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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Jan 26 2017

Full Issue

Lawmakers Seek To Relax Gun Restrictions For Those Deemed Mentally Impaired

The rule, issued in December in response to the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, applies to recipients of disability insurance and supplemental security income who require a representative to manage their benefits because of a disabling mental disorder, ranging from anxiety to schizophrenia. In other public health news, a common test for herpes is leading to false diagnoses, a study looks at what factors may contribute to early menopause, officials warn of a possible outbreak of the bird flu and the National Hockey League turns a blind eye to chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE.

USA Today: Congress To Challenge Gun Ban For Some Mentally Impaired

As part of an effort to roll back Obama-era regulations, Congress is expected to take up legislation as early as next week that would prevent the government from declaring some Social Security recipients unfit to own guns after they’ve been deemed mentally incapable of managing their financial affairs. (Gaudiano, 1/25)

Stat: Flawed Herpes Testing Leads To False Positives, And Needless Suffering

The kind of test used to diagnose Lauren, an IgM test, has long been rejected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention but is still used by some clinicians. Meanwhile, the CDC and the US Preventive Services Task Force concur that the most widely available herpes test, called HerpeSelect, should not be used to screen asymptomatic people because of its high risk of false positives: Up to 1 in 2 positive tests could be false, according to the USPSTF’s most recent guidelines. That high failure rate isn’t, however, always communicated to patients. Online forums abound with stories like Lauren’s, of people who request herpes tests alongside those of other STDs and are shellshocked by the results. (Wessel, 1/26)

NPR: Women Who Menstruate Before Age 11 At Higher Risk Of Premature Menopause

Women who get their first period when they were 11 or younger are more likely to hit menopause before the age of 40, a study finds. And women with early menstruation who had no children were even more likely to have premature menopause. (Boddy, 1/25)

The New York Times: W.H.O. Warns Of Worrisome Bird Flu In China

After a spate of deaths from bird flu among patients in China, the World Health Organization has warned all countries to watch for outbreaks in poultry flocks and to promptly report any human cases. Several strains of avian flu are spreading in Europe and Asia this winter, but the most worrisome at present is an H7N9 strain that has circulated in China every winter since 2013. (McNeil, 1/25)

USA Today: Skeptical Of CTE Link, NHL Won't Fund Concussion Research

The NFL has been criticized both for the amount of money it has donated for head trauma research and trying to manipulate how it is spent. But at least it has donated.The NHL has not given money to any of the four centers leading research into neurodegenerative diseases, specifically the question of why so many football and hockey players develop chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), USA TODAY Sports has found. (Armour, 1/25)

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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