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Morning Briefing for Tuesday, August 8, 2023

August 8, 2023 Morning Briefing

Medicare drug coverage, maternity care, abortion vote, ‘Eris’ covid variant, surprise medical bills, opioids, and more are in the news.

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Ohioans Decide Today On Referendum That Could Upend Abortion Vote

August 8, 2023 Morning Briefing

The outcome of today’s election — which will decide whether to raise the threshold for amending the state constitution from 50% to 60% — likely will have broader implications for the 2024 election and beyond. Turnout for the special election has already blown away expectations.

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Billing Arbitration Comes To An End After Changes To No Surprises Act

August 8, 2023 Morning Briefing

Last week, a court ruling saw parts of the surprise billing law vacated, and this has now resulted in the federal government stopping processing payment disputes between providers and insurers over out-of-network bills, Modern Healthcare reports. Axios notes insurers sometimes pay double for the same procedure versus Medicare Advantage prices.

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New Covid Variant EG.5, Or ‘Eris,’ Among Fastest-Spreading So Far

August 8, 2023 Morning Briefing

News outlets report on the rapid spread of a new covid variant labeled EG.5, unofficially known as “Eris,” which may be among the fastest-spreading yet due to a mutation. Meanwhile, the Chicago Tribune notes covid cases are ticking up as summer comes to an end, and The Washington Post explains why it may be hard to find covid tests.

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First Edition: Aug. 8, 2023

August 8, 2023 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

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A photo of three boxes of Wegovy.

Seeking Medicare Coverage for Weight Loss Drugs, Pharma Giant Courts Black Influencers

By Rachana Pradhan August 8, 2023 KFF Health News Original

Novo Nordisk, the dominant company in the multibillion-dollar market for weight loss drugs, focuses on Black lawmakers and opinion leaders to spread the message that obesity is a chronic disease that needs treatment.

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A father cradles his baby daughter and feeds her from a bottle. He is wearing a black t-shirt and she is wearing a white bow headband around her black curly hair.

Amid Lack of Accountability for Bias in Maternity Care, a California Family Seeks Justice

By Sarah Kwon August 8, 2023 KFF Health News Original

April Valentine’s family wants to know whether racism could have played a role in her death. A KFF Health News analysis shows state regulators are ill-equipped to find discrimination in its many forms.

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A photo of a stethoscope on top of a one hundred dollar bill.

What One Lending Company’s Hospital Contracts Reveal About Financing Patient Debt

By Noam N. Levey August 8, 2023 KFF Health News Original

Within two years of North Carolina’s public university system going into business with AccessOne to finance patients’ payment plans, nearly half of its patients were in loans that charged interest. As federal scrutiny increases on lenders, KFF Health News is sharing that contract and others obtained through public records requests.

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A photo of four women speaking together inside a courthouse.

How the Texas Trial Changed the Story of Abortion Rights in America

By Sarah Varney August 7, 2023 KFF Health News Original

Stark, plaintive testimony from women denied abortion care represents the start of “the 50-year fight to get rid of Dobbs,” one historian says.

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Viewpoints: It Won’t Be Long Before AI Replaces Human Doctors; Will Ohio Protect Reproductive Rights?

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

Editorial writers discuss AI in health care, abortion rights, lobotomies and more.

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Morning Briefing for Monday, August 7, 2023

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

Postpartum depression, abortion law, hospital cyberattacks, child vaccination rates, antibiotic resistance, cancer, and more are in the news.

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Following Pandemic Screening Delays, Late-Stage Cancers Rise: Study

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

Confirming what many may have suspected, a new study in Lancet Oncology emphasizes how care disruptions during the pandemic have led to more diagnoses, now, of late-stage cancers of nearly all types. Meanwhile, the Hill reports on which of alcohol or cannabis is worse for you.

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Hospitals In At Least 3 States Working To Recover From Cyberattack

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

The attack last week hit Prospect Medical Holdings, a private equity company that operates 16 hospitals and 165 outpatient facilities across California, Texas, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Pennsylvania. In some places, emergency departments were forced to close, and health providers reverted to pen and paper.

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Appeal Blocks Medical Complications Exemption From Texas Abortion Ban

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

The Texas attorney general issued a late-night appeal resulting in a suspension of an earlier injunction from Travis County Judge Jessica Mangrum. This had, for a short while, exempted people with medically complicated pregnancies from Texas’ punitive abortion ban.

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CDC Confirms Human Swine Flu Cases Linked To Michigan County Fairs

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

The first two human swine flu cases in the U.S. this year were linked to infected pigs at public events, the Detroit Free Press reports. Also in the news: a Bay area spa was ordered closed following two deaths associated with Legionnaires disease; warnings over undercooked seafood risks; and more.

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Data: Covid Drove Up Antibiotic Use; Worries Over Antibiotic Resistance

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

Even as CIDRAP covers a report on CDC data showing a significant rise in antibiotic use in U.S. hospitals early in the pandemic, Fox news reports on how doctors are warning over rising antibiotic resistance in Americans. Also in the news: how covid tracking has waned, and more.

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Childhood Vaccination Rates Slipping, Even As Fall’s Sickly Season Nears

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

News outlets cover worries over the rate of childhood vaccination in the U.S., with about 1 in 6 toddlers missing out on some of the necessary doses against measles, mumps, polio, tetanus, and more, even as the typical fall illness season approaches. Assistant Secretary of Health Rachel Levine spoke on the matter of childhood shots.

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FDA Approves Fast-Acting Pill For Postpartum Depression

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

Zurzuvae is the first treatment for postpartum that can be taken at home. It works in days, compared with other depression treatments that take weeks.

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First Edition: Aug. 7, 2023

August 7, 2023 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

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A photo of the former NIH director speaking in front of the NIH logo.

The NIH Ices a Research Project. Is It Self-Censorship?

By Darius Tahir August 7, 2023 KFF Health News Original

The National Institutes of Health appeared to be digging into health misinformation. But then the federal agency stepped back. It can’t quite explain why, sometimes even offering contradictory explanations.

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