- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Bill of the Month: A Hospital Charged $722.50 to Push Medicine Through an IV. Twice.
- Covid’s Lingering Effects Can Put the Brakes on Elective Surgeries
- Doctors’ Lobby Scores ‘Major Victory’ on Bill to Hold Physicians Accountable
- Children and Covid: Journalists Explore Grief and Vaccine Side Effects
- Political Cartoon: 'Time of Your Life'
- Vaccines 3
- MRNA Vaccines May Protect For Years — With One Big Caveat, Study Finds
- Will FDA Speed Up Full Approval Process For Covid Vaccines?
- Teens Sneaking Behind Parents' Backs To Get Covid Vaccine
- Covid-19 3
- Thanks To Delta, WHO Says Masks Still Needed Even For Vaccinated People
- What To Know About Future Path Of Delta Variant -- And Delta Plus
- Study Finds Lost Sense Of Smell, Taste Could Last A Year After Covid
- Administration News 2
- Infrastructure Deal 'Waters Have Been Calmed'; Unlinked From Spending Bill
- 'Heartbreaking Stories': Biden Administration Urged To Tackle Medical Debt
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Bill of the Month: A Hospital Charged $722.50 to Push Medicine Through an IV. Twice.
A college student never got an answer for what caused her intense pain, but she did get a bill that totaled $18,736 for an ER visit. She and her mom, a nurse practitioner, fought to understand all the charges. (Rae Ellen Bichell, )
Covid’s Lingering Effects Can Put the Brakes on Elective Surgeries
Even after recovering from covid, many patients experience respiratory or other problems and, since this effect of the virus is so unpredictable, medical experts aren't sure when it is safe to undergo elective surgery. But medical experts are setting up guidelines. (Michelle Andrews, )
Doctors’ Lobby Scores ‘Major Victory’ on Bill to Hold Physicians Accountable
Patients and some lawmakers have long blasted the Medical Board of California for failing to discipline negligent or abusive physicians. But the politically powerful California Medical Association, which represents doctors, has mobilized against the latest attempt to give the board more money and power to investigate complaints. (Samantha Young, )
Children and Covid: Journalists Explore Grief and Vaccine Side Effects
KHN and California Healthline staff made the rounds on national and local media this week to discuss their stories. Here’s a collection of their appearances. ( )
Political Cartoon: 'Time of Your Life'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Time of Your Life'" by Bob and Tom Thaves.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
FOLLOW SCIENCE; LIVE LONGER
Life expectancy:
We all can stop the decline —
please trust the science
- Vijay Manghirmalani
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
MRNA Vaccines May Protect For Years — With One Big Caveat, Study Finds
Covid boosters might not be needed after all — as long as the virus and its variants do not evolve much beyond their current forms, which is not guaranteed.
The New York Times:
A Study Finds That The Pfizer And Moderna Vaccines Could Offer Protection For Years
The vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna set off a persistent immune reaction in the body that may protect against the coronavirus for years, scientists reported on Monday. The findings add to growing evidence that most people immunized with the mRNA vaccines may not need boosters, so long as the virus and its variants do not evolve much beyond their current forms — which is not guaranteed. People who recovered from Covid-19 before being vaccinated may not need boosters even if the virus does make a significant transformation. (6/28)
In other covid vaccine research —
CIDRAP:
One COVID Vaccine Dose Yields Good Protection In Elderly, 2 Studies Find
As COVID-19 vaccines were first being approved for emergency use in the United Kingdom, the UK Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation decided to extend the interval before the second dose from 4 to 12 weeks to maximize the amount of people who could be vaccinated. This week, two Lancet Infectious Diseases studies estimated vaccine effectiveness (VE) for the elderly after receiving just one dose. (McLernon, 6/25)
USA Today:
Immunocompromised Must Be Cautious, COVID Vaccines Not As Protective
Dr. Robert Montgomery had several reasons for getting a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as he could. As a transplant surgeon at a busy New York hospital, his patients were among the most vulnerable to the disease. The pandemic has exacted a terrible toll on transplant recipients. About 20% of those infected died – almost 2,000 in New York City alone last year compared to just one or two transplant patient deaths in a typical flu season, Montgomery said.He also is a transplant patient himself. The heart beating inside his 61-year-old chest is not the one he was born with. (Weintraub, 6/27)
Also —
Stat:
Perna Set To Retire From Warp Speed Later This Summer
Gus Perna, the four-star Army general responsible for coordinating the U.S. coronavirus vaccine response, is set to retire this summer, according to four current and former Health and Human Services officials. A number of Perna’s top deputies have also left the initiative in recent weeks, including Doug Meyer, the operation’s former chief of operations, Marion Whicker, the former deputy chief of supply, production and distribution, and Eric Shirley, the operation’s former chief of staff, according to STAT’s review of the officials’ LinkedIn profiles. (Florko, 6/25)
Salon:
Scientists Hope MRNA Vaccine Technology Could Be Used To Cure Cancer And HIV
One of the unexpected ripple effects of the global pandemic is how it catalyzed medical breakthroughs. Most prominently, the same technology used in SARS-CoV-2 vaccines has the potential to improve treatments for diseases like cancer and HIV. Earlier this June, President Biden's medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci noted that the extraordinary success of the messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) COVID-19 vaccines had given new hope to HIV vaccinologists. In fact, researchers across multiple disciplines have renewed enthusiasm based on the techniques advanced during the pandemic. Such a vaccine would be an astonishing achievement in vaccinating against a retrovirus, HIV, that has eluded scientists for decades. (Malik, 6/27)
KHN:
Children And Covid: Journalists Explore Grief And Vaccine Side Effects
KHN senior correspondent JoNel Aleccia discussed grief among the estimated 46,000 children in the U.S. who lost a parent to covid-19 on NBC News NOW on Tuesday. ... KHN senior correspondent Sarah Varney discussed one family’s reckoning with racism after a police shooting on NPR/WBUR’s “Here & Now” on Monday. ... California Healthline editor Arthur Allen discussed children and the covid vaccine on KGO-810’s “The Chip Franklin Show” on Monday. (6/26)
Will FDA Speed Up Full Approval Process For Covid Vaccines?
Some public health officials and politicians are calling on the Food and Drug Administration to step up their review, arguing that it would help some hesitant Americans to get vaccinated.
The Hill:
Calls Rise For FDA To Fully Approve COVID-19 Vaccines
Calls are rising from some experts for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to move faster to fully approve the COVID-19 vaccines, in what could be a key step to address vaccine hesitancy. As the vaccination rate lags, with the country on pace to miss President Biden’s goal of vaccinating 70 percent of adults by July 4, polling indicates full approval could help convince some of the remaining unvaccinated people to get the shots. (Sullivan, 6/27)
CBS News:
Arkansas Governor Says Final FDA Approval Of COVID-19 Vaccine Would Help Fight Hesitancy
Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson said Sunday he believes final, non-emergency use approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of coronavirus vaccines would help combat hesitancy among Arkansas residents to get their shots. "Whenever they see emergency use authorization, then they say, well, they haven't made a final approval, they haven't got all the research completed that is needed on there. They want to do more study. And so it was approved as emergency use," Hutchinson, a Republican, said in an interview on "Face the Nation." "And so for that reason, you can't mandate it. We don't mandate it in Arkansas. We have to rely upon the education." (Quinn, 6/27)
National Geographic:
How Full FDA Approval Could Pave The Way For COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates
In reality, vaccines that have been given an EUA have gone through a rigorous examination by the FDA that is very similar to its full approval process. In the case of the authorized COVID-19 vaccines, the FDA evaluated data from clinical trials that included tens of thousands of study participants, as well as the companies’ manufacturing plans to ensure the quality and consistency of the vaccines. An EUA is only given after the FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee—15 scientists with expertise in immunology, epidemiology, vaccine safety, and more—determines the “known and potential benefits outweigh the known and potential risks of the vaccine,” according to the FDA. (Kramer, 6/11)
Teens Sneaking Behind Parents' Backs To Get Covid Vaccine
Many are stuck in a tug of war between one parent who says yes and the other who says no. Increasingly, adolescents are seeking ways to be vaccinated without their parents’ consent.
The New York Times:
As Parents Forbid Covid Shots, Defiant Teenagers Seek Ways To Get Them
Teenagers keep all sorts of secrets from their parents. Drinking. Sex. Lousy grades. But the secret that Elizabeth, 17, a rising high-school senior, keeps from hers is new to the buffet of adolescent misdeeds. She doesn’t want her parents to know that she is vaccinated against Covid-19. Her divorced parents have equal say over her health care. Although her mother strongly favors the vaccine, her father angrily opposes it and has threatened to sue her mother if Elizabeth gets the shot. Elizabeth is keeping her secret not only from her father, but also her mother, so her mom can have plausible deniability. (Hoffman, 6/26)
AP:
As Variant Rises, Vaccine Plan Targets ‘Movable Middle’
Thrown off-stride to reach its COVID-19 vaccination goal, the Biden administration is sending A-list officials across the country, devising ads for niche markets and enlisting community organizers to persuade unvaccinated people to get a shot. The strategy has the trappings of a political campaign, complete with data crunching to identify groups that can be won over. But the message is about public health, not ideology. The focus is a group health officials term the “movable middle” — some 55 million unvaccinated adults seen as persuadable, many of them under 30. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 6/27)
Politico:
Arkansas Governor Trying To Reverse His State's Trends On Vaccination
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Sunday that hospitalizations are up among those who are unvaccinated and that vaccinations have slowed, a worrying trend among several states across the country. Hutchinson said on CBS News’ “Face the Nation” that “people started feeling comfortable” after vaccines were first doled out. “People saw the cases of hospitalizations go down. And so, the urgency of getting the vaccine slowed down,” he said. (Bice, 6/27)
Las Vegas Review-Journal:
Rewards Haven’t Provided Big Boost For Nevada COVID-19 Vaccinations
Sisolak announced a state raffle on June 17 in which vaccinated residents could win a total of $5 million in prizes, including college tuition and a $1 million grand prize. The rewards were intended to boost the state’s declining numbers of new vaccinations. Brian Labus, an assistant professor of epidemiology and biostasticis at UNLV’s School of Public Health, said the offer didn’t immediately result in big gains. “There wasn’t a giant spike in people vaccinated the next day,” he said when asked to review vaccination data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Through Friday, the seven-day daily average of first doses administered also appeared to continue its downward trend. (Hynes, 6/27)
CNBC:
Covid Vaccines Work But More People Need To Get The Shots: U.S. Doctor
Vaccines are working against Covid-19, including the highly contagious delta variant — but the challenge is in getting enough people inoculated, according to a professor of preventive medicine at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. “Leaving it in the refrigerator doesn’t help, that won’t prevent disease. You have got to move that vaccine into arms,” William Schaffner said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Monday. (Choudhury, 6/28)
In other news about the vaccine rollout —
San Francisco Chronicle:
Vaccination Clinic Serves Local Deaf Community As Alameda County Shifts From Mass Sites
Speaking in sign language, Jacqueline Augustine said her right arm hurt after she received her first dose of the coronavirus vaccine on Saturday. Augustine received the shot at a small pop-up clinic inside the Deaf Counseling Advocacy and Referral Agency in San Leandro. The clinic was designed to attract people from the deaf and hearing-impaired community as well as anyone else in the area who still needs a vaccination. “My family was so worried about me,” said Augustine, who was going to get a shot in March but developed a skin infection that kept her housebound for months. “My family was encouraging me. My doctor was, too. He said it’s time.” (Cabanatuan, 6/26)
Axios:
Black People Lag In COVID Vaccinations Even In Predominantly Black Areas
Black people in the city of Philadelphia, the nation's largest predominantly Black county, are lagging far behind white people when it comes to COVID-19 vaccinations, the Washington Post reports. It's a reflection of larger racial disparities in vaccination rates across the United States. "Coronavirus immunizations are the latest iteration of the pandemic’s unequal burden," the Post writes. (Chen, 6/27)
Politico:
Rush To Close Vaccination Gap For Hispanics
Troves of misinformation, language barriers and fears around immigration enforcement are hampering efforts to vaccinate Hispanic communities against Covid-19, challenging the Biden administration’s push to crush the coronavirus as a dangerous new variant quickly spreads. Much of the nationwide attention on the slowing vaccination campaign has focused on hard-line resisters, predominately in Republican-led states in the South and Mountain West. But Hispanic communities, even as they’re among the most eager to receive the shots, are still facing barriers to vaccination that could leave them vulnerable to the virus this summer, according to interviews with nearly two dozen people working on vaccination efforts, including state officials and community groups. (Roubein and Goldberg, 6/27)
Thanks To Delta, WHO Says Masks Still Needed Even For Vaccinated People
Noting that vaccines alone aren't enough to stop community transmission of all variants of covid, the World Health Organization stressed the importance of sticking with masks. Separately, senators are pressing the CDC and TSA on when they'll update masking rules.
Fox News:
WHO Recommends Masks -- Even For Vaccinated People -- Because Of Delta Variant
As the highly contagious delta variant of the coronavirus gained traction around the world, the World Health Organization urged vaccinated people to continue to wear masks and social distance, according to reports. "Vaccine alone won’t stop community transmission," Dr. Mariangela Simao, WHO’s assistant director-general for access to medicines and health products, said during a briefing in Geneva, according to CNBC. "People need to continue to use masks consistently, be in ventilated spaces, hand hygiene ... the physical distance, avoid crowding. This still continues to be extremely important, even if you’re vaccinated when you have a community transmission ongoing." (Stimson, 6/27)
CNBC:
WHO Urges Fully Vaccinated People To Continue To Wear Masks As Delta Covid Variant Spreads
The World Health Organization on Friday urged fully vaccinated people to continue to wear masks, social distance and practice other Covid-19 pandemic safety measures as the highly contagious delta variant spreads rapidly across the globe. “People cannot feel safe just because they had the two doses. They still need to protect themselves,” Dr. Mariangela Simao, WHO assistant director-general for access to medicines and health products, said during a news briefing from the agency’s Geneva headquarters. (Lovelace Jr., 6/25)
Also —
The Hill:
Bipartisan Senators Ask CDC, TSA When They Will Update Mask Guidance For Travelers
A bipartisan group of senators has asked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Transportation Security Administration (TSA) when they will update their mask guidance for travelers. In a letter, Sens. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), and Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) requested information about the agency’s process for updating the mask guidelines for vaccinated people, adding that they want answers by July 12. (Oshin, 6/27)
Roll Call:
3 House Republicans Fined For Not Wearing Mask On Floor
Three House Republicans each must pay $500 fines imposed by the sergeant-at-arms for being warned and then failing to wear a mask on the House floor. Reps. Brian Mast of Florida, Beth Van Duyne of Texas and Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa were all fined, according to an announcement released on Friday by the House Ethics Committee. (Marquette, 6/25)
North Carolina Health News:
Masks For Some: Gyms Navigate Murky Vaccine Terrain
For more than a year now, Katie Burke’s work life has been a month-to-month series of twists and shimmies. A co-owner of the Zumba studio Triangle Dance 4 Life, Burke has had to make more than a few pivots in how she taught her dance classes since coronavirus took over. The initial change came all at once. Gov. Roy Cooper’s stay-at-home orders shuttered gyms almost right away in spring 2020. Later, in the summer, as North Carolinians came to terms with capacity restrictions at stores, takeout-only restaurants and the mask mandate, hundreds of gym owners across the state had to find a way to stay afloat and comply with a seemingly endless stream of statewide orders. (Engel-Smith, 6/28)
What To Know About Future Path Of Delta Variant -- And Delta Plus
As delta-driven cases quickly rise across the globe -- including pockets of the U.S. -- alarmed public health experts weigh in on the fallout for vaccine boosters, infection rates and renewed restrictions. The common message of them all: your best shot at staying safe is to get vaccinated now.
Reuters:
Booster May Be Needed For J&J Shot As Delta Variant Spreads, Some Experts Already Taking Them
Infectious disease experts are weighing the need for booster shots of the Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna mRNA-based vaccines for Americans who received Johnson & Johnson's (JNJ.N) one-dose vaccine due to the increasing prevalence of the more contagious Delta coronavirus variant. A few say they have already done so themselves, even without published data on whether combining two different vaccines is safe and effective or backing from U.S. health regulators. Canada and some European countries are already allowing people to get two different COVID-19 shots. (Erman, 6/27)
Los Angeles Times:
Highly Contagious Delta Coronavirus Variant Spreading Fast In California
The Delta coronavirus variant is now the third-most common in California, new data show, underscoring the danger of the highly contagious strain to people who have not been vaccinated against COVID-19. The variant makes up 14.5% of California coronavirus cases analyzed so far in June, up from 4.7% in May, when it was the fourth-most identified variant in California, according to data released by the California Department of Public Health. (Lin II, Money and Wigglesworth, 6/27)
CNN:
These Are The Pockets Of The US Most At Risk As The Delta Covid-19 Variant Spreads, Expert Says
The Delta variant, a strain of Covid-19 believed to be more transmissible and dangerous than others, is likely to break out in some US communities, a health expert told CBS's Face the Nation. "It's not going to be as pervasive," Dr. Scott Gottlieb, former commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, told the station Sunday. "It's going to hyper-regionalized. There's certain pockets of the country where you're going to have very dense outbreaks." Those pockets will be ones with low vaccination rates and low rates of prior infection, Gottlieb said, like in many rural and southern communities. (Holcombe, 6/28)
The Wall Street Journal:
How Mutations Have Shaped The Covid-19 Pandemic
Based on a recent government projection, the Delta variant of the Covid-19 virus could become the dominant type of this coronavirus in the U.S. within a month, making it one of most aggressive variants to take hold in the country. Delta is the latest in a series of variants that have spread throughout the U.S. Like all viruses, coronaviruses mutate as they reproduce. Some of these genetic changes make them better at infecting human cells or evading our immune defenses. As newer, better-adapted variants emerge, they push aside earlier versions of the virus. Here is a look at how this process has played out across the U.S. since the start of the pandemic. (Ulick, 6/27)
In related news from around the globe —
CNBC:
The Covid Delta Variant Has ‘Exploded’ In The UK — And It Could Be A Blueprint For The U.S.
Since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, the U.S. has been keeping a close eye on the U.K. From its initial response to Covid-19 (questioned by many), to its much-praised immunization program and world-class research, all have helped inform how the U.S. — which faced its first major Covid outbreak after Britain — has reacted. (Ellyatt, 6/28)
CNBC:
Delta Covid Variant Has A New Mutation Called ‘Delta Plus’: Here’s What You Need To Know
The “delta variant” has come to dominate headlines, having been discovered in India where it provoked an extreme surge in Covid-19 cases before spreading around the world. But now a mutation of that variant has emerged, called “delta plus,” which is starting to worry global experts. (Ellyatt, 6/24)
Study Finds Lost Sense Of Smell, Taste Could Last A Year After Covid
In other news, elective surgeries are being delayed as the after-effects of covid have an impact on patients; questions are asked of a probe into covid deaths at a Massachusetts veterans home; and Utah sees a spike in covid cases and deaths.
USA Today:
COVID: Loss Of Taste And Smell Could Last Up To A Year, Study Says
COVID-19 survivors who lost their sense of taste and smell may have to wait up to a year to fully recover, a new study found. Researchers followed 97 COVID-19 patients who lost their sense of taste and smell for an entire year and asked them to complete a survey every four months, according to the study published Thursday in JAMA Network Open.Out of 97 patients, 51 of them also were asked to undergo objective testing to corroborate the self-reported surveys. At eight months, 49 out of the 51 patients had fully recovered their sense of taste and smell. (Rodriguez and Rice, 6/25)
KHN:
Covid’s Lingering Effects Can Put The Brakes On Elective Surgeries
The week before Brian Colvin was scheduled for shoulder surgery in November, he tested positive for covid-19. What he thought at first was a head cold had morphed into shortness of breath and chest congestion coupled with profound fatigue and loss of balance. Now, seven months have passed and Colvin, 44, is still waiting to feel well enough for surgery. His surgeon is concerned about risking anesthesia with his ongoing respiratory problems, while Colvin worries he’ll lose his balance and fall on his shoulder before it heals. (Andrews, 6/28)
In other news about the spread of the coronavirus —
The New York Times:
Prisoners Sent Home Because Of Covid May Have To Go Back
In the final days of the Trump administration, the Justice Department issued a memo saying inmates whose sentences lasted beyond the “pandemic emergency period” would have to go back to prison. But some lawmakers and criminal justice advocates are urging President Biden to revoke the rule, use his executive power to keep them on home confinement or commute their sentences entirely, arguing that the pandemic offers a glimpse into a different type of punitive system in America, one that relies far less on incarceration. (Kanno-Youngs and Turcotte, 6/27)
The Boston Globe:
Holyoke Soldiers’ Home COVID-19 Probe Raises Questions About Independence
When 76 veterans died last spring of COVID-19 in the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home, the need to get to the bottom of what happened and why, and who was to blame, could hardly have been more clear. So when Governor Charlie Baker tapped a private attorney to conduct an independent investigation, it seemed like the moment for one of those no-stone-unturned independent probes that have made history here. But a Boston Globe Spotlight Team review of Baker’s arrangement with former prosecutor Mark Pearlstein — including communications between the governor’s office and Pearlstein — raises troubling new questions about whether the investigation was truly independent. The legal contract between the Office of the Governor and Pearlstein’s law firm created an explicit attorney-client relationship, which could be used to keep their communications and other materials private and suggested Pearlstein was working for Baker, not the public. (Estes and Ostriker, 6/26)
Salt Lake Tribune:
Utah COVID-19 Cases And Deaths See Summer Spike
A vaccinated person was among the eight deaths caused by COVID-19 reported Sunday by the Utah Department of Health. Of those deaths, seven occurred prior to May 27, and none of the people was hospitalized. This, despite the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 rising to 215 on Sunday, a 14-person jump over Saturday and the highest number of hospitalizations since early March. One of the eight was a “breakthrough case,” which is defined by the UDOH as “someone who has a positive test [more than] 14 days after they have completed the full series of an approved COVID-19 vaccine.” Four fully vaccinated Utahns have now died of COVID-19. (Jag, 6/27)
Infrastructure Deal 'Waters Have Been Calmed'; Unlinked From Spending Bill
After a weekend of negotiations, the White House and senators say that the bipartisan $1.2 trillion infrastructure deal is back on track when the Biden administration backed off comments linking the bill to a larger spending package that would include more health care measures.
The New York Times:
Infrastructure Deal Is Back On Track After Biden’s Assurances
A fragile bipartisan infrastructure deal appeared to be moving forward once again on Sunday, as moderate Republicans said they had been reassured that President Biden would not hold it hostage while Democrats simultaneously work on a larger, partisan economic package. After 48 hours of chaos, the statements by leading Republicans prompted a sigh of relief for the White House, where Mr. Biden and top aides had worked through the weekend to keep the eight-year, $1.2 trillion investment to rebuild the nation’s infrastructure from falling apart. G.O.P. negotiators even suggested that they could now begin drafting the bill and said they believed it would win enough Republican votes to pass the Senate next month. (Fandos, 6/27)
NBC News:
Biden's Pledge To Boost Home Caregiver Funding Excluded From Infrastructure Deal
When Morgan Champion brought her 74-year-old father home to live with her, she had little time to prepare. It was early May when she and her sister had found him emaciated and sitting in a soiled diaper at his memory care facility in Tallahassee, Florida, after the pandemic lockdown finally lifted.“We really felt like dad was in danger,” Champion said. The family needed to get him out as quickly as possible. ... “I want him to have the dignity of being taken care of well,” Champion, 34, said. “It’s definitely been a struggle.” (Khimm, 6/26)
In more news about joblessness and hunger —
Houston Chronicle:
Thousands Of Texans File Lawsuit Against Gov. Abbott For Ending Federal Unemployment Benefits
Thousands of Texans have banded together and hired an attorney to file suit to block Gov. Greg Abbott from ending emergency federal unemployment benefits before the programs expire in September. The plaintiffs, two groups that organized over Facebook with more than 30,000 people, argue that the decision to end the benefits early exceeded the governor’s authority, according to the lawsuit, filed this week in state district court in Austin. The benefits, aimed at providing relief to workers during the pandemic, are scheduled to expire Saturday under Abbott’s order. (Carballo, 6/25)
KQED:
Some Disabled Californians Feel Abandoned By Newsom’s Golden State Stimulus
While California lawmakers automatically sent checks to 1.2 million people who receive SSI, the 1.2 million Californians on SSDI only qualify if they had income from work in 2020. But that’s rare — research shows that fewer than one in five SSDI recipients work during a typical year, often because they are limited by their disabilities or risk losing their benefits if they work too much. Disability advocates say it’s the latest example of the state abandoning some of its most vulnerable residents during the pandemic, after having directed medical health providers to ration COVID-19 care to elderly and less healthy people last spring and deprioritize people with disabilities for vaccines earlier this year — both policies that were reversed after considerable outcry. (Botts, 6/26)
The Wall Street Journal:
Americans Are Leaving Unemployment Rolls More Quickly In States Cutting Off Benefits
The number of unemployment-benefit recipients is falling at a faster rate in Missouri and 21 other states canceling enhanced and extended payments this month, suggesting that ending the aid could push more people to take jobs. Federal pandemic aid bills boosted unemployment payments by $300 a person each week and extended those payments for as long as 18 months, well longer than the typical 26 weeks or less. The benefits are set to expire in early September, but states can opt out before then. (Morath and Barrett, 6/27)
The New York Times:
Where Jobless Benefits Were Cut, Jobs Are Still Hard To Fill
By lunchtime, the representatives from the recruiting agency Express Employment Professionals decided to pack up and leave the job fair in the St. Louis suburb of Maryland Heights. Hardly anyone had shown up. “We were hoping we would see prepandemic levels,” said Courtney Boyle, general manager of Express. After all, Missouri had just cut off federal unemployment benefits. (cohen, 6/27)
The Washington Post:
The New Face Of Hunger: Hispanic, Employed, But Still Struggling To Feed The Family
The new face of hunger in the Washington region is a Hispanic man or woman who struggles to feed their household despite working, according to a new report from the Capital Area Food Bank. The 2021 “Hunger Report” comes a year after the organization released a July 2020 report warning that the coronavirus pandemic could greatly grow the number of food-insecure people in the area. (Swenson, 6/27)
In news about the housing crisis —
The Washington Post:
Housing Crisis Poses Crucial Test For Biden Administration’s Economic Plans
Housing has emerged as one of the most unequal and consequential parts of the economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. Low interest rates, cheap mortgages and bidding wars are fueling a housing boom for wealthier Americans and making homeownership out of reach for many first-time buyers. Meanwhile, housing is a top expense and worry for millions of renters and unemployed workers, and advocates fear a wave of homelessness once the CDC’s final moratorium lifts July 31. (Siegel, 6/27)
San Francisco Chronicle:
Health Care For Undocumented Seniors, $600 Stimulus Checks Coming In Next California Budget
Facing a looming deadline, legislative budget officials said late Friday they had reached a framework for the state budget with Gov. Gavin Newsom, hashing out agreements on homelessness funding, health coverage for undocumented seniors and other lingering policy differences. But the officials, who declined to speak on the record, said some key details remained unsettled, even as the Legislature prepares to pass the $262.2 billion spending plan on Monday, three days before the start of the new fiscal year. (Koseff, 6/26)
Oklahoman:
'Brief, Rare And Nonrecurring': Oklahoma City's Plan To Reduce Homelessness
A 118-page plan to help end homelessness released by the Oklahoma City Mayor's Task Force on Homelessness looks to tackle problems service providers admit are complex. Dan Straughan, executive director of the Homeless Alliance, said one way the plan does this is looking at root causes. "Until you address the issues that contribute to poverty, you're not going to be able to effectively address the issues that contribute to homelessness," Straughan said. (Williams, 6/28)
'Heartbreaking Stories': Biden Administration Urged To Tackle Medical Debt
Democratic Sens. Chris Murphy and Chris Van Hollen is calling on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to help Americans facing aggressive medical debt collection by hospitals. Separately, news outlets report on a charity's big buy of medical debt, hospital tactics and more.
Modern Healthcare:
Senators Urge Biden Admistration To Protect Patients From Harsh Medical Debt Collections
Senate Democrats are calling on federal authorities to take action on aggressive medical debt collection, citing reports about hospitals suing patients over unpaid bills. In a letter to the the Consumer Financial Proection Bureau (CFPB), Democratic Sens. Chris Murphy (Conn.) and Chris Van Hollen (Md.) recommended a series of actions to protect consumers' credit scores, provide patients with more information about financial assistance and coverage options, and give them more time to dispute or resolve debts before they are sent to collections. (Hellman, 6/25)
In other news about medical debt —
The Wall Street Journal:
Medical-Debt Charity To Buy, Wipe Out $278 Million Of Patients’ Hospital Bills
A national charity will for the first time buy medical debt, totaling $278 million, directly from hospitals, a push to speed financial relief to patients, many of whom shouldn’t have been billed at all under the hospitals’ financial-aid policies. RIP Medical Debt, which uses donations to wipe out unpaid medical bills, has reached a deal with nonprofit Ballad Health, a dominant hospital system in Tennessee and Virginia, to buy debt owed by 82,000 low-income patients. Many likely qualified for free care under Ballad’s policy but didn’t get it, executives at Ballad involved in the agreement said. The patients lacked applications, they said. (Evans and Mathews, 6/15)
Becker's Hospital Review:
Medical Debt Grew For Patients By 6.5% In Spring
Credit monitoring site Credit Karma said its members' medical debt grew by 6.5 percent from May 2020 to March 2021, Newsweek reported June 14.Credit Karma said medical debt grew by $2.8 billion among its members, and the number of people facing past-due medical bills rose by 9 percent. (6/14)
Fast Company:
How Hospitals Inflate Bills And Shake Down Patients For Cash
A third of working Americans have medical debt. And about half of that group has defaulted on medical loans. Even for the insured, deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses are going up—while hospitals are inflating bills in a price war with insurance companies. And when people can’t pay, many hospitals sue or send bills to debt collectors. It’s the terrible reality of America’s healthcare, and a new series of data visualizations by Axios, spotted by FlowingData, takes you right inside of it. Built from an analysis of the top 100 hospitals in the United States by Johns Hopkins University, Axios’s charts let you easily sort through the data by tapping on a few tabs to spot some of the worst predatory billing behaviors. “We wanted to make this data feel personal and understandable,” Michelle McGhee, a visual journalist at Axios, wrote in an email to Fast Company. (Wilson, 6/28)
Quartz:
Buying All Of The US’S Medical Debt Would Cost Less Than $3 A Person
Medical debt in the US is higher than ever before. Although Americans generally didn’t have to pay for Covid-19 testing and treatment, other medical expenses didn’t stop during the pandemic, and the high rates of unemployment meant many lost employer-sponsored health insurance, too. According to the most recent estimate, from 2018, there is $81 billion of outstanding medical debt in the US, based on sample credit data from the Consumer Financial Bureau Protection. This value is likely higher after the pandemic, although it’s hard to give an accurate estimate. (Merelli, 6/24)
Becker's Hospital Review:
Northwell Creates New Role: Medical Debt Ombudsman
Northwell Health is creating an independent medical debt ombudsman, the New Hyde Park, N.Y.-based health system said June 15.Northwell said it is the only hospital or health system in the U.S. to have such a role. The medical debt ombudsman will act as an independent reviewer to help patients pay their medical debt and avoid legal action by educating them about the health system's financial assistance options. (Adams, 6/16)
And more about the high cost of health care —
Modern Healthcare:
High Costs, High Deductibles Inspire Consumers To Pay Cash For Drugs
If innovation is the mother of necessity, the market for disrupting the pharmacy industry could be limitless. Attention to the cost of prescription drugs intensified this month when the Food and Drug Administration approved the Alzheimer's disease drug Aduhelm, which manufacturer Biogen has priced at $56,000. But for policymakers, payers and patients, high drug prices are nothing new. Nearly 90% of consumers believe the federal government should negotiate directly with the drugmakers to drive down prices, according to a June poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Respondents across the political spectrum agreed that lowering prescription costs should be a key priority for President Joe Biden's administration. (Tepper, 6/25)
Modern Healthcare:
Molina To Pay ED Staffing Firms $19 Million Over Underpaid Claims
A Texas state court jury on Thursday awarded two emergency department staffing companies more than $19 million in damages from Molina Healthcare of Texas due to underpaid claims. ACS Primary Care Physicians Southwest PA and Emergency Services of Texas will receive $1.5 million in actual damages and $17.5 million in punitive damages. The Houston jury found Molina Healthcare "engaged in unfair or deceptive practices" in paying emergency department claims. The staffing companies' attorney, John Zavitsanos, said this was the first lawsuit that evaluated how ACA plans would have to reimburse for ED claims. ACS and Emergency Services first sued Molina in 2017. (Devereaux, 6/25)
KHN:
A Hospital Charged $722.50 To Push Medicine Through An IV. Twice.
Claire Lang-Ree was in a lab coat taking a college chemistry class remotely in the kitchen of her Colorado Springs, Colorado, home when a profound pain twisted into her lower abdomen. She called her mom, Jen Lang-Ree, a nurse practitioner who worried it was appendicitis and found a nearby hospital in the family’s health insurance network. After a long wait in the emergency room of Penrose Hospital, Claire received morphine and an anti-nausea medication delivered through an IV. She also underwent a CT scan of the abdomen and a series of tests. (Bichell, 6/28)
KHN:
Doctors’ Lobby Scores ‘Major Victory’ On Bill To Hold Physicians Accountable
The board that licenses and disciplines doctors in California is failing to hold bad actors accountable, endangering patients in the process. That’s the verdict of state lawmakers and patient advocates who have been working for years to reform the Medical Board of California. But an attempt this year to give the board more money and power to investigate complaints of fraud, gross negligence, sexual misconduct and other misbehavior is under attack from one of the most politically potent forces in California’s Capitol: doctors themselves. And so far, it seems, the doctors are winning. (Young, 6/28)
CMS Nixes Medicaid Work Requirements In Arizona, Indiana
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services alerted both states on Friday that the agency is rescinding previous approval by the Trump administration to add work or job training rules for some Medicaid beneficiaries. In related news, Georgia is also delaying its plans to institute such requirements.
Modern Healthcare:
Medicaid Work Rules In Arizona, Indiana Scrapped By CMS
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services pulled the plug on Arizona's and Indiana's plans to require some Medicaid beneficiaries to work, attend job training or participate in other activities to keep their health coverage, according to letters the federal agency sent the two states Friday. The waivers President Donald Trump's administration approved were unlikely to promote the objectives of Medicaid, which federal courts have ruled is to provide health insurance, CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure wrote in the letters. The pandemic also presents challenges to the Medicaid population that make work requirements especially burdensome, she wrote. At this time, beneficiaries may lack access to economic opportunities, transportation and affordable childcare as the public health emergency gradually winds down. Imposing a work requirement under these circumstances could lead to unfair benefit losses, she wrote. (Brady, 6/25)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Georgia Delays Medicaid Expansion After Pushback From Washington
Georgia will delay the rollout of its limited Medicaid expansion, originally planned for July 1, until at least August 1, according to a letter the state Department of Community Health sent to Washington dated Thursday. The delay comes after the plan has come under scrutiny by the Biden Administration because of the state’s requirements that beneficiaries either work or attend school or engage in other qualifying activities. In several other states, the administration has already revoked Medicaid work requirements, citing the pandemic and economic environment and saying such rules present barriers to those lacking access to transportation or child care, among other issues. (Hart, 6/26)
In other news from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services —
Modern Healthcare:
CMS Doesn't Know If Hospitals Are Ready For The Next Pandemic
CMS can't ensure that hospitals are prepared for emerging infectious disease threats like COVID-19, according to a federal watchdog report released Monday. Although the agency announced in February 2019 that hospitals had to plan for potential outbreaks, CMS can't confirm that all hospitals have updated their emergency preparedness plans during the pandemic because it only inspects them every three to five years, HHS' Office of Inspector General said in its report. That's mainly because CMS can't require accrediting organizations, which inspect about 90% of Medicare and Medicaid-approved hospitals, to carry out more frequent quality and safety surveys or targeted infection control inspections. (Brady, 6/28)
Stat:
Will Biogen's Alzheimer’s Drug's Cost To Medicare Be Big Or Catastrophic?
The Food and Drug Administration’s decision to grant wide-ranging approval to the controversial, pricey new Alzheimer’s drug Aduhelm will have an eye-popping impact on Medicare finances. The question is exactly how big the impact will be. Estimates of how many seniors on Medicare will actually take Aduhelm, which has a list price of $56,000, vary wildly. Some experts have guessed at relatively low patient interest, around 500,000 people. Biogen, the company behind the drug, has put its target population far higher, around 1 million to 2 million people. (Cohrs and Parker, 6/28)
And in more state Medicaid news —
AP:
Missouri Senate Votes To Renew Key Tax For Medicaid Funding
Missouri senators passed a bill to renew a key tax for Medicaid funding early Saturday after hours of debate over coverage of family planning services. The GOP-led Senate voted 28-5 to send the bill to the House. Senators were able to advance the bill after some Republicans joined with Democrats to vote down a proposal that sought to cut off any government money for Planned Parenthood. (6/26)
AP:
California Budget Boosts Health Care For Older Immigrants
California will soon pay the health care bills for low-income people 50 and older who are living in the country illegally, part of an expansion of Medicaid that aims to inch the nation’s most populous state toward Democrats’ goal of making sure everyone has health insurance. The new coverage will eventually cost taxpayers about $1.3 billion per year, money that’s part of the new state operating budget that Gov. Gavin Newsom and state legislative leaders unveiled Friday night. The budget is scheduled for a vote in the state Legislature on Monday, with Newsom likely signing it into law before the state’s fiscal year begins Thursday. (Beam, 6/26)
J&J Will End Sales Of Opioids, Settle With New York State For $230 Million
The drugmaker will permanently end manufacturing and sales of opioids across the U.S. It will also pay $230 million to settle a lawsuit alleging it helped fuel the opioid crisis. Syringe exchanges, medical marijuana rules and harm reduction for drug users are also in the news.
Modern Healthcare:
J&J To Stop Selling Opioids, Agrees To $230M Settlement With NY
Johnson & Johnson has agreed to pay $230 million to New York state to settle claims that the pharmaceutical giant helped fuel the opioid crisis, Attorney General Letitia James said on Saturday. The drugmaker also agreed to permanently end the manufacturing and distribution of opioids across New York and the rest of the nation, James said in a statement announcing the settlement. The company "helped fuel this fire, but today they're committing to leaving the opioid business—not only in New York, but across the entire country," she said. (6/26)
Stat:
Johnson & Johnson Agrees To Pay $230 Million To Settle N.Y. Opioid Case
On the eve of a widely anticipated trial, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) agreed on Saturday to pay $230 million to the state of New York to settle a lawsuit alleging that the company helped fuel the devastating opioid crisis. The deal comes as negotiations intensify with the health care giant and three of the nation’s largest pharmaceutical wholesalers to complete a sweeping $26 billion settlement of thousands of other lawsuits. The settlement includes an additional $33 million in attorney fees and costs, as well as a commitment from J&J to halt opioid sales, a step the company said it has already taken (you can read the settlement here). (Silverman, 6/26)
In other news about drug use —
AP:
Conn. Opioid Deaths Keep Rising Even After Pandemic Eases
Opioid deaths spiked in Connecticut during the pandemic and continue to increase in 2021, fueled by continued disruptions to recovery programs and a deadly, fentanyl-laced drug supply. The synthetic opioid fentanyl, which is 80 to 100 times more powerful than morphine, was found in 4 percent of accidental intoxication deaths in the state in 2012 but showed up in the vast majority of fatal overdoses last year, the Hartford Courant reported. (6/27)
Charleston Gazette-Mail:
Syringe Exchange Remaining Open In Cabell County Despite New Law
Despite a new law making it harder to operate the life-saving operations, the Cabell-Huntington Health Department will continue to offer syringe exchange services. The Cabell Board of Health voted unanimously Wednesday to continue operating the program at the behest of health officer and CEO Dr. Michael Kilkenny. Kilkenny said with the help of grants the department already has for the program, they will be able to operate under the law and still rebound from the pandemic-driven increase in overdoses. (Stuck, 6/27)
Philadelphia Inquirer:
Failure By Pa. Officials To Clarify Rules Around Medical Marijuana, Addiction Treatment Had Serious Consequences
Tyler Cordeiro slept on a couch outside his mother’s Bucks County home, suffering from opioid withdrawal. His sister took a photo of his mother, Susan Ousterman, on the other section of the L-shaped sofa, resting with him, the two lying nearly head-to-head. Those days in September 2020 were exhausting and desperate for the family. The 24-year-old Cordeiro struggled with addiction for several years, and he had recently lost access to Medicaid insurance coverage. Ousterman and her daughter, Mary Cordeiro, called every 800-number and helpline they could find to help pay for addiction treatment. (Mahon, 6/28)
The New York Times:
Helping Drug Users Survive, Not Abstain: ‘Harm Reduction’ Gains Federal Support
The thin young man quietly took in the room as he waited for the free supplies meant to help him avoid dying: sterile water and cookers to dissolve illicit drugs; clean syringes; alcohol wipes to prevent infection; and naloxone, a medicine that can reverse overdoses. A sign on the wall — “We stand for loving drug users just the way they are” — felt like an embrace. It was the first day the drop-in center in a residential neighborhood here had opened its doors since the coronavirus forced them shut in the spring of 2020. “I’m so glad you all are open again,” the man, whose first name is Jordan, told a volunteer who handed him a full paper bag while heavy metal music riffed over a speaker in the background. He asked for extra naloxone for friends in his rural county, an hour away, where he said it had been scarce throughout the pandemic. (Goodnough, 6/27)
Approval, Pricing Of New Alzheimer's Drug Targeted In House Investigation
Stat reports that both Biogen, makers of Aduhelm, and the Food and Drug Administration are to be examined. Meanwhile, Axios reports on Aduhelm's price impact on efforts to lower prescription costs and outlines its potential impact on medical standards and budgets.
Stat:
House Leaders To Investigate FDA Approval, Price Of New Alzheimer’s Drug
The top House Democrats on two powerful committees on Friday announced an investigation into the approval and pricing of Biogen’s controversial Alzheimer’s drug, Aduhelm. Both Biogen and the Food and Drug Administration will be under the microscope, House Committee on Oversight and Reform Chair Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) and Energy and Commerce Chair Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) said. (Cohrs, 6/25)
Axios:
New Alzheimer's Drug May Complicate Democrats' Push To Lower Drug Prices
Advocates of lowering prescription drug prices are beginning to use an expensive new Alzheimer's drug to make the case for reform, but actually addressing the therapy's price raises complicated policy challenges. Democrats may be positioning themselves to push policy measures that assign value to drugs and then price them accordingly. If successful, that could be a huge blow to the pharmaceutical industry. (Owens, 6/28)
Axios:
New Alzheimer's Drug May Be A Catastrophe In The Making
The FDA’s approval of a new Alzheimer’s treatment — the first one in almost two decades — should have been a cause for celebration. Instead, it has become a scientific and financial mess. Experts from all corners of the health care world fear the FDA’s decision will undermine medical standards, explode the federal budget and fill millions of desperate people with false hope. (Baker and Herman, 6/28)
In other pharmaceutical and biotech news —
Stat:
In A First For Genome Editing, Intellia Reports Positive Data On In Vivo CRISPR Therapy
In a major milestone for the still-young field of genome editing, Intellia Therapeutics said Saturday that the first six patients to receive a CRISPR-based treatment for a genetic nerve disorder have safely had the DNA inside their liver cells edited. Preliminary results from the study — the first to show that CRISPR-based gene editing can be delivered systemically and performed in vivo, or inside the body — found that the treatment reduced levels of a disease-causing protein by an average of 87% in the higher dose cohort with only mild side effects. The encouraging interim Phase 1 results, presented at a conference on Saturday, were published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine. (Molteni, 6/26)
Albuquerque Journal:
NM Lawsuit Triggers National Concern About Surgical Supplies
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other national groups say an environmental protection lawsuit filed in New Mexico could strain medical supplies across the state and country. Their warnings focus on a 41-page complaint filed by New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas seeking damages and other relief against a Santa Teresa plant that sterilizes medical equipment. The industry groups say any disruption to the facility’s work could affect medical procedures across New Mexico and the United States. (McKay, 6/25)
The Washington Post:
Prohibited, Unlisted, Even Dangerous Ingredients Turn Up In Dietary Supplements
When buying a dietary supplement, you probably assume that what’s on the label is what’s in the pill. But this assumption doesn’t always hold up, says Pieter Cohen, a physician at Cambridge Health Alliance. In March, Cohen published his 14th paper concerning dietary supplements that contained either prohibited or unlisted ingredients. This time, he and his colleagues analyzed 17 brands of sports and weight-loss supplements sold in the United States, and they detected nine prohibited stimulants in them. Almost half of the brands tested included more than one prohibited stimulant. (Aschwanden, 6/26)
Stat:
Experts Debate The Value Of Digital Coaching For Type 2 Diabetes
Even before the pandemic drove an extreme shift toward telemedicine, diabetes care was leading the march toward digital care. A crop of health care companies including Onduo, One Drop, Lark Health, Omada, Livongo, and Virta Health have built businesses on the idea that virtual coaching and remote monitoring can help people with diabetes keep their glucose levels in healthier ranges. Next year, estimates suggest the market for digital diabetes care will exceed $700 million. (Palmer, 6/28)
Las Vegas Review-Journal:
Company Demands Return Of Drug Planned For Zane Floyd Execution
The makers of ketamine, a drug planned for the execution of convicted killer Zane Floyd, have demanded that Nevada prison officials return the supply before the lethal injection scheduled for next month.
A lawyer for Hikma Pharmaceuticals wrote in a cease-and-desist letter to Attorney General Aaron Ford on Thursday that the Nevada Department of Corrections obtained 50 vials of ketamine illegally. “NDOC’s purchase and intended use of Hikma’s products for capital punishment is in violation of state and federal law, in knowing violation of Hikma’s property and proprietary interests in its products, and these actions will cause significant damage to Hikma’s business reputation and the interests of its investors,” Hikma’s lawyer, Josh Reid, wrote in the nine-page letter obtained by the Review-Journal. (Ferrara, 6/25)
Threats, Harassment Hit One In Four Health Workers During Pandemic
About 23% of public health care workers said they'd been targeted because of their work since the pandemic began. In other news, a new Arizona State University program is trying to attract new students to tackle a nursing shortage that's been felt particularly in rural areas.
Axios:
Nearly A Quarter Of Health Workers Threatened Or Harassed, CDC Says
Nearly a quarter of public health workers said they felt bullied, threatened or harassed because of their work since the pandemic began, new CDC data shows. The data corroborates the anecdotal evidence of how politically charged public responses and work burnout wreaked havoc on the mental health of public health workers this past year, causing some to even resign. (Fernandez, 6/28)
AP:
New ASU Havasu Program Aims To Help Address Nurse Shortage
Even before the pandemic, a scarcity of nurses was an ongoing concern in Arizona especially in more rural areas. An Arizona State University nursing program, set to debut at the school’s Lake Havasu City campus this fall, aims to put a dent in that shortage. ASU Havasu, which is still a young campus at 9 years old, got approval in April from the Arizona Board of Nursing to offer a 12-month bachelor of science degree in nursing. The program is expected to draw more than 30 new students, the Today’s News-Herald reported. (6/27)
In other health care industry news —
Modern Healthcare:
San Diego Sues Molina, HealthNet, Kaiser
The city of San Diego sued three health insurers on Friday, alleging Kaiser Permanente, HealthNet and Molina Healthcare all advertised false networks of providers in an attempt to get consumers to sign up for their plans. The three insurers together enrolled more than 3.3 million California residents in 2019, and "are among the worst actors in California when it comes to the inaccuracy of their provider networks," according to the three separate suits, all filed in San Diego Superior Court. (Tepper, 6/25)
Modern Healthcare:
Bright Health Raises $924 Million In Largest Insurtech IPO Of 2021
Bright Health raised $924 million on a valuation of approximately $12 billion during its initial public offering on Thursday, with the Minneapolis-based insurtech booking the largest IPO among the health insurance startups that went public this year. The company's shares failed to reach their estimated price of $18 during the IPO, meaning its valuation fell about $2 billion short of what investors expected. Bright Health is the last of the insurtechs expected to make an IPO this year, with Alignment Healthcare, Oscar Health and Clover Health all going public earlier in 2021. (Tepper, 6/25)
Health News Florida:
UF Health Reports Progress After Cyberattack At Villages, Leesburg Hospitals
UF Health announced Friday that it has restored the electronic medical records for its hospitals and clinics in The Villages and Leesburg following a cybersecurity event. UF Health's investigation of the cyberattack is ongoing. The hospital system still is not describing the nature of the cyberattack, which was detected on the night of May 31. (Byrnes, 6/26)
The Boston Globe:
Region’s Lab Space Boom Continues As High-Rise Moves Forward In Malden
A developer has won approval for a nine-story office building in downtown Malden that would add to a cluster of projects seeking to attract life-sciences companies to the city center. The Malden City Council on June 22 signed off on the planned project by Quaker Lane Capital at 11 Dartmouth Street, where the developer says it intends to create space for retail, with offices above “targeted at innovation-driven tenants, including public and private sector organizations as well as entrepreneurial and research and development focused firms.” The 160,000-square-foot project comes as developers throughout the region are investing heavily in lab space, betting that life sciences will be a key to the future of the Boston’s economy. In Malden, additional office space is coming online to support companies working on research and development. (Rosen, 6/27)
CNBC:
Doximity CEO Ignored Silicon Valley Wisdom, Built $10 Billion Company
Jeff Tangney launched his first health-tech start-up, Epocrates, in the middle of the dot-com bubble. While the company survived the crash and eventually went public, the endgame was a disappointing acquisition for less than $300 million. By the time Tangney started his next venture, Doximity, in 2010, he’d learned a few things: Don’t raise too much money. Don’t burn too much cash. Fix a real problem for doctors. (Levy, 6/27)
In news about health care and the LGBTQ community —
Crain's New York Business:
How New York's Health Systems Are Advancing Care For LGBTQ Communities
June might be Pride month, but the work to ensure better access to healthcare for the LGBTQ community happens all year round. Health networks including NYC Health + Hospitals and Stony Brook Medicine have built clinics and care centers in areas of need. Earlier this month, the city public health system opened a gender-affirming integrated services practice in the South Bronx—its first such facility in the borough. Similarly, the Long Island health network brought LGBT-specialized care to the East End with a new, 2,000-square-foot, $750,000 health center. Robert Chaloner, chief administrative officer at Stony Brook Southampton Hospital, says he hopes the center will inspire other facilities to spring up in the future. (Sim, 6/25)
ABC News:
When Cancer And Gender Identity Collide: Transgender Patients Fight Stigma And Disease
Receiving a cancer diagnosis can be scary and life-altering. It takes strength to navigate the world following a diagnosis, so any additional barriers to this process can be tough, such as for transgender patients. Although the world of medicine largely remains a cisgendered world, the landscape is changing to include more research, advocacy and education about transgender patients. (Okolo, 6/27)
Axios:
LGBTQ Seniors On The Isolation Of Living Through A Pandemic
Many elder LGBTQ Americans, already disproportionately isolated before the pandemic, faced greater loneliness in quarantine as they lost access to resources and community, two older LGBTQ Americans told Axios. Data is lacking on how LGBTQ Americans have been affected by the coronavirus — especially older populations, who battle a myriad of complications as a high-risk and under-resourced group. (Rummier, 6/26)
The First Big Cruise Ship In Over 15 Months Has Departed A US Port
Meanwhile, on a Royal Caribbean International cruise in the Bahamas, two young passengers have tested positive for covid. The TSA has also reported the highest number of travelers passing though its screening processes since March 7, 2020.
CNN:
First Cruise From A US Port In More Than 15 Months Has Set Sail
It's been a long circuitous journey to restarting cruise travel in the United States. But more than 15 months after the pandemic halted the industry, the first big cruise ship has sail out of a US port on Saturday. Celebrity Edge left from Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale just after 6 p.m. on a seven-night voyage with ports of call in Mexico and the Bahamas. The ship is sailing at 40% capacity as Celebrity -- and the industry -- sets off toward a US recovery. (Hunger, 6/26)
The Washington Post:
Two Young Unvaccinated Passengers On Royal Caribbean Cruise Test Positive For Covid-19
Two young unvaccinated passengers on a Royal Caribbean International cruise out of the Bahamas tested positive for the coronavirus, the cruise line said. The passengers, who were younger than 16 and traveling in the same group, left Adventure of the Seas before the end of the cruise on Thursday in Freeport with their companions. They returned home to Florida on a private flight arranged by the cruise company, CEO Michael Bayley said in a Facebook post. (Sampson, 6/25)
USA Today:
TSA Reports Highest Number Of Travelers Since March 2020
Next Sunday marks the Fourth of July, President Joe Biden's target date of getting 70% of adult Americans at least partially vaccinated for COVID-19. But the White House last week said that wasn't predicted to happen. Getting at least one shot into the arms of 70% of all American adults will take a few more weeks, said Jeff Zients, the White House coronavirus response coordinator. But with Transportation Security Association screening numbers trending upward, including its highest recorded number since March 7, 2020 reported Friday, neither the faulty prediction nor variants is not predicted to deter holiday revelry. The spread of the delta variant of COVID-19 into the U.S. is becoming a concern for medical experts because of pockets of people in the nation who have yet to receive the vaccine. (Aspegren and Vargas, 6/28)
In other public health news —
Fox News:
NJ Man Contracts Rare Mosquito-Borne Virus: What Is Jamestown Canyon Virus?
Health officials in New Jersey confirmed the state’s first mosquito-borne disease of the year after a man in his sixties from Sussex County tested positive for Jamestown Canyon virus. The unnamed patient experienced onset of fever and neurological symptoms in May, the state health department announced this week. The patient had not traveled, and was released from the hospital to a long-term rehabilitation center last week, a spokesperson for the health department told Fox News. The case marks the state's second such reported infection; the first case occurred in 2015 in Sussex County. (Rivas, 6/26)
CIDRAP:
Backyard Poultry Salmonella Outbreak Grows To 474 Cases, 1 Death
A US Salmonella outbreak linked to backyard poultry has grown by 311 cases, to 474 illnesses, and the CDC has reported the first outbreak death, according to a CDC update yesterday. Three more states are affected (46 total) and a new serotype has been added (Salmonella Mbandaka) since the CDC's first notice of the outbreak on May 20. An Indiana patient has died. ... Of 271 people interviewed, 209 (77%) reported contact with backyard poultry before getting sick. (6/25)
Undark Magazine:
Flesh-Eating Parasites May Be Expanding Range As Climate Heats Up
Three years ago, Laura Gaither and her family spent their summer vacation in Panama City Beach. One afternoon, while rinsing sand off her feet, the 35-year-old Alabama resident felt something biting her legs and noticed tiny black bugs on her skin. Gaither brushed them away, and later, when she described the bites to local residents, they told her that she had likely been bitten by sand flies. Three of Gaither's five kids had been bitten, too, but she didn't worry. The marks on their legs and arms looked like ant or mosquito bites, which can cause burning and itching, but usually subside within a week. (Petroni, 6/25)
Also —
NBC News:
'An Ongoing Nightmare': People With Obesity Face Major Obstacles When Seeking Medical Care
Laura Baker, a retired special education teacher from Santa Barbara, California, was 18 months into a brain cancer diagnosis when she typed out a distressing Facebook post in the fall of 2019.“I am currently having some concerning symptoms and nobody seems to know what to do,” Baker, then 57, wrote. What Baker really needed, she said, was a CT scan of her head. Her local hospital had a working CT scanner, but it wasn’t available to her. The reason: her size. (Schapiro, 6/27)
The Washington Post:
Parents Are Struggling To Get Kids Off Screens After The Pandemic
The week after Rebecca Grant took away her kids’ video games for a month, after a year of relaxed pandemic rules, her 10-year-old son was livid. He gave her the silent treatment, mostly ignoring her except to spit out a hurtful “I don’t love you” one night at bedtime. The ban wasn’t an easy decision for Grant. The 46-year-old mom of two from Fremont, Calif., did hours of research and read multiple books from parenting experts. She joined Facebook groups for families in similar situations and closely watched her children’s behavior, which had been worrisome for a while. Still, she was caught off guard by the reaction. (Kelly, 6/26)
CBS News:
Her Sister Needed Blood And Platelet Donations To Survive. It Inspired This Teen To Launch A Blood Drive
She's an energetic and fun-loving 6-year-old, but beneath Violet Jackson's vibrant smile, she's battling B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. She was diagnosed just last month. Violet is undergoing treatment at Omaha's Children's Hospital, where she's received pints of blood and platelets. "I was thankful the blood was available for Violet when she needed it," said Violet's mother, Wendy Jackson. "And I wanted to pay that gift forward, so I scheduled my blood donation." Then, big sister Eden got really inspired. (Preston, 6/27)
The Washington Post:
How To Work Out With A Weighted Hula Hoop
Though they’ve existed for more than a decade, weighted Hula-Hoops have emerged as a social media favorite during the pandemic, enticing fitness enthusiasts looking for new, affordable and convenient ways to work out at home with the promise of childlike fun (some gyms and studios are adding in-person classes as clients return). Videos tagged “weighted hula hoop” have generated more than 176 million views on TikTok, and some popular hoops have reportedly been selling out online. (Haupt, 6/23)
Louisiana's State Worker Insurance Will Pay For Weight-Loss Surgery
A new law covers obesity surgery for state workers, including teachers and retirees. In other news, South Carolina offers free HIV and STD tests; the CDC gives Maine $7 million to prepare for future pandemics and the state's budget includes $300 covid relief payouts.
The Advocate:
Louisiana State Worker Insurance To Cover Obesity Surgery After Governor Signs Bill Into Law
Louisiana's health insurer for state workers, teachers and retirees will soon cover weight loss surgery for people who are obese, under a bill signed into law by Gov. John Bel Edwards. Sen. Regina Barrow, a Baton Rouge Democrat, had previously tried to get the Office of Group Benefits to cover gastric bypass surgery and other types of weight loss surgeries, to lessen the health conditions associated with obesity. But lawmakers had raised concern about the costs. Barrow made some adjustments to the legislation and won unanimous support from the House and Senate in the recently ended legislative session. The governor agreed to the idea and signed the bill, which will take effect Aug. 1. (6/26)
AP:
SC Officials Offer Free Testing For HIV, Sexual Diseases
To mark National HIV Testing Day, South Carolina health officials are offering free testing for HIV and sexually transmitted diseases later this week. The free testing is Tuesday at several local health departments across the state, the Department of Health and Environmental Control said in a statement. (6/27)
AP:
CDC Gives Maine $7M To Prep For Future Public Health Crises
The federal government has given Maine a $7 million boost to help prepare for another public health crisis. Republican Sen. Susan Collins and independent Sen. Angus King said the Maine Department of Health and Human Services has received the money from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About $1.8 million of the money is for preventing and controlling emerging diseases and the rest is for preparing and responding to public health emergencies. (6/27)
Bangor Daily News:
$8.5B Maine Budget Deal Includes $300 COVID-19 Relief Payments To Most Workers
Lawmakers reached a bipartisan agreement Sunday afternoon on a revised $8.5 billion two-year state budget that will provide $300 COVID-19 relief payments to most Maine workers. The budget bill negotiated by the Legislature’s budget committee will likely go before both chambers on Wednesday. A deal was largely in place over the past week, but the budget panel formally reached an agreement over the weekend after weeks of negotiations. (Piper, 6/27)
AP:
WVa Chief Justice Suspends Some Court Health Protocols
West Virginia Chief Justice Evan Jenkins has suspended many of the court health protocols that arose last year from the coronavirus pandemic. Jenkins’ administrative order contained some exceptions. Courts should continue using remote technology when possible for hearings and proceedings, Jenkins’ order said. They should also continue avoiding the use of call dockets to cut back on extended waiting periods in lobbies, common areas and court rooms, he wrote. (6/28)
AP:
Montana To Use Federal Money To Boost Child Care Capacity
More than $30 million of federal funding could be directed toward expanding child care capacity in Montana under recommendations approved by a state health advisory commission. The commission approved up to $31 million for the state health department to administer grants to expand child care in the state, the Montana State News Bureau reported Thursday. The commission, which is made up of three members of the executive branch and seven lawmakers, is tasked with directing coronavirus relief dollars. (6/27)
Des Moines Register:
Polk County Adds Mental Health Crisis Services For Children
Des Moines area families whose children are going through mental health crises will soon have more options when seeking help. Starting July 1, young residents of Polk County will be offered new, short-term mental health crisis services either in their homes or at a residential program. The new crisis services are meant to be an alternative to sending children to a psychiatric hospital unit, said Liz Cox, executive director of Polk County Health Services. Until now, she said, many children with relatively mild issues, such as anxiety or low-level depression, have been served well with occasional counseling. Children in critical situations, such as actively attempting suicide, could be taken to a hospital. But there have been few intermediate alternatives. (Leys, 6/27)
UK Health Minister Breaks Covid Rules, Resigns After Causing Scandal
Matt Hancock was seen kissing an aide in his office in a leaked video, breaking social distancing rules he'd imposed on Britain. His replacement is reportedly keen to end the country's covid restrictions. Separately, reports say 2 million English people likely had long covid.
AP:
UK Government Accused Of Hypocrisy As Health Minister Quits
Britain’s health secretary has resigned after a tabloid splashed photos and videos of him kissing an aide in his office — breaking the same coronavirus social distancing rules he imposed on the nation. While Matt Hancock was swiftly replaced, the scandal was another blow to Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his Conservative government, which has repeatedly come under criticism for incompetence and hypocrisy in its handling of the pandemic over the past year. (Hui, 6/28)
Bloomberg:
New U.K. Health Chief Is Ex-Deutsche Man Keen To End Virus Rules
Sajid Javid’s return to Boris Johnson’s top team as health secretary seals a speedy comeback for one of the political heavyweights of the Conservative Party, a one-time managing director at Deutsche Bank AG who is expected to push for a timely end to Britain’s coronavirus restrictions. Replacing Matt Hancock following his dramatic resignation over the weekend, Javid is more likely to support easing coronavirus rules than his predecessor, according to former Javid aide Salma Shah, speaking on BBC TV on Sunday. (Mayes, 6/28)
Stat:
Analysis Shows Pharma's Influence Over U.K. Parliament Members
The pharmaceutical industry has developed a “hidden web of policy influence” over members of the U.K. parliament through payments that run the risk of creating of “institutional corruption,” according to a new analysis. Specifically, researchers focused on All-Party Parliamentary Groups, which are informal clusters of lawmakers that focus on particular issues and seek to influence government through meetings and reports (read more here). However, APPGs do not receive government funding, so the findings raise questions about the extent to which these groups act independently. (Silverman, 6/25)
Fox News:
Over 2 Million Likely Had Long COVID-19 In England, Study Estimates
A new study projects more than 2 million adults in England likely experienced persistent symptoms in the months following COVID-19 infection, or so-called long COVID. Researchers affiliated with Imperial College London released findings Thursday, stemming from over half a million people in England who participated in several rounds of the Real-Time Assessment of Community Transmission-2 (REACT-2) study, which invited random samples of adults to take surveys from September to February. "Long COVID, describing the long-term sequelae after SARS-CoV-2 infection, remains a poorly defined syndrome. There is uncertainty about its predisposing factors and the extent of the resultant public health burden, with estimates of prevalence and duration varying widely," authors prefaced. (Rivas, 6/26)
In news from Canada —
Bloomberg:
Toronto Arena Becomes Clinic, Breaks Record With 26,771 Shots
The Toronto Raptors were the only team in the National Basketball Association not to play in its home arena this season due to Covid-19 restrictions. On Sunday, they handed over the venue to health authorities to smash Canada’s record for most vaccinations at a single site in a day. The clinic at the Scotiabank Arena administered 26,771 doses of Pfizer Inc. and Moderna Inc. vaccines, according to a statement on Twitter from the facility’s owner, Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd. (Decloet, 6/27)
Stat:
Health Canada Allows A Controversial Rare Disease Drug Back On The Market
In yet another twist in a complicated tale, Health Canada has reinstated approval of a rare disease drug after the manufacturer of a rival medicine claimed the regulator had originally issued an “incorrect and unreasonable” endorsement. The move came after Canada’s Federal Court earlier this month quashed the approval for Ruzurgi, which is used to treat people with a rare neuromuscular disorder called Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome, or LEMS. The medicine is marketed by Jacobus Pharmaceuticals, a small, family run company, although a competitor, Catalyst Pharmaceuticals (CPRX), has sought to push back the approval until 2028. (Silverman, 6/26)
Delta Covid Variant Soars In Sydney, Forcing Full Lockdown Of City
It's the first full lockdown of the Australian city since the pandemic began. Meanwhile, South Africa tightens its restrictions; most infections in the UAE are linked to more-infectious variants; and India may have undercounted covid deaths by hundreds of thousands.
Axios:
Sydney Enters Full Lockdown To Fight Delta Variant
Australian authorities announced a two-week lockdown in the city of Sydney and surrounding areas as the Delta coronavirus variant continues to rapidly spread. This is the first full lockdown for Sydney since the beginning of the pandemic in 2020. It takes effect from Saturday at 6 p.m. local time until at least midnight on Friday, July 2. (Gonzalez, 6/26)
AP:
South Africa Tightens Restrictions To Fight Resurgent Virus
Battling a fast-increasing surge of COVID-19 cases, South Africa has reintroduced tough restrictions including a ban on alcohol sales and an extended nightly curfew. The delta variant, first discovered in India, appears to be driving South Africa’s new increase, President Cyril Ramaphosa said Sunday night, announcing the return to strict measures. South Africa recorded more than 15,000 new cases Sunday, including 122 deaths, bringing its total fatalities to near 60,000. (Magome and Meldrum, 6/27)
Reuters:
More Infectious COVID-19 Variants Account For Most UAE Cases, Authority Says
New coronavirus infections in the United Arab Emirates are mostly from more infectious variants leading to an increase in the number of virus-linked deaths, a federal authority has said. The Gulf Arab state, with a population of about 9 million, has had one of the world's fastest vaccination campaigns. (6/28)
The Wall Street Journal:
India Has Undercounted Covid-19 Deaths By Hundreds Of Thousands, Families And Experts Say
India has officially recorded more than 390,000 coronavirus deaths, but families who have lost loved ones, health experts and statisticians say that vastly undercounts the true toll. ... India’s undercount has also left a huge gap in the world’s understanding of the impact of the Delta variant, which health experts believe helped drive one of the world’s worst Covid-19 surges in April and May. India was the first to detect the highly infectious variant, which has hopscotched around the world. It is fueling a surge in the U.K., and is expected to become the dominant variant in the U.S. (Li, Bhattacharya and Agarwal, 6/27)
The Wall Street Journal:
Covid-19 Killed 26 Indonesian Doctors In June—At Least 10 Had Taken China’s Sinovac Vaccine
At least 10 of the 26 doctors in Indonesia who died from Covid-19 this month had received both doses of the vaccine developed by Sinovac Biotech Ltd., a medical association said, raising questions about the Chinese-made shot that is being used in many parts of the developing world. (Emont, 6/27)
Reuters:
Mallorca Probes COVID-19 Outbreak Among Hundreds Of Partying Students
Authorities in Mallorca are investigating a coronavirus outbreak involving more than 600 students celebrating the end of term in the Spanish island, just as it prepares for British tourists to return following the easing of travel curbs. Students visiting from the mainland went to a music concert at a bullring in the capital, Palma, as well as parties on boats and in hotels, and officials said on Saturday they wanted to find out if venues had adhered to virus-control measures. ... At least 1,000 students have had to go into isolation. (6/26)
In news about Russia —
NBC News:
Russia Registered The First Covid Vaccine. Now It's Struggling To Vaccinate Its Population
In August 2020, Russia became the first country in the world to register a Covid-19 vaccine. President Vladimir Putin announced the news on national television and said one of his daughters had already been vaccinated. At the time, Russia was set to race ahead of other countries in its efforts to vaccinate its population. Instead, 10 months after Sputnik V’s approval, Russia's vaccination rate is one of the lowest in countries where vaccines are widely available. (Chistikova and Elbaum, 6/27)
The Washington Post:
As Moscow Demands More Vaccine Proof, A Black Market Booms For Fake Certificates
It took just a few hours for fraudsters to act after Moscow's mayor announced this month that coronavirus vaccinations were compulsory for most of the city's service sector employees. Accounts advertising the availability of fake coronavirus vaccination certificates suddenly appeared as social media followers of Russians who identified as working in restaurants or bars. A new black market was born with a deep potential clientele: the many Russians still hesitant to be vaccinated even amid a surge in coronavirus cases. (Khurshudyan, 6/27)
Reuters:
S.Korean Consortium To Produce Russia's Sputnik Light Vaccine
Huons Global Co Ltd said on Monday its South Korean consortium plans to begin production of a single-dose Sputnik Light COVID-19 vaccine from as early as September. The plan followed a request by the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), which markets the vaccine, and production would take place along with Sputnik V vaccines the consortium also intended to make for the sovereign wealth fund, Huons said. (Cha, 6/27)
In other global developments —
Stat:
Gilead Faces Pressure To Lower The Price Of A Drug To Treat Rare Infection
Over the past few months, thousands of people in India who survived Covid-19 returned to hospitals with a rare and life-threatening infection called mucormycosis, or black fungus. But the medicine used to treat the infection is in short supply and priced out of reach for many people, according to dozens of advocacy groups that are urging the manufacturer to quickly widen access. (Silverman, 6/25)
CIDRAP:
ACIP Approves Dengue Vaccine For Endemic Areas, Tweaks Flu Vaccine Advice
The vaccine advisory group to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) yesterday unanimously voted to recommend Sanofi's dengue vaccine (Dengvaxia) for children ages 9 to 16 years who live in areas such as Puerto Rico where the disease is endemic. The vaccine is given in three doses and requires a test to confirm that a child has had a previous dengue infection. Vaccination in someone who has never been exposed to dengue before can lead to a more severe future infection through a phenomenon called antibody-dependent enhancement. (6/25)
Viewpoints: Ways US Can Boost Global Vaccine Effort; Some College Vaccine Mandates Being Challenged
Opinion writers tackle these covid and vaccine topics.
Newsweek:
U.S. Should Give Global Vaccine Effort A Shot In The Arm
President Joe Biden recently pledged to donate 500 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to developing countries over the coming year. The European Union also promised 100 million doses. The announcement is welcomed news. The fight against COVID-19 is a tale of two worlds. In the United States, case counts have plummeted to the lowest level since March 2020, thanks to plentiful vaccines. Well over half the population has now received at least one vaccine dose. (Democratic former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, 6/25)
Chicago Tribune:
A University Meets Vaccine Resistance
From the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Americans have been yearning for the bygone life they once took for granted. But many of those most impatient to return to normal have been the least willing to help us get there. First, some people refused to wear masks. Now, some — often the same ones — balk at getting vaccinated. This resistance is behind a lawsuit filed by eight students against Indiana University, which is requiring all students, faculty and staff at all campuses to be inoculated against the virus for the fall semester. The school says exceptions will be “extremely limited,” covering only those with religious objections or certain medical conditions. (Steve Chapman, 6/27)
CNN:
Why Republicans Are So Focused On Covid-19's Origins
"China lied and Americans died." With those words, Elise Stefanik, the number three Republican in the House of Representatives, showed her party's plan to put the origins of the pandemic at the center of next year's midterm elections. Republicans are calling on Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi to hold hearings on whether the virus was naturally transmitted from animals to humans or leaked out of a lab in Wuhan in China. They want to paint Democrats as defending the ruling Chinese Communist Party by not being more active in punishing Beijing for the virus. (Stephen Collinson, 6/27)
Los Angeles Times:
Why We May Never Know If The Coronavirus Leaked From A Wuhan Lab
Early in this century, post-SARS, and in a period when China started allowing more students and scientists to study abroad, collaboration and exchange between American and Chinese scientists blossomed. Many of China’s top scientists today were educated in the West. These include George Gao, the head of China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention, who trained and taught at Oxford and Harvard; and Shi Zhengli, who directs the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases at the Wuhan Institute of Virology and received her PhD in France. (Elizabeth Rosenthal, 6/27)
Stat:
India's Doctors Face Covid-19 Toll With Support From U.S. Physicians
Ravaged by Covid-19, India is desperately trying to contain a pandemic that has infected nearly 30 million people and claimed — officially — nearly 400,000 lives. Others put the toll closer to 4 million deaths. Medical teams, traumatized by their experiences, recently called it a “a war zone.” In April, doctors and other clinicians working in a hospital in Gurgaon were attacked by family members after patients died of Covid-19, likely from lack of oxygen. A few weeks afterward, they hid in the canteen to avoid a repeat assault. (Lipi Roy, Reshma Gupta and Bhavna Lall, 6/26)
CNN:
I Tested Positive For Covid-19 Twice In Two Cities. The Responses Were Vastly Different
As someone who has tested positive for Covid-19 in both Britain and Hong Kong, I've experienced the worst of both worlds. In one, I fell victim to the complete failure to check the disease's spread, and in the other I got caught up in a zealous system intended to completely eradicate Covid-19. (Pauline Lockwood, 6/27)
Scientific American:
How The Pandemic Roiled The Foster Care System
Among the unseen victims of COVID-19’s ravages are the legions of foster children for whom basic services and support were for months suspended. Financial, emotional, educational, social and even some basic housing issues were pushed aside; the foster care system itself was overwhelmed by virus-related court closures and delays. Mental health care, so critical for young foster children, was confined often to calls or Zoom meetings. Uncertainty about the future, always a reality in the system, became the coin of the realm. Chicago saw a 33 percent increase in the number of children entering foster care. States like California, Kansas and Florida meanwhile, noted decreases in reports of child abuse—a chilling reminder of what can happen when watchful eyes no longer are present. A CDC report also noted fewer child abuse-related emergency department visits during the pandemic. “It’s not that it is happening less,” says Moisés Barón, CEO of the San Diego Center for Children. “It’s just that there are fewer mandated reporters interacting with the youth.” (Carolyn Barber, 6/27)
Perspectives: Evidence Emerging That Colds Can Prevent Flu; Warming Temperatures Pose Health Risks
Editorial writers weigh in on these public health issues.
The Boston Globe:
A Potential Saving Grace In The Next Cold And Flu Season
As mask mandates end and workplaces and schools reopen, viruses long held in check by precautions against COVID-19 are making comebacks. And they’ll be infecting a population in which relatively few people have picked up any immunity to them since the pandemic began. Are we headed for a year of nonstop sniffles and coughs and even worse? Not necessarily. Researchers studying how COVID-19 and the common cold interact with the body’s immune system suggest that as we return to a semblance of normalcy, an underappreciated phenomenon called viral interference may help put some limits on the next cold and flu season. (Veronique Greenwood, 6/25)
CNN:
Health Risks From Heat Waves Send A Climate Alarm
"I'm sorry I'm late Dr. Tummala," a patient tells me at the start of a recent clinic appointment. Smiling with what I hope is a look of understanding, I brush off her apology. I have come to know this patient over many years and am well aware that she is apologizing for something that is not her fault. Using a walker for support, she takes three different modes of public transportation and braves the elements -- whether it's rain, snow or sweltering heat -- to get to her clinic visits. (Neelu Tummala, 6/27)
Bloomberg:
Is The FDA's Drug Approval Process Broken?
Max Nisen: In November, a prestigious FDA advisory committee you sit on overwhelmingly voted that there wasn’t convincing evidence that Biogen Inc.’s Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab helps patients. The FDA approved it anyway earlier this month, and you resigned in protest. Most people don’t know what these advisory committees do. What purpose do they serve, and how did you end up on one? (Max Nisen, 6/26)
Stat:
PASTEUR Act Takes Aim At The Scourge Of Antimicrobial Resistance
Look no further than the coronavirus pandemic to see an immediate and high-profile example of the evolutionary battle between microbes and humans and the antimicrobial resistance it breeds. Even as medicines and vaccines are developed to defeat Covid-19, new viral variants that resist treatment are evolving and spreading. (Sevahn Vorperian and Stephen Quake, 6/25)
Houston Chronicle:
Conversion Therapy Is Discredited Yet Fewer Than Half Of US States Have Bans In Place
Pride Month is being marked by some lawmakers in Kentucky with a renewed push to ban “conversion therapy — the discredited practice of trying to change someone’s sexual orientation or gender identity. If successful, the bill, which aims to prohibit mental health professionals in the state from “engaging in sexual orientation and gender identity change efforts” with minors, would make Kentucky the 21st state in the U.S. to put in place such a prohibition. As experts in mental health counseling, we welcome these moves. But we remain concerned that at present many LGBTQ youth live in states that have no ban in place protecting them from conversion therapy — a practice that the scientific community has long since shunned. (Donna Sheperis and Carl Sheperis, 6/25)
Stat:
An Open Letter To 2021 Medical School Graduates
To the medical school graduating class of 2021: As I write this, I imagine a younger version of myself sitting next to you, not knowing, like you, what will come next. I worried, during that anxious period between graduation and the start of residency, whether I was up to the physical and mental tasks of being a physician: the long hours and the intellectual requirements of practicing medicine. What I learned was that the most important challenges would be emotional, ethical, and philosophical, tests of the spirit and soul rather than of the body and mind. (David Weill, 6/27)
Newsweek:
Why Women Need Mental Health To Be A Part Of Every Annual Exam
The greatest threat to our health is not heart disease, nor is it cancer (the most common causes of death for women), but the insidious effects of women's declining mental health. I make this claim not simply because women continue to be diagnosed with anxiety and depression at more than double the rate of men; nor do I assert this because providers are much more likely to write-off a female patient suffering from pain and mental illness than a male patient—though both these facts are true. I make this assertion because research has shown time and time again that how we perceive stress and internalize it in our bodies has a lasting impact on our physical health. And yet, our health care system has not responded to this evolving research and nuanced understanding of the way psycho-social stress implicates long-term health outcomes. (Felicity Yost, 6/25)