Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Medicare Spending, Uptake Remain Low For New Alzheimer's Drugs
People on Medicare are not getting the recently approved Alzheimers medications nearly as much as federal officials anticipated. (Herman, 5/11)
More pharma and tech updates
Recent issues with Boston Scientific Corp. pacemakers are associated with multiple deaths and thousands of serious injuries. The Food and Drug Administration issued a bulletin Thursday classifying the companys latest recall to correct its pacemakers as Class I, the most serious type. The problem has been associated with four deaths and 2,557 serious injuries as of March 18, according to the company. (Dubinsky, 5/8)
Game-changer. Thats how Prof Misty Jenkins, an immunologist at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, describes CAR T-cell therapy, an emerging but still costly cancer treatment that supercharges the bodys immune system to fight disease. Late last month, Jurassic Park actor Sam Neill put the treatment in the spotlight, revealing his stage three cancer was in remission after undergoing CAR T-cell therapy as part of a clinical trial in Sydney. He stopped short of describing his remission as a miracle the success, he said, was science at its best. (Ryan, 5/9)
In healthcare industry developments
North Memorial Health plans to merge with Sanford Health to create a single nonprofit health system. This merger marks Sanford Health's expansion from its Sioux Falls base into the Twin Cities market, following a previous deal with Fairview Health Services that fell apart three years ago. (Zurek, 5/8)
The owners of the now-shuttered West Suburban Medical Center faced off in court Friday over the hospitals future, amid accusations of mismanagement and questionable fund transfers. (Schencker, 5/8)
The Hiram W. Davis Medical Center has been slated for closure since August 2024, but some Virginia lawmakers remain hesitant to support the plan as families raise concerns about where residents with complex medical needs will go. The state-operated medical center in Petersburg provides long-term care for patients with intellectual or developmental disabilities. (Schabacker, 5/8)
More than two centuries ago, when measles broke out in a household in Japan, the residents might hang on their door a woodblock print bearing an image of the golden boy a heroic character with a baby face and muscled arms meant to warn visitors and protect those already afflicted. When the disease had passed, the print usually would be burned. UCSF has one of the few that survived the era. Its about the size of a modern sheet of loose-leaf paper, the character dyed red a color meant to ward off evil and calligraphy printed across the top. (Allday, 5/10)
Victoria Nodiff-Netanel carries a 32-key piano everywhere, including hospitals, schools, police stations and parties. But its not for her to play. She has trained her nine miniature horses to run their muzzles along the keyboard, creating tunes that are as tumultuous as they are amusing. Music is one way the mares, part of Nodiff-Netanels nonprofit called Mini Therapy Horses, comfort people, especially hospital patients, in Southern California. (Melnick, 5/9)
Ants can be a nuisance. Just ask officials at a hospital in Canada who are dealing with an appearance of ants within the operating room that has forced them to indefinitely suspend some surgeries there. The ants appeared recently at Carman Memorial Hospital in Carman Manitoba, according to a statement from Southern Health-Sant矇 Sud, the provincial authority that oversees the hospital. (Deb, 5/8)
On healthcare workers
Stuck at home while recovering from mono, Dawn Zuidgeest-Craft received a gift at 7 years old that shaped the rest of her life: a microscope. She loved inspecting mealworms and leaves underneath the lens so much that her mother, Paula Wesner, predicted that her daughter would become a doctor. Zuidgeest-Craft pursued a career in health care years later, becoming a nurse practitioner and pediatric educator. She still planned to become a doctor, but she put her goal on hold while she raised two children. Then she remarried and had two more children, delaying her dream again. (Melnick, 5/10)
The University of Minnesota Medical School is adding a site to its rural family medicine residency program the only program of its kind in Minnesota. The medical school is partnering with Lakewood Health System to launch a residency in Staples, a small 3,000-person city in west-central Minnesota located across Todd and Wadena counties. Residents will begin with one year of training at North Memorial Health in Minneapolis, followed by two years in Staples. (Work, 5/10)
As nurses continue navigating burnout, staffing shortages and an increasingly complex healthcare system, their role has never been more critical. (Hille, 5/9)