- KFF Health News Original Stories 2
- For 2020 Dem Hopefuls, ‘Medicare-For-All’ Is A Defining Issue, However They Define It
- The High Cost Of Sex: Insurers Often Don’t Pay For Drugs To Treat Problems
- Political Cartoon: 'Coffee Run?'
- Women’s Health 1
- With At Least 20 Cases Barreling Toward Supreme Court, Both Sides Of Abortion Debate Are On Edges Of Their Seats
- Administration News 3
- Trump Administration Needs To Pump Brakes On Overhaul Of $260M Family Planning Program, Democrats Say
- Health Technology Leaders Surprised And Giddy Over Administration's Proposed Rules On Patient Data
- Industry Groups Hopeful That False Claims Act Whistleblower Cases Will Dwindle Under New Attorney General
- Elections 1
- Moderate 2020 Hopefuls Embrace Medicare Buy-In, With Universal Coverage As A Longer-Term Goal
- Government Policy 1
- Adult Immigrant With Congestive Heart Failure Becomes Third Person To Die In U.S. Custody Since December
- Veterans' Health Care 1
- VA Paid Thousands For Adviser Involved In Privatization Push To Commute From California To D.C. Over Three Month Period
- Capitol Watch 1
- Following Investigation Into IHS Doctor, Lawmaker Calls For Broad Assessment Of The Indian Health Service
- Public Health 3
- Resistance And Mistrust Around Vaccinations Aren't Anything New--They've Always Existed Together
- With Women Making Up Two-Thirds Of Alzheimer's Patients, Scientists Begin To Look For Link To Menopause
- When Being Tied Down To Kidney Dialysis Is Unappealing, An Alternative Option Few Are Told About Can Help Older Patients
- Opioid Crisis 1
- In Midst Of Opioid Epidemic, States Look Toward Data Sharing, Medication-Assisted Treatment And More Solutions
- State Watch 2
- Have The Days Of Double Hospital Rooms Passed? Patients Start To Expect Private Rooms As The Norm
- State Highlights: California's Kaiser Permanente Plans To Drop Tuition For First 5 Medical School Classes; 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund Running Low On Money
- Editorials And Opinions 2
- Different Takes: Desperate Circumstances During Pregnancies Bring About Late-Term Abortions; Lessons on Going Forward With A Devastating Diagnosis
- Viewpoints: Can All This Talk About Tradeoffs Stop Progress On Health Care?; Mass Shootings By Americans Are The Real National Emergency
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
For 2020 Dem Hopefuls, ‘Medicare-For-All’ Is A Defining Issue, However They Define It
Support for “Medicare-for-all” is becoming a front-runner topic among Democratic presidential candidates. But the phrase is being used to describe any number of policies. (Shefali Luthra, 2/19)
The High Cost Of Sex: Insurers Often Don’t Pay For Drugs To Treat Problems
Medicare and many private insurers view prescribing drugs to improve sexual function as a lifestyle issue that’s not medically necessary to pay for. (Michelle Andrews, 2/19)
Political Cartoon: 'Coffee Run?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Coffee Run?'" by Darrin Bell.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
WELL, DEPENDS ON WHO YOU ASK...
"Medicare for All":
A buzzy catchphase, but what
Does it really mean?
- Anonymous
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 KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Supporters and opponents of abortion rights describe this as the most fraught time for Roe v. Wade since the early 1990s, when the high court was filled with Republican appointees and instances of blockades, bombings and arson at clinics were on the rise. “That was a moment people thought Roe v. Wade was going to end and abortion rights were going to disappear,” said David S. Cohen, a law professor at Drexel University whose research explores issues such as abortion at the intersection of constitutional law and gender. “Many people feel that way now.” Meanwhile, the practice of "adopting" other couples' frozen embryos allows antiabortion people to take part in IVF in a manner they deem ethical.
The Washington Post:
At Least 20 Abortion Cases Are In The Pipeline To The Supreme Court. Any One Could Gut Roe V. Wade.
The Supreme Court’s 5-to-4 vote this month to block a restrictive Louisiana abortion law from taking effect provided some measure of consolation to reproductive rights advocates who feared the court’s new conservative majority would act immediately to restrict access to the procedure. But that relief is likely to be short lived. In the pipeline are at least 20 lawsuits, in various stages of judicial review, that have the potential to be decided in ways that could significantly change the rights laid out in the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling, and refined almost two decades later in Planned Parenthood v. Casey. The 1992 decision said a state may place restrictions on abortion as long as it does not create an “undue burden” on a woman’s right to abortion. (Cha, 2/15)
The New York Times:
Embryo ‘Adoption’ Is Growing, But It’s Getting Tangled In The Abortion Debate
As evangelical Christians, Paul and Susan Lim believe that life begins at conception. So when they decided to have a third child, in vitro fertilization was out of the question, since the process often yields extra embryos. But “adopting” the frozen embryos of another couple who had gone through I.V.F. was not. Dr. Lim called it a “rescue operation.” To him, transferring donated embryos to his wife’s uterus was akin to saving a life. “These children are being abandoned in a frozen state,” he said. “If they don’t get adopted, they’re dead.” (Lester, 2/17)
And in other news on abortion —
The New York Times:
States Flout Abortion Coverage Requirements, Federal Investigators Say
Federal health officials are not enforcing requirements for Medicaid coverage of abortion in the limited circumstances where it is legal, congressional investigators have found. At least 13 states are flouting a requirement to cover abortion-inducing pills, and one state, South Dakota, has for 25 years failed to provide the required coverage for abortion in cases of rape or incest, the Government Accountability Office, a nonpartisan investigative arm of Congress, said in a report made public this month. (Pear, 2/17)
The Associated Press:
Illinois Democrats Propose Expanded Abortion Access
Illinois Democrats have introduced two measures that would expand abortion access in the state by removing a parental notification requirement and a ban on late-term abortions. The proposed legislation was filed Wednesday, The Chicago Tribune reported. One bill sponsored by Democratic Rep. Emanuel Welch of Hillside would repeal the state's parental notice law, which requires minors to notify a legal guardian before having an abortion. (2/15)
The Associated Press:
Iowa Governor Opts Not To Appeal Fetal Heartbeat Law Ruling
Iowa's governor said Monday she decided against appealing a judge's ruling last month that struck down Iowa's "fetal heartbeat" abortion law, which would have been the most restrictive anti-abortion law in the nation. Gov. Kim Reynolds called it an extremely difficult decision but the right one for the state. (Pitt, 2/18)
Democratic lawmakers pointed out what they called “troubling irregularities” in the regulatory review process of changes that the Trump administration wants to make to the Title X program. “We have reason to believe that the final rule, if implemented, would undermine the federal Title X family planning program and threaten access to family planning services for millions of low-income women across the United States,” they wrote.
The Washington Post:
Democrats Call On Trump Administration To Delay Title X Family Planning Rule, Citing ‘Serious Concerns’
Democratic members of Congress are asking the Trump administration to slow down efforts to overhaul the $260 million family planning program, citing issues with what they call an “unconventional and nontransparent” review process. The proposed changes to the Title X program, which were announced last May, are a top priority of conservatives who helped elect the president. They would bar clinics that provide abortion services or referrals from receiving federal family-planning funds. A wide range of critics — from medical groups to abortion rights activists — have decried the effort as an attack on Planned Parenthood, which stands to lose millions of dollars a year if the changes go into effect. (Cha, 2/15)
In other news on the administration's policies —
The Associated Press:
Lawsuit Claims Discrimination By Foster Agency
A Catholic mother accuses a federally funded South Carolina foster agency of not working with her because she's "not the right kind of Christian," her lawyers say. In a federal lawsuit filed Friday, Aimee Maddonna and her lawyers say Miracle Hill Ministries is unconstitutionally discriminating against non-Protestants. The lawsuit challenges a waiver granted this year to the Greenville agency, which previously has come under fire for denying services to same-sex couples and non-Christian families. (Kinnard, 2/15)
Health Technology Leaders Surprised And Giddy Over Administration's Proposed Rules On Patient Data
Trump administration officials say the rules are geared toward putting patients in control of their own health records. Health technology experts were thrilled at the prospect of more open sharing of health information in a standardized format. “Oh, my goodness, I’ve been dancing in the streets!” said Aneesh Chopra, president of CareJourney, a company that analyzes data for health care firms. Other health and technology news focuses on the challenge of getting people to actually use new digital tools, simple devices that can have a big impact on patients' lives, and mental health apps.
Stat:
Health Tech Leaders Emboldened By Plan To Free Up Patient Data
As the nation’s largest annual gathering of health technology leaders wraps up Friday, many are leaving surprised, and emboldened, by the breadth of a Trump administration proposal to liberate vast stores of patient information to help deliver on the promise of better, digitally enabled care. By allowing patients to control their electronic health records — and share them with researchers and entrepreneurs as they see fit — the government is hoping to harness the increasing power of artificial intelligence and other digital tools to provide more personalized medical services at a lower cost. (Ross, 2/15)
Modern Healthcare:
HHS Using Disclosure, Transparency To Try To Force Change
To get healthcare's powerful players to behave as desired, HHS and its various units are increasingly turning to the same playbook: naming and shaming bad actors. Most recently, the CMS and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology issued two proposed rules on Feb. 11 to spur interoperability and counter information-blocking. (King, 2/16)
Modern Healthcare:
CIOs Focus On Proving IT's Usefulness To Drive Adoption
After spending billions of dollars on new technology solutions, healthcare leaders must figure out ways to ensure a solid return on investment. That's not always easy, especially when some clinicians continue to resist using digital tools to their fullest potential, or when the technology itself creates barriers. Pamela Arora and Ken Lee offer real-world examples to show how technology can improve care and lower costs. Managing Editor Matthew Weinstock recently spoke with Arora, from Dallas-based Children's Health, and Centura Health's Lee about their strategies as health IT leaders. (Weinstock, 2/16)
Georgia Health News:
A Few Devices — Some Very Simple — Can Help Seniors’ Quality Of Life
A lift chair has made a big difference for Henry Cato, 78, of Franklin, who has neuropathy in his legs. The chair is a kind of recliner, but it includes a mechanism that pushes the chair up from its base and slowly moves the sitting person into a standing position. Henry does not have to struggle to get to his feet. He received the lift chair from the Three Rivers Area Agency on Aging. It makes things easier for both him and his wife, Queen, 72, who is his caregiver. (Thomas, 2/17)
The Washington Post:
Mental Health App Guide Offers Reviews And Information
If you’re struggling with anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder or depression, an app might help. But should you invest in a therapy app or one that only tracks symptoms? Which apps are credible, and which ones are scams — or even harmful? (Blakemore, 2/17)
Health companies can be hit hard by whistleblower cases, with said whistleblowers potentially pocketing a large amount of money for coming forward. But with William Barr, who has called whistleblower law an unconstitutional "abomination," as attorney general, industry groups are hopeful some of the pressure will ease.
Modern Healthcare:
New Justice Dept. Policies, AG May Mute False Claims Act Whistleblowers
Healthcare industry groups have always hated False Claims Act whistleblower lawsuits. These cases involve private individuals—usually knowledgeable insiders—accusing companies and individuals of defrauding federal programs in the hope of righting a wrong and collecting a share of the bounty for their work. False Claims Act lawsuits can hit companies and individuals with damages up to three times the demonstrated losses to the government. Whistleblowers can pocket 15% to 30% of that recovery. The number of healthcare cases grew to 506 in 2018 from 291 in 2008. (Meyer, 2/16)
Modern Healthcare:
Can A Doctor's Medical Necessity Decision Be A False Claim?
Last year, Intermountain Healthcare lost an appeal to dismiss a whistleblower case accusing it, HCA-owned St. Mark's Hospital and a staff cardiologist of filing false Medicare claims for nearly 1,000 medically unnecessary heart operations. On Jan. 14, Intermountain petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to decide whether part of the whistleblower law violates a constitutional clause barring individuals not appointed by the president, the attorney general or the federal courts from prosecuting cases on behalf of the government. It wants to stop the case from moving to discovery. (Meyer, 2/16)
Moderate 2020 Hopefuls Embrace Medicare Buy-In, With Universal Coverage As A Longer-Term Goal
"Medicare for All" may be a litmus test for progressive Democrats, but moderates are aiming for a more centrist approach. Both Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) reiterated that, although universal health care is something good to aim for in the long-term, helping people with more practical solutions immediately is what they're focused on.
Pioneer Press:
Klobuchar’s CNN Town Hall: Five Questions And How She Answered Them
The senator expressed support for allowing the public to buy into Medicare or Medicaid, which she said could bring insurance rates down. Universal health care could be an option in the future, Klobuchar said, but now is not the time for that approach. “We have to start somewhere and I think we can do that much more immediately,” Klobuchar said. She added that officials must also address the rising costs of prescription drugs. (Faircloth, 2/18)
Bloomberg:
Sherrod Brown Wants Medicare Buy-In At Age 50 As An Option Now
Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown defended his push to allow Americans over 50 years old to buy into Medicare, rather than seeking universal government coverage as some progressive Democrats advocate, and said the odds of him running for president are about 50-50. ...Brown joined Democratic colleagues Senator Debbie Stabenow of Michigan and Senator Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin in introducing a bill Feb. 13 that would allow Americans over 50 years old to buy into Medicare, the federal health insurance program that currently provides coverage for those 65 and older. (Waller, 2/17)
Kaiser Health News:
For 2020 Dem Hopefuls, ‘Medicare-For-All’ Is A Defining Issue, However They Define It
Democrats with 2020 presidential aspirations are courting the party’s increasingly influential progressive wing and staking out ambitious policy platforms. Front and center are three words: Medicare. For. All. That simple phrase is loaded with political baggage, and often accompanied by vague promises and complex jargon. Different candidates use it to target different voter blocs, leading to sometimes divergent, even contradictory ideas. (Luthra, 2/19)
The deaths have brought national attention to the quality of care at detention facilities following the controversy over family separations. Part of the budget deal that averted a government shutdown last week included $415 million for humanitarian relief "specifically for medical care" and to improve Border Patrol processing facilities in the region.
Texas Tribune:
Adult Migrant From Mexico Dies In Border Patrol Custody
An adult migrant has died after being taken into U.S. Border Patrol custody this month in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley. The 45-year-old undocumented immigrant from Mexico died Monday morning after being diagnosed with congestive heart failure and cirrhosis of the liver. The immigrant's death was first reported by USA Today. According to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection news release, the immigrant was encountered by the police department in Roma, Texas, a small border community between Laredo and Mission, on Feb. 2. The person, who wasn’t identified, then requested medical attention. (Aguilar, 2/18)
USA Today:
Third Migrant Dies In Border Patrol Custody In As Many Months
The immigrant illegally crossed the border and was arrested by the Roma (Texas) Police Department on Feb. 2, requested medical attention and was taken to a local hospital, according to a statement released Monday night by Customs and Border Protection. The immigrant "was cleared" by officials at the Mission Regional Medical Center and was handed over to Border Patrol officials at the Rio Grande City Border Patrol Station, according to the CBP statement. The following day, after receiving a welfare check by CBP officials, the immigrant again requested medical attention and was taken to the McAllen Medical Center, where the immigrant was diagnosed with cirrhosis of the liver and congestive heart failure, CBP said. The immigrant remained at the hospital before dying on Monday morning. (Gomez, 2/18)
The New York Times:
Another Migrant With An Illness Has Died In Border Patrol Custody
The death came less than two months after 7-year-old Jakelin Caal Maquin and 8-year-old Felipe Gomez Alonzo also died in the agency’s custody, in December, amid three straight months of record-breaking numbers of migrant families entering the country. Both had shown symptoms of illness after they were taken into custody along the Southwest border, and their deaths prompted widespread condemnation from members of Congress and the public. The agency soon after announced new medical checks for children, and a temporary infusion of support from other federal agencies, including the Coast Guard and the United States Public Health Service. (Dickerson, 2/18)
In other news —
Texas Tribune:
As Piedras Negras Facility Nears Closure, Fate Of Several Migrants Unclear
They're the lucky ones — the hundreds of migrants who have moved out of the makeshift shelter in this town across the U.S.-Mexico border from Eagle Pass. But as Olvin Hernandez stood behind a fence that walled him off from the rest of the city, he realized he might face a different path. Hernandez, 21, is among the hundreds whose fate remained unknown Monday after more than 1,000 Central American asylum-seekers have been allowed to leave a former factory that’s been a temporary facility for the group since they arrived earlier this month. (Aguilar, 2/18)
ProPublica:
The Lucky Ones
The first stories we can correct are the ones we tell ourselves. My story, the one I have hung onto since I was a little girl, is that I got lucky. Luck made sense because luck can happen to anyone. Even me. Luck fit into the parts of my story I wasn’t ready to explain, the parts that I surrendered to half-memories. I made it to this country because of luck. I grew up a janitor but then my parents got lucky and bought the business and I ended up a journalist. My citizenship came after I was undocumented for almost a decade, when I got lucky. (Gallardo, 2/19)
Darin Selnick, a senior Veterans Affairs adviser, flew to Washington, D.C. from California for two weeks out of every month, at taxpayers' expense. Reports show that the costs for the six trips during the time period between Oct. 21, 2018, and Jan. 19, 2019 included: $3,885.60 for six round-trip flights in coach, $5,595.46 for 23 nights in hotels and $1,976 for meals. In other news, an army veteran is suing over defective earplugs.
ProPublica:
The VA Is Paying for a Top Official’s Cross-Country Commute
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs paid $13,000 over a three-month period for a senior official’s biweekly commute to Washington from his home in California, according to expense reports obtained by ProPublica. The official, Darin Selnick, is a senior adviser to VA Secretary Robert Wilkie and has played a key role in developing the administration’s controversial new rules on referring veterans to private doctors. The proposal, announced last month, has drawn opposition from some lawmakers and veterans groups. (Arnsdorf, 2/15)
The Baltimore Sun:
Maryland Army Veteran Sues 3M Over Earplugs
The suits on behalf of service members come after 3M settled a federal lawsuit in July for $9.1 million to resolve allegations that it knowingly supplied the U.S. military with defective earplugs. The suit was brought under the False Claims Act after a whistle-blower complaint. ... Hearing impairments, including constant ringing from tinnitus, can be debilitating and permanent and had been the No. 1 service-connected disability reported among veterans since 2005, the Government Accountability Office reported in 2011. Tinnitus and hearing loss remain top health conditions at Veterans Affairs medical centers, costing the department billions in benefit claims, according to the complaint. (Cohn, 2/15)
And in news from the military —
The Associated Press:
Judge Halts Air Force's Efforts To Discharge Airmen With HIV
A federal judge on Friday ordered the U.S. Air Force to temporarily stop discharging service members who are HIV-positive, ruling that it's working under a policy that is "irrational" and "outdated." U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema in Alexandria, Virginia, issued her decision as a lawsuit moves forward against the U.S. Military. (2/15)
An investigation this month has revealed that the Indian Health Service mishandled allegations against a doctor who was allowed to continue practicing for years following the accusations. Now Sen. Mike Rounds wants a broader assessment of the problems at the department. “Come hell or high water, we’re going to get to the bottom of what the problems are,” he said.
The Wall Street Journal:
South Dakota Senator Moves For Evaluation Of Indian Health Service
Sen. Mike Rounds, a South Dakota Republican, introduced legislation Thursday calling for a broad assessment of the U.S. Indian Health Service, following an investigation of the agency by The Wall Street Journal and the PBS series Frontline. The bill calls for a sweeping evaluation of the agency’s performance, including its long-term vacancies, how it allocates money to its more than two dozen hospitals and the competency of the agency’s leadership. The Journal/Frontline investigation revealed the Indian Health Service mishandled allegations of sexual assault by a pediatrician it employed for decades and routinely hired physicians with troubled backgrounds to fill slots at its remote hospitals on Native American reservations. (Weaver and Frosch, 2/15)
In other news from Capitol Hill —
The Hill:
Congress Allows Violence Against Women Act To Lapse
The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), which provides funding and grants for a variety of programs that tackle domestic abuse, lapsed at the end of Friday after Congress failed to pass an extension before leaving for its one-week recess. Lawmakers squabbled over whether a clean extension of the landmark legislation, which was first signed into law in 1994, should be wrapped into a massive must-pass government funding deal that was signed by President Trump on Friday. (Brufke, 2/16)
Resistance And Mistrust Around Vaccinations Aren't Anything New--They've Always Existed Together
Although the antivaccination movement has grown in the past few years, thanks in part to social media, there has always been a fierce outcry against compulsory shots for as long as vaccines have been used. Experts are hoping to leverage the recent outbreak in the Pacific Northwest to change minds. And some recent trends suggest that it might be the case.
CNN:
Vaccine U-Turn: Measles Surges As Campaigners Ride Populist Wave Of Distrust In Government
More than a century before Facebook, anti-vaccination campaigners had another method for spreading their message -- an eye-catching march through town with tiny children's coffins emblazoned with the words: "Another victim of vaccination." The year was 1885, and smallpox vaccinations were compulsory in the UK -- reportedly inciting 100,000 people to demonstrate in the city of Leicester, England, one sunny March day. Fast-forward to 2019 and the anti-vaccination campaign is a global, multi-faced beast -- spurred by safety concerns, religious and political beliefs, preferences for homeopathic approaches and widespread misinformation. (McKenzie and Fox, 2/18)
The New York Times:
As Measles Outbreak Flares, Vaccination Rates Soar And Some Come Off The Fence
The one-day immunization clinic at David Douglas High School in Portland, Ore., was hectic on Saturday, with a wait of 45 minutes to over an hour just to see a nurse. But Cameron Wagner said that after balking this long at getting her 4-year-old son vaccinated, out of concerns about potential side effects, a few more minutes would not matter. “I’ve talked to more doctors and have weighed the options, and decided to come in and get a shot,” said Ms. Wagner, 46, a massage therapist. (Johnson, 2/16)
Reuters:
Explainer: Low Vaccination Rates, Global Outbreaks Fuel U.S. Measles Spread
A measles outbreak that has stricken at least 225 people in New York state since October began with a traveler who visited Israel during the Jewish high holidays and returned to a predominantly ultra-Orthodox Jewish neighborhood of Rockland County. A similar pattern unfolded three months later and nearly 3,000 miles away when a person who visited Eastern Europe returned to a community with strong ties to a local church group in Vancouver, Washington. More than 50 people fell ill there. (2/15)
CNN:
Officials Hope To Change Minds Amid 'Exquisitely Contagious' Measles Outbreak
Officials in Clark County, Washington, publish a list every day of where people infected with measles have been. Among them: busy spots like Concourse D at Oregon's Portland International Airport on January 7 and the sold-out Portland Trail Blazers' home game four days later. There's also a Costco, a Trader Joe's, numerous schools, day-care centers and churches, a swimming pool and even a trampoline park. "It is exquisitely contagious," said Dr. Alan Melnick, director of the county health department. "You can be in a room where somebody with measles had left two hours earlier and still get the disease." (Watt, 2/13)
The Hill:
Washington State House Committee Passes Bill To Ban Personal, Philosophical Vaccine Exemptions
A Washington state House committee on Friday passed a bill to ban the personal or philosophical exemption for the vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) for school-age children amid an outbreak of the virus. The bill passed through the state's Health Care and Wellness Committee, despite opposition from critics who say parents should have a right to choose whether to vaccinate their children, The Seattle Times reported. (Gstalter, 2/16)
Seattle Times:
Amid Measles Outbreak, State House Panel Moves To Ban Personal Vaccine Exemptions
House Bill 1638 moved through the Health Care and Wellness Committee on a primarily party-line vote despite vocal opposition from critics who say the injections can cause harm that outweighs the benefits associated with avoiding certain preventable diseases. All nine Democrats voted in favor, while the bill’s prime sponsor — Rep. Paul Harris of Vancouver, Clark County — was the only Republican on the committee to support it. Rep. Joe Schmick, R-Colfax, the top Republican on the committee, argued that while he thinks every child should be vaccinated, parents should also retain the right to choose. (Goldstein-Street, 2/15)
The Oregonian:
6 New Measles Cases In Vancouver-Area Outbreak
Five children and one adult have been newly diagnosed with measles in Clark County, public health officials said Saturday, breaking a lull in new cases that saw just one new diagnosis in a week. The total between Washington and Oregon is now at 64, with 59 in Clark County, one in King County, and four in Multnomah County. Five of the six new patients were unvaccinated, according to Clark County Public Health, and one had received just the first of two recommended doses. (Zarkhin, 2/17)
The Oregonian:
Vancouver-Area Measles Outbreak Jumps By Nearly 10 People In 3 Days
In little more than a week, nearly 10 more people have been diagnosed with measles, breaking a weeklong lull in new cases. Clark County Public Health identified a child who was unvaccinated and has measles Monday afternoon after a morning update said there were no new cases. This brings the total number of cases to 67 -- 62 in Clark County, four in Oregon and one in the Seattle area. (Hamburger, 2/18)
New Orleans Times-Picayune:
Louisiana Health Officials Urge Doctors To Be On Alert For Measles
The Louisiana Department of Health urged healthcare providers around the state to be on the lookout for measles cases as other parts of the United States continue to report new cases. Louisiana has not reported any measles cases so far this year. Two confirmed cases were reported in New Orleans last year. Those cases involved travelers who contracted the illness while traveling abroad. Both adult patients were not vaccinated with the MMR vaccine (measles, mumps and rubella). (Clark, 2/15)
Stat:
Vaccines Don't Work Against Some Viruses. CRISPR Might Fix That
Despite decades of trying, there are still no vaccines against viruses that kill tens of millions of people and cause untold suffering every year: HIV, respiratory syncytial virus, influenza, and the cancer-causing Epstein-Barr virus. There are many reasons why, including how hard it is to identify the exact piece of an antigen that will trigger production of an effective antibody. And even when vaccines exist, they fail when B cells don’t rearrange their DNA segments in a way necessary to manufacture the needed antibodies. (Begley, 2/19)
The change in estrogen doesn't just effect fertility, scientists are beginning to understand. It also effects how the brain is protected from aging. In other women's health news: heart attacks, genetic testing, pregnancy and breast cancer.
The Wall Street Journal:
The Link Between Menopause And Alzheimer’s
Women make up nearly two-thirds of patients with Alzheimer’s disease in the U.S., in part because they live longer than men. Now, researchers are exploring whether hormonal changes related to menopause affect the development of the disease. “The truth is that Alzheimer’s is not a disease of old age, it’s a disease of middle age,” says Lisa Mosconi, director of the Weill Cornell Women’s Brain Initiative in New York City, a research program aimed at reducing Alzheimer’s risk. “In reality, the brain changes start in mid-life.” (Reddy, 2/18)
The Wall Street Journal:
‘I Had No Idea I Was Having A Heart Attack’: For Women, The Signals Often Aren’t Clear
On a sunny day in Bellevue, Wash., in June 2011, I had just completed a workout class when I experienced a bizarre sensation of intense, full-body muscle fatigue. I broke into a bone-chilling sweat. My upper left arm throbbed, a deep ache next to the bone. I was heaving for air at a rapid clip. I grew nauseated. A fist was pressing through my chest to my spine. I was 56 years old, an exercise enthusiast, a nonsmoker and a retired cardiac-care nurse. And yet I had no idea that I was having a heart attack. It felt nothing like I’d imagined. It turns out that it’s hard to recognize a heart attack as it happens. (Oliveira, 2/18)
The New York Times:
A Mother Learns The Identity Of Her Child’s Grandmother. A Sperm Bank Threatens To Sue.
Danielle Teuscher decided to give DNA tests as presents last Christmas to her father, close friends and 5-year-old daughter, joining the growing number of people taking advantage of low-cost, accessible genetic testing. But the 23andMe test produced an unexpected result. Ms. Teuscher, 30, a nanny in Portland, Ore., said she unintentionally discovered the identity of the sperm donor she had used to conceive her young child. The mother of the donor was identified on her daughter’s test results as her grandmother. Excited and curious, Ms. Teuscher decided to reach out. (Mroz, 2/16)
NPR:
Understanding Pregnancy Basics Could Make Childbirth Safer
Brittney Crystal was just over 25 weeks pregnant when her water broke. It was her second pregnancy — the first had been rough, and the baby came early. To try to avoid a second premature birth, Dr. Joy-Sarah Vink, an obstetrician and co-director of the Preterm Birth Prevention Center at Columbia University Medical Center, arranged for Crystal to be transported by ambulance from her local Connecticut hospital to New York City, where Vink could direct her care. (Kodjak, 2/18)
NPR:
At New York Fashion Week, Metastatic Breast Cancer Patients Walk The Runway
On a cold, bright Sunday afternoon during New York Fashion Week, nearly six hundred people packed into an old building in Manhattan's Lower East Side for an unusual lingerie show. The audience shouted exuberantly when the first model stepped onto the runway. Jaleh Panahi, of Kingston, New York, is a 73-year old practicing physician, mother and grandmother who's had metastatic breast cancer for eight years. (Schattner, 2/17)
More than 200,000 patients age 65 and older receive dialysis and are often told they'd die without it, yet few are informed about a conservative option that helps manage the disease. Public health news also looks at spanking; gay Catholic priests; CBD oil; a CRISPR patent; unsafe radiation exposure; presidents' public speech patterns; new Ebola treatments and more.
The New York Times:
Dialysis Is A Way Of Life For Many Older Patients. Maybe It Shouldn’t Be.
John Everdell had lived most of his life with kidney disease. As a young man awaiting a transplant, he had briefly undergone dialysis. That’s how he knew, when the prospect of kidney failure loomed again in his late 60s, that he would refuse dialysis this round. “He was a very independent man, with an idea of how he was going to live his life,” said Trix Oakley, his partner of 22 years. (Span, 2/15)
USA Today:
Spanking Kids Harms Mental Health, Says American Psychological Association
The American Psychological Association joined a growing list of health organizations calling for a ban to spanking because it can cause short- and long-term harm to children. The association has long warned physical discipline can be harmful to kids' mental health. It made its position official Feb. 15 with a policy change. (Haller, 2/18)
The New York Times:
‘It Is Not A Closet. It Is A Cage.’ Gay Catholic Priests Speak Out
Gregory Greiten was 17 years old when the priests organized the game. It was 1982 and he was on a retreat with his classmates from St. Lawrence, a Roman Catholic seminary for teenage boys training to become priests. Leaders asked each boy to rank which he would rather be: burned over 90 percent of his body, paraplegic or gay. Each chose to be scorched or paralyzed. Not one uttered the word “gay.” They called the game the Game of Life. The lesson stuck. Seven years later, he climbed up into his seminary dorm window and dangled one leg over the edge. “I really am gay,” Father Greiten, now a priest near Milwaukee, remembered telling himself for the first time. “It was like a death sentence.” (Dias, 2/17)
Bloomberg:
Does CBD Oil Work? Industry Needs Data To Back Up Health Claims
While CBD is generally believed to be safe, scant research has been conducted on its medical and health benefits because cannabis has long been prohibited at the federal level. The only clinically proven remedy is a treatment for two rare forms of childhood epilepsy. All other claims are anecdotal. Now regulators are starting to pay closer attention. Earlier this month, New York health officials ordered bakeries and restaurants to stop adding cannabidiol, the formal name for CBD, to beverages and food. In December the Food and Drug Administration made clear that it’s illegal to market CBD products as dietary supplements. (Giammona and Owram, 2/17)
Stat:
MilliporeSigma Is Poised To Win A CRISPR Patent
The usual suspects have done a fine job of turning the CRISPR patent landscape into a minefield for companies trying to figure out what intellectual property they need to make their hoped-for therapies, but an unusual suspect is about to mix things up even more. The MilliporeSigma subsidiary of Germany-based pharmaceutical company Merck KGaA will soon receive a patent on an invention that increases CRISPR’s efficiency and decreases its off-target effects, according to documents posted this month by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Both attributes could be extremely useful to would-be developers of treatments based on the genome-editing tool. (Begley, 2/19)
Arizona Republic:
Grand Canyon Uranium Case: 6 Things To Know About Radiation Exposure
If you spent time in the museum collectibles building at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon over the past two decades, you may have been exposed to unsafe levels of radiation. Three five-gallon containers brimming with uranium ore were stored in the building, next to a taxidermy exhibit where tours sometimes stopped for presentations. Here's what you should know. (Wagner, 2/18)
Los Angeles Times:
Why American Voters Were Primed For A President Who Talks Like Trump
When in the grips of oratorical passion, President Obama liked to paraphrase the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. about the “long arc of history” bending toward justice. But when it comes to the oratory of American politicians, history’s long arc is bending away from such lofty rhetorical flourishes. New research finds that the punch-and-jab style of President Trump’s public speech — pugnaciously declarative, larded with personal pronouns, and light on the kinds of phrases that soften a claim or elevate an idea — appears to be just where presidential discourse is headed. (Healy, 2/15)
The Washington Post:
New Ebola Treatments Are Being Tested In Congo Outbreak Area
Amid the second-largest Ebola outbreak ever, the hunt for a lifesaving treatment is on. A clinical trial of patients taking place in Congo is gathering evidence on experimental therapies, to provide a proven option when the deadly virus inevitably emerges again. The first multidrug clinical trial of Ebola therapies, which began enrolling patients in November, will compare the effectiveness of three antibody treatments and one antiviral drug. One therapy tested briefly during the 2014-2016 outbreak in West Africa, the largest ever, has already shown promise. (Cunningham, 2/17)
Denver Post:
Colorado Men's Experiences On Kidney Donor List Indicative Of State's Long Wait Times
About 100,000 people across the country are waiting for a kidney, according to the Living Kidney Donor Network. Coloradans on that list sometimes have to wait longer for a transplant. While average wait times fluctuate from place to place, most people spend four years waiting, according to the UNOS Kidney Learning Center, an online resource for kidney donations. In Colorado, that average stretches to five to seven years, depending on blood type, said Vidya Bhandaram , a kidney transplant doctor at Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center. (Barnett, 2/17)
States across the country have been beefing up their response to the opioid crisis by investing in treatment infrastructure, building databases, offering clean syringes and more. News on the crisis comes out of Maryland and Florida, as well.
CQ:
State Issues: Opioids
States are seeking innovative approaches to tackle rising opioid problems, and many will do that with new leaders who may be unfamiliar with the issue. This year, 20 states have new governors, and informing the officials on best practices and new policies related to the epidemic will be a priority for the bipartisan National Governors Association. Expanding data-sharing and analysis continues to be a goal for many states. New Jersey has implemented a model to share data between health care professionals and law enforcement. This could help aid in developing better strategies and access to medication-assisted treatment, or MAT, which eases withdrawal symptoms and psychological cravings. (Raman, 2/19)
The Washington Post:
Medical Marijuana And Opioids: Maryland Weighs Whether Cannabis Can Help Treat Addiction
Using medical marijuana to help cure opioid addiction may seem counterintuitive. But a growing number of physicians and patient advocates say marijuana should be added to the list of traditional treatment options, pointing to studies that show it helps reduce opioid cravings and withdrawal symptoms. A bill being considered by lawmakers in Maryland would make it the fourth state to explicitly legalize the use of marijuana to treat opioid-abuse disorder, following Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey. (Chason, 2/15)
Health News Florida:
Sen. Rouson Wants $25 Million For Drug Treatment Programs
Members of the Pinellas County Legislative Delegation met Friday in St. Petersburg to give a heads-up on what their priorities will be during the upcoming session. Mental health counseling, criminal justice reform and substance abuse should be on the agenda. State Sen. Darryl Rouson of St. Petersburg said as a recovering addict, he understands the destruction an addiction can leave in its wake. (2/18)
Have The Days Of Double Hospital Rooms Passed? Patients Start To Expect Private Rooms As The Norm
More and more hospitals are transitioning toward private rooms as the standard, reflecting a growing sentiment that patient comfort is an essential part of the hospital business. Hospital news comes out of California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Illinois, and Kansas, as well.
Boston Globe:
Hospitals Face Pressure To Provide Private Rooms For Patients
When she had a heart attack last spring, Ann Galdos rushed to Massachusetts General Hospital, where doctors worked quickly to open up her blocked coronary artery. But when she settled in that night to begin her recovery, there was no rest to be found: The other patient in her shared hospital room was coughing, gagging, and moaning for hours. Galdos paced the hallways to find some peace. (McCluskey, 2/16)
Los Angeles Times:
California Attorney General Wants Oversight In Hospital Sale To Santa Clara County
California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra is asking a federal district judge in Los Angeles to place a hold on the sale of two struggling hospitals to Santa Clara County, a request the county says could scuttle the purchase. Becerra’s action is the latest skirmish in a years-long effort by the state to maintain oversight of six financially beleaguered not-for-profit hospitals. The hospitals, located in both Northern and Southern California, are now in bankruptcy. (Dolan, 2/18)
Boston Globe:
Partners HealthCare Names Interim CEO
Partners HealthCare announced Monday it has named a physician and top executive as its interim chief executive, a move meant to provide continuity as the hospital network enters a period of transition. Dr. Anne Klibanski, 68, will be the first woman to lead Partners, the state’s largest network of doctors and hospitals and the parent of Massachusetts General and Brigham and Women’s hospitals. She is currently the chief academic officer, overseeing Partners’ research and teaching programs, and heads the neuroendocrine unit at Mass. General. (McCluskey, 2/18)
The Star Tribune:
HCMC, North Memorial Discuss Possible Merger
The Hennepin County and North Memorial medical systems are entering merger talks that could combine two urban trauma centers and a fast-growing outer-ring suburban hospital into a larger competitor for an increasingly challenging health care market. The parties are drafting a letter of intent to negotiate a combination, which could range from a partnership between Hennepin Healthcare and North Memorial to a full merger into one organization, according to documents prepared for a closed meeting of the Hennepin County Board on Thursday. (Olson and Chanen, 2/18)
Chicago Tribune:
Melrose Park's Westlake Hospital To Close, Reversing Plans By New Owner To Invest In 670-Employee Hospital
The new owner of Westlake Hospital in Melrose Park plans to close the 230-bed hospital by July, a dramatic shift in plans that’s causing outrage among local leaders who say the hospital is vital to serving a largely minority community. The about-face by Pipeline Health comes just weeks after the for-profit company bought Westlake, Louis A. Weiss Memorial Hospital in Chicago, and West Suburban Medical Center in Oak Park for $70 million, with plans to have part-owner and prominent Chicagoan Dr. Eric Whitaker help turn around the hospitals. (Schencker, 2/17)
KCUR:
Kansas City Anesthesia Group Says Medical Information For 3,472 Patients Might Have Been Compromised
A medical group that provides anesthesia services to Kansas City metro hospitals has notified 3,472 patients that some of their personal information may have been compromised after surgery schedules were stolen from an employee’s car.
A medical group that provides anesthesia services to Kansas City metro hospitals has notified 3,472 patients that some of their personal information may have been compromised after surgery schedules were stolen from an employee’s car. Anesthesia Associates of Kansas City posted a notice on its website that the surgery schedules may have included some patients’ names, dates of birth, types and dates of surgery, and the name of the patients’ surgeons. (Margolies, 2/18)
Boston Globe:
New England Baptist Hospital To Launch Campaign To Attract More Low-Income Patients
New England Baptist Hospital, a renowned hilltop institution where Boston Celtics and amateur athletes alike go for repairs of balky knees and shoulders, sits amid two of Boston’s neediest neighborhoods. Yet just a tiny fraction of its patients are poor. State regulators say the Baptist, which specializes in orthopedic surgery, can no longer remain an outlier. (Kowalczyk, 2/18)
Media outlets report on news from California, New York, Ohio, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Virginia, Florida and Arizona.
The New York Times:
Kaiser Permanente’s New Medical School Will Waive Tuition For Its First 5 Classes
Kaiser Permanente, the California-based health system that is preparing to open one of the few American medical schools not connected to a university, was set to announce Tuesday that it would waive tuition for every student in its first five graduating classes. Kaiser Permanente, which has its own hospitals, clinics, doctors and insurance plan, is following the New York University School of Medicine, which announced last year that it would eliminate tuition for all current and future students. Like N.Y.U., Kaiser’s main goal is to keep students from forgoing lower-paying specialties like family medicine because of crushing debt, or foreclosing the option of medical school altogether because of the cost. (Goodnough, 2/19)
The Associated Press:
9/11 Fund Running Out Of Money For Those With Illnesses
The compensation fund for victims of 9/11 is running out of money and will cut future payments by 50 to 70 percent, officials announced Friday. September 11th Victim Compensation Fund special master Rupa Bhattacharyya said she was "painfully aware of the inequity of the situation" but stressed that awarding some funds for every valid claim would be preferable to sending some legitimate claimants away empty-handed. "I could not abide a plan that would at the end of the day leave some claimants uncompensated," Bhattacharyya said. (2/15)
The Associated Press:
Officials: Ohio Has A Hepatitis A Outbreak, But It's Not New
The Ohio Department of Health says reports that wrongly imply a newly declared outbreak of hepatitis A are circulating around the state, apparently prompted by a recent case involving a restaurant worker. A statewide outbreak of hepatitis A was declared last summer. Department spokesman J.C. Benton said Monday that outbreak is ongoing, but no further outbreak has been announced and there's no new cause for concern. (2/18)
The CT Mirror:
Tax On Sugary Drinks Tops Lamont’s List Of New ‘Sin Taxes’
Gov. Ned Lamont’s first budget will include a series of new “sin tax” proposals, including levies on sugary drinks, electronic cigarettes and plastic bags, and deposits on alcoholic beverages. Lamont, who must submit his first two-year budget proposal to the General Assembly on Wednesday, also will recommend raising the age, from 18 to 21, to purchase both cigarettes and e-cigarettes. (Phaneuf, 2/17)
New Hampshire Public Radio:
N.H. Senate Passes Bills To Boost Mental Health, Child Protective Services
The state senate yesterday unanimously passed two bills aimed at boosting mental health services and protecting vulnerable children. The votes came on the same day Governor Chris Sununu was outlining his budget which looks to tackle some of the same issues. One bill, passed Thursday, would add 77 positions to the Department for Children, Youth, and Families over the next two years. That's 15 more positions than Sununu called for in his speech. (Moon, 2/15)
The Washington Post:
For These Four, Having A Beer Is A Crime — And They’ve Gone To Court To Challenge That
Police arrested Ryan Williams for sleeping in a park bathroom in Roanoke where an empty beer was found in the trash. Bryan Manning was picked up in the same city for smelling like alcohol and later for being at a Walmart where alcohol was sold. Richard Deckerhoff and Richard Eugene Walls were arrested near Richmond for being near beer cans. In the past decade, each man has been prosecuted in Virginia at least 11 times under a state law that makes it a crime for people designated in court as “habitual” drunks to consume or have alcohol. (Marimow, 2/18)
Health News Florida:
Florida Senate Bill Would Require Baby Changing Tables In Many Buildings
A Senate Democrat filed a proposal Thursday that would lead to a requirement in the Florida Building Code that baby-changing tables be included in many buildings that are newly constructed or undergo “substantial” renovations. Sen. Lauren Book, D-Plantation, filed the proposal (SB 1082) for consideration during the legislative session that starts March 5. (2/15)
Health News Florida:
New Fight Emerges Over HIV, AIDS Care
An ongoing legal battle over which managed-care plan should be picked by the state to provide care to low-income AIDS and HIV patients in South Florida has triggered a new round of litigation that pits two competitors. The AIDS Healthcare Foundation this week asked a circuit judge to order competitor Simply Healthcare to stop communicating with the foundation’s Medicare patients. (Sexton, 2/18)
San Jose Mercury News:
South Bay's Gender Health Center Promotes 'Healthy Equity'
For transgender, nonbinary and gender diverse individuals, gender identity carries with it a host of medical, social and emotional issues that aren’t always fully addressed by the healthcare system. Santa Clara Valley Medical Center’s new Gender Health Center aims to provide services for these populations under one roof at the downtown San Jose facility. Dr. Jackie Newton, MD, co-founder of the center, said these services need to be multi-disciplinary, so center staff is taking a collaborative approach to patient care. (Gelhaus, 2/17)
San Jose Mercury News:
California Mail Carrier’s Heat-Related Death Prompts Bill To Require Air Conditioning In U.S. Postal Service Mail Trucks
Seven months after a mail carrier’s heat-related death in Woodland Hills, U.S. Rep. Tony Cárdenas introduced a bill Friday that if enacted would require all U.S. Postal Service delivery vehicles to be equipped with air conditioning within three years. U.S. Postal Service carrier Peggy Frank, 63, was found dead in her non-air-conditioned mail truck on July 6, a day that temperatures soared to 117 degrees. The North Hills resident died of hyperthermia, an abnormally high body temperature caused by a failure of the body to deal with heat coming from the environment. (Gazzar, 2/16)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Homeless Advocates Gather For Vigil, Call For An End To Violence
A candle flickered Monday afternoon at the center of a snow trodden circle on Euclid Avenue where mourners gathered to recognize the life of Marsha Carroll, a woman experiencing homelessness who was killed earlier this month. Carroll, 57, was allegedly beaten to death on Feb. 6 outside the Rainbow Place Apartments on East 79th Street in Midtown, according to a police report. (Christ, 2/18)
San Jose Mercury News:
East Bay Nun, Founder Of Bay Area Crisis Nursery Fired
On a recent Christmas, Sister Ann Weltz received a letter from a mother who years ago dropped her 2-year-old daughter at the Bay Area Crisis Nursery for one night’s care. The woman had been jobless and homeless and planned to spend the night of respite working with social workers on a plan to place her daughter up for adoption to give her a better life. But Sister Ann talked her out of it. And about 15 years later, the woman wrote to share her news: she was starting law school — and her little girl was heading to college. (Gafni, 2/16)
Los Angeles Times:
Family Of Mentally Ill Anaheim Man Say Police Choked And Beat Him During Fatal 2018 Arrest
The family of a mentally ill Anaheim man who died in police custody last year has accused the arresting officers of choking him and failing to render medical aid after the violent clash, according to a federal lawsuit. Justin Perkins, 38, was beaten with batons and choked by two Anaheim officers at an apartment complex around 8:30 a.m. on Oct. 27, the lawsuit alleges. Perkins collapsed after the altercation, and the suit accuses the officers — identified as Shao Wang and Kenny Lee — of failing to get him medical aid for nearly 45 minutes. (Queally, 2/18)
Arizona Republic:
Maricopa County Evictions Up In 2018 And Help Is Slow In Arriving
Maricopa County's eviction epidemic grew through another year. Nothing has been able to slow the system's relentless churn. Not newfound attention in the county's Justice Courts. Not a state-funded eviction prevention program, which has been delayed for months. Even early discussions in the state Legislature, which is debating at least two bills that could tip the scales for tenants and landlords, have failed to contain the crisis. (Woods, 2/18)
The CT Mirror:
CT's Window To Rake In Big Bucks From Pot Could Be Closing
Proponents of legalizing recreational marijuana estimate Connecticut could make roughly $160 million a year by taxing sales of the drug. But the state’s potential take has a chance to be much higher — possibly double or more — if Connecticut can outrace some of its neighbors into the marijuana marketplace. (Phaneuf, 2/19)
Editorial writers focus on women's health care issues.
USA Today:
Who Has A Late-Term Abortion? Women With Pregnancies Like Mine.
People are talking about me again, loudly, unkindly. Even the president of the United States has had his say about families like mine. I have told this story so many times, but I will tell it again as many times as it takes. I help run a support group for families who have ended pregnancy after poor prenatal or maternal diagnoses. If you’re wondering, “Who are these women who get abortions in the third trimester?” We are. I am. Parents who love our babies with our entire hearts. Desperate acts like an abortion in the 36th week of pregnancy are brought about only by the most desperate circumstances and are only available to those who can come up with a lot of money quickly. (Kate Carson, 2/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
We Overcame A Grim Prenatal Prognosis
Radical legislation in New York and Virginia has brought late-term abortion into the spotlight. Advocates justify the practice on the ground that, as one put it, “terminations after 24 weeks are for severe fetal anomalies.” (Jaime Herrera Beutler, 2/18)
Dallas Morning News:
Why Conservatives Should Care About Women's Health
For too long, conservative thinking on women's health has selectively overlooked the influence women have on both economic opportunity and social stability. Conservatism is rooted in ideals of individual rights, liberty and the protection of human dignity. But partisanship has caused too many conservatives to look past the moral and even economic reasons to care for the health of women. (Natalie Gonnella-Platts, 2/18)
Seattle Times:
Veterans Deserve Reproductive Health Services
Americans have heard many stories and seen considerable documentation of the brain, spinal and other wartime injuries suffered by America’s military personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan. Less-known is that the U.S. government callously interferes with these wounded veterans’ chance to have children. A 27-year-old law blocks the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs from providing some reproductive health services – such as in vitro fertilization – to veterans even though those same services are available to active-duty military. Congress repeatedly has refused to overturn that law, adding to thousands of veterans’ financial and emotional stress. (2/18)
Opinion writers weigh in on these health topics and others.
The New York Times:
How Much Will Americans Sacrifice For Good Health Care?
It’s been nearly 10 years since the passage of the Affordable Care Act — one of the most sweeping health care overhauls in the nation’s history. The law has brought the number of uninsured people in America to an all-time low, secured protections for people with pre-existing conditions and advanced the notion that health care is a human right. But the system was never perfect, and its fractures and stress points have become too great to ignore. (2/16)
Chicago Sun Times:
America's Real National Emergency: Mass Shootings
On the very day President Donald Trump declared a national emergency that is nothing but a lie, a horrifically real national emergency played out in Aurora. Just hours after Trump declared a national emergency on Friday so as to defy the will of Congress and spend billions of dollars on a wall along the southern border, a shooter in Aurora killed five people and injured five police officers. ...But now we have another mass shooting. Not along the border, but in Aurora. The dishonesty of our national conversation — the manufactured fear of immigrants when the real and present danger is our own violent society and the stupidity of our gun laws — could not be in starker relief. (2/18)
Los Angeles Times:
Fractures, Trauma, Amputations: What Medics See When They Rescue Migrants At The Border
We found her in a ditch a few steps away from the rusted border fence on the east side of Nogales, Ariz., an inch-and-a-half laceration on her swollen forehead. She came from Guerrero, one of the most violent states in Mexico, and could not remember how she landed on the rugged surface after her grip on the top of the barrier failed and she fell. (Ieva Jusionyte, 2/17)
The Washington Post:
Scary Measles History Has Been Forgotten By Many
On the darkest day of 2018, the winter solstice, we at the Center for Vaccine Research at the University of Pittsburgh tweeted, with despair, a report in the Guardian that measles cases in Europe reached the highest number in 20 years. Why was this a cause for concern? Europe is far away from the United States, and as some people apparently believe measles is a benign, childhood disease that causes a bit of a rash, a dribbling nose and a few spots, right? What was all the fuss about? (Paul Duprex, 2/16)
Stat:
Do Food And Menu Nutrition Labels Influence Consumer Or Industry Behavior?
Although labels have graced food packaging for decades, it’s not entirely clear if they influence consumer choices or food industry practices. To examine their impact, we pooled the findings of 60 studies that included 111 interventions that tested foods with and without labels. There were 2 million observations of people or their purchases across 11 countries. (Dariush Mozaffarian and Siyi Shangguan, 2/19)
The Washington Post:
One Number Determines Who Gets An Organ Transplant. And It’s Horribly Unfair.
We have a liver selection meeting every Wednesday to consider which patients will get transplants. Each patient is listed by name, age, weight, diagnosis and MELD score — a number, based entirely on lab values, that predicts how bad their liver is and correlates with how likely they are to die waiting for a transplant. A score of 15 is where we start to consider transplantation, and 40 means a 90 percent chance of dying within three months. Scanning the list, I noticed with discomfort that the patients at the top, with a MELD of 35 or more, had mostly the same diagnoses: alcoholic liver disease; nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, or NASH, a consequence of obesity leading to fatty liver; and an occasional hepatitis C, a virus that was once the most common indication for liver transplant but now is being cured. (Joshua Mezrich, 2/18)
Stat:
Move Clinical Trial Data Sharing From An Option To An Imperative
Data from clinical trials have long been locked away, some in this principal investigator’s computer bank, some in that pharmaceutical company’s cloud. For years we have been talking about opening up those vaults and freeing these data. The key has finally turned: Data sharing is becoming the new reality. (Rebecca Li, 2/19)
The Hill:
Democracy And Health Care Is Under Attack In Utah
Over the past two years, Americans have sent elected officials one message that could not be clearer: we want more health care, not less. That message rung out in the halls of Congress and in town halls across the country in the outpouring of opposition to bills that would have repealed the Affordable Care Act. It echoed in elections across the country in November, where Democrats made Republicans own up to their attempts to gut health care for millions and rode that message to 40 new seats and a takeover of the House of Representatives. Nowhere was the message clearer than in Idaho, Nebraska and Utah —three dark-red states where voters approved ballot measures in November to expand Medicaid, even though their elected state officials had repeatedly chosen not to. (Jonathan Schleifer, 2/17)
Raleigh News & Observer:
Making Hospital Costs Transparent In The State Health Plan Will Save Taxpayers Money And Help State Employees.
How much are you paying for health care? You may say too much, you may even cite the cost of a recent procedure you’ve had, but do you know what the actual cost of care is? More importantly, do you know if it’s fair? Many North Carolina families are one major medical bill away from bankruptcy, yet we don’t know what we’re paying for. (Robert Broome, 2/18)
Lexington Herald Examiner:
As Youth Smoking Rises, Kentucky Should Mandate Smoke-Free Schools
One in four high school students, and one in seven middle school students, now uses some kind of tobacco product, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced this month. These numbers represent a dramatic increase over just the last year, an increase driven almost entirely by a nationwide surge in youth vaping or, as many of them call it, “juuling.”If we do not stem this burgeoning tide, we will be dealing with the health and economic consequences of an entirely new generation of Kentuckians who are addicted to nicotine. (Ben Chandler, 2/15)