Hawaii Study: Respiratory, Lung Issues Plague Many Maui Wildfire Survivors
The Washington Post and AP report on a new University of Hawaii study on the effects of the Lahaina wildfire. Researchers found, among other things, that up to 74% of the 679 people surveyed had elevated blood pressure levels, meaning a higher risk of cardiovascular disease. Other news from around the nation comes from California, Missouri, North Carolina, West Virginia, Connecticut, Colorado, Kentucky, Louisiana, and more.
A University of Hawaii study examining the health effects of last year鈥檚 deadly wildfires on Maui found that up to 74% of participants may have difficulty breathing and otherwise have poor respiratory health, and almost half showed signs of compromised lung function. The data ... comes from what researchers hope will be a long-term study of wildfire survivors lasting at least a decade. Researchers released early results from that research on Wednesday. (McAvoy, 5/16)
In west Maui, thousands of people are living in the burn zones 鈥 in or near homes that absorbed heavy amounts of toxic smoke from the most deadly wildfire in U.S. history. Many residents say their health is compromised or declining because of exposure to ash, debris and smoke, according to a new health report released Wednesday and first reported by The Washington Post. (Sacks, 5/15)
On other developments across the country 鈥
State lawmakers voiced frustration on Wednesday over a lack of detail on Gov. Gavin Newsom鈥檚 promised $25-per-hour minimum wage for health care workers, saying they need to know soon as they work to pass his newly proposed budget. 鈥淲e鈥檒l have to see it soon, because we need to pass this budget in like a month,鈥 Assembly Health Budget Chair Akilah Weber told administration representatives at a hearing Wednesday. (Bluth, 5/15)
蘑菇影院 Health News:
California鈥檚 $12 Billion Medicaid Makeover Banks On Nonprofits鈥 Buy-In
For much of his young life, Jorge Sanchez regularly gasped for air, at times coughing so violently that he鈥檇 almost throw up. His mother whisked him to the emergency room late at night and slept with him to make sure he didn鈥檛 stop breathing. 鈥淗e鈥檚 had these problems since he was born, and I couldn鈥檛 figure out what was triggering his asthma,鈥 Fabiola Sandoval said of her son, Jorge, now 4. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so hard when your child is hurting. I was willing to try anything.鈥 (Hart, 5/16)
Missouri鈥檚 GOP-led Legislature on Wednesday renewed a more than $4 billion Medicaid program that had been blocked for months by a Republican faction that used it as a bargaining tool. The bill which now heads to Gov. Mike Parson will renew a longstanding tax on hospitals and other medical providers. Money from the tax is used to draw down $2.9 billion in federal funding, which is then given back to providers to care for low-income residents on Medicaid health care. (Ballentine, 5/15)
Republican lawmakers in North Carolina are pushing forward with their plan to repeal a pandemic-era law that allowed the wearing of masks in public for health reasons, a move spurred in part by demonstrations against the war in Gaza that have included masked protesters camped out on college campuses. The legislation cleared the Senate on Wednesday in a 30-15 vote along party lines despite several attempts by state Senate Democrats to change the bill. (Seminera, 5/16)
West Virginia voters ousted the Republican state Senate president on Tuesday, as well as a doctor who drew fire for breaking with his party over school vaccination policy. They were among at least eight incumbent GOP legislators who lost in the state鈥檚 primary elections.(Willingham and Raby, 5/16)
Time is running out for legislation that would make it harder to sue pesticide manufacturers over claims their products cause cancer, with an unusual coalition of opponents working to ensure they鈥檝e stalled the bill鈥檚 progress. The bill, critics argue, shields large corporations at the expense of everyday Missourians who have developed non-Hodgkin鈥檚 lymphoma they attribute to the use of pesticides formulated with glyphosate 鈥 most prominently, Roundup. (Kite, 5/16)
In a state that ranks among the top 10 wealthiest, nearly half a million people don鈥檛 know where their next meal is coming from. One in eight Connecticut residents experienced 鈥渇ood insecurity鈥 in 2022, rising from one in 10 in 2021, according to the latest annual 鈥淢ap the Meal Gap鈥 report from hunger-relief organization Feeding America. (Phillips, 5/15)
The gas you put in your car has an octane rating between 85 and 91 in Colorado, but, to get off the ground, airplanes need a little more oomph. Standard aviation fuel for piston-engine aircraft 鈥 think Cessnas and other small planes 鈥斅 has an octane rating of at least 100. But that extra pop comes with a price: The fuel typically has lead in it. (Ingold, 5/15)
Pertussis, or whooping cough, is spreading at Lexington schools with six total cases so far, and all central Kentucky families should look for symptoms while ensuring kids are up-to-date on their vaccines, Lexington-Fayette Health Department officials said Wednesday. Pertussis is a highly contagious respiratory illness spread by coughing and sneezing. It affects people of all ages but can be most serious in infants and those with chronic diseases., officials said. (Spears, 5/16)
Until this year, there were no inpatient beds for children under 12 in Acadiana. Now, there are 10 beds available at the only local facility currently offering those services to patients under 18, but the resources still fall short compared to the growing need for adolescent mental health services. The area 鈥渋s under-resourced for inpatient adolescent and pediatric needs, and really all psychiatric needs,鈥 explained Dr. Foster Kordisch, who oversees Lafayette General鈥檚 emergency department. ERs are often the entry point into the mental health care system for those in crisis. (Maschkle, 5/8)
There are so few Indigenous physicians in the United States 鈥 just 0.3% of doctors 鈥 that their numbers barely show up in charts and graphs depicting the diversity of the medical workforce. But as of Thursday, there will be at least nine more. (McFarling, 5/16)
Maryland will part ways with its troubled provider of medical care in state prisons, following a decision Wednesday by the Board of Public Works to forgo contracting with the company again. (Roberts, 5/15)
Colstrip Power Plant owners and politicians are ignoring the public health impacts of air toxics emissions as they blame the EPA for costly air pollution controls, several health and environmental organizations said Tuesday. Since the Environmental Protection Agency rolled out tougher standards on mercury and air toxic emissions April 25, Montana elected officials and power plant owners have characterized the new rules as unreasonably expensive, a potential power plant killer for Colstrip. But the rules have been in the works for years and the health benefits going unmentioned are significant, said those speaking during a Tuesday press conference. (Lutey, 5/15)
蘑菇影院 Health News:
Medics At UCLA Protest Say Police Weapons Drew Blood And Cracked Bones
Inside the protesters鈥 encampment at UCLA, beneath the glow of hanging flashlights and a deafening backdrop of exploding flash-bangs, OB-GYN resident Elaine Chan suddenly felt like a battlefield medic Police were pushing into the camp after an hours-long standoff. Chan, 31, a medical tent volunteer, said protesters limped in with severe puncture wounds, but there was little hope of getting them to a hospital through the chaos outside. (Castle Work and Kelman, 5/16)