetic link. Hughes wondered why she, an otherwise healthy Black mother of two, would develop a malignancy known as a âsilent killer.â After emergency surgery to remove the mass, along with her ovaries, uterus, fallopian tubes, and appendix, Hughes said, she saw an Instagram post in which a woman with uterine cancer linked her condition to chemical hair straighteners. âI almost fell over,â she said from her home in Smyrna, Georgia. (Cohen, 8/1)
State Watch
Federal Appeals Court Rules Kentucky Can Enforce Minors' Gender Care Ban
A federal appeals court is allowing Kentucky to enforce a recently enacted ban on gender-affirming care for young transgender people while the issue is being litigated. The 2-1 decision Monday from the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati is not unexpected. The same three-judge panel ruled the same way earlier this month on a similar case in Tennessee. (Barakat, 7/31)
Harrison has an informal test that he runs on primary care physicians when he meets them for the first time: the eye contact test. When he arrives at the appointment and tells them that heâs transgender, he watches their eyes for a reaction. Heâs looking for signs of shock â have they ever met a trans person before? Do they get nervous, or start talking at him, rather than with him? Trying to find an accepting clinician, especially where he lives in the mountains of North Carolina, can be tough. Heâs been ghosted before â doctors tell him to follow up over an online patient portal or to call back later, which he does, only to never hear back again. (Gaffney, 8/1)
More health news from across the U.S. â
A year after it went live, the 988 national mental health hotline is still working out some issues â and Colorado needs a huge increase in staff to meet the 24/7 demands. For starters, when people dial the three-digit number, their call is routed to the state call center that matches their area code, not their location. This is particularly bad for Colorado, which has a high number of transplants who moved here with out-of-state area codes and a large military population. Also, Colorado realized it needs 260 additional employees to answer the calls on top of the 130 it started with if itâs going to meet a federal requirement taking effect in April that call centers must pick up within 20 seconds. The current threshold is 59 seconds. (Brown, 7/31)
When a group of local researchers set out to understand more about health care services in jails in the Southeast, they discovered that there are many informal ways incarcerated people are released early because they have various health conditions. Jails are required by law to provide health services for those in custody, and research has shown over time that the jail population tends to be sicker than the general population. Incarcerated individuals have higher rates of bloodborne illnesses, chronic illnesses and mental illness, largely because they come from low wealth communities and have had limited access to health care before they were incarcerated. (Knopf, 8/1)
Beginning Aug. 7, about 3,700 Minnesotans can expect a pink envelope in the mail that says: âCongratulations, your medical debt has been retired and we have notified the credit bureaus that this debt has been extinguished. âThatâs according to Jeff Smedsrud. Heâs the managing director of CA Foundation, a Fergus Falls nonprofit that made a donation last week to a national charity that will buy $3.3 million in unpaid medical debt from low-income Minnesotans. (Ki, 8/1)
Providers insist that what are known as child and adult outreach triage teams were saving some of L.A. Countyâs sickest residents by closing a gap in care. Officials with the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health, however, said they were underwhelmed by the teamsâ performance. (Seidman, 7/31)
A resident of Oakland County and another from Macomb County have tested positive for the Jamestown Canyon virus. They have the first confirmed human cases of mosquito-borne disease in Michigan in 2023, state health officials said. They may also be the first in the U.S. to contract the virus this year. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that, as of July 25, the nation had not yet recorded any confirmed human cases in 2023. (Jordan Shamus, 7/31)
It looks like one of those take-a-book, leave-a-book lending libraries that you might see around town. But the âLittle Free Pantryâ outside New London Hospital is filled with canned goods, pasta and other food items. Itâs part of an effort to address food insecurity in the area. People can stop by to take any food they need, or donate if theyâre able. (Cuno-Booth, 8/1)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Heat Waves Are Wreaking Havoc On Human Health; Long Covid Patients Feel Forgotten
Extreme heat has blanketed much of the world this summer. The World Meteorological Organization reports that July has been the hottest month ever recorded on Earth. The frequency of heat waves has been steadily increasing in the United States, from an average of two per year in the 1960s to six today. (Leana S. Wen, 8/1)
In a world where most pandemic safety protocols have evaporated, where is the sense of urgency to treat, or at the very least support, people with long COVID? (Julia Moore Vogel, 7/31)
More than 80 Americans across 18 states, including Texas, have been struck with a serious bacterial infection thanks to contaminated eye drops. Several have suffered permanent vision loss or had surgical eyeball removal. Four have died. (Rachael Lee, 7/29)
As we know from previous studies, physical inactivity and sedentary habits are among the major risk factors for decreased mental well-being. Since its formation in 2010, GENYOUth has aggressively responded to health and wellness issues facing our youth. (Roger Goodell and Ann Marie Krautheim, 8/1)
"Boarding" patients in ERs and other hospital spaces because of a lack of available nursing home and mental health care beds has long been a problem in Minnesota and one that intensified during and after the pandemic. (7/30)
Itâs unfathomable that following a multiyear pandemic that killed more than a million Americans and left millions more with long-term disability (long COVID), the issue of medical debt wouldnât be a major topic of discourse, especially among politicians running in 2024. It is not. (Victoria A. Brownworth, 7/28)
Also â
Two months ago, Avery was kicked off Medicaid. Sheâs supposed to still be eligible, but Arkansasâs Department of Human Services terminated her coverage anyway, saying she hadnât completed all the necessary paperwork. To be fair, paperwork is not exactly Averyâs forte. Because sheâs 15 months old. (Catherine Rampell, 8/1)
As physicians, weâre problem-solvers, diagnosing our patientsâ ailments and finding remedies. We establish a treatment plan. Imagine if your problem persisted for 20 years with no solution; you might seek another doctor. Yet every year, thatâs the scenario physicians and patients face with the failing Medicare physician payment system: For more than two decades, Congress has not passed a comprehensive, stable fix so doctors can continue caring for the nationâs older adults and those with disabilities. (Rick W. Snyder II, 7/31)