Tag: Oct

  • First Edition: Oct. 27, 2022

    First Edition: Oct. 27, 2022

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

    KHN:
    Employers Are Concerned About Covering Workers’ Mental Health Needs, Survey Finds 

    Almost three years after the covid-19 pandemic upended workplaces, mental health coverage remains a priority for employers, according to an annual employer survey fielded by KFF. Nearly half of surveyed large employers — those with at least 200 workers — reported that a growing share of their workers were using mental health services. Yet almost a third of that group said their health plan’s network didn’t have enough behavioral health care providers for employees to have timely access to the care they need. (Andrews, 10/27)

    KHN:
    Montana Backs Away From Innovative Hospital Payment Model. Other States Are Watching.

    Montana is signaling it might step away from an innovative way of setting the prices its public employee health plan pays hospitals for services, an approach that has saved the state millions of dollars and become a model for health plans nationwide. The plan gained national renown among employers and health care price reform advocates when, in 2016, it established maximum amounts the health plan would pay for all inpatient and outpatient services. Those amounts were pegged to Medicare reimbursement rates. The adoption of that model, known as reference-based pricing, has saved the state tens of millions of dollars. Taxpayers help fund the medical plan, which insures public employees and their families, for a total of about 28,800 people. (Houghton, 10/27)

    KHN:
    Readers And Tweeters Take Positions On Sleep Apnea Treatment 

    KHN gives readers a chance to comment on a recent batch of stories. (10/27)


    The Hill:
    Americans Die Younger In States With Conservative Policies: Study


    Americans die younger in states with more conservative policies, while states with more liberal policies are associated with lower mortality rates, according to a new study published Wednesday in the scientific journal PLOS One. Researchers analyzed mortality rates for all causes of death in all 50 states from 1999 to 2019 among adults aged 25 to 64. They compared that to state data on policy measures such as gun safety, labor, marijuana policy, economic taxes and tobacco taxes. (Dress, 10/26)


    FiercePharma:
    OTC Birth Control Pill Delayed As FDA Postpones Expert Meeting For Perrigo Drug


    The FDA has pushed back a decision date on a proposed over-the-counter switch of Perrigo’s prescription birth control drug Opill by 90 days, Perrigo said Wednesday. Perrigo had previously expected an approval in the first half of 2023, but the exact original FDA action date was never disclosed. Perrigo’s HRA Pharma applied for the Rx-to-OTC switch on July 11, and such reviews typically take 10 months. In addition to its decision delay, the FDA also postponed a planned joint meeting by its Nonprescription Drugs Advisory Committee and the Obstetrics, Reproductive and Urologic Drugs Advisory Committee to discuss Perrigo’s application. The conference was previously scheduled for Nov. 18. No new date has been set, Perrigo said. (Liu, 10/26)


    Axios:
    FDA Postpones Meeting To Review Over-The-Counter Birth Control Pills


    “Protection of women’s health is of high importance to FDA,” an FDA spokesperson told Axios. “The postponement does not indicate or affect any decision regarding the application,” the spokesperson said, and added that the agency “remains committed to a timely review of this application.” (Gonzalez, 10/26)


    AP:
    Abortion Providers Challenge Medicaid Ban In Pennsylvania 


    Abortion providers across Pennsylvania urged the state’s highest court on Wednesday to overturn a longtime ban on Medicaid funding for the procedure. Planned Parenthood and other providers say the 1982 law violates the state’s Equal Rights Amendment by treating women’s health care needs differently than those of men. (Dale, 10/26)


    Scientific American:
    These Drugs Could Restore A Period Before Pregnancy Is Confirmed


    Imagine this situation: A woman misses her period and worries she might be pregnant. She doesn’t want to be, so she schedules an appointment with a health care provider and tells them she wishes to get her period back. The provider prescribes her a course of “period pills.” She gets her period again, and that’s the end of it. Such a scenario is not purely hypothetical. Period pills are the same ones used in medication abortion—misoprostol alone or in combination with mifepristone—which could imply that menstrual regulation is just another name for early abortion. But the drugs might not be considered abortion medication because the patient never learns whether they were pregnant in the first place. (Lenharo, 10/26)


    ProPublica:
    Lawmakers And Public Health Advocates Call For Congress To Finally Ban Asbestos


    Days after ProPublica detailed dangerous working conditions at a chlorine plant that used asbestos until it closed last year, public health advocates and two U.S. lawmakers are renewing calls for Congress to ban the carcinogen. “American workers are dying from asbestos. It is way past time to end its use,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley, a Democrat from Oregon. “This ProPublica report confirms our worst fears: workers dealing with asbestos are often left vulnerable to this deadly, dangerous substance.” Merkley and Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Ore., are sponsoring the Alan Reinstein Ban Asbestos Now Act, which would permanently ban the importing and use of asbestos. (Bedi and McGrory, 10/27)


    The Hill:
    Fetterman Stroke Sparks Debate Over What’s Seen As A Disability


    Advocates for people with disabilities have watched the debate over Pennsylvania Senate candidate John Fetterman’s (D) with interest, and say that regardless of his health, it raises questions about how people view those with disabilities.   “I think that most of us … conjure up an image of what it is to be disabled and oftentimes that is some sort of physical mobility disability,” said Emily Blum, executive director of Disability Lead. “That’s an image that a lot of us are very comfortable with because it’s visible.”  (Budryk and Daniels, 10/26)


    Stat:
    For Experts On Stroke, Fetterman-Oz Debate Is A Teachable Moment


    At a Senate debate Tuesday, the Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman, who is recovering from a stroke, at times stumbled over his words, jumbled his answers, and noticeably paused. In the political press, Fetterman’s performance was met with headlines about his “painful debate” and “struggles.” (Joseph, 10/26)


    AP:
    Herschel Walker Faces Abortion Allegation From 2nd Accuser 


    A woman came forward Wednesday to accuse Herschel Walker, the anti-abortion Republican running for U.S. Senate in Georgia, of encouraging and paying for her 1993 abortion — an accusation that came just weeks after a former girlfriend said he did the same for her in 2009. Walker dismissed the newest allegation as “foolishness” and “a lie,” similar to his vehement denials earlier this month of the abortion alleged to have happened 13 years ago. … “I also did not kill JFK,” Walker said in a statement later Wednesday. (Barrow and Dazio, 10/27)


    NPR:
    Republicans Recast Drug Debate As Issue Of Crime And Borders


    On a recent evening, Ryan Hampton stood in front of a crowd of people in Spokane, Wash., urging them to see drugs and addiction as a key issue in the midterm elections. “We see these overdose numbers hitting new historic highs,” Hampton said, referring to the 107,622 Americans who died after using illicit drugs last year. (Mann, 10/27)


    The New York Times:
    Most Hospitalized Monkeypox Patients In The U.S. Were H.I.V.-Positive 


    Nearly all Americans hospitalized for monkeypox infection had weakened immune systems, most often because of H.I.V. infection, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Wednesday. Of 57 hospitalized patients described in the report, 82 percent had H.I.V. More than two-thirds of the patients were Black and nearly one-quarter were homeless, reflecting racial and economic inequities seen in the outbreak overall. (Mandavilli, 10/26)


    The Washington Post:
    Monkeypox Deaths In U.S. Hit 10; Danger Highest With Untreated HIV 


    Monkeypox is causing devastating outcomes for people with severely weakened immune systems, even as new cases continue to decline in the United States, according to a federal report released Wednesday. At least 10 people hospitalized with monkeypox have died. More than 28,000 cases of monkeypox have been reported since the U.S. outbreak began in May. While the vast majority recover within weeks, some patients with untreated HIV experienced especially dire consequences, such as losing function of their brain or spinal cord, eyes and lungs despite being given antiviral medication. (Sun and Nirappil, 10/26)


    ABC News:
    Some US Hospitals Report Beds Are Full Among Increase In Respiratory Infections In Children


    Some hospitals across the United States say their beds are full as cases of respiratory viruses continue to increase among children. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, infections due to respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, have spiked by 69{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} over the last four weeks from 4,667 to 7,917 and are appearing earlier than usual. (Kekatos, 10/27)


    The Hill:
    What To Know About RSV Symptoms And Transmission 


    Adults with RSV typically have symptoms of the common cold, but babies, young children and older adults who are infected with the virus can develop more serious illnesses like pneumonia. … RSV is primarily transmitted through contact with bodily fluids, and less commonly through the air or skin to skin contact. (Hou, 10/26)


    San Francisco Chronicle:
    BQ.1 And BQ.1.1 Strains Are Now CDC’s ‘Greatest Concern’


    U.S. health officials are watching the BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 COVID subvariants “very carefully,” said the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Speaking at a virtual event hosted by the University of Virginia School of Medicine on Wednesday, Dr. Rochelle Walensky described the emerging omicron descendents as “our greatest concern right now, both for the number of mutations, but also for the impact and the phenotype that we are worried that they may imply.” (Vaziri, Buchmann and Ravani, 10/26)


    The Washington Post:
    Still Afraid Of Covid: The People Who Are Still Isolating And Masking 


    [Many] Americans are still going very far out of their way to avoid the virus. They don’t dine indoors at restaurants. They continue to practice social distancing. They wear highly protective masks if they must visit a doctor or stop at a pharmacy. Some are home-schooling their kids. Others are refusing to return to the office. They populate the dozens of social media groups whose members identify as “Still COVIDing.” Many of them would like the unmasked masses to know that this isn’t easy and that it’s only gotten harder. (McCarthy, 10/26)


    The Boston Globe:
    Moderna Nears US Deal To Develop Shots For Ebola, Other Biological Threats


    Moderna declined to comment on the pending contract, and financial terms were not available. The company “continues to explore potential Ebola vaccines, based on earlier research conducted with academic partners,” a spokesperson said in an email. Moderna has said earlier that it’s committed to advancing clinical studies of 15 vaccine programs targeting emerging or neglected infectious diseases by 2025. (Muller and Griffin, 10/26)


    Bloomberg:
    Some States Push To Limit Health Coverage For Poor Children


    About 4 million children in the US have no health insurance. That’s about 5{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of Americans 18 and younger. The number of uninsured kids declined for years, until it began edging up at the end of the 2010s. New research blames that reversal on state policies that made it harder to get safety-net coverage. That’s likely to have useful lessons for the year ahead. … The debate over who should be permitted to get Medicaid, the safety-net insurance for low-income families, has largely been on hold since the Covid-19 pandemic. (Tozzi, 10/26)


    Politico:
    Why Medicaid Is Blocking Patient Home Monitoring


    Many state Medicaid offices are stymieing the use of remote patient care, refusing coverage for low-income residents who suffer from chronic diseases at higher rates than Americans with private insurance, POLITICO’s Ruth Reader reports. Even as successive administrations have touted remote patient monitoring programs as a key to improving Americans’ health and reducing unnecessary government spending, many states have declined to pay for them. (Mahr, Payne, Banco and Leonard, 10/26)


    Fierce Healthcare:
    CMS To Restrict Medicare Advantage TV Ads Amid High Complaints


    Starting next year, insurers will not be able to air any television ads for Medicare Advantage (MA) plans before getting approval from federal regulators. The new requirement is part of a larger effort by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to address concerns in MA marketing practices. The new effort, announced in a memo released Oct. 19, comes as a Senate panel is also investigating how MA plans reach customers. (King, 10/26)


    AP:
    NC Nurse Charged With Murder In Deaths Of 2 Patients 


    A former nurse at a North Carolina hospital has been charged in the deaths of two patients after officials said he injected them with lethal doses of insulin. Forsyth County District Attorney Jim O’Neill announced at a news conference Tuesday that Johnathan Howard Hayes, a registered nurse, was charged with two counts of murder and one count of attempted murder, news outlets reported. Hayes worked at Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem. (10/26)


    The Washington Post:
    Watching TV Could Increase Seniors’ Risk Of Dementia, Study Says 


    How older adults spend their sedentary time — what they do while sitting — makes a difference in their chances of developing dementia, according to research published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It found that those whose time sitting was primarily spent watching television had a 24 percent increased risk for dementia, whereas those who spent that time on a computer had a 15 percent reduced risk for dementia. The researchers explained that TV watching is cognitively passive, meaning little thinking is required, while computer use is cognitively active, meaning it (like reading) is more intellectually stimulating. (Searing, 10/25)


    Politico:
    Jan. 6 Rioter Gets Probation Not Prison After Judge Finds Autism Played A Role


    A Jan. 6 rioter who wielded a hatchet and smashed two windows with a flagpole will serve no jail time, a federal judge ruled Wednesday, finding that Asperger’s syndrome made him susceptible to the influence of the mob. Nicholas Rodean of Frederick, Md., attempted to address U.S. District Court Judge Trevor McFadden Wednesday and visibly struggled to complete thoughts and sentences while explaining and apologizing for his Jan. 6 conduct. At one point, he clutched his head in frustration. McFadden ultimately chose to sentence Rodean to 240 days of home confinement. But he said he was convinced that Rodean’s severe mental illness significantly mitigated “the blameworthiness of your conduct.” (Cheney, 10/26)


    Bloomberg:
    TikTok Found Not Liable For Child Dying In ‘Blackout Challenge’ 


    TikTok isn’t liable for the death of a 10-year-old girl who watched a so-called Blackout Challenge video that encouraged people to choke themselves, a judge ruled.US District Judge Paul Diamond in Philadelphia said a federal law shielded the video-sharing platform from liability in the death of Nylah Anderson, even if the company’s app recommended the video to her. (Burnson, 10/26)


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

  • Northern Health COVID-19 Update for Oct. 20 2021

    Northern Health COVID-19 Update for Oct. 20 2021

    There have been 191 new circumstances of COVID-19 documented in Northern Health and fitness right now (Oct. 20) and there are now 864 active cases in the region.

    There are also currently 72 folks hospitalized for COVID-19 the Northern Overall health Authority like 20 individuals in vital care.

    No fatalities happened in Northern Health today, but six new deaths were being claimed in other places in B.C.

    The province is also reporting 696 new conditions of COVID-19 and 4,888 active circumstances. Of the energetic situations 370 persons are in clinic throughout the province and 139 are in intensive treatment. The remaining people today are recovering at residence in self-isolation.

    There is also a whole of 24 active health care facility outbreaks such as two outbreaks at the College Hospital of Northern B.C. in Prince George, the GR Baker Memorial Medical center in Quesnel and Wrinch Memorial Hospital in Hazelton.

    The province is reporting that from Oct. 12-18, men and women not entirely vaccinated accounted for 67.2 for every cent of situations and from Oct. 5-18, they accounted for 74.9 for each cent of hospitalizations.

    New community well being orders were being declared in the Northern Health and fitness Area on Oct. 14 and stay in place right up until Nov. 19.

    In response to these orders the Town of Prince George made the following variations:

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    • Aquafit Courses at the Prince George Aquatic Centre are now cancelled.
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    • The quantity of participants authorized to stroll on the CN Centre concourse as portion of the general public going for walks system has been minimized from 75 to 50.
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    • User groups, these types of as the Prince George Cougars, building use of civic services and arenas are needed to have their personal Covid-19 safety plan that involves vaccine passport checks. Attendance at the amenities is capped at 50 per cent.
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    “The well being of our citizens is of paramount significance to the Town of Prince George,” stated Mayor Lyn Hall.

    “We are continuing to do the job with Northern Wellness to make certain we are in demanding compliance with all Community Overall health Orders. We also keep on to be thoroughly dedicated to having any important steps to ensure our staff members and our citizens are protected and healthy.”

    The new orders in the Northern Wellness area are as follows:

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    • Own gatherings, equally indoor and outside, are restricted to completely vaccinated persons, including at personal residences and family vacation accommodation&#13
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      • Indoor accumulating: up to 5 people today are permitted
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      • Outside collecting: up to 25 people are permitted
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    • All indoor and outside structured functions demand a basic safety program and for attendees to don a mask and current their BC Vaccine Card demonstrating they are fully vaccinated&#13
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      • Indoor event: up to 50 people are permitted
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      • Outdoor party: up to 100 people today are permitted
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    • Worship services: digital services are essential
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    • Dining places:&#13
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      • Fast-foods restaurants and unlicensed cafés devoid of desk company can deliver consider-out only or involve patrons to existing the BC Vaccine card showing they are entirely vaccinated.
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      • Certified establishments and people with table services should not serve alcohol among 10 p.m.-9 a.m. and ought to involve patrons to present the BC Vaccine Card demonstrating they are totally vaccinated.
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      • Bars and nightclubs (no food company) will be shut
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    • Sport occasions spectators (indoor and out of doors) are limited to 50 for every cent capacity, need to have a basic safety strategy, and require attendees to have on masks and existing their BC Vaccine Card demonstrating they are thoroughly vaccinated
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