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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Dec 10 2018

Full Issue

Perspectives: Until Fentanyl Flow From China Ceases, Deaths Will Mount; Enforce Laws To Help Kids In Foster Care

Opinion writers weigh in on issues stemming from the opioid crisis.

USA Today: China's Deadliest Export: Fentanyl Killing Nearly 80 Americans A Day

Forget tariffs. Forget all the computers, toys and textiles that the Chinese export to America. China’s most consequential export here is fentanyl, the illicit drug killing people in this country at the rate of nearly 80 a day.Fentanyl use in the USA has surged, pushing its death toll last year to 28,466  — nine times higher than in 2013 and a rise so steep that it has helped drive down the nation's life expectancy.  And where is this illicit fentanyl originating? About 80 percent of the pure fentanyl seized by U.S. authorities last fiscal year arrived from China, often through the mail. (12/9)

USA Today: China And America Should Avoid Blaming Each Other On Fentanyl

(Beijing) Global Times: “The crackdown against smuggling and drug use is a long-term global challenge, and there needs to be strengthened coordination and joint responses from various countries, rather than one-sided accusations. China and the U.S. have already had a lot of fruitful cooperation in the fight against drugs. In order to maintain this momentum, the two sides should avoid blaming each other in the process of dealing with fentanyl abuse. It is an exaggeration for the United States to claim that the fentanyl in the U.S. mainly comes from China. Moreover, such claims will only have a negative impact on the active cooperation between the two countries.” (Li Haidong, 12/9)

The Wall Street Journal: The White House Can Help Foster Kids

The opioid crisis has caused a spike in the need for adoption and foster care. More than 20 years ago, the crack epidemic brought on a similar crisis. The foster-care rolls surpassed half a million, and kids were spending years in the system. In 1996 President Clinton issued a directive to the Department of Health and Human Services to find ways of escaping the foster-care “trap” that put children in “limbo” without permanent homes. (Naomi Schaefer Riley, 12/9)

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: CEO Who Was A Foster Child Says We Must Do More To Help Foster Kids.

With a growing number of children entering foster care, we have an education crisis emerging for this special population of students who are not learning because of the emotional trauma they endured growing up in dysfunctional families. That means as so many foster kids fail to get a high school education, many will repeat the cycle of having children in foster care. (Maureen Downey, 12/9)

The Hill: Let’s Try Cures, Not Criminalization, For The Opioid Epidemic

With each prison sentence, America normalizes the ways incarceration functions as an abyss — a socioeconomic black hole — that swallows public funding, the dignity of substance-dependent individuals, and the moral authority of the nation. The thick overcast of failure in the war on drugs reveals the inability to incarcerate our way out of the opioid crisis. We can elect to spend public money on health care that creates new possibilities for Americans, or incarceration that forecloses futures for people burdened by a curable illness. (Willie D. Francois, 12/9)

Stat: Policymakers Must Help Enforce Mental Health Parity Laws

During the midterm election, voters sent several clear messages. Two in the health sphere were that they want equitable, affordable, and comprehensive health care coverage; and they want solutions to address the opioid epidemic. The newly constituted Congress has a tool with vast — and sadly untapped — potential to address both issues: the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, also known as the Parity Act. (Patrice A. Harris and Ellen Weber, 12/10)

Arizona Republic: Opioid Epidemic Is Improving In Arizona Because Government Stepped In

After all, it’s the job of business to be self-interested, make money and satisfy the stockholders. Nothing wrong with that. It’s free enterprise and it delivers goods and services we all use. But it’s the job of government to make sure the best interests of business don’t hurt the people. The opioid crisis is a life-and-death example of why that matters. (Linda Valdez, 12/9)

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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