- 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News Original Stories 4
- US Uninsured Rate Was Stable in 2023, Even as States鈥 Medicaid Purge Began
- Fearing the Worst, Schools Deploy Armed Police To Thwart Gun Violence
- Longtime Head of L.A. Care To Retire After Navigating Major Medi-Cal Changes
- Listen to the Latest '杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News Minute'
- Elections 2
- At Debate, Harris Goes On Attack As Trump Repeats Abortion Lies, Wavers On National Ban
- Trump Has Only 'Concepts Of A Plan' To Replace ACA; Harris Vows To Expand Health Law
- Reproductive Health 2
- Missouri Supreme Court Allows Abortion Rights Amendment On Ballot
- Report: Black Women More Likely To Receive Unnecessary C-Sections
From 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News - Latest Stories:
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News Original Stories
US Uninsured Rate Was Stable in 2023, Even as States鈥 Medicaid Purge Began
About 8% of Americans lacked health insurance in 2023, the Census Bureau announced. But its report doesn鈥檛 capture the effect of states winnowing their Medicaid rolls by millions of people since the pandemic emergency ended. (Phil Galewitz, )
Fearing the Worst, Schools Deploy Armed Police To Thwart Gun Violence
Officials reason that vigilance and familiarity with campuses would speed responses to shootings. But there is scant research about armed police in schools 鈥 and some studies suggest that racial bias in policing offers cause for caution. (Christine Spolar, )
Longtime Head of L.A. Care To Retire After Navigating Major Medi-Cal Changes
John Baackes, who steered Medi-Cal鈥檚 largest health plan following the Affordable Care Act expansion, and later prepared it for a state overhaul of Medi-Cal, will retire after this year. Baackes believes low payments to doctors and other providers, along with an acute labor shortage, hamper Medi-Cal鈥檚 success. (Bernard J. Wolfson, )
Listen to the Latest '杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News Minute'
鈥淗ealth Minute鈥 brings original health care and health policy reporting from the 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News newsroom to the airwaves each week. ( )
Summaries Of The News:
At Debate, Harris Goes On Attack As Trump Repeats Abortion Lies, Wavers On National Ban
Democratic nominee Kamala Harris shared harrowing stories of women being denied care and pledged to make Roe v. Wade the law of the land again if given the opportunity. Republican nominee Donald Trump resurrected false narratives and wouldn't say whether he'd sign or veto an abortion ban at the federal level.
Vice President Kamala Harris delivered a rousing and emotional round of attacks on former president Donald Trump鈥檚 abortion positions during the debate Tuesday night, conjuring clear and specific images of the women who have been denied abortion care since Roe v. Wade fell. 鈥淵ou want to talk about, 鈥榯his is what people wanted?鈥欌 Harris said. ... 鈥淧regnant women 鈥 being denied care in an emergency room because their health care providers are afraid they might go to jail and she鈥檚 bleeding out in a car in the parking lot? She didn鈥檛 want that. A 12- or 13-year-old survivor of incest being forced to carry a pregnancy to term? They don鈥檛 want that,鈥 Harris continued. (Kitchener, 9/10)
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump presented different visions for the future of abortion rights during their presidential debate Tuesday. A back-and-forth between the candidates ended with Harris saying the government shouldn't be deciding what women do with their bodies, but that is what Trump wants 鈥 a claim he denied. Harris promised to sign a bill that reinstates protections for abortion rights that existed under Roe v. Wade if it reaches her desk as president while Trump would not commit to vetoing a national abortion ban if it comes to his desk. (El-Bawab, 9/10)
Donald Trump tried to distance himself from JD Vance鈥檚 claim that the former president would veto a federal abortion ban 鈥 saying he hadn鈥檛 spoken with Vance about the issue and that his running mate wasn鈥檛 speaking for him at the time. 鈥淲ell, I didn鈥檛 discuss it with JD, in all fairness,鈥 Trump said about his running mate鈥檚 assertion. 鈥淎nd I don鈥檛 mind if he has a certain view, but I don鈥檛 think he was speaking for me.鈥 (Lazarus, 9/11)
When White House rivals Kamala Harris and Donald Trump met on the debate stage Tuesday night, it took less than 15 minutes for the topic to turn to abortion 鈥 and former President Trump immediately launched into an oft-told lie.聽(Becker, 9/10)
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump lambasted one another over their stances on abortion during the presidential debate Tuesday night. Harris pledged that if Congress passes a bill to reinstate the protections that were guaranteed by Roe v. Wade, she would 鈥減roudly sign it into law鈥 if elected president. She condemned state-level abortion bans, sharing stories of pregnant women who were unable to get emergency medical care or forced to carry pregnancies to term or because of restrictive laws. She also slammed Trump for his role in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women鈥檚 Health Organization ruling that rolled back abortion rights (Trump appointed three of the U.S. Supreme Court justices who ruled in favor of overturning the landmark decision). (Lee, 9/10)
Trump Has Only 'Concepts Of A Plan' To Replace ACA; Harris Vows To Expand Health Law
The former president indicated that details will be coming "in the not too distant future." His Democratic opponent reminded him that multiple efforts to repeal Obamacare failed during Trump's administration. Plus: how the covid pandemic was handled, and "Medicare for All."
Eight years after he was elected president on a promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, former President Donald Trump still hasn鈥檛 decided how he wants to do it.聽In a presidential debate with Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday, Trump said he had 鈥渃oncepts of a plan鈥 to replace the Affordable Care Act, but offered no details. (Zhang, 9/11)
Donald Trump spent the 2016 presidential campaign promising to repeal the Affordable Care Act. He spent most of his first year in office trying to do just that. Now he wants you to believe he is responsible for saving the law. This novel reinterpretation of history emerged on Tuesday evening at the ABC News presidential debate between Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee. (Cohn, 9/11)
The Covid-19 pandemic resurfaced in the debate just as many voters are trying to move on from the issue. Donald Trump and Kamala Harris tried to relitigate the Covid-19 pandemic, with Harris going after Trump, who defended his record. Harris accused Trump of leaving the Biden administration "the worst public health epidemic in a century.鈥 Trump claimed the U.S. made ventilators for "the entire world." (Leonard, 9/10)
Standing on a Miami debate stage five years ago and seeking the presidency, Kamala Harris raised her hand and joined a pledge to abolish private health insurance in favor of a government-run plan. Harris, then a Democratic senator from California, later said she misunderstood the moderator鈥檚 question, clarifying that she would abolish her own private health insurance 鈥 not every American鈥檚. The moment was one of Harris鈥檚 stumbles in 2019 as she struggled to navigate Democrats鈥 fight over Medicare-for-all, the transformative proposal to provide government health coverage to all Americans, and explain her own evolving position. (Diamond, 9/10)
What's important to voters? 鈥
More than 40% of voters say the cost of care, prescription drugs and insurance premiums are the most pressing healthcare concerns for the presidential candidates to address, according to a KFF survey released Tuesday. As the 2024 presidential election draws near, voters are weighing in on how policies under Vice President Kamala Harris or former President Donald Trump could impact individuals鈥 access to healthcare. (Devereaux, 9/10)
9/11-Linked Illnesses Have Killed More FDNY Firefighters Than Day Of Attack
The New York City Fire Department lost 343 members in the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center, and more than 370 others have perished since. Meanwhile, the health care fund set up to help survivors tackle 9/11-related illnesses is again short of money.
Illnesses linked to the September 11 terror attack on the World Trade Center have now killed more members of the New York City Fire Department than were killed on the day of the attack itself. "Those insurmountable losses did not end at the World Trade Center site," Fire Commissioner Robert Tucker said Monday. "Instead, we have seen our members become sick because of time they spent working in the rescue and recovery." There were 343 members of the FDNY that died on 9/11. In the 23 years since, more than 370 have died of World Trade Center-related illnesses, the department said. (9/10)
Survivors of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks are once again pressuring lawmakers to fully fund their health care. Congress intended to resolve the recurring issue back 2019, but the number of people registered with the 9/11 health care fund has ballooned, as has the cost of new state-of-the-art cancer drugs, and inflation is not helping things. A stopgap funding measure was passed last year. (Rosoff, 9/9)
In the weeks that followed Sept. 11, 2001, when David Skiba came home from lengthy search-and-rescue shifts at ground zero, his wife would take his shoes and place them outside. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 people鈥檚 ashes,鈥 Matt Skiba, their son, remembers his mother saying as she carefully handled the dust-covered boots. David Skiba, a 37-year-old New York state trooper, was working in internal affairs in Albany at the time of the attacks, but he was quickly reassigned to the site of the World Trade Center. There, immersed in thick clouds of toxic dust, he helped supervise rescue and recovery efforts, according to affidavits signed by his colleagues. ... Three years later, he started feeling sick. In January 2005, he was diagnosed with lung cancer. On Feb. 19, 2008, at the age of 43, he died. (Fahy, 9/11)
The first U.S. troops to deploy after the Sept. 11 attacks are suffering from radiation exposure that the government has yet to officially recognize 23 years later. ... Thousands of "K2" veterans have reported cancers, kidney problems and other medical conditions, some of which are known to be connected to radiation exposure. But exposure from K2 is not covered under a major veterans aid bill known as the PACT Act that President Joe Biden signed in 2022. (Copp, 9/10)
After the Twin Towers collapsed, Tom Frey was assigned to Ground Zero where he set up DNA testing sites for families to bring personal items of loved ones to be tested; Frey also worked alongside a bucket brigade for rescue and recovery. When the debris was transferred to a landfill on Staten Island, Frey spent eight months painstakingly sifting through the dust and rubble, looking for human remains. ... In February 2016, Frey says everything 鈥渉it the fan.鈥 (Babakhan, 9/10)
Though not physically at the World Trade Center on the day of the terrorist attacks, Dr. Iris Udasin in a sense, is still at Ground Zero. Since 2003, the East Brunswick resident has cared for thousands of first responders whose lives changed when they ran to help. On Sept. 11, 2024, Udasin 鈥 the medical director of the World Trade Center Health Program at Rutgers鈥 Environmental Occupational Health Sciences Institute鈥檚 Clinical Center since its inception in 2003 鈥 will receive the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Foundation鈥檚 "Service Above Self" award on behalf of law enforcement officers nationwide, presented at the National Law Enforcement Museum in Washington, D.C. "Dr. Udasin has been selected for this prestigious award in recognition of her tireless efforts in support of first responders," said Jon Adler, president of the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Foundation. (Makin, 9/6)
Missouri Supreme Court Allows Abortion Rights Amendment On Ballot
Anti-abortion activists had been pushing to block a November vote on enshrining a right to abortion in the state constitution, but the Missouri Supreme Court ruled against this challenge. Seperately, a group of Republican-led states have renewed their effort to limit abortion pill access.
Missouri voters will decide on Nov. 5 whether to overturn the state鈥檚 abortion ban after the state Supreme Court on Tuesday cleared away a final effort by anti-abortion activists to block a vote on a landmark proposal enshrining a right to abortion in the state constitution. The Missouri Supreme Court ruled that the proposed amendment to the state constitution 鈥 called Amendment 3 鈥 will remain on the general election ballot. The decision came less than three hours before a 5 p.m. deadline to finalize the ballot. (Shorman and Bayless, 9/10)
A group of Republican-led states have asked the full 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals to consider their effort to impose restrictions on the abortion pill mifepristone, including a ban on prescribing it by telemedicine and dispensing it by mail. The states, led by Idaho, in a petition for en banc rehearing on Monday urged the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit to rehear their motion to intervene in, and oppose, a lawsuit by Democratic states that seeks to preserve and expand access to the drug. A three-judge panel of the court ruled in July that they do not have standing to join the case because they have not shown how they are harmed by mifepristone's availability, which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration expanded in 2021 by allowing it to be dispensed by mail. (Pierson, 9/10)
A coalition of advocacy organizations sent a letter to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) this week urging him to hold a vote on a proposal aimed at guarding against a future Trump administration from reviving a long-dormant law to effectively ban abortion. The letter, which was shared exclusively with The Hill, was signed by various abortion-rights and court-reform groups. (Schonfeld, 9/10)
Behind bullet-proof doors in a generic office park is one of only five clinics in the country where women can access the rarest 鈥 and most controversial 鈥 abortion procedures. Women come here desperate, says Dr. Warren Hern, who has run the Boulder Abortion Clinic since 1975. 鈥淚t ranges from the 12-year-old kid who鈥檚 pregnant from her stepfather to the 45-year-old woman who desperately wants to have a baby and finds out that she has a fatal illness that is incompatible with being pregnant,鈥 he says.聽(Burns, Brooks and Kane, 9/10)
Report: Black Women More Likely To Receive Unnecessary C-Sections
The New York Times reports on the new study, which found Black women to be 25% more likely to have cesarean sections than white women. In other women's health news: a dearth of obstetric doctors, maternal home visit programs, toxic metals in tampons, PCOS, and more.
Obstetricians are more likely to give Black women unnecessary cesarean sections, putting those women at higher risk for serious complications like ruptured surgical wounds. That鈥檚 the conclusion of a new report of nearly one million births in 68 hospitals in New Jersey, one of the largest studies to tackle the subject. The additional operations on Black patients were more likely to happen when hospitals had no scheduled C-sections, meaning their operating rooms were sitting empty. (Kliff, 9/10)
In other news about maternal health care 鈥
The United States is facing an ongoing maternity health crisis in which 1 in every 3 counties does not have a single obstetric clinician, affecting women鈥檚 access to care, according to a new report. The report, released Tuesday by the infant and maternal health nonprofit March of Dimes, says that in many parts of the country, obstetrician/gynecologists and family physicians who deliver babies are leaving the workforce, which worsens access to care. (Howard, 9/10)
Some Mountain West states are expanding their home visit programs for pregnant people and new parents after receiving a boost in federal funding. A total of $40 million will go to the region 鈥 an increase of $9 million from the previous year. It鈥檚 part of a 2022 congressional funding package aimed at doubling funding for the program over five years. (Merzbach, 9/10)
On puberty, PCOS, and tampon safety 鈥
Girls exposed to certain chemicals that are common ingredients in household products may be starting puberty comparatively early, a new study has found. Substances of particular concern include musk ambrette 鈥 a fragrance used in some detergents, perfumes and personal care products 鈥 and a group of medications called cholinergic agonists, according to the study, published on Tuesday in聽Endocrinology. (Udasin, 9/10)
As a teenager, Pamela Everland suffered from irregular and excessively heavy periods that lasted for six to eight weeks. At 19-years-old, a gynecologist finally placed her on birth control to regulate her periods, but new symptoms arrived; Everland experienced rapid weight gain throughout her 20s despite committing to various diets, including Weight Watchers and the low-carb Atkins diet, and suffered from acne well into her 30s. But at every doctor鈥檚 visit, she was just told to lose weight. (Goldberg, 9/10)
The Food and Drug Administration announced Tuesday that it has begun a research project examining the possible effects of toxic metals in tampons and that it is launching an independent review. ... 鈥淎lthough toxic metals are ubiquitous and we are exposed to low levels at any given time, our study clearly shows that metals are also present in menstrual products, and that women might be at higher risk for exposure using these products,鈥 study co-author聽Kathrin Schilling, an assistant professor at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, wrote in a news release. Researchers from UC Berkeley School of Public Health were also involved. (Edwards, 9/10)
Also 鈥
After surgery thrust her into menopause at age 40, Stephanie Scott of Hamilton, Ontario, said she had 鈥渮ero sex drive.鈥 Hormone treatments helped with hot flashes and insomnia, but they didn鈥檛 increase her desire for sex. So she signed up for a research study that was testing a unique type of therapy for menopausal women with low desire because of menopause. The result: a noticeable improvement in her sex life. 鈥淭he focus was on reshaping your thoughts about your own body, your own needs and desires and desirability,鈥 said Scott, now 49, who entered early menopause after having a hysterectomy and one ovary removed. (Zimmerman, 9/10)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News:
Listen To The Latest '杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News Minute'
鈥淗ealth Minute鈥 brings original health care and health policy reporting from the 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News newsroom to the airwaves each week. (9/10)
CDC: Lack Of Health Insurance Is A Factor In Rising Suicide Rates
A CDC study finds that communities where people lack health insurance, income, and broadband internet access are likelier to have higher suicide risks, and those "preventable" social factors are playing a role in the national crisis.
People with health insurance, higher income and internet access may be less likely to die by suicide, a new study found. Counties with lower levels of health insurance coverage, broadband internet access and household income had higher suicide rates, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report published Tuesday. (Cuevas, 9/10)
U.S. inflation-adjusted household income increased but poverty rates showed only modest changes last year, the U.S. Census Bureau reported on Tuesday, offering a mixed snapshot of how American households fared as the economy returned to pre-coronavirus pandemic growth levels, job growth boomed and inflation eased. Real median household income rose to $80,610 in 2023, up 4.0% from 2022, back to the peak reached in 2019, while earnings for workers as a whole were higher than before the pandemic, a boost to households after multiple years in which workers' wages were outpaced by high inflation. (9/10)
Social Security recipients are on track for a smaller cost-of-living adjustment next year. The cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, that retirees receive each year is tied to the average inflation data for July, August and September, so the actual increase won鈥檛 be clear until October. There was a 2.9% increase in July, and economists expect the August figure to have risen at an annual rate of 2.6%. The Labor Department reports inflation Wednesday morning.聽 (Tergesen, 9/11)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News:
US Uninsured Rate Was Stable In 2023, Even As States鈥 Medicaid Purge Began
The proportion of Americans without health insurance remained stable in 2023, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday, close to the record low the Biden administration achieved in 2022 through expansions of public programs, including the Affordable Care Act. About 8% of Americans were uninsured, a statistically insignificant increase of just 0.1 percentage point from a year earlier. (Galewitz, 9/10)
If you need help 鈥
Kaiser Permanente To Shut California Nursing Home, Lay Off 249 Staff
The Kaiser Permanente Post Acute Care Center in San Leandro will be permanently closed by mid-November. Also in the news: an Athena Health Care nursing home in Connecticut loses federal funding; a nurse strike is averted at Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital; and more.
Kaiser Permanente has announced the closure of its last free-standing company-owned skilled nursing facility 鈥 also known as a nursing home 鈥 in California, leading to 249 job losses. Regulatory filings reveal that the Kaiser Permanente Post Acute Care Center at 1440 168th Ave. in San Leandro will be permanently closed by mid-November, affecting a range of employees including administrators, physical therapists, dietitians, licensed vocational nurses and, primarily, certified nursing assistants. (Vaziri, 9/10)
The federal agency that oversees long-term care facilities has informed Athena Health Care that it will no longer be getting federal Medicare funding for nearly 200 residents living at the Abbott Terrace Health Center in Waterbury. (Altimari and Carlesso, 9/10)
Nurses at Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital 鈥渧oted overwhelmingly鈥 on Tuesday to ratify a new contract that will increase wages and avert a threatened strike, union officials said in a statement. The Massachusetts Nurses Association, the union for 4,000 nurses, negotiated a wage increase of up to 30 percent over the next two and a half years for Brigham nurses, and a quadrupled hourly rate for some on-call nurses, the statement said. (Alanez, 9/10)
Orlando Health鈥檚 bid to purchase three Space Coast hospitals from the financially ailing Steward Health Care was approved Tuesday by a Texas-based bankruptcy judge. Orlando Health will pay $439 million for Melbourne Regional Medical Center and Rockledge Regional Medical Center in Brevard County and Sebastian River Medical Center in Indian River County. The sale also includes certain Steward Medical Group practices in Florida. (Mayer, 9/11)
Also 鈥
A class-action complaint claims Aetna violated federal non-discrimination law by denying coverage of certain gender-affirming surgeries. The lawsuit filed Tuesday cites civil rights protections in the Affordable Care Act that are currently being challenged by conservative-led states. (Goldman, 9/11)
Medicare Advantage enrollment and profitability聽surged in recent years聽as a growing number of seniors sought plans with minimal copays and extra benefits not offered in traditional Medicare. However, Medicare Advantage enrollment growth has slowed and insurance companies' earnings per member have declined over the past year as insurers grapple with stiffer competition, higher medical costs and utilization, lower reimbursement rates and stricter regulatory oversight. (Kacik, 9/10)
The largest health system in North Carolina simply wasn鈥檛 interested in canceling its patients鈥 medical debt. That is, until the state government dangled billions of dollars in incentive payments.聽(Zhang, 9/11)
The American Medical Association released its updated list of Current Procedural Terminology codes for 2025, adding 270 new universal codes used for billing healthcare services and reimbursing providers. The organization announced 420 updates to its list Tuesday, with several revisions and additions for genetic testing, digital health services like remote patient monitoring and care involving artificial intelligence. (DeSilva, 9/10)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News:
Longtime Head Of L.A. Care To Retire After Navigating Major Medi-Cal Changes
For nearly a decade, John Baackes has led L.A. Care Health Plan, a publicly run insurer primarily serving low-income Los Angeles County residents on Medi-Cal. It is by far the largest Medi-Cal plan in the state. Baackes, 78, who will retire after the end of the year, helped transform L.A. Care into a major market player following its expansion under the Affordable Care Act. He implemented a new administrative structure and promoted a new internal culture. (Wolfson, 9/11)
UnitedHealth Says It's Swapping Out Humira On Some Preferred-Drug Lists
The insurance giant signaled that in 2025 it will remove AbbVie's blockbuster arthritis drug from some reimbursement lists and promote cheaper biosimilar alternatives. Among other pharma news, Novo Nordisk's old weight loss drug Saxenda is found safe and effective for kids.
UnitedHealth Group said on Tuesday it will remove AbbVie鈥檚 blockbuster rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira from some of its lists of preferred drugs for reimbursement as of Jan. 1, 2025, and recommend less expensive biosimilar versions of the medicine instead. UnitedHealth said Amgen's (Amjevita will be among the biosimilars covered on its lists for commercial health plans, which are managed by its pharmacy benefits unit, Optum Rx. (Wingrove, 9/10)
On weight loss drugs 鈥
Novo Nordisk's older weight-loss drug Saxenda helped children between the ages of 6 and under 12 reduce their body mass index by 7.4% in a 56-week trial, according to results presented at a medical meeting on Wednesday. The Novo-sponsored study was the first to examine the safety and efficacy of once daily injections of Saxenda, known chemically as liraglutide, in young children. (Fick, 9/10)
Novo Nordisk on Tuesday reported that its new obesity pill that targets the amylin hormone led to substantial weight loss in an early study, boosting the company鈥檚 pipeline of next-generation candidates that may be more effective than Wegovy. (Chen, 9/10)
More pharmaceutical developments 鈥
British drugmaker GSK said on Wednesday its experimental herpes simplex virus (HSV) vaccine candidate failed to meet the main goal of a mid-stage trial and would not be taken forward to a late-stage trial. (9/11)
Sanofi and Regeneron鈥檚 blockbuster drug Dupixent successfully treated patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria, an inflammatory skin disease, in a late-stage trial, the companies announced on Wednesday, bringing the firms closer to securing Food and Drug Administration approval after the agency rejected their application last year. (Wosen, 9/11)
Baltimore said on Tuesday that it has settled with Walgreens over claims that the pharmacy operator fueled opioid addiction in the Maryland city, the latest in a series of settlements totaling $402.5 million ahead of a trial scheduled to begin next week. (Pierson, 9/10)
Transgender Candidate In Delaware Could Cruise To US House Seat
Sarah McBride, a state lawmaker who won the Democratic primary, would become the first openly transgender member of Congress if she defeats Republican James Whalen III, a former police officer, in November. Separately, former Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo testified in Congress about New York's covid policies.
Sarah McBride, a state legislator, won the Democratic primary for Delaware鈥檚 only U.S. House seat, The Associated Press reported, making her the heavy favorite to win in November in the deep-blue state. If elected, she would become the first openly transgender member of Congress. (Harmon, 9/10)
Democrats joined Republicans to insist that former New York governor Andrew Cuomo explain whether his administration slow-walked accurate data on nursing home deaths, in a hearing room packed with attendees who lost family members to covid in New York nursing homes. (Diamond, 9/10)
Representative Joe Wilson, Republican of South Carolina, was taken to a hospital on Tuesday, according to a social media post. Alan Wilson, Joe Wilson鈥檚 son and the attorney general of South Carolina, said in a separate post that 鈥渄octors have confirmed to us that he has experienced stroke-like symptoms.鈥 ... Mr. Wilson, 77, came to prominence after shouting 鈥測ou lie鈥 at President Barack Obama during a joint session of Congress in 2009. (Petrei, 9/10)
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump urged GOP lawmakers to refuse to pass a short-term bill to keep the government funded if they don鈥檛 get a provision that aims to prevent noncitizens from voting. The deadline for Congress to act to avoid a partial government shutdown is Sept. 30. (Hughes, Ferek and Timms, 9/10)
3 New West Nile Cases In Mass.; Another Tick-Borne Illness On The Rise
The cases of West Nile virus bring the state's total this year to 10. Also in the news: H5N1 bird flu, a public health warning at the Virginia Boar鈥檚 Head plant, and more.
Health officials on Tuesday announced three new human cases of West Nile virus detected in the state, raising the total to 10 for the year. The state Department of Public Health said all three cases were detected in people who are in their 60s. One is a woman who was exposed in Bristol County, another is a man who was exposed in Suffolk County, and the third is a man who was exposed in Barnstable County, the department said. Six human cases of the virus were reported in the state last year, health officials said. (Stoico, 9/10)
If you spot a blacklegged tick crawling up your leg 鈥 or worse, attached to your skin 鈥 you might be worried about getting Lyme disease. That鈥檚 reasonable because Lyme is the most commonly reported illness spread by ticks. But it is far from the only one: The blacklegged ticks that carry Lyme can spread at least six different illnesses. The tick-borne illness babesiosis is one of the next most common after Lyme. And it is on the rise, especially in the Northeast, according to a 2023 report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Loria, 9/9)
Up until last Friday afternoon, a total of 13 people in the United States had officially come down this year with avian influenza H5, also known as bird flu. A subtype of that virus, a potential pandemic pathogen called H5N1, has for months been circulating in our dairy herds, and has already killed tens of millions of birds here. The 13 human cases through last Friday were generally mild, and more important, they were all clearly linked to sickened cows or poultry. (Tayag, 9/10)
Two years before a deadly listeria outbreak, U.S. inspectors warned that conditions at a Boar鈥檚 Head plant posed an 鈥渋mminent threat鈥 to public health, citing extensive rust, deli meats exposed to wet ceilings, green mold and holes in the walls. But the U.S. Agriculture Department did not impose strict measures on the plant, in Jarratt, Va., which could have ranged from a warning letter to a suspension of operations. (Jewett and Rosenbluth, 9/10)
The cholera outbreaks spreading across the globe are becoming more deadly. Deaths from the diarrheal disease soared last year, far outpacing the increase in cases, according to a new analysis by the World Health Organization. Cholera is easy to prevent and costs just pennies to treat, but huge outbreaks have swamped even well-prepared health systems in countries that had not confronted the disease in years. The number of cholera deaths reported globally last year increased by 71 percent from deaths in 2022, while the number of reported cases rose 13 percent. Much of the increase was driven by conflict and climate change, the W.H.O. report said. (Nolen, 9/11)
On the gun violence epidemic 鈥
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News:
Fearing The Worst, Schools Deploy Armed Police To Thwart Gun Violence
A false alarm that a gunman was roaming one Catholic high school and then another in March 2023 touched off frightening evacuations and a robust police response in the city. It also prompted the diocese to rethink what constitutes a model learning environment. Months after hundreds of students were met by SWAT teams, the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh began forming its own armed police force. (Spolar, 9/11)
Editorial writers discuss these public health issues.
Whether insurance companies are required to pay for any type of preventive care is in the hands of a little-known volunteer panel of 16 experts, whose approximately $11 million budget is preposterously inadequate to the growing size of their mission. (Karen Tumulty, 9/10)
When a patient is admitted to the hospital in the U.S., there鈥檚 a standard question physicians like me are supposed to ask: 鈥淚f your heart stops beating, do you want us to do CPR?鈥 On the surface, this may seem like a mechanic asking a customer, 鈥淚f your car stalls, do you want us to jumpstart the engine?鈥 Who would say no to this, especially in a hospital? (Lindsey Ulin, 9/11)
The uninsured rate remained steady last year, at roughly the lowest level ever recorded. That鈥檚 a small miracle 鈥 but one that could vanish if lawmakers don鈥檛 act soon. The share of Americans without health insurance coverage was just 8 percent in 2023, statistically indistinguishable from the record low reached the prior year (7.9 percent), the Census Bureau reported Tuesday. For context, in the bad, old pre-Obamacare days, the share of Americans lacking health insurance was roughly double that amount. (Catherine Rampell, 9/10)
Surgeon General Vivek Murthy鈥檚 latest warning unearths concerning statistics about the mental health and well-being of American parents. These findings resonated with me deeply on two levels. First, I am a parent of three school-age children. Second, I am a trained therapist and head of behavioral health at a provider organization focused on caring for the most vulnerable members of our population 鈥 Medicaid members and those dually eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare. (Ruby Mehta, 9/11)
Silicosis is lung scarring caused by inhalation of silica particles. Scarring is ongoing, even after the exposure has stopped. Silicosis is not a new disease 鈥 it was first described in 400 B.C. and re-described by physicians across the centuries. Despite this long-standing knowledge, clinicians fail to recognize silicosis, and it is often misdiagnosed until the very late stages of disease. (Linda Forst and Lee Friedman, 9/9)