Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Nurses At 12 NYC Hospitals Prepared To Strike In New Year
Roughly 20,000 nurses citywide are preparing to go on strike if their private hospital employers dont agree to new labor contracts before the end of this year, setting the stage for a large-scale work stoppage across New York Citys major health systems. Approximately 97% of union members at 12 private hospitals voted to authorize a strike if they do not reach a deal with their employers by Dec. 31, when the current labor contracts expire, the New York State Nurses Association said Monday. (D'Ambrosio, 12/22)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: Its The Gold Standard In Autism Care. Why Are States Reining It In?
Aubreigh Osborne has a new best friend. Dressed in blue with a big ribbon in her blond curls, the 3-year-old sat in her mothers lap carefully enunciating a classmates first name after hearing the words best friend. Just months ago, Gaile Osborne didnt expect her adoptive daughter would make friends at school. Diagnosed with autism at 14 months, Aubreigh Osborne started this year struggling to control outbursts and sometimes hurting herself. Her trouble with social interactions made her family reluctant to go out in public. (Sable-Smith and Jones, 12/23)
Over the past five years, the attorney generals office, with Aaron Frey at the helm, has secured for Maine more than $260 million in settlements with major pharmaceutical companies accused of supercharging the opioid epidemic. It has overseen the settlements distribution and contributed to efforts to help a state council and local governments spend their shares deliberately and transparently. (Bader, 12/22)
Inside a storage room at the Clark County Health Department are boxes with taped-on signs reading, DO NOT USE. They contain cookers and sterile water that people use to shoot up drugs. The supplies, which came from the state and were paid for with federal money, were for a program where drug users exchange dirty needles for clean ones, part of a strategy known as harm reduction. But under a July executive order from President Donald Trump, federal substance abuse grants cant pay for supplies such as cookers and tourniquets that it says only facilitate illegal drug use. Needles already couldnt be purchased with federal money. (Ungar, 12/22)
After an autumn of angst over the impending expiration at the end of the month of Porter Countys ambulance contract with Northwest Health, the county and hospital have come to a two-year agreement at an annual cost of $1.5 million for a minimum of four advanced life support and one basic life support ambulances. Its a considerable, but expected, increase from the yearly ambulance subsidy of $450,000 the county currently pays. (Jones, 12/22)
A panel of Montana state medical board members on Friday voted unanimously to revoke the medical license of Dr. Thomas Weiner, the former Helena cancer doctor who has been accused of prescribing unnecessary treatments and harming patients. On Friday, four members of the boards adjudication panel accepted the findings of board investigators that Weiner violated rules of professional conduct and prohibited him from practicing medicine in Montana ever again. (Silvers, 12/22)
Regarding health care costs
A greater share of Americans than previously suggested experience burdensome healthcare costs, according to results from a nationally representative cohort study. Among more than 12,600 survey participants, 6.5% said they experienced cost burdens and 3.5% said they experienced catastrophic cost burdens in year 1. (Firth, 12/22)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: Medical Bills Can Be Vexing And Perplexing. Heres This Years Best Advice For Patients
A Texas boys second dose of the MMRV vaccine cost over $1,400. A Pennsylvania womans long-acting birth control cost more than $14,000. Treatment for a Florida Medicaid enrollees heart attack cost nearly $78,000 about as much as surgery for an uninsured Montana womans broken arm. In 2025, these patients were among the hundreds who asked 窪蹋勛圖厙 News to investigate their medical bills as part of its Bill of the Month series. (Huetteman, 12/23)