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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Sep 29 2022

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Who Should Get The Bivalent Booster?; It's Possible To Eradicate Human Rabies Deaths

Editorial writers weigh in on these public health topics.

Bloomberg: The New Covid Booster: If You Had Omicron, Do You Really Need It? 

The new US Covid booster campaign needs a dose of clarity about its goals and limitations. The latest “bivalent” vaccine — retooled to protect against the currently circulating BA.5 variant — will benefit some more than others. (Faye Flam, 9/28)

Stat: Eliminating Rabies With Stronger Human-Animal Health Policies 

The Covid-19 pandemic set back many of the global health goals for 2030. One of the most feasible to recover is the target of eliminating human deaths from rabies, thanks to an effective, inexpensive vaccine for dogs. (Terence Scott, 9/29)

Dallas Morning News: Child Suicide In Texas Is Alarming. We Should Address This Issue Locally

September, which is National Suicide Awareness Month, is coming to an end, but it has been a time to highlight a national emergency with local ramifications: the growing suicide rate in children. (Stacy Wilson, 9/29)

The New York Times: Why Drug Epidemics End 

Despite rising overdose deaths, there’s some important good news regarding opioid misuse. Rates of nonmedical use by high school seniors have fallen by nearly 83 percent since 2002, when 14 percent reported having ever tried using prescription pain pills to get high. By 2021, that proportion was down to just 2 percent. Heroin use also shows a precipitous drop, with only 0.4 percent of 12th graders reporting trying it as of 2021. (Maia Szalavitz, 9/29)

The Washington Post: We Have A Way To End The Opioid Epidemic, But Not The Will 

What fueled the epidemic is well known: pharmaceutical companies’ greed, abetted by the politicians and lobbyists they paid to whittle away regulatory guardrails. That, plus the persistence of a decades-old “war on drugs” mind-set that handles addicted people like criminals instead of human beings with a treatable medical condition. (Beth Macy, 9/28)

Stat: Health Systems: Value Black Lives By Helping Close The Racial Wealth Gap

Institutional declarations of support for Black lives were ubiquitous in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd. The radical, transformative change demanded by hundreds of thousands of protestors across the country, however, has not been realized. Health systems can and must help move the country in that direction. (George Dalembert, Atheendar Venkataramani and Eugenia C. South, 9/29)

The CT Mirror: Airbags: Like Being In The Ring With George Forman

We bless the advent of airbags. But few people realize that these safety devices, while ultimately saving lives, may cause complex injuries themselves. (Patricia A. Richard, MD, DMD, 9/29)

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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