Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Texas Hospital To Open 'Detransition Clinic' In Settlement Over Trans Care
The Texas attorney general has secured an unusual settlement over child transgender care that compels Texas Childrenās Hospital to create the nationās first ever ādetransition clinicā in addition to paying the state $10 million. (Langford and Deguzman, 5/15)
A Kansas judge on Friday protected access to gender-affirming care for transgender minors as the nationās largest childrenās hospital moved to restrict such care in Texas, buckling under pressure from the Trump administration. Texas Childrenās Hospital, based in Houston, said in a statement that it had agreed to a legal settlement āto protect our resources from endless and costly litigation.ā The hospital, which serves more than 1 million patients a year, stopped providing hormone treatments for transgender children and teens in 2022, a year before the state banned such care, but still faced a yearslong investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxtonās office. (Hanna, 5/16)
Legislative updates ā
A $25 million grant to cash-strapped hospitals became law less than a week after it was introduced ā so fast that it caught some hospitals, their advocates, and even some lawmakers, off guard. It also left a litany of unanswered questions: who came up with the narrow criteria, how many hospitals would qualify and whether the funding will be enough to prevent hospital closures in the near term. (Yu and Ibarra, 5/15)
Finley Thomas is an 11-year-old girl whoās got a morning makeup and skin care routine. She loves Halloween, dressing up, her older brothers and cheering with her squad.Ā She also uses a wheelchair, has a tracheostomy tube that gets hooked up to a ventilator at night, receives tube feedings for much of her nutrition, and has multiple therapy sessions each weekāall the result of a neurological condition she was born with that has recently required a couple of surgeries. (Hoban, 5/18)
When the Connecticut legislature gaveled out on May 6, several bills didnāt make it across the finish line. Among them wasĀ a proposalĀ that would have allowed dental cleanings in private residences. (Savitt, 5/15)
Regarding hemp, magic mushrooms, and salmonella ā
A top regulator for Coloradoās Marijuana Enforcement Division acknowledged in a private meeting with industry representatives that the amount of chemically converted hemp being illegally sold as marijuana is far greater than the agency has publicly disclosed. The remarks confirmed testing by The Denver Gazette and ProPublica, which found signs of hemp in marijuana vapes sold at dispensaries, as well as reporting that regulators have discovered that some hemp-derived vapes were contaminated with a toxic chemical. (Osher, 5/15)
Californiaās monthslong spate of mushroom poisonings, in which four people have died and 43 others hospitalized, has become the largest known outbreak of its kind in U.S. history, experts say. Three cases were reported earlier this week, long after the typical growing season for the mushrooms behind the illnesses, leaving public health officials and mycologists puzzled about why the poisonings have been so widespread and what is causing the trend. (Bush, 5/15)
Salmonella outbreaks tied to backyard poultry have sickened at least 184 people across 31 states this year, including six in Maryland, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One person has died and 53 people have been hospitalized, the CDC said in a May 14 notice. More than a quarter of the people sickened were children younger than 5. (Davis, 5/16)
Also ā
Mission Hospital has no plans to add staff in key areas ā including trauma care, security, and nursing administration ā as part of its recently approved, now-contested, 95-bed acute-care expansion, according to its application to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. (Clifford, 5/16)