Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
US Excess Deaths On The Rise, Remain Higher Than Tallies In Peer Countries
Excess deaths in the United States kept rising even after the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, with more than 1.5 million in 2022 and 2023 that would have been prevented had US death rates matched those of peer countries, estimates a Boston University (BU)-ledstudy today in JAMA Health Forum. The data show a continuation of a decades-old trend toward increasing US excess deaths, mainly among working-age adults, largely driven by drug overdoses, gun violence, auto accidents, and preventable cardiometabolic causes,the researchers say. (Van Beusekom, 5/23)
For the ailing gene editing industry, hope came earlier this month in the tiny, smiling, fuzzy-headed form of KJ Muldoon. At just 6 months old, KJ received a gene editing treatment custom-built to correct his unique mutation. Hes not cured, researchers explained at the annual American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy meeting in New Orleans. But he has been able to resume a normal diet and is nolonger on the path to a liver transplant. (Mast, 5/26)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: A Ministroke Can Have Major Consequences
Kristin Kramer woke up early on a Tuesday morning 10 years ago because one of her dogs needed to go out. Then, a couple of odd things happened. When she tried to call her other dog, I couldnt speak, she said. As she walked downstairs to let them into the yard, I noticed that my right hand wasnt working. But she went back to bed, which was totally stupid, said Kramer, now 54, an office manager in Muncie, Indiana. It didnt register that something major was happening, especially because, reawakening an hour later, I was perfectly fine. (Span, 5/27)
The new world of contact lenses has arrived: ones that allow individuals to see in the dark with their eyes closed. In the journal Cell, neuroscientists explained how they created contact lenses that make the breakthrough possible by converting infrared light to visible light. Per the research, there is no power source necessary, and the wearers can see both visible and infrared light simultaneously, with the latter increasing when ones eyes are closed. (Djordjevic, 5/24)
A study published yesterday in Eurosurveillance highlights the substantial costs associated with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections in children ages 5 and under. ... Costs were assessed from an outpatient healthcare sector and societal perspective, with the results stratified by country and the age-group of children diagnosed as having RSV. (Dall, 5/23)
For people with chronic gynecological pain conditions, pain can be constant, making everyday activities like sitting, riding a bicycle and even wearing underwear extremely uncomfortable. For many of these people most of whom identify as women sexual intercourse and routine pelvic exams are unbearable. (Hintz and Berke, 5/26)
Also
Even the hospital walls may soon have ears. A fast-growing technology known as ambient listening is taking over an onerous but necessary task in healthcare: documenting what happens in the doctor-patient encounter. Already gaining traction for outpatient medical visits, the AI-powered systems are also moving into hospital rooms and emergency departments to capture discussions at the bedside, update medical records, draft care plans and create discharge instructions. (Landro, 5/27)
Food apps that rate the healthfulness of packaged foods have become increasingly popular. You can scan a food package with your phone camera and the app will rank it for its nutritional content. Some apps will flag ingredients and additives. If the product you scan gets a poor rating, many apps will suggest an alternative in the same food category. But do they really help consumers make healthier choices? (Godoy, 5/26)
Its easy to feel as though youre doing something wrong these days if you dont know your VO2-Max and how many hours of REM sleep you get each night, or if youre not taking a dozen different supplements and scrutinizing every morsel of food that makes its way into your mouth. Biohackers and other longevity seekers with their many podcasts, YouTube channels, and X accounts would have you believe that if you diligently measure your every bodily function and meticulously tailor your nutrition and exercise regimens, you can reprogram your body to live longer and evade dreaded diseases, just as a computer can be programmed to perform virtually any desired task. (Alex Harding, 5/27)