- KFF Health News Original Stories 3
- With Its Two Doctors Planning to Retire, an Alabama Town Patches Together Health Care Options
- Save Billions or Stick With Humira? Drug Brokers Steer Americans to the Costly Choice
- Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis Injects Presidential Politics Into the Covid Vaccine Debate
- Political Cartoon: 'Hang Ten Healthcare'
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
With Its Two Doctors Planning to Retire, an Alabama Town Patches Together Health Care Options
LaFayette and other rural areas of the country tend to have high rates of health problems but not enough doctors. Many are adapting by investing in nontraditional prevention and treatment options. (Arielle Zionts, 9/19)
Save Billions or Stick With Humira? Drug Brokers Steer Americans to the Costly Choice
Thousands of patients with autoimmune diseases who rely on Humira, with a list price of $6,600 a month, could get financial relief from new low-cost rivals. So far, the pharmacy benefit managers that control drug prices in America have not delivered on those savings. (Arthur Allen, 9/19)
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis Injects Presidential Politics Into the Covid Vaccine Debate
Losing ground in the Republican primary, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida and his top medical advisers dismissed the recent federal recommendation that almost everyone get an updated covid shot. (Phil Galewitz and Daniel Chang, 9/18)
Political Cartoon: 'Hang Ten Healthcare'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Hang Ten Healthcare'" by Danny Shanahan.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
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Summaries Of The News:
Abortions Restart In Wisconsin — And Appointments Are Fully Booked
The state halted abortions 15 months ago when Roe v. Wade was struck down. Planned Parenthood offered abortions Monday at clinics in Madison and Milwaukee; every appointment was filled within 24 hours of announcing the news, AP reported. Other abortion news is from Florida and Indiana.
AP:
Planned Parenthood Resumes Offering Abortions In Wisconsin After More Than A Year
Planned Parenthood resumed offering abortion services in Wisconsin on Monday after halting them for more than a year since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Providers across the state stopped offering abortions following the June 2022 decision, fearing enforcement of an 1849 state law that appears to ban the procedure but had previously been nullified by the 1973 Roe ruling. A judge ruled last month that the 144-year-old law doesn’t apply to medical abortions. (Venhuizen, 9/18)
News Service of Florida:
Lawmaker's Proposal Seeks To Prevent Criminal Charges For Women Over Abortions
Pointing to recent comments made by Gov. Ron DeSantis, Senate Minority Leader Lauren Book on Friday filed a bill aimed at preventing women from being charged with crimes after obtaining abortions. A law signed by DeSantis in April would prohibit abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. The law says "any person who willfully performs or actively participates in a termination of pregnancy" in violation of the law would face felony charges. (9/18)
AP:
Indiana’s Attorney General Faces Misconduct Complaint Over Remarks About Abortion Doctor
A complaint filed Monday alleges that Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita violated professional conduct rules in statements he made about a doctor who performed an abortion on a 10-year-old rape victim last year. The Indiana Supreme Court’s disciplinary commission references an interview Rokita gave in July 2022 about Dr. Caitlin Bernard on a Fox News show, The Indianapolis Star reported. (9/18)
Fox News:
Abortion Chatbot Charley Helps Women End Their Pregnancies: 'Let's Get Started'
For those women who are considering terminating their pregnancies, a new chatbot called Charley aims to help them start the process of getting an abortion. The chatbot, which launched on Sept. 12, is available on Charley’s website, greeting visitors with the message, "Need an abortion? Let’s get started." On its website, Charley is described as "designed by abortion experts, made for abortion seekers." (Rudy, 9/19)
In other reproductive health news —
The Oklahoman:
MRIs As Well As Mammograms Can Be Required For Dense Breast Tissue
A randomized study of 40,000 women with extremely dense breast tissue found that those who had mammograms followed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans had more tumors detected than with mammography alone. The research, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, also found that supplemental MRI screening was much more effective at detecting so-called interval cancers, growths that would become symptomatic before the next routine screening. (Cohen and James, 9/19)
Stat:
FDA Panel To Weigh Safety Of Artificial Wombs For Preterm Births
The artificial womb, a device aiming to save infants born way too soon, is inching closer to being tested in humans. The technology is close enough to reality that the Food and Drug Administration has decided to convene a two-day panel starting Tuesday to discuss how to best evaluate safety and effectiveness, as well as the ethical quandaries in running clinical trials. The second day will be closed to the public to shield trade secrets. (Lawrence, 9/19)
Lobbying Push Targets CMS Plan To Cut Physician Pay For Some Providers
CMS faces pressure from some health care providers to revise its proposed rule that would reduce Medicare physician fees for some specialists in order to boost payments for primary care physicians. Other Medicare news relates to savings programs, drug price negotiations, scams, and more.
Modern Healthcare:
2024 Medicare Physician Fees Should Not Be Cut, Providers Say
Providers want the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to reconsider cutting physician pay and avoid financial repercussions that could force them to scale back care. Comments healthcare industry groups wrote in response to the Medicare physician fee schedule proposed rule for 2024, which CMS issued in July, object to the agency's plan to reduce doctor pay 1.25% next year. (Berryman, 9/18)
Modern Healthcare:
CMS Simplifies Medicare Savings Programs' Enrollment
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services wants to make it easier for millions of older adults and people with disabilities to attain Medicare coverage. The agency issued a final rule Monday that aims to streamline the enrollment and renewal process for Medicare Savings Programs by reducing administrative burdens on states and eligible individuals. (Berryman, 9/18)
WUSF Public Media:
Experts Discuss Medicare Drug Price Negotiations And Their Impact On Floridians
Florida has more people on Medicare than any other state except one. Almost one in four people who call Florida home rely on the federal government health insurance plan. Thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act, Medicare will now be able to bargain over prices for the first 10 drugs covered by the plan. Those drugs include Entresto for heart failure, Enbrel for arthritis, Eliquis and Xarelto to help prevent blood clots, and Jardiance, Januvia, and Farxiga for Type 2 diabetes. (Pinos, 9/18)
KSL-TV:
Feds Warn Of Evolving Scam Targeting Medicare Users By Sending Unwanted COVID Test Kits
KSL Investigators have been hearing from Utahns that COVID-19 test kits are showing up in their mailboxes, out-of-the-blue. They didn’t want them. They didn’t order them. But these test kits have been showing up regardless. Turns out, they are part of a scam that first targeted Medicare and may now be targeting you. (Gephardt and Schrage, 9/18)
Fierce Healthcare:
Low-Income Seniors Report Deceptive Medicare Marketing: Study
Seniors are becoming increasingly overburdened by marketing efforts from private Medicare plans, and low-income beneficiaries are twice as likely to file complaints regarding fraudulent phone calls compared to high-income counterparts, according to a study from The Commonwealth Fund. (Tong, 9/19)
Despite Warnings, New Covid Shot Prices Are Surprising Some
Covid vaccines were free until the pandemic public health emergency ended. Even though some pharmacies have signs for "free" shots, insurers and patients are being billed for them. Meanwhile, Pfizer expects 1 in 4 in the U.S. will get shots this year.
CBS News:
'Nightmare': Some Planning To Get New COVID-19 Vaccine Getting Bills For Nearly $200
When Glen Cote of Acton drove to his appointment at CVS for the new COVID-19 vaccine, he was shocked to receive a text on his phone minutes before his appointment, letting him know that the vaccine would cost $190.99. "Nightmare is the first word that comes to mind," he explained to WBZ-TV. Cote is covered by MassHealth, the state's program for Medicaid. (Rex, 9/19)
More on the vaccine rollout —
Reuters:
Pfizer Forecasts 24% COVID Vaccination Rate In US This Year
Pfizer expects 24% of the U.S. population, or about 82 million people, to receive COVID-19 shots this year, CFO David Denton said at a conference on Monday, reiterating the vaccine maker's estimates from earlier this year. (9/18)
CNN:
Covid-19 Vaccination Rates Lag Behind Flu’s, But Getting Shots Together May Help
Every year since 2010, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that everyone in the country ages 6 months and older receive a flu vaccine. But that has resulted in just fewer than half of all adults and about 58% of kids getting the shot each year, according to CDC data. (Tirrell, 9/19)
NBC News:
Vivek Ramaswamy Regrets Taking The Covid Vaccine. His Wife, A Surgeon, Does Not
Vivek Ramaswamy said he regrets taking the two doses of the Covid-19 vaccine he’s received. He also said at a recent campaign stop that he and his wife, surgeon Apoorva Ramaswamy, “disagree on things sometimes,” and that’s OK. One of those things is their feelings about the Covid-19 vaccine, Apoorva Ramaswamy told NBC News in an interview. Dr. Ramaswamy, who is a laryngologist at Ohio State University, said she has no regrets about taking the jabs to protect against Covid, putting her decision in terms of her responsibility to the patients she sees. (Tabet and Koretski, 9/18)
KFF Health News:
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis Injects Presidential Politics Into The Covid Vaccine Debate
As Americans consider whether to take advice from federal health officials and get an updated covid vaccine, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is drumming the message that ignited his national political career: Ignore what the federal government tells you about covid-19. Last week — as polling showed him running a distant second to Donald Trump for the Republican presidential nomination — DeSantis convened a virtual roundtable featuring a panel of covid vaccine skeptics. Their mission: to swat away the FDA’s findings that the new shots are safe and effective for those 6 months and older. (Galewitz and Chang, 9/18)
USA Today:
Dr. Peter Hotez Warns Of Deadly Anti-Vaccine Movement In New Book
Dr. Peter Hotez is no stranger to controversy. A pediatric infectious disease specialist at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Hotez began taking on the anti-vaccine movement when his now-adult daughter was a child. Activists blamed her autism and that of others on vaccines. Hotez, who develops vaccines for neglected tropical diseases, didn't buy it. He took them on directly in his 2020 book "Vaccines Did Not Cause Rachel's Autism: My Journey as a Vaccine Scientist, Pediatrician, and Autism Dad." (Weintraub, 9/19)
In covid vaccine research —
CIDRAP:
COVID Vaccination After Long COVID May Be Linked To Better Outcomes
A new observational study from Canadian researchers reveals that COVID vaccination after long COVID was tied to fewer symptoms, increased well-being, and less inflammation. The study, based on participants in Montreal, is published in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases. Long COVID, or post-COVID condition (PCC), is a major emerging public health issue, as 10% to 30% of COVID-19 patients who are not hospitalized, and 50% to 70% hospitalized patients, experience an array of symptoms lasting more than 12 weeks after acute infection. (Soucheray, 9/18)
CIDRAP:
Study: Original Pfizer COVID Vaccine 33% Effective Against Emergency, Urgent Care In Young Kids
A new study in JAMA estimates that the original single-strain Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine conferred 33% protection against COVID-19 emergency department (ED) and urgent care (UC) visits for children younger than 5 years during Omicron variant predominance. Researchers from Kaiser Permanente and Pfizer conducted a test-negative case-control study among 24,261 patients aged 6 months to 4 years diagnosed as having an acute respiratory infection (ACI) and tested for SARS-CoV-2 at Kaiser Permanente Southern California from July 2022 to May 2023. Of all children, 48% were seen in the ED, 29% visited the UC, and 23% were outpatients. (Van Beusekom, 9/18)
Covid BA.2.86 Spreads Across States, But Outnumbered By Other Variants
The variant is a "highly mutated" version of covid and has now been found in 10 states. It remains a rare source of covid cases, though, being outnumbered by other dominant variants. Meanwhile, the CDC has updated its map showing where covid is spreading through the U.S. population.
CBS News:
New COVID Variant BA.2.86 Spotted In 10 States, Though Highly Mutated Strain Remains Rare
People across at least 10 states have now been infected by BA.2.86, a highly mutated variant of the virus that causes COVID-19 that authorities have been closely tracking. According to data tallied from the global virus database GISAID, labs have reported finding BA.2.86 in samples from Colorado, Maryland, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia and Washington. Estimates suggest BA.2.86 still remains a small fraction of new COVID-19 cases nationwide. (Tin, 9/18)
Newsweek:
COVID Cases Update: Map Reveals 9 States With Highest Positive Tests
Map data updated by the CDC on Monday reveals that the percentage of positive COVID tests dropped slightly overall across the nation for the week ending September 9, falling from 14.4 percent to 14.3 percent. The data is based on the results of 50,579 nucleic acid amplification tests, which are different than the antigen tests typical sold for home testing. Positivity rates were significantly higher than average in two out of 10 regions that the CDC uses to group states. In region six—consisting of Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico and Oklahoma—the positivity rate was 17.3 percent. In region seven—covering Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska—16.4 percent of tests were coming back positive. (Slisco, 9/18)
News Service of Florida:
Number Of COVID Cases In Florida Shows A Decrease After Weeks Of Gradually Rising
Reported numbers of new COVID-19 cases in Florida decreased during the past two weeks after steadily increasing this summer, according to Florida Department of Health data released Friday. (9/18)
CIDRAP:
CDC Notes US COVID-19 Hospital Cases Up Slightly
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) today noted that COVID-19 hospitalizations are up 8.7% and deaths up 4.5% in the most recent reporting week, though numbers are still quite low. Roughly 18,900 Americans were hospitalized for the virus in the first week of September, the CDC said, a number not seen since mid-March. Parts of Montana, Texas, Alabama, and Florida have seen significant increases in virus activity, but the CDC notes that fewer jurisdictions are reporting data in regular intervals. (Soucheray, 9/15)
Also —
New York Post:
COVID Severity ‘Much Lower’ Now — But These 3 Symptoms Remain: Top NYC Doc
Despite the recent warning of a new variant from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, cases of COVID-19 are noticeably weaker than previous waves, a top NYC doctor has said. “Just about everyone who I’ve seen has had really mild symptoms,” Dr. Erick Eiting, who is vice chair of operations for emergency medicine at Mount Sinai Downtown, told NBC News. The outlet also reported that the virus has become so light it is hard to tell apart from allergies or just a common cold.“ The only way that we knew that it was COVID was because we happened to be testing them,” Eiting added, noting that current symptoms mostly include congestion, some sneezing and a mild sore throat. (Mitchell, 9/18)
CNN:
Home Tests Still Work To Detect Covid-19, But Here’s Why Your Test May Not Pick Up An Infection
Some people are speculating that rapid tests have lost their ability to detect some of the newer coronavirus variants, but experts say it’s not the case. (Goodman, 9/18)
USA Today:
No, CDC Data Doesn't Show 99% Of Reported COVID-19 Deaths Were From Other Causes
Claim: “The CDC has just quietly admitted that over 99% of reported ‘Covid deaths' were faked in order to scare the public into taking the experimental Covid jab,” the post reads. “... According to the CDC's Covid dashboard, just 1.7% of the 324 'Covid deaths' registered in the week ending August 19 had Covid as the primary cause of death." ... False:
The post misrepresents the data on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. The source actually said that COVID-19 deaths accounted for just 1.7% of all deaths from all causes in the U.S. that week. It has since been updated to 1.6%. (Trela, 9/18)
WLRN 91.3 FM:
PolitiFact FL: COVID Lockdowns Returning? Public Health Experts Say That’s Unlikely
Variant-driven COVID-19 cases are increasing and a few U.S. schools and businesses have temporarily reinstated mask mandates to mitigate the virus’ spread. Now, some are sounding the alarm that more severe restrictions are on the horizon. "They’re gonna bring back draconian lockdowns. They’re gonna bring back the tortuous mask mandates in schools," one person said in an Aug. 21 TikTok video. "They’re gonna bring back the injection mandates. They’re gonna close down churches, they’re gonna close down small businesses." (Swann, 9/18)
'Historic' Health Care Worker Strike At Kaiser Permanente Looms After Vote
Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. Kaiser Permanente employees voted to authorize a strike against unfair labor practices, after recent votes by 68,000 staff members in California, Colorado, Oregon, and Southwest Washington. Also in the news: hospital mergers, environmental sustainability, and more. (Note: KFF Health News is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.)
The Baltimore Sun:
Kaiser Permanente Employees In Maryland, Mid-Atlantic Region Vote To Authorize A Strike
The possibility of a historic health care worker strike inched closer to reality Monday after the union representing Kaiser Permanente employees in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C., announced their members had voted last week to authorize a work stoppage to protest unfair labor practices if a labor agreement isn’t reached by Sept. 30. The vote, which concluded on Saturday, follows strike authorization votes by nearly 65,000 Kaiser employees in California, Colorado, Oregon and Southwest Washington in the past two weeks, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions said in a news release. (Roberts, 9/18)
In other health industry news —
Stat:
Patients, Doctors Press FTC To Beef Up Hospital Merger Scrutiny
Comments to antitrust regulators lay bare Americans’ anger and disillusionment over consolidation’s effects on all sectors of the economy, but especially health care. A 24-year-old wrote that after his hometown hospital in Indiana merged with a bigger group, his mom, who worked there, found it harder to provide good care amid staff cuts and reduced support. An internal medicine doctor in Wisconsin said after his hospital merged, colleagues were fired, drug shortages got worse, and prices skyrocketed. (Bannow, 9/18)
Modern Healthcare:
Joint Commission Adding Environmental Sustainability Certificate
Beginning Jan. 1, the voluntary program will certify hospitals that prioritize environmental sustainability as a strategic goal and allocate resources to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The initiative comes as the Joint Commission overhauls its accreditation standards to alleviate administrative burdens on healthcare organizations while making space for new strategic priorities. (Hartnett, 9/18)
Modern Healthcare:
How Epic Cornered The Hospital EHR Market
Since the federal government pushed the use of electronic health records in 2009, there has been a race among vendors to sell the software solutions to health systems. The cost of EHR installation varies by hospital and health system but it can be run more than a $1 billion for larger organizations. For example, Boston-based Mass General Brigham, formerly known as Partners Healthcare, and Rochester, Minnesota-based Mayo Clinic both reportedly spent more than $1 billion to install Epic Systems' product. (Perna, 9/18)
Axios:
Facing Higher Health Costs, Employers Get Tough
Employers girding themselves for an especially pricey health care benefits season this fall are pushing back harder in negotiations, armed with new price transparency data and emboldened by increased industry scrutiny. (Reed, 9/19)
Also —
The Washington Post:
Former Dentist Gets Probation After Procedure Left Child Brain Damaged
When she saw her daughter for the first time after a 2016 dental procedure, Courissa Clark said she couldn’t understand why her 4-year-old, Nevaeh Hall, was unresponsive. Earlier that day, Nevaeh had seizures while receiving dental work, according to court documents. Instead of seeking emergency medical services, the dentist, Bethaniel Jefferson, gave the child more sedatives to try to calm her down, documents allege. (Melnick, 9/19)
Modern Healthcare:
DocGo Names Lee Bienstock CEO After Anthony Capone’s Resignation
DocGo, a mobile health services company, appointed Lee Bienstock as CEO on Monday and replaced former CEO Anthony Capone, who resigned on Friday. Capone resigned after acknowledging his academic credentials were falsified. In an emailed statement, a DocGo spokesperson said Capone was stepping down for personal reasons. (Turner, 9/18)
KFF Health News:
With Its Two Doctors Planning To Retire, An Alabama Town Patches Together Health Care Options
Charity Hodge had mixed feelings when she spotted a Facebook post announcing that her longtime primary care doctor was ready to retire after decades of serving their rural community. “I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, no!’” Hodge recalled while sitting in an exam room on a July afternoon, waiting to see the physician, Terry Vester. “Well, I’m happy for the retirement part, but that’s my favorite doctor, so I’m crying on the inside.” (Zionts, 9/19)
House GOP's Stopgap Funding Plan Opposed By Own Members, Senate Dems
A Republican House bill to extend federal government funding for an additional 30 days past the Sept. 30 deadline faces stiff opposition from a handful of House conservatives. Even if it passed, Senate Democrats say they do not support such a measure.
The Hill:
House GOP Tensions In Shutdown Drama Boil Over
Tensions in the House GOP over how to avoid — or not avoid — a potential government shutdown are coming to a boil, with frustrations spilling over into public jabs and airing of grievances without a clear path forward to fund the government past Sept. 30. “It’s an unmitigated disaster right now on the majority side,” Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.), an appropriator, said on MSNBC on Monday. “I’m fearful of what this leads to.” Republicans are bitterly divided on a short-term stopgap bill that would fund the government through Oct. 31. The measure includes an 8 percent cut to everything but Defense and Veterans Affairs, along with the bulk of the House GOP’s border crackdown bill. (Brooks and Schnell, 9/18)
Roll Call:
House Stopgap Bill Falters With No Senate Backup Plan In Sight
Democrats controlling the Senate have no interest in the 30-day continuing resolution House Republicans unveiled Sunday night, which cuts most domestic agencies by more than 8 percent and would impose a range of border-related restrictions that President Joe Biden has already threatened to veto. But the Senate itself is tied in knots over appropriations, with a $279 billion, three-bill fiscal 2024 spending package stymied by procedural objections to considering more than just the base bill for the Department of Veterans Affairs and military construction projects. (Quigley, 9/18)
Politico:
A Bill To Increase Health Care Price Transparency Was Pulled From The House Floor
A bill to increase health care price transparency was pulled from the House floor this week after some top Democrats signaled they would oppose the legislation. The bill, the "Lower Costs, More Transparency Act," was being brought up under a fast-track process that requires a two-thirds vote. Some key Democrats like Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), the top Democrat on the Education and Workforce Committee, had signaled they would oppose the bill, meaning it could have lacked enough votes to pass under a suspension of the rules. (Wu, 9/18)
In other health news from Capitol Hill —
Politico:
Virginia Rep. Jennifer Wexton Will Not Seek Reelection, Citing New Diagnosis
Rep. Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.) announced on Monday that she will not seek reelection after receiving an updated, more serious diagnosis of progressive supranuclear palsy. Wexton revealed in April that she’d been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease, saying at the time that she hoped to continue serving “for many years to come.” But she sought additional testing after she had not been making the progress “to manage my symptoms that I had hoped,” Wexton, 55, said in a statement, leading to the new diagnosis of PSP, which she called “a kind of Parkinson’s on steroids.” The two conditions are often confused when first diagnosing a patient because they have similar symptoms. (Frazier, 9/18)
Stat:
Rep. Adam Smith On His Mental Health Struggles, And The Country's
Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) knew when he hit rock bottom. “I woke up one morning in early April of 2016 and seriously considered the possibility that I might never be able to get out of bed,” he opens his recent memoir, “Lost and Broken,” which details the six years in which “crippling anxiety” and chronic pain dominated his life even as he bounced back and forth from the Capitol to northern Seattle, the district he has represented for nearly three decades. (Owermohle, 9/19)
Med Dosage Errors Among Young People With ADHD Have Soared: Study
The study warns that over the past two decades, errors involving ADHD medications rose by almost 300% in people under 20 — mostly in cases of taking a medication twice. Separately, a study on MDMA as a treatment for PTSD could result in consideration for FDA approval by 2024.
CBS News:
Study Finds Errors With ADHD Meds In Kids Has Increased Last Two Decades
A new study in the Journal of Pediatrics finds errors involving ADHD medications in kids have risen sharply over the past two decades. Researchers at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Ohio studied national poison data from 2000 through 2021 and found that errors involving ADHD medications increased by almost 300% in people under 20 during that period. Two-thirds of the cases occurred in kids ages 6 to 12. The most common error was accidentally taking or being given mediation twice, followed by taking someone else's medication or taking the wrong medication. (Marshall, 9/18)
In other pharmaceutical updates —
Fox News:
Study On MDMA's Use To Treat PTSD Could Send Therapy Method To FDA For Approval By 2024
A new study published last week suggests the psychedelic drug MDMA, also known as Ecstasy or Molly, can reduce symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, and some expect the treatment to be approved by 2024. The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), a non-profit research and educational organization that was formed in 1986 and focuses on the medical, legal and cultural contexts for how people can benefit from the "careful" uses of psychedelics and marijuana, sponsored the study. (Wehner, 9/18)
The New York Times:
Does Ozempic Stop Working Over Time? Why Weight Loss Can Plateau
People taking the drug and similar medications will hit an inevitable, and necessary, plateau. Here’s why. (Blum, 9/18)
KFF Health News:
Save Billions Or Stick With Humira? Drug Brokers Steer Americans To The Costly Choice
Tennessee last year spent $48 million on a single drug, Humira — about $62,000 for each of the 775 patients who were covered by its employee health insurance program and receiving the treatment. So when nine Humira knockoffs, known as biosimilars, hit the market for as little as $995 a month, the opportunity for savings appeared ample and immediate. But it isn’t here yet. Makers of biosimilars must still work within a health care system in which basic economics rarely seems to hold sway. (Allen, 9/19)
Drugmaker Mallinckrodt May Be Considering Exiting Opioid Business
The pharmaceutical maker is one of the largest U.S. producers of prescription opioids, the Wall Street Journal reminds us, and it's in talks with its investors about selling a portion or all of its business units. Meanwhile, in San Francisco, fentanyl overdose deaths are rising again.
The Wall Street Journal:
Bankrupt Drugmaker Mallinckrodt Considers Sale Of Opioid Business
Pharmaceutical manufacturer Mallinckrodt, one of America’s largest producers of prescription opioids, is in talks with its major investors about selling some or all of the company’s business units, potentially leading to its exit from the opioid business, according to people familiar with the discussions. (Saeedy, 9/18)
More on the opioid crisis —
San Francisco Chronicle:
San Francisco Drug Overdose Death Numbers Are Rising Again
The numbers underscore how San Francisco officials continue to struggle to address the devastation of fentanyl on the city’s streets — a crisis that Health Director Dr. Grant Colfax called “distressing.” The last figures indicate people are dying from fentanyl overdoses at a rate of nearly three people a day. Colfax and and other health leaders on Monday announced a renewed push to urge people struggling with addiction to seek treatment. (Ho and Leonard, 9/18)
The New York Times:
Fentanyl Found Near Nap Mats At Day Care Where Boy Died, Police Say
A kilogram of fentanyl was found near mats that children used for napping at a Bronx day care site where one toddler died and three other children were hospitalized last week, the police said on Monday night. Chief Joseph Kenny, the Police Department’s chief of detectives, explained just how close to the children the potent narcotic was: “It was laid underneath a mat where the children had been sleeping earlier,” he said at a news conference, where he joined Mayor Eric Adams and other city officials. (Kilgannon and Shanahan, 9/18)
The Washington Post:
Sober Homes Promised Help And Shelter. Some Delivered Fraud, Officials Say.
In August, the New Mexico attorney general unveiled a campaign warning unsheltered people from “being lured” into traveling across state lines “to illegitimate recovery facilities.” The Blackfeet Nation in Montana in July declared a state of emergency aimed at helping displaced members, while one of the state’s senators, Jon Tester (D), demanded an investigation from the federal agency that oversees Medicaid services. (Ovalle, 9/18)
The Washington Post:
How One Company Profited While Delaying Narcan’s Drugstore Debut
Five years after public health officials first asked for it, Narcan finally hit store shelves this month — a potentially pivotal moment in the fight to counter the country’s stubbornly high death toll from heroin, fentanyl and pain pills. Now, anyone can buy the opioid overdose reversal drug without a prescription. But it almost didn’t happen. Narcan’s maker, Emergent BioSolutions, for years refused to allow its blockbuster drug to be sold over the counter (known as OTC), frustrating health experts and workers on the epidemic’s front lines who saw making Narcan and other naloxone-based medicines easier to buy as a way to save lives. (Frankel, 9/18)
Research Shows Obesity As A Cardiac Death Factor Has Been Rising
Research published in the Journal of the American Heart Association finds the number of adult American deaths from heart disease with obesity cited as a factor soared between 1999 and 2020. Meanwhile, CNN reports on WHO efforts to promote proper treatment for hypertension.
The Washington Post:
Obesity As A Factor In Cardiac Deaths Tripled Over 20 Years
The number of U.S. adults who died of heart disease and whose death record cited obesity as a contributing factor was three times greater in 2020 than in 1999, according to research published in the Journal of the American Heart Association. (Searing, 9/18)
CNN:
Proper Treatment For Hypertension Could Avert 76 Million Deaths Globally By 2050, WHO Says
The dangerous effects of high blood pressure are highlighted in a new report by the World Health Organization that identifies the condition as one of the world’s leading risk factors for death and disability. Published Tuesday, WHO’s first report on the global impact of high blood pressure, also known as hypertension, offers recommendations on ways to combat the “silent killer.” (Musa, 9/19)
The Washington Post:
Nearly Half Of Adults With Hypertension Are Unaware They Have It, WHO Says
An estimated one in three adults worldwide live with hypertension but most people with the risky cardiovascular condition are not adequately treated, according to a new report by the World Health Organization. A 2020 study published in The Lancet found high blood pressure is “the single most important risk factor for early death,” the WHO report says. Hypertension, or high blood pressure, leads to an estimated 10 million deaths every year, but almost half of adults with high blood pressure don’t know they have it. (Amenabar, 9/19)
In other health and wellness news —
Consumer Reports:
A Healthy Diet May Lower Dementia Risk — Even If You Start Late
Doing puzzles, playing memory-boosting games, taking classes and reading are activities that we often turn to for help keeping our brains sharp. But research is showing that what you eat, how often you exercise and the type of exercise you do can help lower your risk of dementia to a greater extent than previously thought. ... And living a healthy lifestyle can produce brain benefits no matter what your age. (Lee, 9/18)
NBC News:
Morning Workouts May Be Better For Weight Loss, Study Finds
Is morning the best time of day to exercise? Research published Tuesday in the journal Obesity finds that early morning activity — between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. — could help with weight loss. “My cautious suggestion from this study is that if we choose to exercise in the early morning, before we eat, we can potentially lose more weight compared to exercise at other times of the day,” said lead researcher Tongyu Ma, a research assistant professor at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. (Sullivan, 9/19)
The Conversation:
Screen Time Is Contributing To Chronic Sleep Deprivation In Tweens And Teens – A Pediatric Sleep Expert Explains
With the start of a new school year comes the inevitable battle to get kids back into a healthy bedtime routine. In many cases, this likely means resetting boundaries on screen use, especially late in the evenings. But imposing and enforcing those rules can be easier said than done. A growing body of research is finding strong links between sleep, mental health and screen time in teens and tweens — the term for pre-adolescent children around the ages of 10 to 12. Amid an unprecedented mental health crisis in which some 42% of adolescents in the U.S. are suffering from mental health issues, teens are also getting too little sleep. (Chen, 9/19)
CNN:
Male Loneliness Epidemic: How Fathers Face A Friendship Deficit
Several years ago, another dad reached out to me after reading my work about being a stay-at-home dad. He was married, had two toddlers and was not coping well. He couldn’t find another person to talk to outside his family. He didn’t say it, because most of us men won’t, but fatherhood was taking a toll on his mental health and self-worth. He felt alone — but not because he didn’t have a good relationship with his significant other. He told me it was because he didn’t have friends. (Carpenter, 9/18)
On gambling and addiction —
AP:
Another Option Emerges To Expand North Carolina Gambling, But Most Democrats Say They Won't Back It
The prospects of enacting soon an overdue North Carolina budget, permitting more state-sanctioned gambling and implementing Medicaid expansion stayed uncertain Monday as Republicans suggested dividing the topics between two bills. But most Democratic colleagues sound unwilling to provide the necessary votes. Action for passing a two-year state government spending plan idled last week when House Republicans said they didn’t have enough votes to pass the budget on their own if it contained language that would authorize four additional casinos and legalize video gambling machines statewide. (Robertson, 9/18)
The New York Times:
Phil Mickelson Says Gambling Addiction ‘Isn’t Any Fun At All’
Phil Mickelson, the golf great whose issues with gambling have made headlines throughout the years, took to social media on Monday to share details about his addiction, and to offer a warning to potential bettors ahead of this year’s N.F.L. season. As the 2023-24 football season kicked off in earnest, Mickelson posted on X to say that he would not be gambling on any games. “I crossed the line of moderation and into addiction which isn’t any fun at all,” said Mickelson, who has won six major golf tournaments. (Lindner, 9/18)
Judge Blocks California Youth Online Safety Law On Constitutional Grounds
The temporary block happened because the California Age-Appropriate Design Code probably violates the First Amendment, the Washington Post explains. Modeled after UK legislation, it would require digital platforms to verify, before launch, if their products could harm young people.
The Washington Post:
Judge Blocks California Law Meant To Increase Online Safety For Kids
A federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked an online child protection law in California and said it probably violates the Constitution. Under the law, known as the California Age-Appropriate Design Code, digital platforms would have to vet their products before public release to see whether those offerings could harm kids and teens. The law also requires platforms to enable stronger data privacy protections by default for younger users. (Lima, 9/18)
Axios San Francisco:
California Announces New $16.3M Youth Suicide Prevention Campaign
The California Department of Public Health (CDPH) announced $16.3 million in new grants last week to community-led youth suicide prevention projects amid a nationwide surge in reported teen mental health issues. The funding is part of a new media and outreach campaign launched by CDPH that aims to support youth disproportionately impacted by suicide, such as Black, Indigenous and LGBTQ populations. (Chen, 9/18)
On the 'unwinding' of Medicaid —
Kansas City Star:
Kansans Lose Healthcare As Pandemic Policy Dismantles
More than 81,000 Kansans have lost their Medicaid coverage as Kansas ends COVID-19 era extensions, according to data through the end of August released by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment Monday. Nearly three-quarters of those Kansans lost their coverage because they failed to submit paperwork, not because they were deemed ineligible for the program that provides coverage to disabled and low-income Americans. (Bernard, 9/18)
North Carolina Health News:
Five Takeaways From The Medicaid ‘Unwinding’
The expiration of a pandemic-era federal provision that prevented states from kicking Medicaid participants off the rolls has left North Carolina with the unprecedented challenge of reviewing the eligibility of more than 2.5 million residents. (Baxley, 9/19)
In other health news from across the U.S. —
Stat:
Transgender Sports Debate: Physicians Say Bans Are Health Issue
Almost half of U.S. states have banned or restricted trans youths’ access to gender-affirming puberty blockers, hormones, and surgery — and many of the same states are also targeting trans youths’ participation in sports. Twenty-three states ban trans youths from participating in school sports consistent with their gender identity, with some laws focusing on students from kindergarten through 12th grade and others including, or exclusively applying to, students at the collegiate level. The bans may have consequences for the health of trans youth, according to a new perspective by a group of pediatric sports medicine physicians and health services researchers published in JAMA Pediatrics. (Gaffney, 9/19)
Harvest Public Media:
More Midwest States Are Offering Universal Free Lunch To Students — While Others Consider It
Students are back in the classroom — and school breakfast and lunch are now free in several states. Michigan, Minnesota and Colorado are among six states implementing universal free lunch this year, while several other Midwestern states are taking more gradual steps to expand food access to students. It’s a shift that’s occurring across the country, after students, parents and school districts became accustomed to free school meals during the COVID pandemic. (Medlin, 9/18)
The Baltimore Sun:
Maryland Advocacy Group Plans To Pursue Expansion Of Drug Affordability Next Legislative Session
A Maryland health care advocacy group announced on Monday that it plans to push state lawmakers to expand the authority of the fledgling Prescription Drug Affordability Board next legislative session. The Maryland Health Care for All! Coalition will prioritize passing legislation to authorize the five-member board to use upper payment limits to make high-cost medications more affordable for all Marylanders – not just those who work for state and local governments, according to a news release from the coalition. (Roberts, 9/18)
Axios Georgia:
Emergency Room Visits Are Getting Longer In Georgia
The median time Georgians spent in emergency rooms was 2 hours, 37 minutes last year — the latest in a steady increase from pre-pandemic times, according to the latest Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services data. (Dixon and Fitzpatrick, 9/18)
Viewpoints: Self-Care Doesn't Appear To Be Working; Alabama Will Try Cruel New Execution Method
Editorial writers delve into self-care, death penalty methods, cancer, and more.
The New York Times:
A Skeptical Look At ‘Self-Care’
Love it or hate it, self-care has transformed from a radical feminist concept into a multibillion-dollar industry. But the wellness boom doesn’t seem to be making a dent in Americans’ stress levels. In 2021, 34 percent of women reported feeling burned out at work, along with 26 percent of men. (Ezra Klein, 9/19)
The New York Times:
Alabama Has A Horrible New Way Of Killing People On Death Row
After botching a series of executions by lethal injection, the State of Alabama is planning to use nitrogen gas to put condemned prisoners to death. The first execution will amount to a human experiment, because neither Alabama nor any other state has ever tried to kill people this way. (Bernard E. Harcourt, 9/18)
CNN:
Cancer Changed My Macho Views On Accepting Help
There was no stopping the tears. Five and a half months after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, six weeks after the last of seven chemotherapy infusions and four days after major surgery, the doctor was ready to discharge me from the hospital. (Andy Segal, 9/19)
Stat:
Black Women With Breast Cancer Deserve Better Genomic Testing
When a woman first learns she has breast cancer, her mind immediately floods with “what now?” questions as she grapples with how this disease will impact her life. Unfortunately, Black women also have to ask themselves, “Will my racial heritage and ethnicity affect the care I receive and chances of survival?” (Nathalie McDowell Johnson, 9/19)
Stat:
People With Substance Use Disorder Deserve Online Privacy
The era of rampant, unconsented, and unregulated online data collection may finally be winding down for consumer health data. But the advances in consumer privacy have not yet fully reached the millions of people with health information related to their drug use, substance use disorder treatment, or recovery. (Jacqueline Seitz, 9/18)
Military.com:
House Republicans Are Ready To Shut Down The Government, Even Though It Will Hurt Veterans
As we stare down the prospect of another government shutdown due to House Republican time-wasting, House Republicans continue to argue that their party is the party for veterans. Their actions say otherwise. Last month, House Republicans jammed through an embarrassing military construction/Veterans Affairs appropriations bill. My Democratic colleagues and I fought for veterans' funding after House Republicans called for 22% cuts to all spending in April. President Joe Biden held the line and reached an agreement with Speaker Kevin McCarthy to fund the VA. (Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., 9/18)