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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Jul 10 2017

Full Issue

A Broken Promise: The Fatal Crisis Of The Indian Health Service System

The agency that is supposed to provide care for Native Americans under U.S. treaties that date back generations is failing the people it's supposed to serve.

The Wall Street Journal: ‘People Are Dying Here’: Federal Hospitals Fail Tribes

At the Indian Health Service hospital in Pine Ridge, S.D., a 57-year-old man was sent home with a bronchitis diagnosis—only to die five hours later of heart failure. When a patient at the federal agency’s Winnebago, Neb., facility stopped breathing, nurses responding to the “code blue” found the emergency supply cart was empty, and the man died. In Sisseton, S.D., a high school prom queen was coughing up blood. An IHS doctor gave her cough syrup and antianxiety medication; within days she died of a blood clot in her lung. (Frosch and Weaver, 7/7)

The Wall Street Journal: Families Speak Out: Stories Of Indian Health Service Patients

The Indian Health Service is responsible for providing medical care to about 2.2 million tribal members across the U.S., but the system is in crisis after IHS hospitals repeatedly failed inspections, shut down services or lost access to crucial federal funds. The facilities, which operate in some of the poorest areas of the country, have rendered dangerous care and caused unnecessary deaths, according to federal regulators, agency documents and interviews. (Frosch and Weaver, 7/7)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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