POLITICS
Alzheimer's groups try new tack with Democrats
Advocacy groups for people with Alzheimer's disease have rallied for months to broaden access to new therapies like Aduhelm, showing up in droves to budget and research hearings. Biden health officials haven't budged on Medicare coverage requirements. Now, in new polling shared first with D.C. Diagnosis, advocates argue this could cost Democratic candidates in upcoming elections.
More than two-thirds of likely 2024 voters, regardless of party affiliation, age, gender, and region, strongly favor requiring Medicare to cover FDA-approved drugs that could slow Alzheimer's disease progression, according to an early May poll by Lake Research Strategies (a top pollster for Biden's 2020 campaign) and Public Opinion Strategies. Three-quarters of the 1,000 respondents also strongly agree that Congress should intervene if Medicare doesn't broaden coverage for those drugs (and 80% agree overall).
The poll's commissioners — Alzheimer's disease groups like Alliance for Aging Research and UsAgainstAlzheimer's — are sending a clear message to President Biden: They're primed to make this a 2024 election issue. Half of respondents said they'd be more likely to vote for a candidate who supported Medicare coverage requirements; one-third said they'd be "much more likely." Pollsters also intentionally over-sampled in swing states like Arizona, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
MENTAL HEALTH
Biden's top doctor aims at teens' social media use
Surgeon General Vivek Murthy this morning issued an advisory on youth mental health and social media usage, more formally drawing attention to a link he has underscored for months amid a crisis in children's mental wellbeing.
"Parents are asking 'Is social media safe for my kids?' Based on our review of the data, there isn't enough evidence that it is safe for our kids," he told STAT's Ryan Fitzgerald ahead of the advisory, which calls for policymakers to establish age restrictions and safety standards and tech companies to more transparently share their data.
The advisory comes on the heels of an American Psychological Association report on depression and anxiety among children bullied online. Lawmakers have also tried to step into the social media arena, most recently with a bipartisan bill barring tech companies from using algorithms to target teens with certain content. Read more from Ryan's conversation with Murthy.
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