Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Illinois Wipes Out More Than $1.1B In Medical Debt From 500,000 Residents
Illinois residents have seen more than $1.1 billion in medical debt erased, with the help of a state program that launched less than a year-and-a-half ago. (Schencker, 2/17)
When a single mother of two was diagnosed with breast cancer, she never imagined how quickly the debt collectors would start calling. A new bill being introduced in Massachusetts is seeking to stop the sale of medical debt and prohibit it from impacting people's credit reports."You're just thinking about doing what you need to do in order to get better," Nekia Clark said. "And you just assume that your insurance covers everything." (Cole, 2/17)
In health news from Wyoming
Wyoming House Republicans have advanced two bills related to abortion. The first would ban abortions when there is a detectable fetal heartbeat, while the second would set specific informed consent requirements when terminating pregnancies. (Merzbach, 2/17)
Wyoming state senators are backing a bill that would ban a substance called kratom. Meanwhile, a similar effort in the House failed. Kratom is often marketed as an herbal supplement for lifting mood and boosting energy. Its derived from the leaves of a tree native to Southeast Asia and contains two major psychoactive ingredients that bind to the same receptors in the brain as opioid drugs. (Ouellet, 2/17)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: Wyoming Wants To Make Its Five-Year Federal Rural Health Funding Last Forever
Wyoming officials say they have a plan to make five years of upcoming grants from a new $50 billion federal rural health program last forever. The state could tackle rural health issues long into the future by investing its awards from the Rural Health Transformation Program, the director of Wyomings health department, Stefan Johansson, told state lawmakers. But its unclear whether the maneuver will pass muster with the federal government. (Zionts, 2/18)
From Florida, Connecticut, Hawaii, Michigan, and Maryland
Florida first lady Casey DeSantis food testing program could fall flat as quickly as it began. The House and Senate released their budget proposals last week, and neither chamber has the total funding requested by Gov. Ron DeSantis for the Healthy Florida First initiative within the Florida Department of Health. (Goni-Lessan, 2/18)
Connecticut is having trouble recruiting first responders. Police and fire chiefs on Tuesday said a proposal by Gov. Ned Lamont to waive public college tuition and offer mortgage assistance for police and firefighters was a good first step to attract new recruits. (Otte, 2/17)
Confirmed or suspected suicides accounted for more than half of all deaths in the states largest prison in the past two years, and amounted to one-third of all deaths in the statewide Hawai妡i correctional system during 2024 and 2025, according to data compiled by Honolulu Civil Beat. That data detailing the death toll from suicides in Hawai妡i prisons and jails was drawn from autopsies and other public documents, and shows prisoners in the state system continue to have an abnormally high fatality rate from suicide. (Dayton, 2/17)
Emily Orta was a seemingly healthy 14-year-old soccer player in Adrian when her life changed in seconds. In the middle of a shooting drill, her heart stopped. She wasnt breathing. It was a complete shock, Orta, now 26, told Bridge Michigan. Shed later discover she was living with a rare heart defect from birth anomalous left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery, or ALCAPA. We had no idea that there was any issues. (Newman, 2/17)
An enormous sewage spill that sent hundreds of millions of gallons of raw human waste into the Potomac River is threatening the health of the river and the safety of those who use it. In what appears to be the largest discharge of its kind in the nations history, untreated sewage began gushing into the Potomac on Jan. 19, when a section of a sewer line collapsed near the Clara Barton Parkway in Montgomery County, Md., about five miles upstream of Washington. The 72-inch-wide pipe, called the Potomac Interceptor, normally carries up to 60 million gallons of waste a day. (Dance, Joselow and Niiler, 2/17)