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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, May 27 2015

Full Issue

HHS Awards $112M To Help Doctors Fight Heart Disease

The grants will be used to create regional groups of experts to help smaller medical practices. News outlets also report on other public health issues, including new evidence about umbilical cord care after birth, concerns about college students and tanning beds, some doctors' reluctance to order colon cancer screening and new efforts to fight Alzheimer's disease.

The Hill: HHS Boosts Effort To Fight Heart Disease

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on Tuesday announced $112 million in grants aimed at helping doctors at smaller practices fight heart disease, the leading cause of death in the U.S. The grants will be used to create regional groups of experts who will provide assistance to smaller practices, which tend to have fewer resources than large organizations. (Sullivan, 5/26)

NPR: Delayed Umbilical Cord Clamping May Benefit Children Years Later

A couple of extra minutes attached to the umbilical cord at birth may translate into a small boost in neurodevelopment several years later, a study suggests. Children whose cords were cut more than three minutes after birth had slightly higher social skills and fine motor skills than those whose cords were cut within 10 seconds. The results showed no differences in IQ. (Haelle, 5/26)

USA Today: Waiting A Few Minutes To Cut Umbilical Cord Helps Baby

Cutting the cord is a momentous event in a baby's life. For nine months, the developing fetus is attached to its mother by the umbilical cord. Then, moments after birth, that cord is severed. Now, research suggests there may be benefits to keeping mom and baby attached a few minutes longer. (Weintraub, 5/26)

Kaiser Health News: Tanning Beds And College Campuses – A Public Health Concern

Tanning salons are already under siege – they got taxed by the health law, are newly regulated by the federal government and states, and have become dermatologists’ favorite bad guy. But some policymakers say that’s not enough. Pointing to rising skin cancer rates and increased marketing toward young people, these public health advocates want new national restrictions regarding who can get their indoor tan on. “It’s time we started treating [tanning beds] just like they are cigarettes. They are carcinogen delivery systems,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., at a May 20 Capitol Hill briefing on the dangers of indoor tanning. “We do not allow our children to buy cigarettes, yet the tanning industry continues to target adolescent girls. And this is not unlike what we found with the tobacco industry.” (Gillespie, 5/27)

Reuters: Doctors' Lapse May Explain Some Minority Lag In Colon Cancer Screens

Racial minorities may be more likely to forego colon cancer screening than whites because their healthcare providers don’t recommend the potentially life-saving tests, a new study in California suggests. (Neumann, 5/26)

The Associated Press: Peeking Into Healthy Brains To See If Alzheimer's Is Brewing

Sticky plaque gets the most attention, but now healthy seniors at risk of Alzheimer’s are letting scientists peek into their brains to see if another culprit is lurking. No one knows what actually causes Alzheimer’s, but the suspects are its two hallmarks — the gunky amyloid in those brain plaques or tangles of a protein named tau that clog dying brain cells. New imaging can spot those tangles in living brains, providing a chance to finally better understand what triggers dementia. (Neergaard, 5/25)

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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