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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Apr 25 2016

Full Issue

The Shifting Definition Of Healthy Eating

Foods with fat and salt may not be as bad as once thought -- and businesses are pivoting to keep up. Meanwhile, Bernie Sanders opposes a soda tax, saying it hurts poor families.

Dark chocolate is in. So, too, is beef jerky. And full-fat ice cream? You bet. Driven by fast-changing definitions of what is healthy to eat, people are turning to foods they shunned just a couple of years ago. Studies now suggest that not all fat, for example, necessarily contributes to weight gain or heart problems. That has left companies scrambling to push some foods that they thought had long passed their popularity peak and health advocates wondering what went wrong. (Strom, 4/22)

Bernie Sanders on Sunday came out against a plan being considered by the city of Philadelphia to tax soda as a means of paying for universal pre-kindergarten programs. He argued on NBCs Meet the Press that it would be regressive, affecting the poorest families who often buy soda precisely because it is inexpensive. (Bassett, 4/24)

And Kaiser Health News looks at the health struggles former Maryland inmates have upon their release and the lack of pharmacy options in Baltimore

Stacey McHoul left jail last summer with a history of heroin use and depression and only a few days of medicine to treat them. When the pills ran out she started thinking about hurting herself. ... Jail officials gave her neither prescription refills nor a Medicaid card to pay for them, she said. Within days she was back on heroin her preferred self-medication and sleeping in abandoned homes around Baltimores run-down Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood. Thousands of people leave incarceration every year without access to the coverage and care theyre entitled to, jeopardizing their own health and sometimes the publics. (Hancock, 4/25)

The immense new CVS dominates the corner of Pennsylvania and West North avenues. ... CVS, its front shelves crammed with brightly-packaged processed foods and household cleaning supplies, is an island of abundance for this West Baltimore neighborhood, one of the citys poorest. Its a contrast that shows whats changed and what hasnt in the past year, since Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man, died of injuries sustained in police custody, unleashing days of protests. ... But if 2015s protests emphasized police brutality and race relations, the absence of more stores like CVS that are easily accessible to people in impoverished, predominantly black neighborhoods underscores Baltimores other persistent inequities. (Luthra and Snow, 4/25)

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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