Monday roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From the public health front

  • The Washington Post reports
    • “In 2022, 8,300 cases of tuberculosis were identified in the United States, marking a 5 percent increase from the year before, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “The 2022 rebound in TB cases included a 26 percent increase in TB diagnoses in children 4 or younger — from 160 cases in 2021 to 202 last year. That increase is concerning, CDC officials said in a news release, because cases in that age group are usually the result of recent transmission rather than reactivation of a long-standing latent infection.
    • “Still, the overall 2022 tally did not reach the pre-pandemic count of 8,895 TB cases in 2019. That number fell by 20 percent in 2020, which health officials generally attributed to delayed or missed diagnoses during the pandemic, as well as changes in people’s travel and movement that limited their potential exposure to the disease.”
  • STAT News informs us
    • “Only about one in 5,000 people in the United States is a centenarian. (About 1,900 centenarians live in Massachusetts, according to 2021 federal records.) And the odds of reaching 110 are rarer still: just one in 5 million.
    • “But it’s not just longevity that makes [centerarian Heldra] Senhouse exceptional. Her clear memory and sharp thinking are hallmarks of super agers, as these ancients are known; so is her generally good health. Major age-related illnesses hit most centenarians about 20 to 30 years later than everyone else. And few ever develop Alzheimer’s disease.
    • “Increasingly, scientists believe that genes, and not necessarily good habits, determine who lives past 100. Many people who exercise regularly, eat healthy diets, and refrain from smoking will make it to 90. Beyond that is when researchers say genetics plays a much larger role.
    • FEHBlog note — the researchers are trying to identify the super ager genes.
  • JAMA Online offers a discussion of the role of pediatricians in resolving the maternal mortality problem.

From the substance use disorder front —

  • The Washington Post discusses community efforts to create “overdose prevention centers [that] allow people to take illegal drugs like fentanyl under the watch of staff trained to reverse overdoses.”
  • STAT News tells us
    • “Ever since fentanyl came to dominate the U.S. illicit drug supply, doctors and patients have found buprenorphine, a key addiction-treatment medication, increasingly difficult to use.
    • “All too often, fentanyl’s potency has meant that patients transitioning to buprenorphine, a far weaker drug, experience excruciating symptoms known as “precipitated withdrawal.” Often, the discomfort is so severe that patients give up on buprenorphine altogether.
    • “But a trio of West Coast doctors is reporting a buprenorphine breakthrough thanks to an unlikely-seeming medication: ketamine, an anesthetic used both medicinally and recreationally and that has hallucinogenic effects at high doses. Giving tiny doses of ketamine as patients begin buprenorphine treatment, they say, has all but eliminated their withdrawal symptoms.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front, Healthcare Dive reports, “Nonprofit Kaiser Permanente posted net income of $1.2 billion for the first quarter this year, as higher care volumes and a more generous financial market boosted quarterly profit. The operator reported a $961 net loss in the first quarter of last year.”

From the telehealth front, Healthcare IT News shares a sneak peek at a new Ernst & Young survey. “The firm’s global health leader speaks with Healthcare IT News about hybrid care, digital transformation, big data, generative AI and smart technology.”