- KFF Health News Original Stories 3
- Most States Have Yet to Permanently Fund 988. Call Centers Want Certainty.
- ‘Like a Russian Roulette’: US Military Firefighters Grapple With Unknowns of PFAS Exposure
- Hollywood's A-List Health Insurance Is Jeopardized by the Labor Strikes
- Political Cartoon: 'A Clean Bill of Health?'
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Most States Have Yet to Permanently Fund 988. Call Centers Want Certainty.
For rural Americans, who live in areas often short of mental health services and die by suicide at a far higher rate than urbanites, the federally mandated crisis phone line is one of the few options to connect with a crisis counselor. (Christina Saint Louis, 9/7)
‘Like a Russian Roulette’: US Military Firefighters Grapple With Unknowns of PFAS Exposure
Federal research linking “forever chemicals” to testicular cancer confirms what U.S. military personnel long suspected. But as they seek testing for PFAS exposure, many wonder what to do with the results. There’s no medical treatment yet. (Patricia Kime and Hannah Norman, 9/7)
Hollywood's A-List Health Insurance Is Jeopardized by the Labor Strikes
Hollywood actors and writers who qualify for their union health plans get a very good deal compared with other Americans. But not working during the strike threatens their eligibility in the system. (Jackie Fortiér, LAist, 9/7)
Political Cartoon: 'A Clean Bill of Health?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'A Clean Bill of Health?'" by Elisabeth McNair.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
NEW TECHNOLOGY FOR HEALTH CARE?
Temporary tats
may have new competition,
thanks to 'Magic Ink'
- 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:
FDA May Approve Updated Covid Boosters As Early As Friday: Report
NBC News reports that the FDA plans to greenlight new versions of the covid booster updated to target the XBB.1.5 omicron subvariant, and that the shots could be available to the public by next week. In other covid news: global case trends, masks, and long covid.
NBC News:
FDA Could Greenlight New Covid Boosters As Early As Friday
The Food and Drug Administration plans to greenlight updated versions of the Covid boosters as early as Friday, according to four people familiar with the agency’s plans. The latest shots are designed to target the XBB.1.5 omicron subvariant. Though that strain is no longer dominant, the boosters should still protect against current circulating subvariants, which are closely related, the drugmakers and experts say. (Lovelace Jr. and Alba, 9/6)
Reuters:
Pfizer Says Updated COVID Shot Generated Strong Reaction Vs New Variant In Mice
Pfizer on Wednesday said the updated Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine expected to be used this fall elicited a strong antibody response against the highly mutated BA.2.86 subvariant of the coronavirus in a preclinical study in mice. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has previously indicated that BA.2.86 may be more capable of causing infection in people who previously had COVID or were vaccinated with previous shots. (9/6)
CIDRAP:
WHO Airs Concerns About Global COVID Trends
At a briefing on global health issues today, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said there are concerning trends ahead of the Northern Hemisphere winter, including rising deaths in parts of the Middle East and Asia and increased hospitalizations in multiple regions. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, PhD, included the caveat that data are limited, with few countries reporting information. Regarding variants, he said there is currently no dominant one, though EG.5 is on the rise. He said the heavily mutated BA.2.86 variant has been detected in small numbers in only 11 countries, though the WHO continues to monitor developments, especially regarding transmissibility and potential impact. (Schnirring, 9/6)
President Joe Biden tested negative again —
MarketWatch:
Biden Continues To Test Negative For COVID After First Lady Tests Positive
President Joe Biden tested negative for COVID-19 on Wednesday morning and is not experiencing any symptoms, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters. The president, who is due to leave Thursday for a G-20 summit in India, is getting tested more often after first lady Jill Biden tested positive for COVID on Monday. (Reklaitis, 9/6)
Politico:
Biden Appears To Be Over Covid Protocols
For two days straight, the White House told anyone who would listen that President Joe Biden was taking his Covid exposure seriously by following a strict set of public health precautions. Then Biden strode into a room full of people on Wednesday and reduced those precautions to a punchline. “I’ve been tested again today, I’m clear across the board,” Biden said, smiling as he held up his face mask. “They keep telling me, because it has to be 10 days or something, I gotta keep wearing it. But don’t tell them I didn’t have it when I walked in.” (Cancryn, 9/6)
The Washington Post:
School Mask Mandates Are Back. So Are The Political Divisions They Deepened
School administrators say they are not eager to relive the bitter fights over masks and vaccination that dominated the first two years of the pandemic. Josh Tovar, a high school principal in Texas’s Garland Independent School District, said his campus is seeing a spike in student and staff infections that is depriving some classes of teachers. But, Tovar said, he would never consider requiring masks again, even if he had that power. (Natanson, Nirappil and Vazquez, 9/6)
In covid research —
CIDRAP:
Long COVID Less Likely After Omicron Than Other Variants, Data Show
Researchers in Sweden report that the risk of getting long COVID after a COVID-19 infection was higher for the wild type, Alpha, and Delta variants compared to Omicron. The study is published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases. Though prior research has shown that severe COVID-19 is less likely from Omicron infections compared to earlier variants, less is known about how each variant increases the likelihood of developing long COVID, or persistent symptoms lasting 12 or more weeks following acute infections. (Soucheray, 9/6)
The New York Times:
Can Covid Damage Your Heart? A Look At Short- And Long-Term Health Risks
During the first two years of the pandemic, from March 2020 to March 2022, there were approximately 90,000 more deaths in the United States attributed to cardiovascular disease than were expected for that span of time. The majority of these occurred in people 65 and older — the age group with the highest risk for cardiovascular complications. But heart-related deaths also increased dramatically in younger adults. In fact, a study found that the sharpest rise in deaths from heart attack during that period occurred in 25- to 44-year-olds. (Smith, 9/7)
Abortion Rose So Far This Year In Most States Where It's Still Legal: Study
New research from the Guttmacher Institute determines that abortions rose in nearly every state where the procedure remains legal. The largest increase is seen in states that border ones with total abortion bans, showing that people are "highly motivated" to travel, the researchers say.
The New York Times:
Abortions Rose in Most States This Year, New Data Shows
Legal abortions most likely increased in the United States in the first six months of the year compared with 2020, an analysis of new estimates shows, as states with more permissive abortion laws absorbed patients traveling from those with bans and access to abortion pills via telemedicine continued to expand. ... The data suggests that thousands of women have crossed state lines to obtain an abortion, in the face of restrictions at home. It also indicates a rise in abortions among those living in states where the procedure is legal. (Walker and McCann, 9/6)
NPR:
Where Are Abortions Happening? New Study Tracks Post-Roe Trends
People seeking an abortion are "highly motivated" to travel if they can't get abortions where they live. That's one conclusion from a study from the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy group that supports reproductive rights. ... "If you're interested in where people are going, then I think the numbers tell a big part of that story because it represents a lot of people traveling," says Isaac Maddow-Zimet, a data scientist at the Guttmacher Institute. (Simmons-Duffin, 9/7)
In other abortion updates —
The Washington Post:
Mexican Court Expands Access To Abortion, Even As U.S. Restricts It
The Mexican Supreme Court on Wednesday widened access to abortion, decriminalizing the procedure in federal health facilities. The ruling means that more than 70 percent of women in Mexico — including everyone who uses the federal health system — will have access to legal abortion, said the Information Group on Reproductive Choice, or GIRE. The nonprofit organization, which took the case to the Supreme Court, called the decision a “historic milestone.” (Sheridan, 9/6)
Reuters:
Planned Parenthood Seeks To Overturn US Whistleblower Fraud Law
Planned Parenthood is challenging a decades-old law allowing whistleblowers to bring fraud lawsuits on behalf of the government, in a bid to defeat a $1.8 billion lawsuit by an anonymous anti-abortion activist and the state of Texas seeking to recover money they claim the organization illegally took from Medicaid. In a filing in Amarillo, Texas, federal court on Friday, Planned Parenthood argued that the so-called "qui tam" provision of the federal False Claims Act (FCA) lets private citizens take on the role of government officials enforcing the law, violating the U.S. Constitution's requirement that such officials be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. (Pierson, 9/6)
AP:
Hundreds Of Military Promotions Are On Hold As Republican Senator Demands End To Abortion Policy
Top defense officials are accusing Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville of jeopardizing America’s national security with his hold on roughly 300 military promotions, raising the stakes in a clash over abortion policy that shows no signs of easing. Tuberville brushed off the criticism, vowing he will not give in. “We’re going to be in a holding pattern for a long time,” he said, if the Pentagon refuses to end its policy of paying for travel when a service member goes out of state to get an abortion or other reproductive care. (Freking and Copp, 9/7)
On child care and maternal care —
The Washington Post:
Child Care Is About To Get More Expensive, As Federal Funds Dry Up
With her toddlers’ day care closing in weeks, Lexie Monigal is back in a familiar bind: desperately searching for child care while contemplating quitting her full-time job as a surgical nurse in Menasha, Wis. It’s the second time this year her twins’ day care has suddenly announced plans to shutter — both for financial difficulties — leaving her without someone to watch her 2-year-olds and exacerbating a long-standing shortage of child care in this stretch of Wisconsin. (Bhattarai,9/5)
The 19th:
Ta’Kiya Young Shooting Highlights Sobering Reality For Black Pregnant Women In America
Nadine Young left her home in Ohio under the crushing weight of grief. By the end of 1989, the young mother of four had lost both of her parents, a stillborn baby girl and her sister. She packed up and moved to Mississippi for nearly a decade, where she gave birth to a fifth son. She taught her boys to be respectable and to always do what police asked. (Henry, 9/6)
After Covid, Medicare Advances Are Now Worsening Hospital Debt
Roll Call reports that one of the pandemic "lifelines" Medicare threw to the health industry is now becoming another "stone around their necks" for a few hospitals. And Axios covers a Medicare experiment to push states to control and lower their health care spending.
Roll Call:
Medicare Pandemic Advances Deepen Debt For Some Hospitals
Congress poured money into the U.S. economy throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. But for a few hospitals, one of the lifelines that Medicare threw to the medical industry ultimately became another stone around their necks. (Clason, 9/6)
Axios:
Medicare Encourages States To Test Global Health Budgets
The Biden administration wants states to control and lower their health care spending through a new Medicare experiment that takes a page from Maryland's unique hospital payment system. The latest attempt at transforming how America pays for health care builds on states' work to improve care quality while managing health care costs for all payers, including Medicare, Medicaid and private insurers. (Goldman, 9/6)
On Medicare drug price negotiations —
Stat:
AstraZeneca Chief Proposes A Novel Edit To The Drug Pricing Bill
Among the pharmaceutical companies’ many objections to the Biden administration’s drug pricing program is a set of provisions the industry says will warp how cancer drugs are developed. On Wednesday, AstraZeneca CEO Pascal Soriot proposed a new solution. (Mast, 9/6)
Reuters:
Astellas Withdraws Lawsuit Challenging Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Plans
Japan-based Astellas Pharma on Wednesday withdrew a lawsuit filed against the U.S. government, days after its prostate cancer drug was spared from the first list of drugs that will be subject to Medicare price negotiations. The U.S. government, late last month, selected the first 10 drugs, including the top-selling blood thinner Eliquis from Bristol Myers Squibb and Pfizer, which will face price negotiations as part of President Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act. (9/6)
HHS Inspector General Says Nursing Homes Aren't Ready For Disasters
The Office of the Inspector General surveyed 168 nursing homes last year to examine their readiness to respond to public health emergencies or natural disasters. Most of them were not prepared. Separately, Axios reports potential problems from a nursing home inspector shortage.
Modern Healthcare:
OIG Report: Nursing Homes Unprepared For Disasters
The Health and Human Services Department Office of Inspector General surveyed 168 nursing homes last year to determine areas of concern regarding their readiness to respond to public health emergencies and natural disasters. Seventy-seven percent of facilities told the OIG that they face at least one “major” or “moderate” challenge that jeopardizes their ability to care for residents during crises. Staffing stood out as the most commonly cited problem. (Berryman, 9/6)
Axios:
Nursing Home Inspector Shortage Could Undermine Staffing Proposal
State inspectors who likely will help enforce the Biden administration's new nursing home staffing requirements are facing their own workforce shortages. The Biden administration says its newly proposed staffing ratios could improve patient care, but the program's success may depend on a nursing home oversight apparatus that's already struggling to keep up with inspections. (Goldman, 9/7)
Modern Healthcare:
Gig Workers Move Into Nursing As Reliance On Travel Nurses Drops
Gig workers are making their way into hospitals in the form of nurses picking up shifts and working alongside staff clinicians caring for patients. Their arrival comes as health systems try to decrease their reliance on expensive travel nurses and other temporary workers needed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some systems created internal staffing agencies and float pools, while others are embracing per-diem structures where clinician gig workers—much like Uber and DoorDash drivers—use apps to choose what shifts they work, and where. (Devereaux, 9/6)
In other health care industry news —
Modern Healthcare:
340B Remedy’s Clawbacks Face Opposition From Hospitals
Budget neutrality is the central sticking point across the 150-plus comments submitted to the federal government regarding the proposed rule. The American Hospital Association, among other provider associations and health systems, disagrees with government's assessment, arguing that the Health and Human Services Department has “the legal obligation and legal flexibility to not seek a clawback of funds that hospitals received as a result of HHS’ own mistakes.” (Kacik, 9/6)
Stateline:
Some States Back Hospital Mergers Despite Record Of Service Cuts, Price Hikes
Nearly half of Mississippi’s rural hospitals are at risk of closing, according to a report from the Center for Healthcare Quality & Payment Reform, a nonprofit policy research center. Mississippi leaders hope easing restrictions on hospital mergers could be a solution. A new law exempts all hospital acquisitions and mergers from state antitrust laws and classifies community hospitals as government entities, making them immune from antitrust enforcement. (Vollers, 9/7)
Modern Healthcare:
Why Companies Disrupting Healthcare Press On Despite Setbacks
Large retailers have poured billions of dollars into healthcare services, with executives promising big gains in market share and profitability—but some of those efforts are not going according to plan.On Friday, Rosalind Brewer stepped down as CEO of Walgreens Boots Alliance, and Ginger Graham, lead independent director, took on the role of interim CEO. Brewer, who joined Walgreens in March 2021, was an integral part of the company's shift beyond its stores and traditional pharmacy and oversaw multibillion-dollar investments into the strategy starting mere months after her arrival. (Hudson, 9/6)
Houston Chronicle:
Prairie View A&M Starts School Of Public And Allied Health
Prairie View A&M University on Wednesday launched its School of Public and Allied Health, coming on the heels of a COVID-19 pandemic that laid bare health disparities in diverse communities and spiked student interest in the field at the HBCU. ... “I’m excited about what next,” said Angela Branch-Vital, the school’s executive director. “Being able to make an impact, that’s what’s key to me – being able to represent the underserved, being able to be a voice for those who do not have a voice.” (Ketterer, 9/6)
Modern Healthcare:
NextGen To Be Acquired By Thoma Bravo For $1.8B
Private equity firm Thoma Bravo will acquire electronic health records vendor NextGen Healthcare for $1.8 billion, the companies announced Wednesday. The deal will bring an end to NextGen's four decades as a publicly traded company since it debuted as Quality Systems in 1982. NextGen is the latest health technology business to go private, following private equity deals for companies that struggled on the public markets, such as SOC Telemed, Allscripts and Tivity Health. (Perna, 9/6)
Amid Extreme Heat, Many Low-Income Americans Miss Out On Money To Pay Cooling Costs
Politico reports that over 30 million low-income households eligible for federal funding to help pay for cooling during dangerous hot weather have yet to receive any aid. The news comes as the UN's first global chief heat officer sounded warnings over the dangers posed by warming cities.
Politico:
Holes In Federal Aid Leave Millions Sweltering
If nothing else, this summer’s record-smashing heat has demonstrated that air conditioning can be a life-saving necessity. Yet more than 30 million low-income households that are eligible for federal funding to help pay their cooling costs haven’t received a dime, writes Thomas Frank in an investigation published today. That’s largely because the federal program to protect poor families from dangerous temperatures was designed with frigid winters in mind. And almost every state spends the bulk of that program’s money on heating, even as summer death tolls rise. (Skibell, 9/6)
E&E News By POLITICO:
States Withhold Cooling Aid For The Poor As Heat Gets Deadlier
More than 30 million low-income households that are eligible for federal funding to defray the cost of air conditioning have not received any money from a government program that was created to protect vulnerable people from dangerous temperatures, an E&E News analysis shows. The dearth of cooling assistance going to households nationwide reflects shortcomings in U.S. and state policies to address the dangers of extreme heat as it kills more Americans than other weather-related disasters, according to some experts. It comes during a summer of unmatched climate catastrophes, including the hottest month on record. (Frank, 9/6)
More on the heat wave —
Reuters:
UN Chief Heat Officer Says Warming Cities Pose Potential To Be Major Killers
The United Nations' first global chief heat officer called on Wednesday for political leaders to make firm commitments at November's COP28 climate meeting to stem rapidly rising temperatures in cities, particularly in poorer countries. Eleni Myrivili, tasked with trying to ease the impact of hotter summers that threaten the health and livelihoods of billions of urban residents around the world, said finding the finance for nature-based solutions and adaptation plans for cities was a major roadblock to progress. (9/6)
The Washington Post:
Extreme Heat Poses Heightened Death Risk For Those With Schizophrenia
When temperatures surge, the effects of schizophrenia can be profound. During the record-breaking heat wave in British Columbia in Canada in 2021, for example, researchers found that an astonishing 8 percent of the people who died in the heat had been diagnosed with schizophrenia — rendering it more dangerous, when combined with heat, than any other condition studied. ... People with schizophrenia are more likely to be unhoused or economically vulnerable — but that’s not the only reason they are at greater risk. Drugs prescribed for schizophrenia and other serious mental illnesses dehydrate patients and make it harder for their bodies to manage high temperatures. (Osaka, O'Connor and Muyskens, 9/6)
The Boston Globe:
Many Mass. Students Are Returning To Hot Classrooms That Could Compromise Their Learning
“We really worry about the physical health of children when the temperature gets above 90 degrees,” said Dr. Scott Hadland, chief of adolescent and young adult medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital for Children. “We will see more of these days even in September as the climate changes and the effects in many US classrooms, especially in Massachusetts, which often don’t have air conditioning.” (Scales, 9/5)
In other environmental health news —
Axios:
Canada Wildfires Smoke Hits U.S. Air Quality As 1,008 Fires Burn
Toxic smoke from Canada's historic wildfires is drifting across the U.S. — triggering air quality alerts throughout much of Colorado, Wyoming, Minnesota and Nebraska through Thursday. (Falconer, 9/7)
NPR:
Climate Change Makes Air Quality Worse, And That's Bad For Health
Emergency room visits for asthma spike during and after smoke exposure. Heart attacks, strokes, and cognitive function problems also increase after smoke exposure. In 2022, people living in the Amazon basin, Alaska, and the western part of North America all breathed in more wildfire smoke than they have on average over the past 20 years. (Borunda, 9/6)
The Boston Globe:
Record Rain And Mosquitoes ‘A Window Into The New Normal’
“There are definitely more mosquitoes outside my tent than in most years,” said Matthew Ayres, a professor of biological sciences at Dartmouth who studies population ecology of insects and focuses on forest pests to understand how species fluctuate. ... With climate change, new kinds of mosquitoes are coming to New Hampshire carrying diseases like West Nile Virus and Eastern Equine Encephalitis. (Gokee, 9/6)
AP:
Order Not To Use Tap Water In West Virginia Community Enters Fourth Week After Plant Malfunction
A notice ordering residents of a northern West Virginia community not to use their tap water entered its fourth week Wednesday after a treatment-plant malfunction allowed the release of a hazardous solvent. Dr. Matt Christiansen, the state’s health officer, said preliminary findings from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency showed tetrachloroethylene in the water serving the community of Paden City along the Ohio River. (Raby, 9/6)
KFF Health News:
‘Like A Russian Roulette’: US Military Firefighters Grapple With Unknowns Of PFAS Exposure
A U.S. military firefighter for 32 years, Kurt Rhodes trained and performed his duties with aqueous film forming foam, or AFFF — a highly effective fire suppressant that he never knew contained PFAS chemicals, now known to be harmful to human health. New federal research links testicular cancer in U.S. service members to the “forever chemicals,” adding to a growing body of evidence of the dangers they pose. Rhodes lives in fear that he, like many of his colleagues, will get sick. “It’s kind of like a Russian roulette,” he said. “Are you going to get the cancers or are you going to be one of the lucky ones who doesn’t?” (Kime and Norman, 9/7)
Advances against Lyme disease —
Reuters:
Pfizer, Valneva Say 'Positive' Result For Lyme Disease Vaccine Candidate Booster
Pfizer and French pharmaceutical peer Valneva announced on Thursday that a phase 2 study for its VLA15 Lyme disease vaccine candidate showed a "strong immune response" in both children and adolescents a month after a booster shoot. "The Phase 2 booster results emphasize the vaccine candidate’s potential to provide immunity against Lyme disease in paediatric and adolescent populations," the two companies said in a statement. (9/7)
California Assembly Passes Bill To Decriminalize Personal Psychedelic Use
The measure cleared the state's lower house Wednesday. If California's effort succeeds, it would be the third state to take such a step. Separately, NPR reports that the share of U.S. drug overdose deaths caused by counterfeit pills is rising.
The Wall Street Journal:
Psychedelics Decriminalization Bill Approved By California Assembly
California’s assembly passed a bill that would make it the third state to decriminalize psychedelic drugs for personal use. The measure cleared the lower house of the Democratic-controlled state legislature Wednesday, with a final tally showing 44 members voting yes, 14 opposed and 22 not voting. Four of the Assembly’s 13 Republican members joined their Democratic colleagues to vote for the bill. (Mai-Duc and Elinson, 9/6)
In other news about drug use —
NPR:
Share Of U.S. Drug Overdose Deaths Caused By Fake Prescription Pills Is Growing
The share of overdose deaths involving counterfeit pills more than doubled between mid-2019 and late 2021, and the percentage more than tripled in western states, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. According to the CDC, overdose deaths that had evidence of fake pill use accounted for just 2% of fatalities between July and September of 2019. That figure jumped to 4.7% between October and December of 2021. (Hernandez, 9/6)
Stat:
For Those In Heroin’s Grip, 'Housing Is Health Care' In This Program
Shaun Anderson hasn’t slept this late in the day in years. He still wakes up a few times throughout the night — a habit he’s developed trying to protect himself from being jumped while at his most vulnerable. This morning, however, he slept so deeply he didn’t hear his doorbell ring. He wasn’t used to even having a doorbell, or a regular place to sleep — housing is one of many things he’d lost to a decades-long battle with opioid use disorder. (Wisniewski, 9/7)
More mental health news —
Stat:
Ketamine Treatment For Depression: Why It Can Be Hard To Access
Every day, Marisa Russello was overwhelmed by suicidal thoughts. Even one negative thought might cause her to spiral. A writer working on her book manuscript, she’d be unable to change a word without questioning the entire project’s value altogether. Her depression made it hard to fall and stay asleep. She developed insomnia and took to sleeping during the day. She knew not to listen to intrusive feelings, but her brain kept telling her otherwise. A darkness took hold of her consciousness and wouldn’t let go. (Maloney, 9/7)
KFF Health News:
Most States Have Yet To Permanently Fund 988. Call Centers Want Certainty
Since the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline transitioned a year ago to the three-digit crisis phone number 988, there has been a 33% increase in the number of calls, chats, and texts to the hotline. But even with that early sign of success, the program’s financial future is shaky. (Saint Louis, 9/7)
North Carolina Health News:
Colleges Focus On Mental Health As Students Return
When Peyton Morris was 16, her father died by suicide. A few years later, she was a freshman at UNC Chapel Hill when the campus lost several students to suicide over a six-week period. So when Morris started her sophomore year, she revived Walk. Support. Glow. — a student organization on campus that works to bring more awareness about mental health issues and the resources available to students. (Fernandez, 9/7)
The New York Times:
At Yale, A Surge Of Activism Forced Changes In Mental Health Policies
In the weeks after Rachael Shaw-Rosenbaum, a first-year student at Yale, died by suicide in 2021, a group of strangers began convening on Zoom. Some of them knew Ms. Shaw-Rosenbaum. But many only knew what she had been going through, as she struggled with suicidal thoughts and weighed the consequences of checking herself into the hospital. One, a physician in her early 40s, had been told years ago to withdraw from Yale while she was hospitalized after a suicide attempt, an experience she recalls as chillingly impersonal, “like you’re being processed through this big machine.” (Hartocollis and Barry, 9/6)
The Charlotte Ledger:
When The ER Is The Only Option
Grace, 11, still has nightmares about the emergency room. After she tried to take her own life in May, Grace spent three days at Atrium Health Brenner Children’s Hospital in Winston-Salem. The other kids in the ER with her were mostly older, Grace said, and some were violent. (Crouch, 9/6)
Teen Reported Dead After Eating Extremely Spicy Tortilla Chip
The mother of a 14-year-old Massachusetts boy says her son died after taking part in Pacqui's "One Chip Challenge," which involves eating a chip dusted with some of the spiciest chili peppers in the world. Among other news, research links traumatic brain injuries to cognitive decline later in life.
The New York Times:
Teenager’s Death Has Paqui Spicy ‘One Chip Challenge’ Under Scrutiny
One of the last things Harris Wolobah, 14, of Worcester, Mass., ate before he died was a single tortilla chip in a coffin-shaped box that bore an image of a skull with a snake coiled around it, his mother said. Lois Wolobah said her son’s school called last Friday to tell her he was sick and that she needed to come and get him. When she arrived, Harris was clutching his stomach in the nurse’s office, she said in an interview on Tuesday. He showed her a picture of what he had just consumed: a single Paqui chip, dusted with two of the hottest peppers in the world, the Carolina Reaper and the Naga Viper. (Carballo and Tumin, 9/6)
The Washington Post:
What To Know About The ‘One Chip Challenge’ And Extremely Spicy Foods
Lois Wolobah got a call Friday from the nurse at her son’s high school in Worcester, Mass. Harris, a sophomore, had fainted after eating a tortilla chip. When Wolobah got to the high school, her son showed her an image on his phone of what made him sick — a single “extremely hot tortilla chip” encrusted with seasoning from some of the spiciest chile peppers in the world, packaged in a coffin-shaped box emblazoned with a snake slithering through the eye of a skull. A few hours later, Wolobah passed out at home, Lois and her husband, Amos, told WBZ. He was taken to an emergency room, where he died. (Edwards, 9/7)
On dementia —
The Washington Post:
Traumatic Brain Injuries Linked To Cognitive Decline Later In Life
Traumatic brain injuries are associated with cognitive decline later in life, and a sharper drop in cognition as we age, a study of twins who served in World War II shows. (Amenabar, 9/6)
CNBC:
Weight Loss Drugs Wegovy, Ozempic Tested To Treat Addiction, Dementia
Scientists have begun investigating whether so-called miracle obesity drugs could be used to treat conditions such as dementia and alcohol addiction after recent trials pointed to the drugs’ efficacy in treating serious health issues. (Gilchrist, 9/7)
In other health and wellness news —
AP:
NBA Owner Putting Millions Toward Stroke Care, Health Research In Detroit
The family foundation of NBA team owner Dan Gilbert will give nearly $375 million for a 72-bed rehabilitation center for stroke patients in Detroit and a research institute that will focus on a genetic disease that afflicted his son, officials announced Wednesday. Gilbert, the billionaire owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers and founder of Detroit-based Rocket Companies, had a stroke in 2019 and received extensive care in Chicago. He said his foundation would create a $10 million fund to help low-income residents who get care at the new Detroit rehab center. (9/6)
Stat:
How To Prevent Cancer’s Breakthroughs From Increasing Disparities
Looking at the dizzying progress in cancer medicine over the last couple of decades, it’s easy to imagine that advances in synthetic biology or immunology will soon help cure or prevent more cancers. But without a strategy to connect “these miracles” to all communities, only some will benefit and others will be left behind, said Robert Winn, the director of the Massey Cancer Center at Virginia Commonwealth University. (Chen, 9/6)
The Washington Post:
A Hearty Breakfast Could Reduce Jet Lag In Older Adults, Study Finds
Many people, especially older adults, suffer from jet lag, the grueling fatigue and brain fog that accompanies long-distance travel. Breakfast may offer a simple and effective solution. Eating a hearty breakfast in the time zone of the final destination may help older adults recover more quickly from jet lag, researchers from Northwestern University and Santa Fe Institute wrote in a study published Tuesday. Avoiding a meal late in the night before, if possible, may also help. (Amenabar, 9/7)
CIDRAP:
High Level Of Resistant Staph Bacteria Found In Chinese Food Products
A new study by researchers in China highlights the threat of multidrug-resistant (MDR) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in packaged food. In the study, which was published last week in the journal Zoonoses, researchers with the China National Center for Food Safety Risk Assessment analyzed 276 ready-to-eat (RTE) food-associated S aureus isolates collected from supermarkets, convenience stores, fast food restaurants, and farm-product markets in 25 provinces across China in 2018. The investigators assessed antimicrobial susceptibility, virulence factors, and molecular characteristics. (Dall, 9/6)
Louisiana Has Highest Firearms-Related Death Rate For Children
A recent study points to a worsening of the gun death rate among children, with Louisiana "sadly leading the way," Axios reports. In other news, a California judge has temporarily paused a school district's policy of forcibly outing trans students to their parents.
Axios New Orleans:
Louisiana Has The Country's Worst Gun Death Rate For Children
Firearm deaths among children in the U.S. hit a new record high in 2021, with Louisiana sadly leading the way, according to a study published recently in the journal Pediatrics. The study, based on government data, points to the worsening of an already distressing trend, after guns became the leading cause of death for children for the first time in 2020. (Saric and Wells, 9/6)
In news from California —
Sacramento Bee:
California Judge Puts School District’s Policy Of Outing Transgender Students To Parents On Hold
A San Bernardino County Superior Court judge has put a pause on Chino Valley Unified School District’s new policy requiring school employees to out transgender students to their parents. Wednesday’s temporary restraining order marks the first legal setback for an effort to implement forced outing policies in school districts across the state. The latest to consider such a policy is Rocklin Unified. Other school systems that have passed or considered such a policy include districts in Murrieta and Temecula. (Sheeler, 9/6)
The 19th:
California Promised Reparations To Survivors Of Forced Sterilization. Few People Have Gotten Them
It was more money than Moonlight Pulido had ever held in her hands. Looking at the check — $15,000 from the state of California — she started to cry. Pulido, 58, had spent most of the past 30 years incarcerated, only recently being released from prison. She hoped to save most of the money. Having that kind of financial cushion, she knew, could be life-changing. But as emotional as she was, Pulido couldn’t forget what the money acknowledged, and the other life-altering reason she had received it. (Luthra, 9/5)
More health news from across the U.S. —
WMFE:
A Survey Finds Florida Food Inflation Turning Into A Health Crisis
A recent survey found that increasing food prices are affecting more than people's wallets — they’re affecting people’s health. The survey, published in August by Sachs Media, was conducted for Farm Share, a nonprofit and the state's largest food bank, revealing that rising food costs are changing the way Floridians eat. (Caraballo, 9/6)
Axios Indianapolis:
Indianapolis Ranks High For Number Of Retail Health Clinics
The Indianapolis area has about 1.9 retail clinics for every 100,000 residents, per new data from health care analytics firm Definitive Healthcare. That's the fifth-highest rate in the country. (Fitzpatrick, Beheraj and Hurt, 9/6)
The Hill:
Authorities Search For Homicide Suspect In DC After Escape From Hospital
Authorities in Washington, D.C. are searching for a homicide suspect who escaped police custody at the George Washington University (GW) Hospital, prompting an hours-long shelter-in-place order on GW’s campus. The Metropolitan Police Department said 30-year-old Christopher Haynes escaped police custody at the 900 block of 23rd St. NW shortly after 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. (Nazzaro, 9/6)
KFF Health News and LAist:
Hollywood's A-List Health Insurance Is Jeopardized By The Labor Strikes
The issues dominating the dual Hollywood strikes by actors and writers are artificial intelligence, residual payments, and job protections. But one topic that’s often a contentious point in labor negotiations — health insurance — has slipped under the radar. A-list stars have been out in force snapping selfies on picket lines in the bright California sun, but it’s the people who may have never walked the red carpet who are forgoing a paycheck and potentially their health insurance as the negotiations drag on and work dries up. (Fortier, 9/7)
Research Roundup: Alzheimer's; Cancer; Covid; Weight-Loss Pill
Each week, KHN compiles a selection of recently released health policy studies and briefs.
ScienceDaily:
Researchers Identify New Gene Mutation That Alters Alzheimer's Disease Risk
A groundbreaking study led by experts from Indiana University School of Medicine has shed new light on the genetic underpinnings of Alzheimer's disease. (Indiana University School of Medicine, 9/6)
CIDRAP:
Cancer Diagnoses Fell Early In COVID Pandemic, But Many Types Eventually Climbed Again
In April 2020, diagnoses fell 23% for any type of cancer, 46% for breast, 35% for colon, 47% for rectal, 50% for head and neck, 65% for melanoma, and 33% for endocrine cancer and rose 12% for blood cancer and 8% for cancers with an unknown primary site. (Van Beusekom, 9/6)
CIDRAP:
Stress Over Family Members' COVID Hospitalization Lessens After 1 Year, Survey Finds
A new research letter in JAMA notes that, compared with 3 months after patient intensive care unit (ICU) hospitalization for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) caused by COVID-19, at 1 year family members had lower levels of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety, or depression. Moreover, ARDS caused by COVID-19 compared to ARDS caused by other illnesses was not associated with any greater psychological distress among family members. (Soucheray, 9/5)
New England Journal of Medicine:
Daily Oral GLP-1 Receptor Agonist Orforglipron For Adults With Obesity
Obesity is a major risk factor for many leading causes of illness and death worldwide. Data are needed regarding the efficacy and safety of the nonpeptide glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist orforglipron as a once-daily oral therapy for weight reduction in adults with obesity. (Wharton, et al, 9/7)
Viewpoints: Fall Booster Shows Promise In Battling New Variants; The Post-Roe Dystopia Is Here
Editorial writers delve into new covid variants, abortion, psychedelics, and more.
Bloomberg:
Pirola, Eris Covid Variants Show Importance Of Fall Booster Shot
Preliminary data from three separate research teams suggest the latest anxiety-inducing Covid variant isn’t quite the threat many had feared. BA.2.86 — or what some armchair epidemiologists have dubbed “Pirola” — does seem capable of escaping some of our prior immunity, but we’re not left defenseless. (Lisa Jarvis, 9/6)
The Washington Post:
Want A Terrifying Glimpse Of Post-Roe America? Just Look At Alabama
Remember all that happy talk about our federal system and letting states decide for themselves whether to allow abortion in the wake of the Dobbs ruling last year? Some states would prohibit abortion; some would allow it; and, as Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh assured us, women in abortion-banning states would be free to travel elsewhere to obtain the procedure. (Ruth Marcus, 9/6)
The Washington Post:
Psychedelics Have Great Medical Promise. That Doesn’t Make Them Safe
Hallucinogenic drugs known as psychedelics have generated great enthusiasm within the scientific community for their potential to treat post-traumatic stress disorder, severe depression and other mental health diagnoses. In no way, however, does that justify their recreational use. (Leana S. Wen, 9/6)
The New York Times:
One Of The Best Things We Can Do For Our Health Is Free - And Fun
Loneliness crushes the soul, but researchers are finding it does far more damage than that. It is linked to strokes, heart disease, dementia, inflammation and suicide; it breaks the heart literally as well as figuratively. (Nicholas Kristof, 9/6)
Stat:
Will The IRA Bring Competition To The Biologics Market?
On Aug. 29, Medicare released its highly anticipated list of 10 therapies for which it plans to establish a price by 2026. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), passed in August 2022, gives Medicare pricing power over therapies that both cost Medicare lots of money and have by 2026 enjoyed market exclusivity for a certain number of years — nine for small-molecule drugs and 13 for biologics. (Arti K. Rai, 9/6)
The New York Times:
How To Make Health Care Cheaper And Better
One day, Bob told Jim on the phone that there was no money to be made in finding ways to reduce costs in health care. Jim said he found that hard to believe. Then he said, “There’s maybe a book in this.” And so there was. The book they wrote together is “Why Not Better and Cheaper? Healthcare and Innovation,” and it was published in June. (Peter Coy, 9/6)
Stat:
The (Many) Problems With A New Study Criticizing Cancer Screening
A recent study prompted CNN to report, “Most cancer screenings don’t ultimately give someone extra time beyond their regular lifespan.” Does that mean it’s time to dismantle the cancer screening infrastructure in the United States? Probably not. (Peter B. Bach, 9/7)
Stat:
How To Protect Patients From Sexual Assault
Health care providers have a sacrosanct relationship with patients. That unique position of trust also puts them in a position of power over their patients. Far too often — as exemplified by the recent case involving a New York doctor accused of drugging and assaulting his patients, or the former pediatrician facing more than 100 lawsuits by former patients — predators are able to exploit that power to sexually abuse patients. (Michelle Simpson Tuegel, 9/7)
Mankato Free Press:
Shots Should Be On Back-To-School List For Kids
Pencils, backpacks, water bottles and a long list of other must-haves are on the back-to-school list for students as the new school year kicks off. Vaccinations also should be checked off that list. (9/6)