Advocates said Mississippi is taking a big step toward infant safety with the expansion of Safe Haven Baby Boxes in the state.
Nationwide, more than 280 boxes are available to support families in crisis, and five of those boxes are in Mississippi.
Monica Kelsey, founder and CEO of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, said their secure boxes at fire stations and hospitals let parents anonymously surrender healthy newborns. The organization, which began in Indiana, started installing boxes in Mississippi last year and plans further expansion to other states.
"This is a last resort option," Kelsey, explained. "Our job at Safe Haven Baby Boxes is to keep babies out of dumpsters. We're not an alternative to abortion. We're an alternative to abandonment, and the women that are utilizing our services have already carried their pregnancy to term."
The boxes adhere to the Mississippi Infant Safe Haven law, which permits safe surrender of newborns up to 45 days old without prosecution, reducing unsafe abandonments.
Kelsey added they have seen high rates of abandonments in New Mexico, California and New York. She pointed out Texas, despite strict abortion laws, also has many abandonments and it has not changed since the Roe vs. Wade decision was overturned.
Kelsey noted inside the baby boxes is an orange bag with resources for the mother. She added they operate a 24-hour national hotline for mothers in crisis, offering options such as information about parenting or adoption plans, assistance with surrendering a child at a facility and guidance on using the baby box.
"We counsel moms and it's free for them," Kelsey stressed. "We've also offered medical care to some. We've had legal help for some of these moms, where we've had to hire an attorney to protect their identity or protect them."
So far, the Safe Haven Baby Box hotline has handled more than 9,000 calls, supporting parents across all 50 states, including referring more than 500 women to crisis pregnancy centers, assisting with 10 adoption referrals, and facilitating more than 150 legal Safe Haven surrenders.
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Consumer advocates in Maine said the availability of enhanced subsidies have helped record numbers of people get the health care coverage they need.
Nearly 65,000 Mainers enrolled in health plans this year through the state's online marketplace.
Rachel Collamore, consumer assistance program manager at Augusta-based Consumers for Affordable Health Care, said more people are catching problems early and avoiding trips to the emergency room.
"It means that people who might otherwise kind of roll the dice don't have to anymore," Collamore emphasized. "They can get that security by having a health plan that is more likely to meet their budget and more likely to meet their health care needs."
Enhanced subsidies have cut some premiums, on average, by more than 40%.
Collamore noted open enrollment is closed until November but people can still get coverage if they experience certain "qualifying life events" like getting married or losing an employer-based plan.
The enhanced subsidies will expire at the end of the year unless Congress votes to extend them or make them permanent. Without action, the vast majority of marketplace premium payments will increase, and low-income enrollees will face the biggest premium hikes.
Collamore argued it should concern everyone because "healthy neighbors make good neighbors."
"We know that having access to medications that help you manage chronic conditions," Collamore pointed out. "Even just having access to affordable prenatal care; that those are really, really important and that kind of coverage is really out of reach for some many people if they don't have those tax credits."
Collamore added there are a lot of unknowns, but the Consumers for Affordable Health Care hotline is available for Mainers with questions about their coverage. She encouraged people to contact their elected officials to let them know the importance of keeping the enhanced subsidies in place.
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February is American Heart Month and some Minnesota families are sharing their experiences with a sometimes overlooked disease among newborns: congenital heart defects.
Studies show congenital heart defects are the most common birth defect in the U.S., affecting nearly 40,000 babies each year. The American Heart Association said thanks to progress in the world of research and treatments, outcomes have improved. But families still find themselves in delicate situations.
Stephanie Johnson is a Minnesota mother whose son Henry was born with a syndrome restricting oxygen supplies to the body. Henry endured several surgeries and now lives a mostly normal life like kids his age but the worry is not over.
"We also know that the honeymoon period doesn't last forever," Johnson acknowledged. "At some point his heart's gonna get tired and he'll be looking at likely a heart transplant at that point."
Johnson hopes for additional medical breakthroughs but she and health experts noted congenital heart defect research is grossly underfunded. Another complication is government spending cuts sought by the Trump administration and the potential impact on agencies such as the National Institutes of Health. Policy experts say the research arm has already been dealing with flat funding levels.
In the absence of government support, current research heavily relies on awareness campaigns involving families navigating health scares. Johnson is among those trying to get the issue on the public's radar.
"We need to move science forward," Johnson urged. "Creating awareness for this is just incredibly important because awareness leads to funding, and funding leads to hope, and we're hoping for a cure."
Studies indicate congenital heart defects are underdiagnosed because milder symptoms are not always caught at birth. It means the disease is detected later in childhood or when the person becomes an adult.
Minnesota's Mayo Clinic and its HeartWorks program, as well as the Heart Association, are part of a network of health entities pushing for research advancements.
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For Pennsylvanians with disabilities, there may be unexpected side effects to ending so-called Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility policies.
President Donald Trump has opted to eliminate DEIA initiatives in federal agencies and federally funded programs.
His executive order signed in January characterizes DEIA policies as "discriminatory."
But in Pennsylvania, Mallory Hudson - the director of the disability justice program at the Keystone Progress Education Fund - said a memo went out ordering the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division to not file any new complaints, motions to intervene, agreed upon remands, amicus briefs, or statements of interest.
"That means that the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division has been instructed not to file any new civil rights cases, right?" said Hudson. "And that includes ADA complaints. So, those are - that is one of the few ways that disabled people can even protect their civil rights."
She adds the Americans with Disabilities Act was first passed in 1990 under President George H.W. Bush, and its legal precedent was based on the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Hudson said another potential concern is the future of the Inflation Reduction Act under the new administration.
She noted that the IRA has allowed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to negotiate drug prices - and many are benefiting from its progress, like a $35 co-pay for insulin.
"Older adults and some folks with disabilities have been able to do that $35 copay, and for folks on disability, that's still a pretty big chunk of change," said Hudson. "But it was better than before - and then, that meant taxpayers were paying the difference."
Lower prices have been negotiated for 10 medications so far, cutting costs for patients and saving taxpayers billions.
It's estimated that if the IRA had been enacted in 2023, it would have slashed prescription drug spending by 22% - or roughly $6 billion.
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