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Tuesday, Jul 31 2018

Full Issue

Palliative Sedation May Serve As Loophole For Places Where Aid-In-Dying Remains Illegal

The practice involves giving patients enough sedatives to induce unconsciousness. Often, it's enough so that they never wake up. In other public health news: the flu, e-cigarettes, voices, gene therapy, raw centipedes, and more.

Toward the end, the pain had practically driven Elizabeth Martin mad. By then, the cancer had spread everywhere, from her colon to her spine, her liver, her adrenal glands and one of her lungs. Eventually, it penetrated her brain. No medication made the pain bearable. A woman who had been generous and good-humored turned into someone hardly recognizable to her family: paranoid, snarling, violent. (Ollove, 7/30)

Sanofi is one of the world鈥檚 leaders in influenza vaccine production, through its vaccine arm Sanofi Pasteur. And if anyone at Sanofi knows vaccines, it鈥檚 Dr. Gary Nabel, the company鈥檚 chief scientific officer, who happens to be a former head of the National Institutes of Health鈥檚 Vaccine Research Center. When Nabel dropped by STAT for a visit, we thought we鈥檇 explore some flu vaccine-related issues. (Branswell, 7/31)

When a San Diego-based mother posted an emergency alert on Nextdoor, a community discussion app, she hoped a Good Samaritan could help, according to court filings. Her son聽was hysterical after losing a flash drive with his homework near the local McDonald鈥檚, she wrote, uploading a photo along with the message. A neighbor quickly replied, explaining that the chewing-gum-sized object in the picture was not a flash drive:聽It was a Juul vaping device. (Paul, 7/30)

It is vital to transgender women to find the feminine voice that matches their gender identity, gives them confidence and helps prevent harassment. ... The problem for transgender women is that finding a feminine voice is no easy task. As The Washington Post reported, testosterone, which transgender men take to build up their muscles and grow facial hair, also increases the size of their vocal folds, making their voices deeper. Estrogen, however, which most transgender women take, can鈥檛 shrink the vocal cords. (Nutt, 7/30)

Gene and cell therapy companies collectively raised $2.3 billion in equity financing in the first 4 1/2 months of this year, putting them on pace to exceed their $4.5 billion haul last year, according to a database maintained by the news organization BioCentury. For cancer alone, there are 753 cell therapies being developed worldwide, according to the Cancer Research Institute, a nonprofit group. Half of them have reached human testing. That鈥檚 the point at which it becomes essential for a company to have an experienced professional who knows how to oversee a manufacturing operation of far greater complexity than the kind traditionally used by pharma to make synthetic compounds. (Robbins, 7/31)

Scientists in China now have hard evidence that eating raw centipedes is a really bad idea. That might go without saying in most parts of the world. But centipedes are an established remedy in traditional medicine in China. (McNeil, 7/30)

One of the hottest fields in health care investing is digital health. Companies in the space collectively raised $3.4 billion in venture capital in the first half of this year, spread across 193 deals, according to a count from the venture firm Rock Health. If that pace continues, the sector will set a new record this year 鈥 both in terms of number of deals and VC money invested overall. But is all that cash being invested wisely? To tease out that question, STAT sat down to chat with聽veteran health care VC聽Lisa Suennen, who works as the lead health care investor for General Electric鈥檚 corporate venture arm. (Robbins and Feuerstein, 7/30)

In Minnesota alone, the rate increased 40.6 percent between 1999 and 2016, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. So what are medical professionals doing to prevent suicides? (Wurzer, 7/30)

Nobody wants a deadly Ebola outbreak, but for the world health chief, the latest episode has been invaluable. The World Health Organization鈥檚 Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus this month declared an end to an Ebola outbreak that started in May in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, four years after the agency鈥檚 high-profile failure to contain the spread of the virus throughout West Africa. (Jennings, 7/29)

Kaiser Health News: For Many College Students, Hunger Can 鈥楳ake It Hard To Focus In Class鈥

As students enter college this fall, many will聽hunger for more than knowledge. Up to half of college students report that they were either not getting enough to eat or were worried about it, according to published studies. 鈥淔ood insecurity,鈥 as it鈥檚 called, is most prevalent at community colleges, but it鈥檚 common at public and private four-year schools as well.聽Student activists and advocates in the education community have drawn attention to the problem in recent years, and the food pantries聽that have sprung up at hundreds of schools are perhaps the most visible sign. (Andrews, 7/31)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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