- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Despite 1991 Ruling, Foes Of New Family Planning Rules See Law On Their Side
- There’s A New ‘Medicare-For-All’ Bill In The House. Why Does It Matter?
- Listening To Older Patients Who Want To Stop Dialysis
- Detention Centers In California Lack Oversight And Proper Care, Reports Find
- Political Cartoon: 'Out Of Hand?'
- Capitol Watch 3
- As Progressive Dems Go All-In On 'Medicare For All,' Moderates Worried About 'Seismic' Disruptions To System Shy Away
- Background Check Bill Passes House, But Dems Are Still Moving Cautiously When Picking Their Gun Safety Fights
- Transgender Troops Argue That Transitioning Made Them Better, More Effective Soldiers
- Elections 1
- Klobuchar's History Of Advocating For Medical Device Industry Could Complicate Her Reputation As Champion For Consumers
- Health Law 1
- Creating Reinsurance Program, Bringing Back Insurer Subsidies Are Focus Of House Task Force Looking To Stabilize Health Law
- Veterans' Health Care 1
- Patient At VA Hospital Shoots Doctor While Undergoing A Psychological Evaluation
- Women’s Health 1
- Emboldened By Supreme Court Changes, Missouri Passes Sweeping Abortion Bill That Includes Ban If Roe Is Overturned
- Public Health 3
- Rising Threat Of Misinformation Surrounding Measles Vaccinations Must Be Countered By Doctors, Officials Testify
- Smartphones, Prevalence Of SUVs Cited As Possible Factors In Sharp Rise Of U.S. Pedestrian Deaths
- This Stem Cell Treatment Was Billed As A Miracle Cure. Then People Started Getting Sick.
- Opioid Crisis 1
- Are Safe Consumption Sites Really Illegal? No Easy Answer, As Advocates In Mass. Hope To Open Center
- State Watch 2
- From The State Capitols: Suicide Prevention Training; Children's Mental Health; Surprise Medical Bills; Cost Transparency; And School Safety
- State Highlights: Failures By N.J. Nursing Center Leaders Led To Deaths Of 11 Children, Report Finds; 10 Babies Died In Arizona Following Outbreak Of Syphilis
- Health Policy Research 1
- Research Roundup: Hospital-Acquired Complications; Medicaid Expansion; And Serious Illness In America
- Editorials And Opinions 2
- Different Takes: 'Medicare For All' Is Not A Magic Pill Unless Cost Of Delivery Falls; Talk About Lowering Drug Prices Won't Cut It
- Viewpoints: Time To Really Research Nutrition, The Top Cause Of Poor Health; HHS Has To Ensure African Americans Finally Get Help With Alzheimer's
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Despite 1991 Ruling, Foes Of New Family Planning Rules See Law On Their Side
Lawyers seeking to block the Trump administration’s decision to alter rules for the Title X family planning program say their efforts will not be stymied by the Supreme Court’s approval of similar rules 28 years ago. They point to new protections enacted in the Affordable Care Act and language in funding bills that shifts the legal calculus. (Julie Rovner, 2/28)
There’s A New ‘Medicare-For-All’ Bill In The House. Why Does It Matter?
The progressive proposal adds details to the discussion of this controversial approach to overhauling the nation’s health system, and Democratic primary candidates will have to be prepared to get more specific. (Shefali Luthra, 2/27)
Listening To Older Patients Who Want To Stop Dialysis
Older adults with advanced kidney disease sometimes want to stop dialysis but often meet resistance from doctors, new research shows. We explore options available to these patients, including conservative care. (Judith Graham, 2/28)
Detention Centers In California Lack Oversight And Proper Care, Reports Find
Health and safety problems at immigration detention facilities throughout California pose a serious risk to detainees, according to two reports released Tuesday. State Attorney General Xavier Becerra and California State Auditor Elaine Howle concluded that federal and local governments are failing to adequately oversee the facilities, allowing the problems to persist. (Anna Gorman and Ana B. Ibarra, 2/27)
Political Cartoon: 'Out Of Hand?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Out Of Hand?'" by Dave Coverly, Speed Bump.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
THE EXHAUSTING SIDE EFFECTS OF CANCER
Dealing with cancer's
Intense financial fallout
Can be full-time job.
- Anonymous
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:
More than 100 Democrats unveiled their new "Medicare for All" plan Wednesday, a proposal that would move every American onto a government insurer in the span of two years. Almost immediately, moderate Democrats started distancing themselves, offering more incremental improvements to the current health system. The topic is driving a wedge into the party and reveals a fault line between broad ideologies on how to move the country forward. Meanwhile, health insurers' stocks are not faring well on the news.
The New York Times:
As Over 100 House Democrats Embrace ‘Medicare For All,’ A Party Division Appears
Denouncing the profit motive in health care, more than 100 House Democrats rallied on Wednesday around a bill to replace most private health insurance with a national single-payer system, “Medicare for all.” The chief sponsor of the bill, Representative Pramila Jayapal, Democrat of Washington, said it would cure “a deep sickness within our for-profit system” of health care. But the bill highlights Democrats’ split over health policy going into the 2020 elections. (Pear, 2/27)
Modern Healthcare:
House Democrats Introduce ‘Medicare For All' Bill
Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D- Wash.) told reporters that the goal of the Medicare for All Act of 2019, which has more than 100 co-sponsors, is to completely overhaul the U.S. healthcare system and convert it to a government-run entity. The legislation provides an outline of the thinking of some congressional Democrats on "Medicare for All," an issue that has been highly debated among Democrats running for president in 2020. (King, 2/27)
Kaiser Health News:
There’s A New ‘Medicare-For-All’ Bill In The House. Why Does It Matter?
In many ways, the proposal sounds familiar: The government would establish a health plan that pays for basically all forms of medical care for all citizens. That’s how it gets the moniker “Medicare-for-all.” Under this plan, patients would not be responsible for any cost sharing of medical expenses, and the government coverage would include hospitals, doctors, preventive care, prescription meds and dental and vision care. Private insurers would not be allowed to sell plans that compete with the government program. Senior citizens would be folded into the new Medicare plan, which would be more generous than their current coverage, and the government would make sure any medical care they are getting is not disrupted. The bill leaves two other government health care payers intact: the Veterans Health Administration and the Indian Health Service. (Luthra, 2/27)
CQ:
Democrats Divided Over Medicare-For-All Bill
Last year, a record 62 percent of Democrats backed the House single-payer “Medicare-for-all” bill. Roughly 46 percent of House Democrats have so far signed onto the measure to be unveiled Wednesday. The downturn in support reflects in part the risks for any politician that proposes dramatic change and uncertainty in a system that is central to Americans’ well-being. It underscores the political calculations Democrats face now that the party controls the House and hopes to capture the White House in the 2020 presidential election. And as the party gains power, its ideas will be taken more seriously. (McIntire, 2/27)
Bloomberg:
Health Insurers Sink As `Medicare For All' Idea Gains Traction
Health insurers are leading declines among health-care stocks as investors turned their focus to Democrats’ new “Medicare for all” bill that would replace almost all private plans and assessed the implications of a Senate hearing on surging drug prices. The S&P 500 Managed Health Care Index plunged as much as 4.9 percent, the most since Dec. 6, led by UnitedHealth Group Inc., Humana Inc. and WellCare Health Plans Inc. The broader health sector index fell 0.8 percent. (Darie, 2/27)
Politico:
POLITICO's Pulse Check: Meet The Industry Group Fighting Medicare For All
More than 100 House Democrats on Wednesday, led by Rep. Pramila Jayapal, unveiled their sweeping Medicare for All legislation. So what comes next — and why is the health care industry so opposed to it? First, POLITICO's Alice Miranda Ollstein joins Dan Diamond (starts at the 1:05 mark) on Capitol Hill to explain the state of play. (2/28)
The House passed legislation on Wednesday that would expand background checks to all gun sales, a bill that's gone further on gun control than any other in decades. But despite the apparent willingness to take on some proposals, Democrats, who have been hard-charging on other liberal issues, are aiming at low-hanging fruit -- such as the “boyfriend loophole” that allows some domestic abusers to own guns. And passage in the Senate is unlikely.
Reuters:
U.S. House Approves Expanded Background Checks For Gun Sales
The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday passed a bill that would expand background checks for gun sales to include firearm purchases at gun shows and over the internet, a measure likely to face Senate and White House opposition. The background check bill, which was approved by a 240-190 vote, is the first gun control measure taken up by Democrats since they regained control of the House in the 2018 congressional midterm elections. (Becker, 2/27)
Politico:
House Passes Most Sweeping Gun Control Legislation In Decades
The background checks legislation faces stiff opposition in the GOP-controlled Senate, and President Donald Trump — who has strong backing from the National Rifle Association and other gun rights groups — has vowed to veto the bill if it ever reaches his desk. But House Democrats insist that some federal action must be taken to address the growing toll of gun violence. In addition to Wednesday's vote, they will move legislation on Thursday to close the "Charleston loophole," which allows people to buy guns before background checks are completed, and extend the time period for any background checks from three days to as long as 20 days. White supremacist Dylann Roof was able to buy a gun in 2015 despite pending drug charges, and he later killed nine African-Americans at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C. (Bresnahan, 2/27)
The Washington Post:
Hard-Charging Democrats’ Cautious Strategy On Gun Control Reflects Limits Of Political Change
For six years, Rep. Mike Thompson’s job as House Democrats’ point man on combating gun violence amounted to stretches of obscurity punctuated by tragedy. As leader of the House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force, he convened countless meetings of lawmakers, experts, advocates and victims, trying to build support for some kind — any kind — of gun control legislation. And when a mass shooting occurred, he stepped forward alongside Democratic leaders to explain the need for the kind of action the House Republican majority had no interest in taking. (DeBonis, 2/27)
Transgender Troops Argue That Transitioning Made Them Better, More Effective Soldiers
Service members went before the House Armed Services Committee’s subcommittee on military personnel to talk about their experience with gender dysphoria and the military. The hearing comes at a time when the Trump administration is fighting in federal court to put in place a new policy that will limit many transgender people from serving in their preferred sex. Meanwhile, a new poll shows that the majority of Americans support the right for transgender people to serve in the armed forces.
The Associated Press:
Transgender Troops Tell Congress They Excel In Military
Transgender troops testifying for the first time to Congress on Wednesday said transitioning to another sex made them stronger, while Pentagon officials defended the Trump administration's desire to bar people like them from enlisting in the future. Army Capt. Alivia Stehlik, an infantry officer and graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. and Ranger School, told lawmakers she became a more "effective soldier" after she transitioned from male to female in 2017. (2/27)
The Washington Post:
In First, Transgender Troops Testify Before House As Trump Administration Seeks To Limit Their Service
Army Capt. Alivia Stehlik commissioned as an infantry officer from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., graduated from Ranger School and lived a “soldier’s life,” she said, spending long periods in the field before becoming a physical therapist in the service. After the Obama administration rescinded a ban in 2016 on serving while transgender, she wanted to do something else as a soldier, too: transition from male to female. (Lamothe, 2/27)
USA Today:
Pentagon Defends Policy That Bans Most Transgender Troops From Serving
House Democrats blasted the Pentagon policy on Wednesday that bans most transgender troops from serving, charging that barring them would damage military readiness by cashiering seasoned troops. Rep. Jackie Speier, chairman of the House Armed Service Committee's personnel panel, branded the Pentagon policy "bogus." The Pentagon has been seeking to overturn a 2016 policy that allowed transgender troops to serve openly and receive treatment. (Brook, 2/27)
Reuters:
Most Americans Back Transgender Troops: Reuters/Ipsos Poll
Nearly 60 percent of Americans said transgender people should be allowed to serve in the U.S. armed forces, according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll conducted ahead of a congressional panel's review, set for Wednesday, of Trump administration curbs on transgender service. The U.S. Supreme Court on Jan. 22 ruled in favor of letting the Trump administration enforce its policy of barring many transgender people from the military. Implementation of the policy has been delayed by legal wrangling in a lower court case that the Supreme Court did not directly address. (2/27)
During her time in the Senate, presidential hopeful Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) advanced proposals that consumer advocates claim would put patients’ safety at risk, such as pushing the FDA to approve medical devices faster and calling for a greater presence of industry-backed experts at the agency.
The Associated Press/International Consortium of Investigative Journalists:
Klobuchar Defends Her Record On Regulating Medical Devices
In her more than two terms as a U.S. senator representing Minnesota, Amy Klobuchar has built a reputation as an effective champion for consumer safety, sponsoring bills that improve swimming pool safety, ban lead in children's products and tackle the nation's opioid crisis. "Consumers deserve products that have been tested and meet strong health and safety standards," her website declares. (Forliti and Woodman, 2/28)
In other 2020 news —
Boston Globe:
Marijuana Legalization And The 2020 Presidential Race: Where The Candidates Stand
All 12 official Democratic candidates, as well as the potential Republican hopeful and former Massachusetts governor Bill Weld, told the Globe they now support full nationwide legalization, Canada-style. President Trump, meanwhile, has said he supports states’ rights to legalize. (Martin and Pindell, 2/27)
The Democratic lawmakers who are a part of the Affordable and Accessible Healthcare Task Force want to bring back efforts to stabilize the health law marketplaces--work that fell by the wayside due to political bickering. Meanwhile, the Trump administration is considering action on health savings accounts.
The Hill:
Moderate Dems Revive Effort To Stabilize ObamaCare Markets
A group of moderate House Democrats will make a push this year to stabilize ObamaCare's markets, reviving an effort that fell to partisan bickering in 2017. The New Democrat Coalition, a caucus of 101 centrists, says the House should "immediately" work with Republicans to bring down ObamaCare premiums and reverse the Trump administration's "sabotage" of the health care law. (Hellmann, 2/27)
Modern Healthcare:
Azar Touts Funding HSAs With Obamacare Subsidies
The Trump administration is considering action two fronts that could loosen up the reins on health savings accounts. HHS Secretary Alex Azar on Wednesday pushed the idea of funneling Affordable Care Act subsidies into HSAs for people in the individual market to pay for premiums and other out-of-pocket health spending. At the same time, the administration is exploring a proposal that would allow high-deductible plans with HSAs to cover preventive services such as providing free insulin. (Luthi and King, 2/27)
Patient At VA Hospital Shoots Doctor While Undergoing A Psychological Evaluation
According to investigators, Lawrence Bon, 59, had been in the West Palm Beach V.A. Medical Center since early morning and had been deemed "combative." The doctor's injury was not life-threatening.
The Associated Press:
FBI: Vet Shoots, Wounds Doctor Before Mental Health Check
The FBI says a 59-year-old U.S. Army veteran has shot and wounded a doctor just before a mental health evaluation at a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Riviera Beach, Florida. The FBI told news outlets Wednesday night that Larry Ray Bon, of Michigan, arrived at the West Palm Beach VA Medical Center that morning and was combative for hours. They say he was about to undergo the evaluation that evening when he pulled out the gun and shot the doctor in the neck. (2/28)
The New York Times:
Patient Shoots Doctor At Florida Veterans Affairs Hospital, Officials Say
The F.B.I. took over the investigation of the shooting because it occurred in a federal building, Agent Leverock said. Mr. Bon was scheduled to appear in federal court on Thursday. The West Palm Beach V.A. Medical Center, about 75 miles north of Miami on Florida’s eastern coast, is a general medical, psychiatric and surgical facility, according to its website. The 153-bed facility opened in 1995 and “provides health services to veterans throughout South Florida,” both at the main facility in West Palm Beach and six contractor-operated outpatient clinics, a 2017 report said. The facility also operates a 108-bed “community living center” and a 13-bed “blind rehabilitation service,” according to the report. During the 2017 fiscal year, the facility served about 60,000 veterans, the report said. (Jacobs and Stevens, 2/27)
In other veterans' health care news —
WBUR:
VA Expands Vets' Access To Private Care But Gives No Plan To Pay For It
The law expands a popular caregiver program and will examine VA's aging infrastructure. But the most controversial plank is a drastic increase in the number of veterans who will be eligible to use a private health care provider and bill the VA, in what's known as the Veterans Choice Program. (Lawrence, 2/27)
The legislation also includes a strict ban on abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, a measure that's been struck down in courts multiple times. While supporters tout the measure, critics say they're "terrified" of the draconian restrictions.
The Associated Press:
Missouri House Passes Wide-Ranging Abortion Restrictions
The Missouri House on Wednesday took steps to outlaw most abortions in the state should the U.S. Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade, an effort that's part of a broader Republican push amid renewed optimism that the high court might be more open to increased restrictions, and possibly an outright ban, on the procedure. (Ballentine, 2/27)
KCUR:
Missouri House Approves Sweeping Anti-Abortion Bill
Supporters of the legislation called it the “strongest pro-life bill in the country” at a time when Missouri has only one abortion provider. “I think here in Missouri, we know that life is precious. We want to give women, men, young people the choice: the choice to live,” Schroer said. Several amendments were added to the bill during Tuesday’s debate. (King, 2/27)
Meanwhile, in news on Planned Parenthood and the family planning program —
Chicago Tribune:
Planned Parenthood Of Illinois Could Lose Millions Over New Rule Surrounding Abortion
Days after the Trump administration issued a rule barring many health centers from providing abortion referrals, Planned Parenthood of Illinois said that it expects to continue offering such services despite the prospect of losing millions of dollars in funding. Under the new rule, finalized by the Trump administration last week, health providers such as Planned Parenthood will no longer be allowed to directly refer patients for abortions if they accept Title X money. That funding supports family planning services and related preventative care, especially for low-income patients. (Schencker, 2/27)
Kaiser Health News:
Despite 1991 Ruling, Foes Of New Family Planning Rules See Law On Their Side
State attorneys generals and women’s health advocates hoping to block in court new Trump administration rules for the federal family planning program face one major obstacle: The Supreme Court upheld very similar rules in 1991. Those rules were summarily canceled after a change in administrations. But the court is arguably more conservative than it was 28 years ago.Still, those who oppose the rules say that the ground has shifted enough to help them succeed this time. (Rovner, 2/28)
The Associated Press:
Evers' Official: Ex-Planned Parenthood VP Has No Legal Say
Gov. Tony Evers' pick to lead the Wisconsin Department of Health Services on Wednesday defended naming a former vice president at Planned Parenthood as a top deputy, saying she won't have any involvement in lawsuits challenging the state's abortion laws. Secretary-designee Andrea Palm was asked about the pick of Nicole Safar during a confirmation hearing before the state Senate's health committee. (Bauer, 2/27)
CDC Finds That Progress Against HIV Epidemic Plateaued In Recent Years
The report comes just weeks after President Donald Trump announced an ambitious plan to end the crisis. “Now is the time for our Nation to take bold action. We strongly support President Trump’s plan to end the HIV epidemic in America,” CDC Director Robert Redfield said in a statement. “We must move beyond the status quo to end the HIV epidemic in America.”
The Associated Press:
Weeks After 2030 HIV Pledge, Report Shows US Headway Stalled
Three weeks after President Donald Trump announced a campaign to end the U.S. HIV epidemic by 2030, new government data show that progress against the disease stalled recently. After declining for several years, the estimated number of new HIV infections held about steady from 2013 to 2016, the latest available data, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday. (Stobbe, 2/27)
The Hill:
CDC: Progress In Preventing HIV 'Stalled'
The report comes three weeks after President Trump announced a new campaign to end the HIV epidemic in the U.S. within 10 years. Eugene McCray, director of the CDC's Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, framed the report as evidence the campaign is needed. “After a decades-long struggle, the path to eliminate America’s HIV epidemic is clear,” McCray said in a statement. “Expanding efforts across the country will close gaps, overcome threats, and turn around troublesome trends.” (Rodrigo, 2/27)
Stat:
As Trump Calls For An End To HIV Epidemic, CDC Says Progress Has Stalled
Although public health researchers and advocates have been largely welcoming of the initiative, some have said that the administration has an uneven track record on HIV policy. Trump, for example, went a year after firing his HIV/AIDS advisory panel before new members were sworn in, and the administration has also turned back health protections for LGBT Americans. Men who have sex with men account for about 70 percent of new HIV infections, the new CDC report said. Among men who have sex with men, infections fell 16 percent from 2010 to 2016 for whites, stayed flat for blacks, and increased 30 percent for Latinos. (Joseph, 2/27)
"We shouldn't be criticizing people who get this information that's false because they may not know it's false," said Dr. Anthony Fauci, infectious disease chief at the National Institutes of Health, during a House Committee on Energy and Commerce. Experts testifying stressed the importance of public health officials and doctors combating that false information and said outbreaks such as the one in the Northwest are "really unacceptable."
Modern Healthcare:
Health Officials, Lawmakers Take Aim At False Measles Vaccine Claims
Public health officials say the spread of misinformation about the safety and efficacy of vaccines has fueled a series of measles outbreaks across the country. There have been more than 159 cases in 10 states since January. Testifying before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, called false information distributed through social media about the use of the Measles, Mumps and Rubella vaccine a 'threat' to public health that could only be counteracted with a sustained public education effort. (Johnson, 2/27)
The Associated Press:
How 'Completely Avoidable' Measles Cases Continue To Climb
The U.S. has counted more measles cases in the first two months of this year than in all of 2017 — and part of the rising threat is misinformation that makes some parents balk at a crucial vaccine, federal health officials told Congress Wednesday. Yet the vaccine is hugely effective and very safe — so the rise of measles cases "is really unacceptable," said Dr. Anthony Fauci, infectious disease chief at the National Institutes of Health. (2/27)
The Washington Post:
Texas State Rep. Bill Zedler Suggests Antibiotics Treat Measles
Amid a relentless anti-vaccine movement and measles outbreaks across the United States, a Texas lawmaker has falsely suggested that antibiotics can be used to treat the deadly childhood disease. Texas state Rep. Bill Zedler (R), an anti-vaxxer who is promoting legislation to allow parents to more easily opt out of vaccinations for their children, said he had measles when he was a child. "When I grew up, I had a lot of these illnesses,” Zedler recalled, according to the Texas Observer. “They wanted me to stay at home. But as far as being sick in bed, it wasn’t anything like that.” (Bever, 2/27)
Smartphones, Prevalence Of SUVs Cited As Possible Factors In Sharp Rise Of U.S. Pedestrian Deaths
An estimated 6,227 people died on foot from car crashes nationwide last year, the most since 1990. “The alarm bells continue to sound on this issue," said Jonathan Adkins, the executive director of the Governors Highway Safety Association.
The Associated Press:
Study: US Pedestrian Deaths Hit Highest Number Since 1990
The number of pedestrians killed on U.S. roads last year was the highest in 28 years, according to a report from a safety organization. Using data reported by states, the Governors Highway Safety Association estimates that 6,227 pedestrians were killed last year. That’s up 4 percent from 2017 and 35 percent since 2008. The association blames the increase on factors that include distracted or impaired drivers, more people walking to work, and more SUVs on the road, which cause more severe injuries in collisions with people on foot. (2/28)
The Wall Street Journal:
Pedestrian Deaths Reach Highest Level In Nearly 30 Years
Pedestrian deaths now account for about 16% of motor-vehicle crash deaths, up from 12% a decade ago. In that span, all other traffic deaths grew by less than 5%. “We’re killing way too many pedestrians. This has got to be a high priority,” said Jonathan Adkins, executive director of the nonprofit Governors Highway Safety Association, which represents state highway-safety offices and commissioned the report. (Calvert, 2/28)
This Stem Cell Treatment Was Billed As A Miracle Cure. Then People Started Getting Sick.
Companies are advertising the use of umbilical cord blood, saying the treatment is “as miraculous as the birth of a child itself” and “stimulates regenerative healing.” But the products are not approved by federal regulators and can be dangerous to patients. In other public health news: cancer drugs, genome mapping, flu shots, dialysis, tobacco, and more.
The Washington Post:
‘Miraculous’ Stem Cell Therapy Has Sickened People In Five States
Over the past year, at least 17 people have been hospitalized after being injected with products made from umbilical cord blood, a little-known but fast-growing segment of the booming stem cell industry, according to state and federal health officials and patient reports. Sold as a miracle cure for a variety of intractable conditions, the injections have sickened people in five states, prompting new warnings from health officials about the risks of unproven stem cell treatments. (Wan and McGinley, 2/27)
The Wall Street Journal:
New Cancer Drugs Aim To Offer Alternatives To Chemo
Michelle Lowry was a healthy baby until a pea-sized lump appeared on her neck when she was two. Within weeks it had swelled into a life-threatening tumor obstructing her breathing and she was hospitalized at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. “Her right arm and hand stopped working,” recalled her mom, Christina Lowry, who lives in Simi Valley, Calif. “Her face was swollen, her eye was almost swollen shut. The tumor was almost all the way around her neck.” A test showed her tumor was caused by a so-called NTRK fusion, which happens when a gene known as NTRK fuses with another unrelated gene. (Reddy, 2/27)
Bloomberg:
Is The World Ready For A $100 Genome Illumina (ILMN) CEO Asks
For years, the cost to decode a full human genome has been falling much like computer processing costs -- from hundreds of thousands of dollars per person to about $1,000 today. With a $100 genome getting closer, the CEO of the top maker of DNA sequencers thinks the world may not be ready. Illumina Inc.’s first machines, introduced in 2006, could decode a full human genome for about $300,000. A model released in 2014 can do so for about $1,000, and has made DNA sequencing widespread, helping diagnose diseases and find new drugs. The company’s latest machines could one day bring the cost close to $100. (Brown, 2/27)
Stat:
New Study Finds No Link Between Flu Shots And Miscarriages, Allaying Fears
A new study looking at whether women who are pregnant face an increased risk of a miscarriage if they get a flu shot found no link between the vaccine and pregnancy loss. The reassuring finding contradicts an earlier study by the same researchers that raised questions about the safety of getting a flu shot during pregnancy. An overview of the study findings was presented Wednesday at a meeting of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which guides vaccination policy for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Branswell, 2/27)
Kaiser Health News:
Listening To Older Patients Who Want To Stop Dialysis
Dr. Susan Wong sat down with an 84-year-old patient in the hospital, where he’d been admitted with a flare-up of a serious autoimmune condition and deteriorating kidney function. The older man told her he wanted to go home; he’d had a good life and was ready for its end. He didn’t want aggressive care — including dialysis — having witnessed his wife and son die painfully in intensive care years ago. (Graham, 2/28)
Stat:
Study: Guardant Blood Test Might Replace Biopsies In Some Cancers
Could a blood test help more lung cancer patients get drugs that are targeted to the genetic weaknesses of their tumors? Yes, according to summary results of a 282-patient clinical trial being made available Wednesday. The result is a boon for Guardant Health, the San Francisco-based startup that sells the test, Guardant360, which is a “liquid biopsy” that works by detecting fragments of DNA in the bloodstream. The full study will be presented in full at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in early April. (Herper, 2/27)
The Associated Press:
In Tobacco State, Students Testify About Youngsters' Vaping
Twelve-year-old Hannah Piedad first encountered vaping — an electronic form of smoking — at a New Year's party. It was the smell that got her attention. "I was intrigued because it smelled just like maple syrup," she said. Now the student at Johnson County Middle School in eastern Kentucky has testified before lawmakers in this tobacco state that e-cigarettes have become commonplace at her school despite a state law requiring a person to be at least 18 to buy them. (2/27)
NPR:
'Car Talk' Lives On In Medical Education, Teaching Med Students How To Diagnose
Ray and Tom Magliozzi, better known as "Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers," stopped recording new episodes of NPR's Car Talk in 2012. Tom passed away shortly thereafter, in 2014. But the spirit of the show lives on. And if you visit a doctor's office, you just might benefit from it. As it turns out, Ray and Tom's step-by-step method of diagnosing car trouble can be applied to more than just your broken down old jalopy. A handful of physicians are using the show to teach medical students how to diagnose disease. (Chisholm, 2/27)
The New York Times:
High Blood Pressure In Teens Tied To Kidney Failure In Adulthood
High blood pressure in adolescence is associated with kidney failure in adults, a new study reports. Israeli researchers studied health records of more than 2.6 million healthy 16- to 19-year-old candidates for military service from 1967 to 2013. Almost 8,000 had a diagnosis of hypertension. Over an average follow-up of 20 years, 2,189 developed renal disease requiring dialysis or kidney transplant. (Bakalar, 2/27)
The New York Times:
How To Support A Friend Or Loved One Who Has Been Sexually Abused
It’s an especially difficult time to be a survivor of sexual abuse or assault. On top of the daily struggle to stay safe and healthy, sexual abuse survivors also have to contend with an endlessly triggering news cycle. If you’re not a survivor yourself but you’re close to one — maybe a partner, friend or family member — you may not be able to fully understand what they’re going through, and you may feel confused or lost about how to best support them. Here’s what you need to know, and how you can be supportive. (Marin, 2/27)
Are Safe Consumption Sites Really Illegal? No Easy Answer, As Advocates In Mass. Hope To Open Center
Federal prosecutors in Massachusetts and elsewhere have said federal law prohibits such facilities that are allowed in 66 countries, including Canada. Other legal experts interpret the law differently. News on the epidemic looks at efforts under way in Ohio to save lives, as well.
Boston Globe:
Wait, Is This Legal? When It Comes To Safe Consumption Sites, The Law Is Unclear.
Is there any legal way to establish centers where people could use illicit drugs under medical supervision? That is one of the top questions legislators will ask if they take up a bill to allow “safe consumption sites,” as the state’s Harm Reduction Commission has recommended. (Freyer, 2/28)
Columbus Dispatch:
Ohio Is A Leader In Approach To Battling Opiod Epidemic, AMA Official Says
A newly published study shows that the opioid epidemic is occurring in waves, but Ohio may be a model in stemming the tide. The study, recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), found that Ohio had a 121 annual percent increase in people who died as a result of overdosing on synthetic opiates, such as fentanyl or carfentanil, between 1999 and 2016. (Bruner, 2/27)
Cincinnati Enquirer:
Fatal ODs Down 20 Percent In Hamilton County But No Victory Declared
Addiction treatment is up. Prevention efforts are going full steam. Sterile syringes and naloxone are more accessible than ever in Hamilton County and narcotics officers are seeing fewer opiates on Cincinnati-area streets. The Hamilton County Heroin Coalition reported progress on Wednesday in their State of the Heroin Crisis news conference, but its members don't think the heroin and fentanyl epidemic in the region is anywhere nearly over. (DeMio, 2/27)
News from state legislatures comes from New Hampshire, Iowa, Texas, Florida and Georgia.
Concord (N.H.) Monitor:
House Passes Mandatory Suicide Prevention Training Along With Dozens Of Other Bills
A bill that would require New Hampshire schools to provide at least two hours of suicide prevention training for staff each year is one step closer to becoming law. The House of Representatives took up dozens of issues Wednesday and will continue its work Thursday, moving some bills to the Senate, others to committees and many to their swift demise. (Willingham and DeWitt, 2/27)
Des Moines Register:
Iowa Children's Mental Health Bill Draws Praise And Concerns
Advocates for Iowa children on Wednesday praised a new bill to set up a children’s mental health system, but they said they hope legislators add details and money to the effort. Peggy Huppert, Iowa executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, told a Senate subcommittee Wednesday that the bill does not include deadlines to accomplish its goals, including new services for children with mental illness. (Leys, 2/27)
Houston Chronicle:
Surprise! Out-Of-Network Medical Bills Still Trap Texas Patients
[Khrystyna] Greene is among the thousands of Texans who, despite their best efforts to determine costs and coverage before treatment, still get slammed with surprise medical bills. For 10 years, Texas lawmakers have promised to fix the problem, passing consumer protections, creating and then tweaking a state-sponsored mediation system for disputed charges, and trying to crack down on deceptions involving insurance coverage. But, as Greene’s experience and dozens of patient bills reviewed by the Chronicle show, the surprises keep coming. Lawmakers say they will try again this year. On Thursday, state Sen. Kelly Hancock, a Fort Worth Republican, is scheduled to announce sweeping legislation to further combat surprise medical billing. “It’s time to take consumers out of this,” he said Tuesday. (Deam, 2/27)
Miami Herald:
Florida Governor Endorses Patient Savings Healthcare Bill
A bill to help patients reduce their health insurance premiums by shopping for healthcare received the endorsement on Wednesday of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who said the proposal will build on the state’s efforts to make public the prices charged by hospitals and other medical providers. (Chang, 2/27)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Georgia Senate Votes For School Safety Initiative
Senate Bill 15 would require routine threat assessments and drills in public schools and would mandate coordination between state agencies and local authorities and schools. It also would establish a program for certifying current or former military or public safety personnel as school safety coaches. (Tagami, 2/27)
Media outlets report on news from New Jersey, Arizona, California, Texas, Missouri, Kansas, Wisconsin, Georgia, New York, Tennessee, Minnesota and Ohio.
The Associated Press:
Company Leaders Are Faulted In Outbreak That Killed 11 Kids
A federal report says a viral outbreak that killed 11 children at a New Jersey nursing home was made worse because those in charge didn't plan for such an outbreak and didn't react fast enough. The Record reports the pediatric medical director of the Wanaque Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation didn't know how many children were infected with adenovirus or what his job entailed at the time of the outbreak last fall. (2/27)
Arizona Republic:
10 Arizona Babies Died Of Congenital Syphilis In 2018
Arizona is in the midst of a syphilis oubreak among women and newborns that caused the deaths of 10 babies last year, state data shows. Deaths from congenital syphilis — syphilis passed from a mother to her baby during pregnancy or delivery — are completely preventable. (Innes, 2/27)
Los Angeles Times:
What It’s Like To Go To School When Dozens Have Been Killed Nearby
Jaleyah Collier had just said goodbye to Kevin Cleveland outside a doughnut shop a few blocks from Hawkins High School on a spring afternoon in 2017. Get home safe, she told him before walking away. Minutes later someone drove into an alley nearby, got out of the car and asked Kevin, 17, and two others about their gang affiliation. The gunman then sprayed them with at least 10 rounds, killing Kevin and injuring the others. Jaleyah, then a high school sophomore, barely had time to grieve when a month later, her best friend, Alex Lomeli, 18, was shot and killed when someone tried to rob a market about a mile from the same high school, located at 60th and Hoover streets. (Kohli and Lee, 2/27)
Dallas Morning News:
Medical City To Open Heart Hospital And Spine Hospital In Dallas This Fall
Medical City Dallas announced Wednesday that it's spending about $92 million to turn a vacant Dallas health care facility into a heart hospital and spine hospital that will open in October. Medical City Heart Hospital and Medical City Spine Hospital will be across the highway from the health system's Dallas campus, which is at North Central Expressway and Forest Lane. The specialty hospitals will be located in the former flagship hospital of Forest Park Medical Center, a chain of doctor-owned hospitals that filed for bankruptcy after its doctors were accused of accepting millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks to perform surgeries. (Repko, 2/27)
KCUR:
The Latest Data Show Youth Suicides Continue To Rise In Missouri And Kansas
In 2017 in Missouri, 75 children and teenagers killed themselves — the most on record, according to an analysis of the most recent available data for the state. That same year in Kansas, 99 young people took their own lives. Another record.It’s difficult to compare youth suicides in Kansas and Missouri because the two states track the data differently, and some places supress the numbers so that individuals aren't identifiable in the statistics. (Ryan, 2/27)
WBUR:
Storing Health Records On Your Phone: Can Apple Live Up To Its Privacy Values?
Since last March, Apple has been rolling out a feature that allows people to store their medical records in its Health app. UC San Diego Health, where Cavaliere sees his doctors, is one of more than 200 health care providers around the United States using the health records feature. (Sydell, 2/27)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Wellspring Nursing Home Has To Find New Homes For 105 Residents
Wellspring of Milwaukee, a nursing home and rehabilitation center, is scrambling to find new homes for its residents this week after a vendor won a court judgment that froze its bank account. The nursing home, 9350 W. Fond du Lac Ave., learned on Monday that its bank account was frozen. (Boulton, 2/27)
Georgia Health News:
Legionnaires’ Disease On The Rise, And Experts Not Sure Why
Cases of Legionnaires’ disease have quadrupled in Georgia over the past 10 years, public health statistics show. That increase mirrors a national trend, with U.S. cases up fivefold since 2000. (Kanne, 2/27)
The Wall Street Journal:
ThriveNYC, A Mental Health Initiative, Comes Under Scrutiny
Officials for the city’s ThriveNYC program, a mental health initiative, struggled to tell members of the New York City Council during testimony Wednesday how its annual budget of $250 million is spent and exactly how New Yorkers have benefited from the city’s services. The ThriveNYC initiative, now three years old, is the signature effort of Chirlane McCray, the wife of New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. In January, Ms. McCray announced that the program would become its own office, which now has 21 employees with a $2 million office budget, according to Susan Herman, appointed to lead the office. (West, 2/27)
Nashville Tennessean:
Vanguard Healthcare To Pay $18M Settlement For Bogus Claims, Poor Care
For the second time, a Brentwood-based nursing home company has agreed to pay millions of dollars to the federal government to settle a lawsuit alleging the company submitted bogus Medicare and Medicaid claims for reimbursement while neglecting patients. Vanguard Healthcare agreed this week to pay more than $18 million to resolve a federal lawsuit brought by the U.S. Department of Justice and state of Tennessee for billing Medicare and Medicaid programs for "grossly substandard" nursing home services, according to a news release. (Sauber, 2/27)
Los Angeles Times:
Terminal Island Prison Inmates Went Without Heat During The Coldest February In Decades
Hundreds of inmates at the Terminal Island federal prison on the harbor front spent one of the coldest periods in decades in frigid cells with no heat and only blankets for warmth before they were transferred temporarily to another facility. As outside temperatures plunged into the low 40s at night, two units that housed more than 200 inmates lost heat after an underground steam line failed in January at the low-security federal lockup that sits at the entrance to Los Angeles Harbor in San Pedro. (Winton, 2/27)
MPR:
Schools Add Healthy, Local To The Menu -- And Some Kids Eat It Up
In Minnesota and around the country, many schools are shifting away from nuggets and fries to fresher, locally-grown foods. More than half of Minnesota school districts now have some kind of farm-to-school program. It's not an easy change. It requires schools to rethink everything when it comes to feeding children. (Shockman, 2/28)
Los Angeles Times:
Should California Insure Itself Against Spending Too Much On Fighting Wildfires?
This would be a first for California: state government buying insurance to protect itself against overspending its budget. But before you start pelting the politicians and screaming fiscal irresponsibility, know that the budget-busting would be for fighting wildfires. (Skelton, 2/28)
Columbus Dispatch:
Fake Pain Cream Sold At The Arnold, To City First Responders, Couple Admit
A central Ohio couple have pleaded guilty to federal health-care fraud charges for conspiring with others to sell a bogus cream to those seeking pain relief, including attendees at the Arnold Sports Festival and Columbus first-responders. Officials with the U.S. attorney’s office in the Southern District of Ohio said Amy M. Kirk, a nurse practitioner in Columbus, and Ryan D. Edney, of Plain City, each signed plea deals involving conspiracy to commit health-care fraud, according to court records. (Sullivan, 2/27)
Each week, KHN compiles a selection of recently released health policy studies and briefs.
JAMA Internal Medicine:
Measuring Hospital-Acquired Complications Associated With Low-Value Care.
In this cohort study and descriptive analysis of 9330 episodes of low-value use of 7 procedures (ranging from 56 low-value spinal fusions to 3963 low-value knee arthroscopies), depending on the procedure, between 0.2% and 15.0% of patients receiving these low-value procedures developed at least 1 of 16 hospital-acquired complications, the most common being health care–associated infection. (Badgery-Parker, 2/25)
The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation:
'Partial Medicaid Expansion' With ACA Enhanced Matching Funds: Implications For Financing And Coverage
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) provides enhanced federal matching funds to states that expand Medicaid to nonelderly adults up to 138% of the federal poverty level (FPL, $17,236/year for an individual in 2019). The ACA enhanced match (93% in 2019, and 90% in 2020 and thereafter) is substantially higher than states’ traditional Medicaid matching rate. A few states have sought Section 1115 demonstration waiver authority from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to receive the substantially higher ACA enhanced match while limiting coverage to individuals at 100% FPL, instead of covering the full 138% FPL ACA group. (Rudowitz and Musumeci, 2/20)
Commonwealth Fund:
Coping With Serious Illness In America
The luckiest among us have family and friends to lean on when times get tough. For those who develop a serious illness — an often painful and tumultuous experience — family and friends offer crucial emotional support and help with day-to-day activities. A recent survey of the sickest adults in America, conducted by the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, the New York Times, and the Commonwealth Fund, found that seriously ill adults also rely on their family and friends to organize their health care, helping them navigate an often complex, confusing, and inefficient system. Focus groups and in-depth interviews conducted by the Commonwealth Fund since 2016 revealed that while taking care of a seriously ill family member or friend can bring meaning and satisfaction to caregivers, it also can become a complex and serious responsibility that burdens them. (Lewis et al, 2/21)
JAMA Internal Medicine:
Association Of Adolescent Hypertension With Future End-Stage Renal Disease.
Hypertension is a leading risk factor of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The role of nonmalignant hypertension as the sole initiating factor of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in non–African American populations has recently been questioned. (Leiba, 2/25)
JAMA Cardiology:
Two-Year Outcomes After Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement With Mechanical Vs Self-Expanding Valves: The REPRISE III Randomized Clinical Trial.
In this analysis of the randomized clinical trial, at 2 years, mortality and all stroke were similar between valves. Disabling stroke and paravalvular leak were less while pacemaker requirement and valve thrombosis were more frequent after using the mechanically expanded valve. (Reardon, 2/27)
Editorial writers weigh in on efforts to improve quality of care and lower costs.
Los Angeles Times:
'Medicare For All’ Is Popular, But It's Likely Doomed To Fail
America’s fascination with Medicare for all is born of good intentions. Americans are hurting and in search of relief. Nearly 30% of U.S. adults struggle to pay their medical bills, and more than 20% say they’ve put off treatment or filling a prescription because of cost. Unfortunately, in our search for a magic pill, we’ve missed the key point. Government-run programs work well in the rest of the world because the cost of medical care delivery — what doctors, nurses and drug companies get paid — is considerably less than in the United States. Lowering the cost of care would mean reining in drug prices, eliminating unnecessary procedures, and closing small, inefficient hospitals. Until we do, every approach, including Medicare for all, will fail. There is no painless solution, no magic pill. (Robert Pearl, 2/28)
The Hill:
Republicans Promise To Lower Drug Costs — Don't Believe Them
Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, held a hearing on drug prices and several CEOs of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world testified. Ostensibly, the hearing is to look at why drug prices are so high in the United States and discuss laws that could be implemented by Congress, or regulations imposed by the Trump administration, to help reduce the cost of medicine for the American people. As someone who believes that drug costs in this country are out of control, on the one hand, I am pleased that this congressional took place. However, I strongly doubt that Republicans on Capitol Hill or President Donald Trump, are serious about doing anything about the costs of medicine because they probably don’t want to threaten drug companies’ profits or stock prices. (Former Rep. Silvestre Reyes (D-Texas), 2/27)
Axios:
Health Care Spending Is More Than Just The Parts You See
People focus on the health costs that are most tangible and sometimes outrageous to them: their deductibles, and drug costs, and surprise medical bills, and the annual increase in the share of the premium they pay. But there's more that gets less attention because it's not as visible to them. (Drew Altman, 2/28)
The Gainesville Sun:
Larry Lowenthal: World's Best Health Care System? Not U.S.
At least she was honest about it. I once sat on a panel evaluating candidates for public office. One candidate told us her solution to solving America’s health-care crisis: require that all residents purchase health insurance at market rates, with “government” subsidizing those who needed financial help. Then, anyone without coverage would be denied service. “What if,” I asked, “some people slip through the insurance cracks and show up at the ER very sick or seriously injured?” (Larry Lowenthal, 2/25)
Houston Chronicle:
The Real State Of Emergency In Texas? Our Lack Of Health Insurance
Mr. Johnson, a middle-aged man with salt and pepper hair, wasn’t sleeping well. At first, the two pillows he wedged beneath his back helped, but now he was getting short of breath even in his La-Z-Boy. ...That’s where I, a cardiologist in training, saw him. He didn’t need me to tell him the news he already knew. His heart failure was getting worse. He hadn’t been taking his medications, he reluctantly confessed. It wasn’t for a lack of trying. His wife explained that they had to take turns buying medications. They could not afford their prescriptions nor their health insurance, and they did not qualify for Medicaid. The couple would buy his heart medications at times and her insulin the other times. Now they were taking turns being admitted to the hospital. (Taimur Safder, 2/27)
Louisville Courier-Journal:
Louisville Budget Cuts: Expect Rise In Hep A, HIV, Overdoses
In 2018 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report showing that for the first time in a century, average life expectancy in the U.S. fell. The decline, fueled by a rise in drug overdoses and suicides, sends a loud warning that we, as a nation and a city, must continue to invest in public health. Protecting people from disasters and disease outbreaks. Providing immunizations. Screening people for disease. Promoting on-the-job health and safety. These are all investments that save lives. Today in Louisville, that investment is threatened by a $65 million budget shortfall over four years, driven largely by an increasing state pension obligation. (Karen Cost, 2/27)
Opinion writers weigh in on these health care issues and others.
The New York Times:
We Need Better Answers On Nutrition
Poor nutrition is a leading cause of poor health and spiraling health care spending. Research from the Tufts Friedman School suggests that poor eating causes nearly 1,000 deaths each day in the United States from heart disease, stroke or diabetes. In 2016, the direct and indirect costs of chronic diseases as a result of obesity were $1.72 trillion — almost 10 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. (Joon Yun, David A. Kessler and Dan Glickman, 2/28)
Stat:
Alzheimer's Disease BOLD Act Funds Must Help African-Americans
Former model and restaurateur B. Smith is a likely representation of life with Alzheimer’s disease. Beyond the gasps over Smith’s home life — she lives with her husband and his live-in girlfriend — her situation points to real-world challenges faced by black families caring for loved ones who have this life-altering condition. Alzheimer’s is a public health crisis for which Congress has thankfully put aside its differences long enough to pass the Building Our Largest Dementia Infrastructure for Alzheimer’s (BOLD) Act. Now the question is whether the money and resources directed toward African-Americans, a group disproportionately affected by Alzheimer’s, is bold enough. (Karen D. Lincoln, 2/28)
Bloomberg:
Private Gun Sale Loophole Must Finally Close
The U.S. has long had two distinct applications of federal gun law. One applies to people who shop at federally licensed gun dealers: They must pass a background check before purchasing a firearm. The other is for those who arrange a private sale from an unlicensed seller, via the internet or at a gun show: They are under no obligation to prove they are legally qualified to make their purchase. A 2015 survey found that more than one-fifth of Americans who obtained a gun in the two years prior to the study did so without a background check. The disparity is absurd, especially when you consider how often people who are legally barred from buying guns try to buy them. (2/27)
USA Today:
Switch To E-Cigarettes, It's Healthier Than Smoking And Helps People Quit
Public health officials’ goal should always be to build awareness of the risks associated with smoking and educate the public on the products that can help smokers quit. Yet the public health community has failed to build awareness of how switching to e-cigarettes can reduce the harm associated with smoking by as much as 95 percent, according to the Public Health England and multiple independent reviews. (Julie Gunlock, 2/28)
Bloomberg:
Watch For Side Effects As Ketamine Is Used To Ease Depression
Clinical trials are not enough to prove any drug is safe and effective – especially one that could be as widely used as Johnson & Johnson’s depression drug esketamine, a slightly altered form of the street drug ketamine. The FDA approval process is a balancing act, weighing safety and efficacy testing against the need to get potentially life-saving drugs out as soon as possible. An advisory panel to the FDA decided this month that the benefits outweigh the risks, and approval is expected soon. But scientists who study depression say there’s a lot more to learn about esketamine’s long-term effects. (Faye Flam, 2/27)
New England Journal of Medicine:
Opioid Use Disorder And Incarceration — Hope For Ensuring The Continuity Of Treatment
A complex web of legal, policy, and structural barriers has led to persistent gaps in access to treatment for opioid use disorder in jail facilities in the United States and prevented the delivery of coordinated care. (Ingrid A. Binswanger, 2/27)
The Washington Post:
The U.S. Is Funding Dangerous Experiments It Doesn’t Want You To Know About
In 2014, U.S. officials imposed a moratorium on experiments to enhance some of the world’s most lethal viruses by making them transmissible by air, responding to widespread concerns that a lab accident could spark a global pandemic. Most infectious-disease studies pose modest safety risks, but given that these proposed experiments intended to create a highly contagious flu virus that could spread among humans, the government concluded the work should not go on until it could be approved through a specially created, rigorous review process that considered the dangers. (Marc Lipsitch and Tom Inglesby, 2/27)
Stat:
We Need More Than Blood Drives To Solve Shortages Of Platelets
When the polar vortex froze out residents in much the United States in January, it also sent chills through the U.S. blood system, especially for people who needed platelets.“ If you are safely able to leave your house, please consider giving blood for hospital patients,” tweeted the Red Cross of Massachusetts. “Polar vortex blamed for critically low blood supply,” reported Minnesota’s Northwest Community Television. (Jonathan Thon, 2/28)
New England Journal of Medicine:
Loud, Gray, And Arbitrary — The Compounding Trauma Of Detention For Asylum Seekers
A New Jersey detention center houses asylum seekers who have fled persecution in their home countries. Even the U.S. physician who comes to examine them must tread carefully to be allowed to do her job in this loud, gray place where guards’ decisions seem arbitrary. (Katherine C. McKenzie, 2/27)