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
Formula May Be Right for Infants, but Experts Warn That Toddlers Donât Need It
Sales of formulas designed for toddlers increased in recent years, but health experts warn parents that, generally, once children reach their 1st birthday, they are fine with cow or plant milk and donât need the expensive, high-calorie products. And doctors say toddler formula should not be given to infants.
Genetic Tests Create Treatment Opportunities and Confusion for Breast Cancer Patients
Doctors are divided on whether blanket testing of breast cancer patients is warranted, since scientists and physicians are sometimes unsure about how to interpret the results.
Covid Still Kills, but the Demographics of Its Victims Are Shifting
Californians were far less likely to die from covid in the first seven months of 2022 than during the first two years of the pandemic. Still, the virus remained among the stateâs leading causes of death in July, outpacing diabetes, accidental death, and a host of debilitating diseases. We break down whoâs at risk.
Political Cartoon: 'Abortion Access Travel Package'
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Abortion Access Travel Package'" by Clay Bennett.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
IS IT OVER, OR WHAT? DEPENDS ON WHOM YOU ASK
Would you look at that â
â Britta Egeland
The pandemic is over!
Oh wait, no itâs not
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:
Mental Health
In A First, Federal Panel Recommends Anxiety Screening For Adults Under 65
A panel of medical experts on Tuesday recommended for the first time that doctors screen all adult patients under 65 for anxiety, guidance that highlights the extraordinary stress levels that have plagued the United States since the start of the pandemic. The advisory group, called the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, said the guidance was intended to help prevent mental health disorders from going undetected and untreated for years or even decades. It made a similar recommendation for children and teenagers earlier this year. (Baumgaertner, 9/20)
The recommendations are based on a review that began before the COVID-19 pandemic, evaluating studies showing potential benefits and risks from screening. Given reports of a surge in mental health problems linked with pandemic isolation and stress, the guidance is âvery timely,â said Lori Pbert, a task force member and co-author. Pbert is a psychologist-researcher at the University of Massachusettsâ Chan Medical School. The task force said evidence for benefits, including effective treatments, outweighs any risks, which include inaccurate screening results that could lead to unnecessary follow-up care. (Tanner, 9/20)
In related news â
A growing number of Americans are struggling with depression and most are not seeking treatment or are undertreated for the mental health disorder, according to a new study. A study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine found almost 1 in 10 Americans reported suffering from depression in 2020, with rates of the mental health disorder higher among adolescents and young adults. (Guzman, 9/20)
Levels of stress, anxiety, worry, sadness and anger among women worldwide are at a 10-year high, according to a new report. In one of the largest studies on womenâs well-being, analytics firm Gallup and medical tech company Hologic, Inc. teamed up to survey over 66,000 women in 122 countries around the world. (Rodriguez, 9/21)
A study published this month in Psychology and Aging by researchers at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine indicates that adults over 60 showed greater mental well-being but worse cognitive performance than younger adults. Adults in their 20s tended to have more experience with anxiety, depression and loneliness than seniors. (Nieto, 9/20)
Also â
The average number of veteran suicides per day in the United States has fallen to the lowest itâs been since 2006, according to new Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) data, but those figures might not paint the whole picture.  The VAâs National Veteran Suicide Prevention Annual Report, released Monday, found that there were 6,146 veteran suicide deaths in 2020, or about 16.8 a day.  (Mitchell, 9/20)
Administration News
FDA Made Many Missteps During Infant Formula Crisis, Internal Review Finds
An internal review of the Food and Drug Administration's actions leading up to the infant formula crisis finds a combination of human error, antiquated technology, and poor communication and accountability amongst an already threadbare food workforce all contributed to a perfect storm of problems which exacerbated the supply shortage. The issue was only worsened by the FDA's lack of a robust mandate to strong-arm industry players' compliance, the review found. (Pezenik, 9/21)
Problems ranged from outdated technology at the FDA to limited training on formula among FDA investigators, the report said. It said funding limitations and gaps in the understanding of cronobacter, the type of bacteria that prompted Abbottâs recall, impeded the FDAâs response to this yearâs incidents and the agencyâs ability to regulate and oversee formula. (Newman, 9/20)
Some parents and advocates had been looking forward to the review shedding specific light on FDA failures in order to provide accountability, but Califf said in an interview shortly after the report was released that the review was meant to âidentify themes of issuesâ FDA needs to improve going forward. FDA Chief Robert Califf noted that the agency had provided a detailed timeline of its response and that an independent review of the larger FDA foods division is ongoing. âWeâre not going to spend a lot of time going back,â Califf said. âWeâre going to spend our time taking into account what happened then and moving forward.â (Lee, 9/20)
Also â
KHN: Formula May Be Right For Infants, But Experts Warn That Toddlers Donât Need ItÂ
Formulas for toddlers are a burgeoning business in the United States: Sales of the drinks more than doubled in recent years as companies convinced parents that their little ones needed the liquid boost. But many experts warn that these products, designed for children ages 1 to 3, fill no nutritional needs beyond what is available in a typical toddler diet, are subject to less regulation than infant formula, and are expensive. In addition, some parents feed the toddler versions to infants even though they do not meet federal standards for infant formula and may not provide babies with adequate nutrients to sustain their growth. (Szalinski, 9/21)
Covid-19
Biden Backpedals: Pandemic Is 'Not Where It Was,' Not 'Over'
President Biden on Tuesday sought to clarify his comments from days earlier that the coronavirus pandemic âis over,â telling guests at a fundraiser that the COVID-19 situation is not as bad as it was. Biden attended a Democratic National Committee fundraiser in New York City ahead of his speech Wednesday to the United Nations General Assembly. At one point, speaking about efforts on the pandemic, Biden referenced his comments to Scott Pelley of CBS last week in which he said the pandemic was âover.â (Samuels, 9/20)
Sen. Susan Collins on Tuesday hit President Joe Biden for calling the COVID-19 pandemic âover,â saying his comments did not align with his administrationâs actions. The Democratic presidentâs comments in an interview aired by CBSâ â60 Minutesâ on Sunday reflected his thinking at a time where mask-wearing is uncommon and the disruptions from the pandemic are far less significant than they were at the outset. (Marino Jr., 9/20)
KHN: Covid Still Kills, But The Demographics Of Its Victims Are ShiftingÂ
As California settles into a third year of pandemic, covid-19 continues to pose a serious threat of death. But the number of people dying â and the demographics of those falling victim â has shifted notably from the first two years. Given the collective immunity people have garnered through a combination of mass vaccination and protections built from earlier infections, Californians overall were far less likely to die from covid in 2022, when the omicron variant dominated, than during the first two years of the pandemic, when other variants were largely at play, amplifying a national trend. (Reese, 9/21)
Kathreen Friend is a pediatric registered nurse based in Doniphan, Missouri â a small town of about 1,800, just 15 minutes north of the Arkansas border. As the lone pediatric specialist in her county, itâs not unusual for her days to fill up with appointments. (Valdivia, 9/21)
In other pandemic news â
Forced into a hectic international competition for goods like many states during the early months of the pandemic, New York never procured anywhere close to what it supposedly needed. But the collection it did manage to build hasnât done much more than gather dust. The state acquired 8,555 ventilators at a cost of $166 million and 1,179 X-ray machines for $86.4 million, state officials told POLITICO this month. And now theyâre stacked in warehouses across New York with no plans to distribute them or put them to any immediate use; Covid treatments have largely moved away from ventilators, and hospitals say they have plenty available to deal with their immediate needs. (Spector, 9/20)
The Justice Department charged 47 people in connection with an alleged scheme that stole more than $250 million from a federal program that fed low-income children, in what officials called the largest theft yet uncovered from a coronavirus pandemic aid program. Federal prosecutors said those charged created entities that claimed to be providing meals to tens of thousands of children who didnât exist. (Gurman, 9/20)
Vaccines
As Moderna Booster Supplies Dwindle, FDA Releases Millions Of Delayed Shots
The federal government is releasing millions of Moderna booster shots that were delayed by the Food and Drug Administration as a result of a safety inspection at an Indiana packaging plant, even as states report shortages and encourage people to get Pfizer boosters instead. (Diamond, 9/20)
The US government supply of Modernaâs shot is currently limited, causing appointments for the product to vary across the country, a Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. pharmacy spokesperson said in an emailed statement. Meanwhile, CVS Health Corp. says some of its drugstores have used all of the updated shots they received from the government, and the company is trying to get more doses. (Peebles, Langreth and Edney, 9/20)
On vaccine and mask mandates â
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear an NYPD detectiveâs challenge to New York Cityâs vaccine requirement for municipal workers after all. Last month, liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor rejected a request by Det. Anthony Marciano to take up his legal challenge â the outcome of which could have significant implications for Mayor Eric Adamsâ administration. But Marciano resubmitted the exact same request to conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, and the high courtâs press office confirmed Tuesday the case will be deliberated at a conference Oct. 7. (Anuta, 9/20)
Private businesses in New York City will no longer be required to enforce COVID-19 vaccines starting Nov. 1, Mayor Eric Adams announced Tuesday. (Ravipati, 9/20)
The Oklahoma Supreme Court struck down the governor's influence over school mask mandates in an opinion issued Tuesday, ruling in favor of doctors and parents who challenged a state law that at one point effectively blocked masking requirements in public schools. (Martinez-Keel, 9/20)
And Canada may soon drop its vaccine requirement for travelers â
Canada will likely drop the vaccine requirement for people who enter Canada by the end of September, an official familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Tuesday. Canada, like the United States, requires foreign nationals to be vaccinated when entering the country. It is not immediately known whether the U.S. will make a similar move by Sept. 30.Unvaccinated travelers who are allowed to enter Canada are currently subject to mandatory arrival tests and a 14-day quarantine. (Gillies, 9/20)
After Roe V. Wade
After Roe's End, More States Extend Postpartum Medicaid
Indiana and West Virginia, two states that recently banned nearly all abortions, received federal approval this month to offer women Medicaid-funded health care during their pregnancy and for 12 months after they give birth. They join 23 other states and the District of Columbia that already have extended postpartum Medicaid coverage from two months to a full year after childbirth. Eight additional states â Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont â have applications pending. (Vestal, 9/20)
In other abortion news from Ohio and Missouri â
An Ohio judge is extending his temporary halt of the stateâs six-week abortion ban, according to a group involved in the case. At a status conference Monday, Hamilton County Common Pleas Court Judge Christian Jenkins said he is extending the temporary restraining order against Ohioâs heartbeat bill until at least Oct. 12, a spokesperson from the ACLU of Ohio told NBC4. Jenkins will determine whether to issue a preliminary injunction against the six-week ban on Friday, Oct. 7. (Walsh, 9/20)
The top Democrat in the Missouri House filed legislation Tuesday to repeal the law that triggered the stateâs near-total abortion ban after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. The measure, sponsored by House Minority Leader Crystal Quade, D-Springfield, is almost certainly dead on arrival during Republican Gov. Mike Parsonâs special session on tax relief. (Suntrup, 9/20)
More on abortion rights â
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) created new headaches for Republicans on Tuesday with his claim that abortion is ânot a statesâ rights issue,â keeping the debate in the headlines and undercutting the partyâs messaging heading into Novemberâs midterms.  (Weaver, 9/20)
A faction of self-proclaimed âabolitionistsâ are seeking to make abortion laws more restrictive and the consequences of having the procedure more punitive than ever before. Emboldened by the overturning of Roe v. Wade, they say they will not be satisfied until fetuses are given the same protections as all US citizens â meaning that if abortion is illegal, then criminal statutes should be applied accordingly. While major national anti-abortion groups say they do not support criminalizing women, the idea is gaining traction with certain conservative lawmakers. And the activists and politicians leading the charge are nearly always men, CNN found. (Ellis and Hicken, 9/21)
Democrats have been on a voter registration tear since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Thereâs just one problem for them â they are digging out from under major Republican gains in the previous 18 months. For most of the two years leading up to the midterm election, Republicans rather than Democrats were making voter registration gains in key states, a POLITICO analysis of state voter data shows â a signal of GOP momentum heading into a classic backlash election against Democratic control of Washington. (Piper, 20)
Only a handful of Georgians â 5% â listed abortion as their top issue in the election. And more than half of likely voters indicated that the political divide over abortion wonât influence their decisions to cast their ballots in November. But the poll also indicated that nearly half of respondents said theyâre more likely to vote for a candidate who wants to protect access to abortion. That includes about half of women and 90% of Democrats. (McCaffrey and Bluestein, 9/21)
On contraception and abortion pills â
President Joe Biden's administration on Tuesday blasted a reported comment from Michigan Republican attorney general nominee Matt DePerno likening Plan B to the drug fentanyl, saying he and other GOP officials want to "ban contraception" in the U.S. (Spangler and Boucher, 9/20)
The second drug, misoprostol, can also safely end a pregnancy on its own. That method has long been considered a significantly less effective alternative to the FDA-approved protocol. But a growing body of research has begun to challenge the conventional thinking. In situations where people use pills to end a pregnancy at home, studies have found far higher rates of success for misoprostol-only abortions than were found in clinical settings. One recent study in Nigeria and Argentina showed misoprostol-only abortion to be 99 percent effective. (Adams, 9/19)
Health Industry
Bill Aims To Make Private Insurance Fully Cover Sex Assault Exams
A bill introduced Monday in the House of Representatives would require private health insurance to cover forensic exams for sexual assault survivors in full. The legislation came after research published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that nearly 18,000 out of 113,000 emergency visits related to sexual violence in 2019 resulted in out-of-pocket costs for the survivors. The average cost was $3,551 per person. (Bendix, 9/20)
More on surprise billing â
âWe have serious concerns that the August 2022 final rule departs from congressional intent just as the September 2021 interim final rule did. Hospitals and doctors intend to make our voices heard in the courts very soon about these continued problems,â the AHA and AMA said in a joint statement. (Goldman, 9/20)
On hospital finances and staffing â
Rural hospitals that weathered the pandemic are facing a funding cliff, in danger of losing some $600 million in Medicare funding at the end of this month unless Congress intervenes. (Dreher, 9/21)
Affected positions range from physicians to nurses, support service aides and physical therapists. Some of the most affected areas include medical/surgical, chemical dependency, dietary, laboratory management and housekeeping. As of 2021, the 162-bed hospital reported more than 800 full-time-equivalent positions. The pending layoffs account for just over 640 FTE positions. (Hudson, 9/20)
Charnika Wilson has been looking to get more involved in patient care after working as administrative faculty for a community-based clinic in Chicago. Her search led her to Rush University System for Health. Wilson was one of 22 people selected from more than 3,000 applicants for a new medical assistant apprenticeship run by Rush and Harper College, which pays for studentsâ tuition and books while offering them hourly pay and benefits. (Kacik, 9/20)
In other health care industry news â
The Justice Department is weighing whether to appeal a federal judgeâs decision that denied its legal challenge to UnitedHealth Groupâs $13 billion proposed acquisition of technology company Change Healthcare. (Tepper, 9/20)
Trinity Health, the nation's fifth largest health system, is finalizing its acquisition of the assets of the rural community hospital North Ottawa Community Health System in Grand Haven. (Walsh, 9/20)
Even if traditional data-center tasks are all moved to the cloud, there will still be a need for on-site infrastructure that will ultimately require what looks like a traditional data center, according to health system CIOs. Becker's spoke to six health system IT leaders to discuss if the presumption that the cloud will absorb the data center stands true. (Diaz, 9/16)
Lifestyle and Health
Microprotein Mutation Linked With Higher Alzheimer's Risks
New research is uncovering the role a specific protein might play in developing Alzheimerâs, a disease that affects 5 million people in the U.S., according to estimates from 2020. In a study published today in Molecular Psychiatry, researchers identified a new gene from mitochondrial DNA that encodes for a âmicroprotein,â named SHMOOSE. They analyzed the default and mutated versions of this small protein and found that the mutated version is associated with increased risk of Alzheimerâs disease, brain atrophy and changes in energy metabolism. (Hou, 9/20)
On cancer and sickle cell anemia â
âThis is a really exciting time in cancer management,â said Dr. Stephen Ansell, the senior deputy director for the Midwest at the Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center in Rochester, Minnesota, who wasnât involved with the report. âWe see the death rate from cancer keeps going down.â (Sullivan, 9/21)
Too few U.S. kids with sickle cell anemia get a needed screening for stroke, according to a study released Tuesday. The study found fewer than half get the screening and only about half or fewer get a treatment that can help with pain and anemia. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the study, and called for more screening and treatment. (Stobbe, 9/20)
In other health and wellness news â
The American Academy of Pediatrics also advised parents to speak with their teens about which challenges are trending on social media or at school. "Sometimes kids are more willing to talk about their peers than themselves. Asking questions about school trends, friends and fads may yield more answers than direct questions about their own activities," the AAP said on its website. (Singh, 9/20)
The National Transportation Safety Board is recommending that all new vehicles in the U.S. be equipped with blood alcohol monitoring systems that can stop an intoxicated person from driving. The recommendation, if enacted by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, could reduce the number of alcohol-related crashes, one of the biggest causes of highway deaths in the U.S. (Krisher, 9/20)
The generator industryâs promised fix for deadly carbon monoxide poisoning was put to the test last year on a narrow patio outside Demetrice Johnsonâs home after Hurricane Ida plunged much of Louisiana into darkness. (Trevizo and Hixenbaugh, 9/21)
State Watch
Study Says Arsenic May Be Poisoning California Prison's Water
Incarcerated Californians â and those who live in neighboring rural communities â may be exposed to dangerous levels of arsenic in their drinking water, a new study has found. Arsenic concentrations in the water supply of the Kern Valley State Prison and three nearby Central Valley communities exceeded regulatory limits for months or even years at a time, according to the study, published on Wednesday in Environmental Health Perspectives. (Udasin, 9/21)
Already battered by drought, dwindling supplies and climate change, Californiaâs water treatment systems also suffer from problems that raise the specter of long-term health issues, according to a state report. Those findings â and others â were contained in an audit by Michael Tilden, Californiaâs acting state auditor. The audit, released in July, focused on the State Water Resources Control Board (better known as the Water Board), which regulates the condition of water across California. (Watts, 9/15)
In other health news from across the U.S. â
North Carolina Senate leader Phil Berger on Tuesday called an offer from state hospitals to expand Medicaid to hundreds of thousands of the working poor ânot a serious proposal,â saying loosened regulations for medical construction projects didnât go far enough. Bergerâs dismissal of the proposal late last week from the North Carolina Healthcare Association short-circuited any expectations â though much improved compared to months ago â that a Medicaid expansion agreement could be at hand. Still, Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, an expansion advocate, urged Berger separately Tuesday to make a counteroffer. (Robertson, 9/20)
Those who buy their own health insurance in Maryland will pay an average of 6.6% more next year, about 4.4% less than the carriers requested, according to the Maryland Insurance Administration, which approved the increases. (Cohn, 9/20)
Juanita Franklin was driving through the East Texas town of Gun Barrel City a couple of years ago when she saw a new sign down the road from the Christian Life Center food pantry where she volunteers. It promised something she desperately needed: âHealthcare Access for All!â Franklin, whose left leg is amputated below the knee and has chronic high blood pressure and thyroid problems, is among the 18% of Texans who are trying to survive without health insurance. Thatâs the highest state rate in the country by far and more than double the national average. The rate is even higher â nearly 30% â among the 6,400 residents of Gun Barrel City. (Krisberg and Leffler, 9/21)
Fremont Public Health Center, an arm of the Southern Nevada Health District, is now open and offering primary care and family planning services. Located at 2830 Fremont St., near Charleston Boulevard, the federally qualified health center provides services on a sliding fee scale and accepts insurance, health district representative Jennifer Sizemore said. (Hynes, 9/20)
In monkeypox updates â
Boston public schools (BPS) yesterday announced the first monkeypox case in an "adult member of the BPS community," according to a letter sent to parents. The school district said the person was isolating at home, and the district was working to identify exposed individuals. (9/20)
Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price condemned the health department on Tuesday for using a picture of a Black man on a poster about a monkeypox vaccination effort. Posters in both English and Spanish on a free monkeypox pop-up clinic included an illustration of a Black man. Price called the poster âunacceptableâ in the regular Dallas County Commissioners Court meeting. (Peterson, 9/20)
Pharmaceuticals
Juul Sues FDA For Withholding Scientific Reviews Behind E-Cig Ban
Juul Labs on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against the Food and Drug Administration over the agency's refusal to disclose documents supporting its order to take Juul's e-cigarettes off the shelves in the U.S. market. (Ravipati, 9/20)
Walgreens Boots Alliance has agreed to spend $1.37 billion to acquire the remaining 30% of specialty pharmacy company Shields Health Solutions that it didn't already own. In September 2021, Walgreens spent $970 million to become a majority stakeholder in Shields, and the company will acquire the remaining stake from other equity holders. The transaction is expected to close by the end of 2022, the companies said Tuesday. (Devereaux, 9/20)
The short history of CRISPR gene editing in humans has, with rare exception, been a history of triumphant progress: A patient apparently cured of sickle cell in 2019, six patients with toxic DNA knocked out of their liver last year, another six patients with a different strand of toxic liver DNA knocked out last week. The next era of CRISPR may not be so smooth. (Mast, 9/21)
KHN: Genetic Tests Create Treatment Opportunities And Confusion For Breast Cancer PatientsÂ
The past decade has witnessed a rapid expansion of genetic tests, including new instruments to inform patients who have been diagnosed with breast cancer about the risk of recurrence and to guide their treatment. But the clinical significance of many of the inherited mutations that can now be identified remains unclear, and experts are torn on when and how to deploy all the new tests available. Patients are sometimes left paying out-of-pocket for exams that are not yet the standard of care, and even the most up-to-date oncologists may be uncertain how to incorporate the flood of new information into what used to be standard treatment protocols. (Andrews, 9/21)
On opioids and drug use â
Walmart and CVS Pharmacy have settled with the state of West Virginia for a combined total of $147 million in a lawsuit over the companiesâ roles in contributing to the oversupply of prescription drugs that fueled the opioid epidemic in the countryâs most impacted state, Attorney General Patrick Morrisey announced Tuesday. Walmart and CVS were two lawsuits that were part of a larger trial that was pushed back to June of next year along with Kroger and Walgreens. Morrisey recently announced a settlement with Rite Aid for up to $30 million to resolve similar litigation. (Willingham, 9/20)
Jouvence Tshiyoyo Bukumba, a nurse, asked Kim, 46, about her cardiology appointment and Chris, 54, about his nerve pain. Then came âthe SOS questionsâ â safer opioid supply. How were their doses? Did they feel any cravings or withdrawal? (Joseph, 9/21)
According to the Alcohol and Drug Foundation, ayahuasca is a liquid-based psychedelic that can cause a person to hallucinate. The active chemical in ayahuasca is dimethyltryptamine (DMT). DMT is a Schedule I controlled substance in the United States, which means it is illegal to manufacture, buy, possess, or distribute the drug. (Kuhagen, 9/20)
Prescription Drug Watch
How To Improve Antibiotic Access, Use, And Stewardship
A panel of experts with the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) published a statement last week on ways to improve antibiotic use and stewardship during infectious disease pandemics and outbreaks. The statement, published in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, addresses widespread inappropriate antibiotic use during the COVID-19 pandemic. The height of unnecessary antibiotic use took place in the early stages of the pandemic, when hospitals were flooded with severely ill patients, diagnostic tests were unavailable or took several days to return results, no treatments were available, and healthcare providers wanted to do something to help. (Dall, 9/19)
A new report from the World Health Organization (WHO) indicates that, while data on antibiotic use and access among the world's migrants and refugees are scarce, multiple factors may be keeping these vulnerable populations from obtaining and using antibiotics appropriately. (Dall, 9/20)
Also â
"No one is responsible for ensuring that drugs are fully utilized for all diseases they can help," said Every Cure co-founder Dr. David Fajgenbaum. "We're taking on that responsibility." Every Cure aims to raise $55 million to coordinate drug data, identify generics that might offer hope for patients with a rare disease and bring the most promising drugs through clinical trials. (Weintraub, 9/18)
One of Washingtonâs most prominent drug pricing patient groups is tapping an advocate who has fought for access to medicines for nearly two decades as its new leader. (Cohrs, 9/19)
Intellia Therapeutics said Friday the first six patients to receive its CRISPR-based treatment for a genetic swelling disorder have safely had small, corrective changes made to dysfunctional DNA inside their liver cells. (Molteni, 9/16)
A study across 36 US pediatric tertiary hospitals finds that early use of the antiviral oseltamivir (Tamiflu) in hospitalized children was associated with a shorter hospital stay, lower odds of 7-day readmission, and lower rates of severe outcomes. The study was published yesterday in JAMA Pediatrics. (9/20)
A topical gel that blocks the receptor for a metabolic byproduct called succinate treats gum disease by suppressing inflammation and changing the makeup of bacteria in the mouth, according to a new study. (New York University, 9/20)
A polypill that includes key medications associated with improved outcomes (aspirin, angiotensin-convertingâenzyme [ACE] inhibitor, and statin) has been proposed as a simple approach to the secondary prevention of cardiovascular death and complications after myocardial infarction. (Castellano, M.D., Ph.D., 9/15)
Perspectives: Justices' Ruling Will Help Clarify Opioid Prescription Practices
Days after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, it made a much less publicized ruling on prescription opioidsâone that was far more welcome in the medical community. In a rare 9â0 decision in Ruan v. United States, the court ruled in favor of several doctors who were criminally convicted of acting as drug dealers by overprescribing pain medications. (Maia Szalavitz, 9/19)
I hear from constituents in Wisconsin every day who struggle to afford the rising price of medications. Otis from Manitowoc lives with diabetes, among other health conditions that require prescription drugs. (Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), 9/19)
Few diseases are as cruelly debilitating as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). But a Food and Drug Administration advisory committee this week gave patients a glimmer of hope by backing a new treatment that can slow their decline and provide precious more time to live. (9/15)
When the COVID-19 pandemic was at its peak and many doctorsâ offices were not providing in-person visits for routine appointments, Marylanders were able to get their vaccination needs met at their local pharmacy. Not only did this speed up the process for those who chose to get the COVID-19 vaccine, but thanks to the PREP Act, families were also able to keep their childrenâs vaccinations up to date at the pharmacy if they couldnât get in with a pediatrician. (9/15)
Carvedilol could be the poster child for how to lower drug prices. Since 2007, over 20 million patients with cardiovascular conditions have enjoyed generic versions of the popular beta-blocker, which cost 2 cents a dose compared with $4.81 for the brand-name product. Patents on the drug Coreg, dating back to 1978, have long expired, enabling these price-saving generics. (Michael A. Carrier, Charles Duan and S. Sean Tu, 9/21)
If youâre a woman or person of color, your health is being hurt by a lack of diversity in healthcare. I suddenly realized that a few years ago at a conference for pharma executives. (Lindsay Androski, 9/15)
The U.S. Supreme Courtâs June 24, 2022, decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Womenâs Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade, has underscored the increasingly critical role that drugs (and therefore drug regulation) will play in the future of reproductive rights. (Lewis A. Grossman, J.D., Ph.D., 9/17)
Editorials And Opinions
Viewpoints: Caregiving Profession Needs Overhaul; Youth In America Are Struggling With Mental Health
Epitomizing these concerns are those workers who provide caregiving support and services to older adults and people with disabilities, at poverty-level wages. Even prior to the pandemic, turnover was high: 1 in 4 nursing assistants and 1 in 5Â home health aides reported that they were looking for new jobs. (Ai-jen Poo and April Verrett, 9/20)
I knew that having a baby wasn't supposed to be easy, but I never imagined that it would be this hard. After a cesarean section that resulted in medical complications, however, I was in tremendous physical pain. (Carli Pierson, 9/20)
As America works to adapt its healthcare services and public policy to meet the needs of children suffering from the current mental health epidemic, it is important that history does not repeat itselfâwith Black children being left behind. (Michelle Wimes, 9/20)
We havenât seen our son in 66 days, and counting. Hopefully by the time you read this, weâll have seen his face â probably too skinny, probably scared, hopefully not still angry â at his next mental health court hearing or with a conservatorship in hand. Until then, we hope he is safe as he can be on the seventh floor of high-observation housing at L.A. Countyâs Twin Towers jail in Chinatown, there on a vandalism charge after being arrested in Walnut for breaking a bus window. (Edward and Bea Stricklan, 9/20)
The ACA remains under legal attack, and one key part of it is in jeopardy. In early September, a U.S. district judge in Texas ruled in a lawsuit, Braidwood Management Inc. et al. v. Becerra, that a part of the popular provision guaranteeing preventive care services without cost-sharing for those in most private health plans violates the Appointments Clause of the U.S. Constitution. (Anand Parekh, 9/20)
While our organizations, the Texas Public Policy Foundation and Texans Care for Children, do not always agree on every policy issue, we do strive to collaborate on policy solutions where we can. In this case, we agree that the Texas Legislature has a unique opportunity to fix unintended bureaucratic barriers in Medicaid that are hurting the children for whom much of the program was intended. (David Balat and Alec Mendoza, 9/21)
Different Takes: Overturning Roe Has Alarming Consequences; Why Is The Covid Death Rate Still So High?
Abortion opponents seem not to have expected some of the more draconian consequences of the Dobbs decisionâthat anti-abortion laws would prevent pregnant women who were not seeking abortions from receiving needed treatment for miscarriages, or that women facing dire medical complications from their pregnancies would not be able to get proper care. (Daniel K. Williams, 9/20)
Ava was excited about her pregnancy. As her rheumatologists, we were anxious about it. Her death left a newborn without its mother, shattered a family, and may be a harbinger of whatâs to come for pregnant people with serious medical conditions. (Jammie Law, Michael Pillinger and Julie Nusbaum, 9/21)
Two years ago, Chrissy Teigenâs pregnancy with her third child ended in tragedy. She and her husband, John Legend, had named the baby Jack and lost him at 20 weeks â on what she called, in an Instagram post featuring somber images from the hospital room, the âdarkest of days.â (Kate Cohen, 9/20)
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, striking down a constitutionally guaranteed right to abortion and directing decisions on abortion to be made by the states, Republican lawmakers hailed that approach. But no one â neither abortion rights supporters nor abortion opponents â expected GOP members of Congress to stop the assault on reproductive rights, no matter what they said. (9/20)
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Earlier this week, President Joe Biden seemed to commit one of his trademark gaffes by saying âThe pandemic is over.â The backlash was swift. Thatâs understandable, given that hundreds of people are still dying from Covid every day. But President Biden may be doing what comes naturally to many of us â judging the situation by our own experiences. (Faye Flam, 9/20)
President Joe Biden spent part of the summer isolating at the White House after developing COVID-19, testing positive on July 21 and then again later that month when his viral levels rebounded after taking Paxlovid. (9/20)