Concerns about 'structural racism' prompt major Mass. hospital network to change policies about babies born addicted to drugs



A major hospital network in Massachusetts has now revamped its policies regarding babies born addicted to drugs in an attempt to address "significant racial and ethnic inequities" it claims are associated with substance abuse disorder.

On Tuesday, Mass General Brigham, the commonwealth's largest hospital group, announced that it will no longer automatically report that an infant has been born with drug addiction since the automatic reporting and other such policies "disproportionately affect Black individuals."

Current commonwealth law demands mandatory reporting of all infants with "physical dependence upon an addictive drug at birth." However, the hospitals affiliated with Mass General Brigham — including Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Newton-Wellesley Hospital, and Salem Hospital — will now encourage reporting such cases to child protective services only if the babies are "suffering or at imminent risk of suffering physical or emotional injury."

Another policy change at Mass General Brigham means that medical professionals will now conduct toxicology tests on newborns and/or "pregnant people" — sometimes referred to as women — only under two conditions. First, hospital workers must be given written consent to perform the tests. Second, they will perform the tests only if the results will affect the medical treatment the mother and/or child receives.

These new policies are part of Mass General Brigham's larger "United Against Racism effort" to fix policies that "may unwittingly perpetuate structural racism."

"Our new perinatal testing and reporting policy is the latest step in our efforts to address longstanding inequities in substance use disorder care and to provide compassionate, evidence-based support to families, while addressing substance use disorder as a treatable health condition," said Sarah Wakeman, M.D., senior medical director for Substance Use Disorder at Mass General Brigham.

Wakeman claimed that some women may stop seeking treatment for addiction if they believe they may lose custody of their children after birth. She also claimed that substance abuse alone does not mean that pregnant women will abuse or neglect their children after they're born.

Mass General Brigham is not the only medical organization that wants fewer babies born addicted to drugs to be taken away from drug-addicted mothers. It is following in the footsteps of Boston Medical Center as well as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Society of Addiction Medicine, which have all taken a similar approach regarding drug-addicted babies.

"This policy reflects an emerging consensus, based on sound science, that is being embraced by our peer institutions and was developed in coordination with a wide range of partners," Wakeman asserted.

Allison Bryant, M.D., MPH, associate chief health equity officer at Mass General Brigham, claimed that this new policy will help those in the medical industry "turn our lens inward to understand our own contributions to stigma and inequity and strive to fix them."

Wakeman agreed. "It takes a multi-pronged approach to eliminate racial inequities and drop barriers to treatment," she said.

H/T: Libs of TikTok

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Mysterious white powder in White House that prompted evacuation tests positive for cocaine: Report



Panic set in Sunday evening at the White House following the discovery of an unknown substance in the West Wing by members of the Uniformed Division of the Secret Service.

TheBlaze reported that precautionary closures were implemented while DC Fire and EMS investigated.

A firefighter with the department's hazardous material team radioed the results of a field test around 8:49 p.m., noting, "We have a yellow bar saying cocaine hydrochloride," reported the Washington Post.

An official familiar with the investigation confirmed to the Post that the transmission was indeed from the White House and that the preliminary test had turned up a positive result for cocaine.

United States Secret Service Chief of Communications Anthony Guglielmi indicated that "an investigation into the cause and manner" is under way to determine how the substance entered the White House.

DC Fire and EMS told TheBlaze the investigation is being handled by the Secret Service.

According to Guglielmi, the alleged cocaine was found by Secret Service members while conducting routine rounds through the executive mansion.

Authorities have sent the sample to a lab for additional tests.

President Joe Biden was not in the White House at the time of the brief evacuation, as he and first lady Jill Biden had left for Camp David Friday, reported Newsweek. Hunter Biden and his son Beau apparently joined the president for the weekend getaway.

Whoever misplaced the alleged cocaine might take solace in Hunter Biden's story of recovery.

The first son was kicked out of the Navy Reserve for cocaine use and told the New Yorker that he turned up for at least one Burisma board meeting high on the illicit substance.

A 2016 police report indicated that Hunter Biden, who referred to himself in his memoir as a "functioning addict," returned a rental car in Arizona that contained "a small ziplock bag with a white powdery substance inside" along with a cocaine pipe, reported the Washington Examiner.

In a 2018 relapse, Hunter Biden noted he "used [his] superpower — finding crack anytime, anywhere."

Despite his difficult, prison-free journey to recovery, Hunter Biden has enjoyed the support of the president, who maintains he is "smartest guy" he knows.

TheBlaze has reached out to the Secret Service for comment and is awaiting a response.

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