Viewpoints: GOP’s Unpopular Efforts To Repeal Health Law Are Backfiring With Voters; Teen Vaping Is A Looming Public Health Catastrophe
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Editorial pages focus on these and other health issues.
Each week, KHN compiles a selection of recently released health policy studies and briefs.
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The legislation was one of several bills California Gov. Jerry Brown (D) addressed this week. Brown also signed into law a measure that requires restaurants to offer water or milk as the default drink for children's meals, but vetoed a statewide change to school start times.
“When it comes to reforming procedures, this is not a one-off thing that you can do once and take a vacation,” said Gigi Gronvall, a biosecurity expert at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. In other public health news: yoga and meditation, Alzheimer's, germs, concussions, and food safety.
Since last year's hurricane, The National Science Foundation has funded a small set of water studies, finding possible lead contamination significant enough to warrant further investigation. News on water safety comes out of Detroit, also.
Researchers are more and more trying to break taboo's on unique treatments for military veterans with mental health disorders. A new study on how an octopus given Ecstasy acts offers clues about how the drug can be used in broader settings.
The technique might someday help millions of people suffering from infertility because of cancer treatments or other reasons, but is also ethically controversial because it involves human intervention in creating life.
Part of the problem is that the real-life application of the models is far too complicated to analyze. But experts say if the government overhauls how models are developed they might save money.
Funds for the Children's Health Insurance Program are technically outside the jurisdiction of the Appropriations Committees and don't count against annual discretionary caps, and the pool of "contingency money" dedicated to the program has been tapped sparingly. Medicaid news comes out of Alabama and Maine, as well.
Joe Grogan, OMB's associate director for health programs, didn't specify what lawmakers can do before year's end to stem rising costs, but one bill with bipartisan support helps generic companies obtain samples of brand drugs as part of the development process. News on the industry also spotlights a new lobbying heavyweight for PBM and Medicaid pharmaceutical spending.
Overdose deaths are on a sharp upward trajectory, but the roles different drugs play in that overarching epidemic has been simplified to focus on opioids. A new study reveals the depth of the crisis in America over the past four decades, and offers a grim picture of the country's future. In other drug-related news: hospitals and addiction treatment; the Trump administration's efforts to curb the epidemic; information exchanges; and more.
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and its officials hold an equity stake in the artificial intelligence startup to which the center has granted exclusive rights to use its vast archives. The connections raised some eyebrows so soon after the resignation of the center's chief medical officer over his failure to disclose financial conflicts.
In February, Congress passed a provision forcing drug manufacturers to pay more for drugs used by Medicare beneficiaries. The industry has been railing about the change ever since, and the bipartisan opioid package might be lawmakers' chance to hand pharma a big win.
HHS Secretary Alex Azar became the public face of the crisis because his agency is responsible for housing the migrant children that were separated from their parents. The Washington Post looks at how he handled the pressure. Meanwhile, Azar plans to shift millions from public health programs to help pay to house detained migrant children.
Christine Blasey Ford originally said she wouldn't testify about her allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh without an FBI investigation. While that's still her preference, she said that she's willing to come in next week "on terms that are fair." Meanwhile, psychological experts dig into the complexities of memory.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
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Each week, KHN's Shefali Luthra finds interesting reads from around the Web.
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