Why domestic violence is a public health problem
ONE IN FOUR — “One in 4 women and 1 in 10 men will experience sexual violence, physical violence or stalking during their lifetime, and they have all reported some form of impact to their health.”
That’s what Shawndell Dawson, director of the new Office of Family Violence Prevention and Services, told Krista on Monday, the day HHS announced the office’s formation.
Krista spoke to Dawson, who previously served as head of the HHS’ Division of Family Violence Prevention and Services, about the long-term health impacts of domestic violence and how the new office can improve services to survivors. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Why is domestic violence a public health problem?
Our National Domestic Violence Hotline did a survey of over 9,000 survivors last year, and 62.2 percent of them reported health needs related to their experiences of abuse.
Often experiences of both physical and mental health trauma can have lifelong health consequences from chronic pain, to traumatic brain injury, to barriers to treating chronic health conditions like diabetes. … There’s research that has shown that experiences of violence and trauma can change your DNA and be passed from parent to child.
Why did HHS decide it was necessary to create this dedicated office?
This office will enable the government to serve as advisers to HHS leaders on more integrated service models around violence and abuse. That means engaging with child support agencies to facilitate safe access to child support for domestic violence survivors and their children, working with Headstart programs that are serving young children experiencing and witnessing violence, trauma and abuse at home and continuing to work with HRSA health centers around screening and assessment of domestic violence.
What’s the out-of-the-gate priority for you as the new director?
The first priority is to release a HHS-ACF [Administration for Children and Families] strategy on preventing and responding to domestic violence across health and social services. Now is the time to ensure that each agency within ACF and HHS has the resources to be able to recognize domestic violence, partner with domestic violence programs, and respond in ways that are trauma informed and help facilitate safe access to services.
WELCOME TO TUESDAY PULSE — Turns out all those cringey dad jokes we’ve endured may better prepare us for awkward social situations for the rest of our lives, a British study found. Insert appropriate dad joke here, and send your news and tips to [email protected] and [email protected].
TODAY ON OUR PULSE CHECK PODCAST, host Ben Leonard talks with reporter Rachel Bluth about California’s plan to partner with Civica, a Utah-based generic pharmaceutical company, to start producing California-branded insulin in a bid to make the drug more affordable. The new insulin, which will cost $30 for a 10 mL vial, is awaiting FDA approval.
BIDEN TO RELEASE COVID ORIGINS INTEL — President Joe Biden signed into law Monday a bill to declassify intelligence on the origins of Covid-19, offering the public a chance to review information that government agencies say is inconclusive, POLITICO’s Carmen Paun reports.
How we got here: Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Mike Braun (R-Ind.) introduced the Covid-19 Origin Act during the 117th Congress, with Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) sponsoring the companion measure in the House. Although Hawley’s measure passed the Senate unanimously in May 2021, the House never considered it.
The latest version of the bill was introduced this year following reports that the Energy Department had concluded the Covid pandemic likely originated from a Chinese lab leak — just days after FBI Director Christopher Wray made a similar public statement about the virus’ start.
The bill was passed unanimously by the Senate on March 1 and the House, where it passed unanimously on March 10.
Why it matters: Biden’s signature is a step further in providing transparency about what the U.S. knows about how the pandemic started.
The U.S. intelligence community is split about the pandemic’s origin, with other agencies supporting the theory that an animal transmitted the virus to people.
A determination that the virus leaked from the Chinese lab would further strain the U.S.-China relationship and erode trust in leading scientists who argued for the natural-origin hypothesis.
What’s next: U.S. intelligence agencies will redact their data to protect sources and methods before sharing it with Congress.
CMS RESPONSE TO DATA BREACH IN THE CROSSHAIRS — The House GOP chairs of the Oversight and Energy and Commerce committees said Monday they’ll investigate the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for its response to a data breach, POLITICO’s Nancy Vu reports.
The Oct. 8 ransomware attack put the personal data of more than 250,000 Medicare beneficiaries at risk. But lawmakers noted in a letter to CMS that it took the agency two months to determine that the attack was a “major incident” before it alerted Congress — during which time the attackers had access to sensitive information like Social Security numbers, banking information and Medicare identifiers.
CMS responds: The agency has received the letter from lawmakers and “will respond directly,” according to a CMS spokesperson. They also pointed to a December press release that outlined CMS’ next steps, which included notifying beneficiaries of the breach and supplying them with an updated Medicare beneficiary identifier and free credit monitoring services.
BECERRA TO SPEAK ON INEQUITIES — HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra will speak today at a symposium held by the Urban Institute on health care inequities.
The event coincides with the 20th anniversary of a landmark report from the National Academies Press that laid bare how racial and ethnic disparities were consistent in quality of care even after adjusting for factors like income and insurance status.
JACKSON DISSENTS — Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented Monday as the Supreme Court wiped out a federal appeals court ruling that upheld the right of a minor to go to court to obtain permission to seek an abortion without parental notification, POLITICO’s Josh Gerstein and Alice Miranda Ollstein report.
The high court’s order directed the appeals court to vacate the judgment in the Missouri case and declare it moot as a result of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs ruling last June that overturned Roe v. Wade and ended the federal constitutional right to abortion.
Jackson penned a solo, four-page dissent arguing that the justices have become too liberal in granting requests from parties to nullify rulings issued by lower courts.
No other justice recorded any objection to the high court’s action.
BIG OIL AND ‘CLIMATE HOMICIDE’ — Can petroleum producers be held criminally responsible for climate-related deaths that occurred after companies allegedly deceived the public about the dangers of burning fossil fuels?
A new academic paper says they can, CLIMATEWIRE’s Leslie Clark reports, and its authors say the novel legal theory — known as “climate homicide” — is already stirring interest from prosecutors.
The paper tries to make a case for criminal prosecution of companies that knew but publicly dismissed the dangers of global warming. The authors argue that criminal charges are routine “for far less culpable and lethal conduct.”
Reality check: Several lawyers who have handled civil and criminal cases say the theory is unworkable. They noted the bar for conviction in a criminal case is higher than in civil litigation: A criminal conviction requires convincing a jury of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
They also said oil companies could argue that their contribution to greenhouse gasses worldwide is “dwarfed by the increases in emissions we see out of China every couple months.”
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American car batteries exported to Mexico are making people sick, The New York Times reports.
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Source: https://www.politico.com/