- Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News Original Stories 3
- Election Outcome Could Bring Big Changes to Medicare
- No Evidence Trumpâs Drug Program for Terminal Patients Saved âThousandsâ of Lives
- Whatâs at Stake: A Pivotal Election for Six Big Health Issues
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Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News Original Stories
Election Outcome Could Bring Big Changes to Medicare
Democrats and conservatives are divided over whether the federal health program for people over 65 should be run almost entirely by the private sector. If Trump retakes the White House, the shift to Medicare Advantage may accelerate. (Stephanie Armour, 11/4)
No Evidence Trumpâs Drug Program for Terminal Patients Saved âThousandsâ of Lives
Though the former president has repeatedly hyped the impact of his experimental drug program, thereâs no basis for his claims in government data, and medical experts say heâs exaggerating. (Jacob Gardenswartz, 11/4)
Whatâs at Stake: A Pivotal Election for Six Big Health Issues
Health care has ebbed and surged as an election issue throughout the presidential campaign. Here are the ways some of the most consequential changes in health policies could hinge on whether Vice President Kamala Harris or former President Donald Trump wins. (Arthur Allen and Phil Galewitz and Julie Rovner and Daniel Chang, 11/1)
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Summaries Of The News:
CMS Releases Final Medicare Reimbursement Rules for 2025
Among the many new rules are physician reimbursement cuts of 2.9%, and hospital outpatient department boosts of 2.9%. Congress braces for a post-election lobbying fight. In other Medicare news: rural health care, star ratings, and more.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has gone ahead with a 2.9% cut to Medicare physician reimbursements for 2025, setting up a lobbying fight when Congress gets back to Washington after the elections. CMS published the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule final rule Friday, which retains the payment reduction the agency proposed in July. The American Medical Association and other physician societies are pleading with Congress to stop the cut from taking effect or blunt its impactâ as it did for 2024 and prior years. (Early, 11/1)
Hospital outpatient departments and ambulatory surgical centers will receive a 2.9% Medicare pay boost next year under a final rule the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued Friday. The reimbursement increase is up from the 2.6% hike CMS proposed in July. The hospital outpatient payment update reflects a 3.4% hospital market basket increase offset by a -0.5% productivity adjustment. (Kacik, 11/1)
Home health and dialysis providers will get modest Medicare reimbursement increases in 2025 under final rules the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued Friday. Medicare home health payments will rise 0.5% next year after the agency proposed a 1.7% cut in June. Dialysis providers treating end-stage renal disease patients are set for a 2.7% reimbursement hike, higher than the 2.2% CMS proposed in June. (Young, 11/1)
The hospital industry has pushed back against Medicare payment reforms for years, arguing that the policies would financially hurt rural hospitals. Two key senators on Friday released a plan to get around that issue by reinvesting some of the money saved from payment reforms to help rural and safety-net hospitals. Hospitals that keep providing services like trauma centers, labor and delivery units, and burn units would get financial bonuses, too. (Zhang, 11/1)
Home health deserts are increasing at an alarming rate across some rural states as home health companies close or reduce services due to financial challenges. Home health companies in Maine, Nebraska and Minnesota say a proposed Medicare rate cut, low Medicare Advantage reimbursements and workforce shortages are forcing them to make difficult business decisions â leaving many communities with limited access or no access to post-acute care in the home. (Eastabrook, 11/1)
Elevance Health is the latest Medicare Advantage insurer to dispute its star ratings quality scores in court. The health insurance company filed suit against the federal government in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas on Thursday. According to Elevance Health, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services improperly assessed its quality performance, costing the insurer $375 million in bonus payments. The company won a case regarding its 2024 star ratings on different grounds, which led the agency to recalculate scores across the program. (Tepper, 11/1)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News:
Election Outcome Could Bring Big Changes To Medicare
On the campaign trail, both former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are eager to portray themselves as guardians of Medicare. Each presidential candidate accuses the other of backing spending cuts and other policies that would damage the health insurance program for older Americans. But the electionâs outcome could alter the very nature of the nearly 60-year-old federal program. (Armour, 11/4)
On Eve Of Election, Trump Campaign Floats Bans On Fluoride, Some Vaccines
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump said he's "OK" with a proposal by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to tell "all U.S. water systems to remove fluoride from public water." And in an interview with NBC News, Trump also said he'll "make a decision" on banning certain vaccines â he didn't say which ones â based on advice he receives from RFK Jr.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Saturday that a Trump administration would, on its first day, âadvise all U.Sâ. water systems to remove fluoride from public water.â Kennedy linked fluoride to various illnesses, despite major medical associations supporting water fluoridation, which they say is safe and a benefit to public health. (Lebowitz, 11/3)
Former President Trump expressed tentative support for former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.âs plan to remove fluoride from water. âWell, I havenât talked to him about it yet, but it sounds OK to me,â Trump told NBC News on Sunday. âYou know, itâs possible.â (Irwin, 11/3)
Former President Trump's plan to let Robert F. Kennedy Jr. "go wild" on federal oversight of food and medicine could have real and serious consequences. Even in an informal role, Kennedy could help diminish some of the most functional parts of the health care system, potentially leading to increases in preventable disease. Kennedy recently said in a Zoom organizing call that Trump has promised him "control of the public health agencies," including HHS, CDC, FDA, NIH and the USDA. (Owens, 11/3)
First came GOP House Speaker Mike Johnsonâs pledge last Monday to overhaul the Affordable Care Act if Donald Trump wins the presidential election. Then Howard Lutnick, the co-chair of Trumpâs transition team, on Wednesday endorsed Robert F. Kennedy Jrâs vaccine skepticism and suggested that a future Trump administration would empower Kennedy to help oversee vaccine data. Three days later, Kennedy announced that Trump would seek to remove fluoride from Americansâ drinking water as a Day 1 priority. The statements add up to a surreal final week of campaigning for Republicans in which several of Trumpâs top surrogates are introducing unconventional â and generally unpopular â ideas that pit them against the health-policy establishment ahead of Election Day on Tuesday. The assorted proposals also add up to an agenda that would likely damage public health. (Diamond, 11/4)
On vaccination policyâ
Former President Donald Trump said Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would have a âbig role in the administrationâ if he wins Tuesday, telling NBC News in a phone interview that he is open to some of his more controversial ideas. Kennedy, who ran for president as an independent this year before he dropped his bid and endorsed Trump, has long spread conspiracies and falsehoods about vaccines and other public health matters. (Burns and Marquez, 11/3)
After losing her father during the pandemic, a young Wisconsin voter tries to persuade her community to vote in unprecedented numbers against Donald Trump. Whitley Rileyâs father, Lawrence, was the first person in Milwaukee to die of covid-19. As Trump initially downplayed the lethal nature of the disease, covid had invaded Black neighborhoods like her own. Health departments in majority-White areas were more likely to receive resources to set up testing sites, distribute masks and engage in public education campaigns, even as rumors proliferated that Black people were somehow immune. (Samuels, 11/3)
A regional public health department in Idaho is no longer providing COVID-19 vaccines to residents in six counties after a narrow decision by its board. Southwest District Health appears to be the first in the nation to be restricted from giving COVID-19 vaccines. Vaccinations are an essential function of a public health department. (Shastri, 11/1)
Election Outcome Could Upend Medicaid, Transgender Care Policies
Republicans envision slashing Medicaid funding, making it harder for low-income Americans to get the care they need. They also have designs on giving the federal government â not states â say over transgender care.
A decade ago, an old work injury put Fred Blackman II in the hospital with a slipped spinal disc that threatened to paralyze him. ... After discharge, he returned to a life he didnât recognize. Heâd lost his job at an insurance company, his health coverage and his house, and his marriage was falling apart. He could barely walk and owed more than $500,000 in medical bills. He got emergency Medicaid coverage with the hospitalâs help, but it lapsed after a few months. (Krisberg, Public Health Watch, 11/1)
While the legislative fight over transgender care has been largely limited to states to date, a spate of campaign ads from Republicans and worried trans advocates both indicate that could change if Republicans take control of Congress and the White House. (Cohen, 11/1)
After years of voting in person, Bettina Dolinsek voted at her home in Ankeny this fall for the first time ever. âIt was easier, time convenient for us to just do it here at home,â she said. âSo I thought weâd try it.â She needed some help to do that, though. Dolinsek is blind, and so is her husband. Because Iowaâs absentee ballots are on paper, she and her husband were not able to read and mark the ballots themselves. (Sostaric, 11/1)
Tim Sheehy, the Montana Republican nominee for Senate, said in an interview with former Fox News host Megyn Kelly that there are no medical records that would prove he did not accidentally shoot himself in the arm in Glacier National Park in 2015. Sheehy is facing a fresh round of scrutiny about a bullet wound in his arm, which he has told voters he sustained while serving as a Navy SEAL in Afghanistan in 2012. But in 2015, he told a park ranger he accidentally inflicted the wound upon himself when he dropped his weapon in a parking lot in Glacier National Park and it fired into his arm. (Goodwin, 11/3)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News:
No Evidence Trumpâs Drug Program For Terminal Patients Saved âThousandsâ Of Lives
Former President Donald Trump has boasted in recent months about âRight To Try,â a law he signed in 2018. Itâs aimed at boosting terminally ill patientsâ access to potentially lifesaving medications not yet approved by the Food and Drug Administration. âWe have things to fight off diseases that will not be approved for another five or six years that people that are very sick, terminally ill, should be able to use. But there was no mechanism for doing it,â Trump said Aug. 30, speaking in Washington, D.C., to supporters of the conservative parental rights advocacy group Moms for Liberty. (Gardenswartz, 11/4)
Also â
Kamala Harris told reporters Sunday that she cast her vote, sending a mail ballot to her home state of California. She also avoided answering a question about whether she voted for the stateâs Proposition 36, a high-profile ballot measure that would increase penalties for some theft- and drug-related crimes. The vice president, speaking to reporters after attending service and delivering remarks at the Greater Emmanuel Institutional Church of God in Christ in Detroit, also answered questions on Gaza and how her campaign would respond if Donald Trump declares an early victory on Tuesday â making no news. (Ward, 11/3)
Mifepristone Challenge Is In Wrong Court, Government Argues In Lawsuit
Idaho, Kansas, and Missouri lack standing to pursue their case in a Texas court, the FDA contends as it seeks to have the lawsuit dismissed. Also, as voters in several states weigh in on abortion ballot measures, physicians and patients in Texas and Florida grapple with the fallout of Roe's end.
The Biden administration on Friday urged a federal judge in Amarillo, Texas, to dismiss a bid by Missouri, Kansas and Idaho to restrict access to the abortion pill mifepristone nationwide, saying the three Republican-controlled states have no basis for bringing their claims in the Texas court. The states brought their lawsuit against the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by intervening in a case that was started by anti-abortion doctors and medical groups. By filing in Amarillo, the original plaintiffs had ensured that the case would go to U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, a staunch conservative and former Christian activist. (Pierson, 11/1)
Abortion news from New York â
A group of New York doctors is making a last-minute attempt to sway voters in favor of Proposition 1, a ballot measure that would enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution. A letter released Monday with more than 150 signatures from health care providers across specialties argues that Prop 1 is crucial for protecting reproductive health care access in New York amid abortion restrictions and bans in other states that have made it harder for some pregnant patients to get needed medical services â even if theyâre not seeking an abortion. (Lewis, 11/4)
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) said New Yorkers who vote Republican in the stateâs tight congressional races are âanti-womanâ and âanti-American.â âIf youâre voting for these Republicans in New York, you are voting for someone who supports Donald Trump, and youâre anti-woman, youâre anti-abortion, and basically, youâre anti-American because you have just trashed American values and what our country is about over and over and you wear this on Election Day,â Hochul said Saturday on MSNBCâs âPoliticsNation,â highlighted by Mediaite. (Irwin, 11/3)
From Nebraska, Texas, Florida, and Arizona â
Referendum 434 would enshrine the stateâs current ban after 12 weeks. Referendum 439 would create a right to abortion âuntil fetal viability.â Many voters are having trouble parsing the wording on ballots as well as mixing up which measure aligns with their views. Local news outlets have offered lengthy explainers, and billboards and ads have tried to demystify the measures. (Searcey, 11/3)
A group of 111 OB-GYNs in Texas released a letter to elected state leaders Sunday urging them to change abortion laws they say have prevented them from providing lifesaving care to pregnant women. The doctors pointed to recent reporting by ProPublica on two Texas pregnant women who died after medical staff delayed emergency care. (Salhotra, 11/3)
Texas' strict abortion laws have hindered doctors in the state, leaving them unable to offer comprehensive maternity care to pregnant women, according to Dr. Emily Briggs, an obstetrician and family physician who works in central Texas. To date, no doctor has been prosecuted for violating the ban, which is now a felony, but the confusing and inconsistent law has doctors worried about how they interact with their patients. Briggs considers it a "dangerous situation." Last year, the number of OB-GYN resident applicants in Texas dropped 16%. (Alfonsi, Chasan, Velie and Costas, 11/3)
Thea Thompson was about 18 weeks pregnant when an ultrasound technician told her in September that she was going to have a baby girl. She and her husband were excited to welcome a second child into their family. But the good news stopped there. Thompson, 37, was having a detailed ultrasound after previous genetic testing showed her fetus had a small risk of developing abnormalities. She could tell her medical team did not like what they saw. (Colombini, 11/1)
Floridaâs election will test whether the state maintains its new reputation as a Republican stronghold, or whether Democrats make some gains by tapping into the support for abortion and marijuana ballot questions and the new energy Vice President Kamala Harris brings to the race. Gone are the days when Florida was looked at as the biggest prize among swing states. After former President Barack Obama won Florida twice, former President Donald Trump carried the state by a whisker in 2016 and then by a much larger share in 2020. In 2022, Republicans took all five statewide seats on the ballot by landslide margins. (Farrington, 11/4)
Vice President Kamala Harris thinks she can win the election on an abortion rights message. Former President Trump thinks he can win on immigration. In Arizona, theyâll find out who was right. None of the seven swing states puts the two campaignsâ top issues in such stark relief. Arizona is the only border state among the battlegrounds and the only one where abortion access is on the ballot as a potential amendment to the state Constitution. (Pinho, 11/3)
Also â
The Supreme Court's landmark 2022 overturning of Roe v. Wade has had an impact on women's health beyond abortion, accelerating a gap in obstetrics and gynecological care in some states across the country. In Texas, the first state to implement more restrictive abortion laws, a fear of discussing abortion has impacted doctors practicing there and the medical students and OB-GYN residents looking to learn there. (McCandless Farmer, 11/3)
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News:
Whatâs At Stake: A Pivotal Election For Six Big Health Issues
In the final days of the campaign, stark disagreements between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump over the future of American health care are on display â in particular, in sober warnings about abortion access, the specter of future cuts to the Affordable Care Act, and bold pronouncements about empowering activists eager to change course and clean house. (Allen, Galewitz, Rovner and Chang, 11/1)
1,700 University Of Illinois Hospital Nurses To Strike Nov. 13
If the strike is not averted, it will be the second one since August. Other health industry news is on New Jersey's CarePoint Health, Zoom, Boston Childrenâs Hospital, and more.
About 1,700 University of Illinois Hospital & Clinics nurses plan to go on an open-ended strike Nov. 13, the nursesâ union announced Friday afternoon. The strike would be the second time the nurses have walked off the job since August. The union, the Illinois Nurses Association, and UI Health have additional negotiating sessions planned before Nov. 13, meaning a strike may still be averted. (Schencker, 11/1)
CarePoint Health, a long-troubled New Jersey hospital chain, has filed for bankruptcy on Sunday. CarePoint listed assets of $500,001 to $1 million and liabilities of up to $50,000 in a Chapter 11 petition filed in the Delaware court. (Suhartono and Phakdeetham, 11/4)
Connecticut officials are investigating service cuts at Rockville General Hospital in Vernon that may have violated state laws, according to an Oct. 17 letter sent by the Office of Health Strategy to Prospect CT CEO Deborah Weymouth. Rockville is one of three hospitals in Connecticut owned by Los Angeles-based Prospect Medical Holdings, along with Manchester Memorial and Waterbury Hospital. (Golvala, 11/1)
The University of Alabama at Birmingham Health System Authority finalized its $450 million acquisition of Ascension St. Vincent's Health System. The transaction included five Alabama hospitals, a specialty care and rehabilitation center, a freestanding emergency department, imaging centers and Ascension Medical Group clinics, according to a Friday news release. (Hudson, 11/1)
Zoom, a company that rose to prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic, is looking to expand its presence in healthcare through artificial intelligence. The company recently announced plans to incorporate ambient AI documentation technology from digital health company Suki in its clinical platform. Zoom plans to use the ambient AI technology, which turns a recording of a doctor-patient conversation into usable clinical notes in the electronic health record, for virtual and in-person visits. (DeSilva, 11/1)
A trial involving one of Bostonâs premier hospitals is laying bare a sharp divide among specialists over how to evaluate minors seeking gender transition care. The dispute centers around the shortened time psychologists at Boston Childrenâs Hospital spend assessing patients in person before recommending medical interventions: two hours. Some clinicians contend that is far too little time for an assessment that can open the door to powerful treatments, including puberty blockers and hormones that can help align a personâs body with their gender identity. (Damiano, 11/1)
Also â
As fall brings the start of respiratory illness season, mask mandates are coming back to health care facilities across the Bay Area. The mandates in health care settings returned Friday â some just for health care personnel and others for patients and visitors â in Alameda, Santa Clara, San Mateo and Contra Costa counties. (Pender, 11/1)
If every emergency room in the United States were fully prepared to treat children, thousands of lives would be saved and the cost would be $11.84 or less per child, researchers found. (Baumgaertner, 11/1)
Artificial intelligence is gaining more of parents' trust than actual doctors. That's according to a new study from the University of Kansas Life Span Institute, which found that parents seeking information on their childrenâs health are turning to AI more than human health care professionals.The research, published in the Journal of Pediatric Psychology, also revealed that parents rate AI-generated text as "credible, moral and trustworthy." (Stabile, 11/1)
Using leeches to suck the blood out of a person might sound medieval, but itâs actually a medicinal practice still used today at many trauma hospitals. Though only used in a handful of cases, the blood-sucking critters can save lives when all else fails. At Harris Health Ben Taub hospital, leeches are an important player in the post surgical ICU unit to help doctors and nurses get blocked blood out of tissue so it can be healthy, especially when traditional routes fail. (Babbar, 11/2)
Deadly Fungal Infections Have Been Trending Upward, Worrying Scientists
The global spread of candida auris is worrisome because the fungi's mutations are able to dodge drugs that stave off serious infection. Elsewhere in the world, mpox is leveling off in Congo, and five countries see uptick in polio infections.
A largely unnoticed surge of rare but deadly fungi is accelerating around the world, helped by the Covid-19 pandemic and a warming planet that appears to be training them to survive at higher and higher temperatures. While the pandemicâs grisly scenes of packed intensive care units and rows of patients on intubators have largely faded from public view, its legacy in the form of driving fungal spread is only now being understood by doctors and scientists. (Hong and Shrivastava, 11/3)
ome health officials say mpox cases in Congo appear to be âstabilizingâ â a possible sign that the main epidemic for which the World Health Organization made a global emergency declaration in August might be on the decline. In recent weeks, Congo has reported about 200 to 300 lab-confirmed mpox cases every week, according to WHO. Thatâs down from nearly 400 cases a week in July. The decline is also apparent in Kamituga, the mining city in the eastern part of Congo where the new, more infectious variant of mpox first emerged. (Cheng and Alonga, 11/3)
Nearly 94,000 children in Gaza City received a second dose of polio vaccine this weekend in an effort that was delayed by intense Israeli bombardment and mass evacuation orders in northern Gaza, the Gazan health ministry said. The second phase of the vaccination campaign was originally set to begin on Oct. 23 across the north of the territory, but it was postponed because of a lack of assurances about pauses in the fighting and bombardment to ensure the safety of health workers, the World Health Organization and UNICEF said in a statement on Friday. (Yazbek, 11/3)
Afghanistan and Pakistan reported more wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) cases this week, part of a notable uptick in activity in the two countries where WPV1 is still endemic, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) said in its latest weekly update, as vaccination efforts are poised to resume in Gaza. (Schnirring, 11/1)
Maryland Will Participate In 'AHEAD Model' That Promotes Health Equity
In other news: a Kansas prisoner sues over health care; the FDA warns against contaminated compounded weight loss drugs; bird flu; tuberculosis; and more.
Gov. Wes Moore signed an agreement Friday pledging Marylandâs participation in a federal model to promote equitable and affordable health care for all Maryland residents. With Mooreâs signature, the state will participate in the federal States Advancing All-Payer Equity Approaches and Development Model, also known as the AHEAD Model. (Hacker, 11/3)
A Kansas City, Kansas, woman incarcerated in a state prison alleges the Department of Corrections ignored her medical problems, leading to a hospitalization and surgery in September, as well as lifelong kidney failure. (Moore, 11/2)
The SEED School of Washington, D.C., a rare charter boarding campus in the District, has been accused of flouting local and federal education laws that protect students with disabilities â drawing outrage and a ânotice of concernâ from the cityâs charter school board. A September audit found the high school, one of D.C.âs oldest charter schools, suspended students without first holding federally mandated meetings that are supposed to determine whether a childâs behavior is the manifestation of a disability or the result of an IEP â or individualized education program â that has not been fully implemented. IEPs are legal documents that detail a studentâs special education needs and how they should be met. (Lumpkin, 11/3)
To Dioselina Salto, the first two weeks of motherhood were amazing, even though she spent much of it in the hospital after her daughter was born prematurely. She visited her daughter Janelle twice a day, held her close to her own skin and pumped breast milk for her, which doctors supplemented with specialized formula. But a midnight call from the hospital changed everything. Doctors told Salto that Janelle had developed a life-threatening intestinal disease called necrotizing enterocolitis, or NEC. (Schencker, 11/3)
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Friday warned against the use of compounded drugs, including versions of popular weight-loss treatments, made by a California-based facility over concerns that they could be contaminated. The facility, Fullerton Wellness, makes compounded versions of Novo Nordisk's and Eli Lilly's weight-loss drugs, among others. It distributes them to patients by medical offices and clinics. (11/1)
The remnants of Hurricane Helene claimed at least 101 lives in western North Carolina, burying many victims beneath rubble and floodwater. Highly trained dogs have played a crucial role in finding victimsâ remains; one canine-assisted search team from Guilford County recovered 20 bodies in the immediate aftermath of the storm. These specialist canines and their handlers are likely to find more casualties in the weeks to come, according to cadaver dog expert Cat Warren. (Baxley, 11/4)
Also â
Los Angeles County health officials said they have detected H5N1 bird flu virus in wastewater collected from the A.K. Warren Water Resource Facility in Carson. The viral âhitâ was detected on Oct. 28 by WastewaterSCAN, an infectious disease monitoring network run by researchers at Stanford, Emory University and Verily, Alphabet Inc.âs life sciences organization. Hits were also seen during the last week in San JosĂŠ, Redwood City, San Francisco, Palo Alto, Sacramento, Santa Cruz, Marina and Turlock. (Rust, 11/1)
Two Elmhurst University students tested positive for tuberculosis Thursday, according to a statement from university President Troy VanAken. They have been isolated and placed under medical supervision. The private liberal arts school has been working with the DuPage County Health Department to identify and notify individuals who may have been exposed to the potentially serious but treatable bacterial infection that primarily affects the lungs. (Atkins, 11/3)
Cases of whooping cough are significantly on the rise in Missouri, echoing a nationwide trend that federal health officials are warning the public about. Missouri has so far this year tallied 422 cases of whooping cough, a 744% increase over a year ago, when there were 50 cases statewide. In Illinois, the numbers are similarly high: There were 1,356 reported cases, compared with 428 at this time last year. (Fentem, 11/4)
Yesterday in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, investigators describe a deadly outbreak of meningococcal disease primarily in Virginia's Eastern Health Planning Region from 2022 to 2024. The outbreak is notable, as almost 80% of the cases occurred in Black residents, and 63.9% were in an age group (30 to 60 years) not generally considered at increased risk of invasive meningococcal disease (IMD). (Soucheray, 11/1)
Viewpoints: The Battle Against Mifepristone Carries On; Overturning Roe Is Killing Women
Editorial writers tackle these public health topics.
Donald Trump has threatened to âprotectâ women, âwhether the women like it or not.â If this bullying paternalism doesnât sit well with you, consider the lawsuit by Missouri, Kansas and Idaho curtail womenâs access to mifepristone, the abortion medication. (Ruth Marcus, 11/4)
Over 20 years ago, I had an experience that will be familiar to many women. I had a series of miscarriages, including one for which I needed a medical procedure to protect me from infection â which is to say, to protect me from possible death. (India Baird, 11/3)
The word âTuskegeeâ has long embodied the painful symbol of medical racism, epitomizing how ethnically uninformed research practices have harmed Black Americans. It is impossible to erase this painful history. But we â one of us working for Tuskegee University, the other for Southern Research â are working on an innovative project to create a future in which Black Americans participate more fully in clinical research and share in its benefits. (Khalilah Brown and Stephen Sodeke, 11/4)
We treat many common conditions that affect the ability to drive, including seizures, heart arrhythmias, eye diseases and dementia. We are privy to our patientsâ abilities and to medications that may affect their driving. Our patients also tend to follow our advice on matters of health and lifestyle. (Sandeep Jauhar, 11/24)
Recently, the smoldering embers of conflict in my familyâs rare disease community have burst into flames over the use of an eponym: Niemann-Pick. An eponym is a name derived from a person who first discovered a disease or who was otherwise closely associated with its identity. (Kara Ayik, 11/4)