Not rendering correctly? View this email as a web page here. Not a subscriber? Sign up | | Daily Edition | | Parents Urged To Check Halloween Candy Amid Fentanyl Surge: Authorities are warning parents to be vigilant about the possibility of narcotics or other contaminants being mixed in with their children's candy this Halloween — especially after someone attempted to smuggle roughly 12,000 fentanyl pills hidden inside bags and boxes of candy at Los Angeles International Airport. But some health experts say the threat of finding drugs in your child's candy bag is overblown. Read more from Times of San Diego, Napa Valley Register, USA Today, and NPR. In more news about the fentanyl crisis — 2021 Saw Dramatic Spike In California Fentanyl Deaths: Last year, for the first time, California's death rate from all drug overdoses surpassed that of lung cancer and ranked just below hypertensive heart disease. The increase was due almost entirely to fentanyl. Read more from Bay Area News Group and AP. Below, check out the roundup of California Healthline's coverage. For today's national health news, read KHN's Morning Briefing. More News From Across The State Becker's Hospital Review: California Physicians Set Strike Dates Members of Valley Physicians Group plan to begin a four-day strike on Nov. 1 in Santa Clara (Calif.) County. The union represents more than 450 physicians in the county's public health and hospital system, according to an Oct. 27 VPG news release shared with Becker's. (Gooch, 10/28) Becker's Hospital Review: Healthgrades' 50 Best Hospitals For Surgical Care Healthgrades named the recipients of its 2023 Specialty Excellence Awards Oct. 25, including the top hospitals for surgical care. Nine facilities from California are on the list. (Bean, 10/28) Voice Of San Diego: Palomar Health Top Staff Has Favorites In Board Elections – As Does The Founder Of Its New Medical Group More than a year after the Palomar Health District board of directors abruptly switched the medical group that provides Palomar Health's doctors, the hospital district's top staff and the new medical group's founder are chipping in campaign donations to support members of the board majority that approved the deal. Palomar Health is a public healthcare district that operates Palomar Medical Center in Escondido and Pomerado Hospital in Poway. It's governed by a seven-member board of directors that is elected by the public. (Layne, 10/28) California Healthline: Open Enrollment For Marketplace Health Plans Is Soon. Here's What You Need To Know. Consumers may find relief in some key changes made by Congress and the Biden administration, although other issues remain unsettled. (Appleby, 10/31) San Francisco Chronicle: Prop. 1 Backers Challenge Claims That California Ballot Measure Would Remove All Abortion Restrictions Campaigning for the Nov. 8 ballot measure that would protect abortion rights in the California Constitution, Attorney General Rob Bonta and two law professors attacked opponents for claiming — contrary to the language of state law — that Proposition 1 would legalize abortions up to the moment of birth. (Egelko, 10/28) CalMatters: California Abortion Law: Would Prop. 1 Allow Late-Term? Proposition 1, the Nov. 8 ballot measure that would create an explicit protection for "reproductive freedom" in the California Constitution, is not written to expand abortion access into the final months of pregnancy and, despite warnings from opponents, legal experts say that is a highly unlikely outcome if it passes. The simple yet sweeping language of the measure — "the state shall not deny or interfere with an individual's reproductive freedom in their most intimate decisions" — has been a source of contention, even among some supporters of abortion rights, since it was introduced this summer. (Koseff, 10/31) The New York Times: Legal Abortions Fell Around 6 Percent In Two Months After End Of Roe In the first two months after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade on June 24, legal abortions nationwide declined by more than 10,000, a drop of about 6 percent, according to the first attempt at a nationwide count of abortions since the decision. (Sanger-Katz and Miller, 10/30) California Healthline: 'Fourth Trimester' Focus Is Pushed To Prevent Maternal Deaths Public health investigators found that 53% of maternal deaths happened well after a mother left the hospital — from seven days to a year after the birth. (Dembosky, 10/31) Sacramento Bee: Study: Oxygen Readings Delayed COVID Care In Black Patients Black patients experienced delays in COVID-19 treatment because a common medical device that measures blood oxygen levels tended to give inaccurate readings for darker-skinned individuals, according to a new study by Sutter Health. The inaccurate measurements contributed to nearly five-hour delays in COVID-19 treatment, which was critical time for the potentially fatal virus, according to the study. (Smith, 10/29) The New York Times: Covid Symptoms Can Rebound Even If You Don't Take Paxlovid When the antiviral treatment Paxlovid came into wider use for Covid-19 infections earlier this year, doctors who prescribed it and patients who took it noticed that symptoms sometimes flared up again a few days after having gone away. Some people even tested negative before they experienced the rebound. But this puzzling phenomenon can occur whether you take Paxlovid or not, according to a new study. Researchers found that when patients received a placebo instead of treatment, a portion of them still experienced a rebound of their symptoms after they had initially improved. (Sheikh, 10/27) CIDRAP: WHO Advisers Weigh In On Omicron XBB And BQ.1 Subvariants The WHO advisory group said XBB and BQ.1 don't currently diverge sufficiently from each other or from other Omicron lineages that have extra immune escape mutations to warrant a variant of concern designation or a new label. "The two sublineages remain part of Omicron, which continues to be a variant of concern," the group said. (Schnirring, 10/28) The Washington Post: Many Lockdown Babies Slower At Social Development, Faster At Crawling, Study Says Early in the pandemic, when much of the world was in lockdown, many parents and other caregivers expressed fears about how a historic period of prolonged isolation could affect their children. Now, a study out of Ireland has shed some light on this question. Its results suggest that babies born during Ireland's first covid-19 lockdown were likely to be slower to develop some social communication skills than their pre-pandemic peers. They were less likely to be able to wave goodbye, point at things and know one "definite and meaningful word" by the time they turn 1. On the other hand, they were more likely to be able to crawl. (Timsit, 10/28) The (Santa Rosa) Press Democrat: 5-Agency Drug Take Back Event Applauded As Local Success The DEA has been hosting regular Drug Take Back Days for more than a decade, providing disposal bins and pickup service to any agency that wants to participate. About 4,000 local law enforcement agencies were hosting four-hour drop-offs nationwide Saturday, including Petaluma, Cotati, Sebastopol, Cloverdale and Rohnert Park. (Callahan, 10/29) CalMatters: California Cancer Care Isn't Equitable; A New Law Might Help Cancer is the second-leading cause of death in California, behind only heart disease. This year alone, the state will tally an estimated 189,000 new cancer cases and close to 61,000 deaths. (Ibarra, 10/30) San Francisco Chronicle: Will COVID Experts Stay On Twitter? Here's What UCSF's Wachter Says UCSF Department of Medicine chair Dr. Bob Wachter, a prominent voice on Twitter for his COVID expertise, tweeted on Saturday that he is "staying put for now" on the platform despite concerns in the wake of Elon Musk's $44 billion purchase. The finalization of the deal Thursday — after which Musk immediately fired several top executives —reportedly led some users to jump ship to other social media services over fears that harassment, misinformation and hatred could increase under Musk's control. (Hwang, 10/30) Modern Healthcare: Elon Musk Owns Twitter. Should Healthcare Organizations Be Worried? Twitter is an important tool for many healthcare organizations, and has helped transform the industry's marketing strategies since its founding in 2006. Health systems, insurers and others use the platform to reach consumers and disperse information. (Hudson, 10/28) CNET: Twitter Reportedly Plans To Charge $20 A Month For Verified Accounts The blue tick is seen by some as a status symbol. To qualify, accounts must be "notable, authentic and active." That includes accounts of government officials; people representing prominent brands; news organizations and journalists; activists; celebrities; athletes and others. They're also fairly rare. In 2021, on 360,000 accounts, or 0.2% of Twitter's monetizable daily active users, were verified. (Musil, 10/30) San Diego Union-Tribune: New Street Medicine Teams Bring Comprehensive Health Care To Homeless People "Anybody home?" physician assistant Teagan Flint asks outside a tent on F Street in downtown San Diego. She was hoping to find a patient she had been working with, but there was no answer at the tent. She would learn later he had been hospitalized. (Warth, 10/30) | | | |
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