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Morning Briefing

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Monday, Mar 24 2025

Full Issue

San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge Safety Nets Are Working

The Washington Post reports on a new study indicating that the nets have reduced suicides by 73%. Other health news comes from Texas, North Carolina, California, and Colorado.

Newly installed safety nets along San Franciscos Golden Gate Bridge reduced suicides there by 73 percent, a new analysis suggests. The study looks at recent suicide deaths along the iconic bridge. Officials say there have been an average of 30 confirmed suicide deaths per year for the past 20 years. In 2024, officials finished erecting a continuous stainless-steel barrier on both sides of the bridge after years of pushback from those who opposed modifying the bridges art deco style. (Blakemore, 3/22)

If you need help

More health news from across the U.S.

Employees from at least one Texas prison falsified temperature logs that help the agency decide when the conditions inside are dangerous to inmates and staff, according to an internal investigation triggered by a federal lawsuit. (McGaughy, 3/21)

Pacific Palisades was burning to ash. As far as the eye could see, homes were on fire, everywhere, said firefighter Joseph Field, 50, whos been with the Los Angeles Fire Department for more than 25 years. Nothing Ive ever seen was like it was that night. Field, manning a 10-inch hose line, dropped a curtain of water on a house that hadnt caught fire yet. (Bonifield, 3/23)

A mother can proceed with her lawsuit against a public school board and medical provider after her son was given a covid-19 vaccination without consent, North Carolinas Supreme Court has ruled. The courts opinion, issued Friday, came after Emily Happel sued Guilford County Board of Education and Old North State Medical Society in August 2022, alleging battery and violation of state and federal constitutional rights after her son, Tanner Smith, received a first dose of the Pfizer vaccine against his wishes and without her consent. (Craw, 3/22)

At Vibe Cultivators, an indoor cannabis farm in Sacramento, the first thing to hit you is the smell. Earthy, skunky, whatever you want to call it, that is some pungent weed. There are aisles of plants, growing on two levels under artificial lights. They have names like Gelato 33 and Alien Runtz. (Lupkin, 3/24)

窪蹋勛圖厙 News: The Colorado Psychedelic Mushroom Experiment Has Arrived

Colorado regulators are issuing licenses for providing psychedelic mushrooms and are planning to authorize the states first healing centers, where the mushrooms can be ingested under supervision, in late spring or early summer. The dawn of state-regulated psychedelic mushrooms has arrived in Colorado, nearly two years since Oregon began offering them. The mushrooms are a Schedule I drug and illegal under federal law except for clinical research. (Ruder, 3/24)

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