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Louisiana’s surgeon general puts basic health care out of reach in a poor, unhealthy state

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lailluminator.com – Greg LaRose – 2025-02-17 10:20:00

by Greg LaRose, Louisiana Illuminator
February 17, 2025

An internal Louisiana Department of Health memo from Surgeon General Ralph Abraham surfaced last week with resounding directives to staff regarding its role in public vaccination efforts.

While not blatantly discounting the efficacy of vaccines, Abraham signaled a significant step back for the state’s role in promoting and administering them. 

“Rather than instructing individuals to receive any and all vaccines, LDH staff should communicate data regarding the reduced risk of disease, hospitalization and death associated with a vaccine and encourage individuals to discuss considerations for vaccination with their health care provider,” the surgeon general wrote.

It all seems innocuous enough until you get to the part where Abraham — a physician and veterinarian – mentions his department’s history in promoting vaccines through public health fairs, media campaigns and working with parish health units.

“While we encourage each patient to discuss the risks and benefits of vaccination with their provider, LDH will no longer promote mass vaccination,” he wrote.

“I don’t know what that means,” New Orleans Health Director Dr. Jennifer Agenvo told our news partners at WVUE-TV Fox 8. “Every year I’ve been here and before me, the New Orleans Health Department and the state health department have worked together on really successful mass vaccination events.”

Avegno said the city will disregard Abraham’s messaging and continue with its own vaccination events.

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U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy was also critical of his fellow Republican physician’s policy move, though his words lose a little steam when you consider his vote for anti-vax conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for U.S. health secretary. Still, Cassidy reflected on his own experience running large-scale immunization programs. 

“Things like vaccine fairs keep a child from having to miss school and a mother from having to miss work,” Cassidy said in a statement. “That is the reality of today’s medicine. To say that cannot occur and that someone must wait for the next available appointment ignores that reality.”   

Abraham has yet to offer any public explanation of his memo, but his department issued a news release the same day in which the surgeon general and his top deputy, Dr. Wyche Coleman III, explained their personal health care philosophy in broad strokes.

“As a nation, we must recognize that there is no miracle pill for the major population health problems we face,” the doctors wrote. “The solution to increased spending and declining outcomes in our country is unlikely to come in the form of a pill or a shot. Much of the solution will likely come down to the usual hard work of improving diet, increasing exercise, and making better lifestyle choices.”

This is a condescending statement in which both doctors assume the public turns to the government for their every health need, and citizens depend solely on public officials for guidance on their wellbeing. Abraham and Coleman also mistakenly assume everyone in Louisiana has the same access to healthy food, adequate exercise time and – easily the most obtuse assumption from the two physicians – medical care.

Vaccine legislation is a loser in Louisiana, but misinformation wins anyway: analysis

The latest data show 1 in 7 people in the state do not have reliable access to healthy food, according to the food bank collaborative Feeding Louisiana. 

Rankings from United Health Foundation place Louisiana at 38th in the nation in terms of the number of adults who meet recommended exercise guidelines, with only 27% reaching that benchmark.

As for health care access, rankings consistently place Louisiana near the bottom in mortality rates for cancer, infants, diabetes, heart disease, kidney disease and stroke. Personal choices indeed account for some of these ailments, but all are exacerbated when medical help is out of reach. 

Public health experts say Abraham’s apparent retreat from mass vaccination events will only add to these problems in a state with the second-highest poverty rate, 18.9%, in the country. Several studies have affirmed the link between poverty and poor health outcomes.

It could also impact one area where Louisiana is in the middle of the pack – influenza and pneumonia deaths. You’ll recall Abraham provided Louisiana health care workers with a rather flimsy opt-out for any employer flu vaccine requirements, revealing his lack of support for a  widely accepted preventative health practice. 

When Republican Gov. Jeff Landry made Abraham the state’s first surgeon general a year ago, public health advocates met the announcement with skepticism. The governor has long made clear his disdain for decisions his Democrat predecessor, John Bel Edwards, made during the COVID-19 pandemic.   

Dating back to his time as attorney general, Landry has repeated disinformation on the coronavirus and the public health response. Right after his LDH appointment, Abraham echoed the political messaging of his boss. 

“This position was created to reverse the prior trend of bureaucrats creating policy and doctors reacting to it, moving us in a unified way forward,” he said at the time. 

Abraham’s choice to back away from promotion of vaccines with a proven track record of success – some of which have eradicated dangerous diseases such as measles and polio — is the exact opposite of the unified front he seeks with health care providers. 

The reality is he will make their jobs immeasurably more difficult.

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Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

The post Louisiana’s surgeon general puts basic health care out of reach in a poor, unhealthy state appeared first on lailluminator.com

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Louisiana K-12 superintendent urges schools to embrace Trump DEI guidance

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lailluminator.com – Piper Hutchinson – 2025-02-19 17:56:00

Louisiana K-12 superintendent urges schools to embrace Trump DEI guidance

by Piper Hutchinson, Louisiana Illuminator
February 19, 2025

Louisiana Superintendent of Education Cade Brumley is urging Louisiana K-12 schools to comply with guidance from President Donald Trump’s administration as it threatens to revoke federal funding from campuses that use race-conscious practices in admissions, programming, training, hiring, scholarships and other aspects of student life. 

The new federal guidelines came in the form of a non-legally binding “dear colleagues” letter Acting Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education for Civil Rights Craig Trainor sent to schools last week. The letter advised K-12 schools, colleges and universities to comply by Feb. 28 or risk losing federal funding. 

It’s the latest example of the Trump administration’s ongoing crackdown on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) measures. 

Brumley, a conservative Republican, endorsed the administration’s guidance in a letter he sent to Louisiana K-12 system leaders Wednesday. Read the full letter below. 

“The Louisiana Department of Education (LDOE) agrees with [federal] guidance and belief that ‘[d]iscrimination [under any banner] on the basis of race, color, or national origin is illegal and morally reprehensible,’” Brumley wrote. “Furthermore, LDOE commends Governor Landry for his proactive Executive Order as well as his unwavering support of LDOE’s work to stop inherently divisive concepts, like Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI), from infiltrating Louisiana’s K-12 public education system.” 

Gov. Jeff Landry, who is ideologically aligned with Brumley and Trump, issued an executive order last year prohibiting the teaching of critical race theory in K-12 schools. Critical race theory (CRT) is an advanced academic concept that holds that race is socially constructed, and it examines how legal structures are used to oppress people of color. Most classes that take the theory into consideration are in graduate programs at the university level. There is no evidence these courses are being taught to children and teenagers in Louisiana. 

The Trump administration’s letter is predicated on a very broad interpretation of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard in 2023, which prohibited the use of affirmative action in admissions. While that decision was limited to admissions, conservatives have favored a sweeping interpretation that applies the prohibition to other aspects of student life. 

In his letter, Brumley advises schools to review programs, initiatives, awards and other items to ensure compliance with Trainor’s guidance. 

Several Louisiana K-12 public schools engage in diversity, inclusion and equity practices, according to a report the Louisiana Department of Education submitted to the Legislature. However, separate reports from Louisiana’s four higher education systems showed minimal spending on DEI

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LSU ahead of the curve 

The Trump administration’s interpretation of Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard has already been adopted by the LSU Board of Supervisors. In October, it passed a resolution calling for the dismantling of all DEI practices

The resolution requires LSU to conduct a comprehensive review of all of its “programs and bureaucracies” in which classifications are maintained based on race, sex, color, ethnicity, political views or national origin. Any programs found to confer “any preferential treatment in violation of the rule of law outlined by the supreme court in SFA v. Harvard” will be eliminated, according to the resolution. 

The board is expected to take action on this review at its meeting Friday, LSU President William Tate told state legislators at a House Education Committee meeting last week. 

Janene Tate, spokeswoman for the Southern University System, the nation’s only system of historically Black colleges and universities, said in a statement the system is confident its current practices are “constitutional and legal.” 

Other colleges and universities contacted for this report are taking a slower approach. 

“I have seen a lot of expressions of angst… regarding the letter, but it really doesn’t apply to any of the efforts we have underway at Louisiana Tech,” university President Jim Henderson said “It does not affect us.” 

“That doesn’t mean there won’t be further guidance that won’t be more restrictive, but it’s not in the four corners of that dear colleagues letter,” Henderson said. 

The University of Louisiana at Lafayette “is analyzing the potential impact” of the federal guidance, spokesman Eric Maron said in a statement, adding it’s premature to comment on any specific required changes.

Southeastern Louisiana University is reviewing the letter and awaiting legal guidance, spokesman Mike Rivault said in a statement. 

Rick Gallot, president of the University of Louisiana System, did not respond to multiple calls requesting comment for this report. 

Chandler LeBeouf, spokesman for the Louisiana Community and Technical College System, said its schools “will remain adaptable to the evolving higher education landscape while ensuring that all Louisianans have the opportunity to pursue education and training in a learning environment that leads to meaningful careers.” 

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Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

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Lewis ousted from vice chairmanship over anti-Landry social media post | Louisiana

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Nolan McKendry | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-02-19 14:15:00

(The Center Square) — The Louisiana Public Service Commission voted Wednesday to remove Commissioner Davante Lewis as vice chairman after he called Gov. Jeff Landry an “asshole” in a social media post last week.

The 3-2 vote stripped Lewis of his leadership role and appointed Commissioner Eric Skrmetta as his replacement. 

The commission also approved a request from Entergy Louisiana to bill customers for $182 million in Hurricane Francine storm recovery fees.

The utility estimates it will add between 80 cents and $1.10 per month bills for customers who use 1,000 to 1,500 kilowatt hours of electricity to help pay for repair costs from the 2024 Category 2 storm that made landfall in Terrebone Parish.

The controversy erupted after Landry praised newly confirmed Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in a social media post, calling him a “major upgrade” over former Assistant Secretary of Health Rachel Levine.

In response, Lewis criticized Landry’s post, accusing conservatives of promoting “cruelty and chaos” and directly insulting the governor.

Following his removal, Lewis condemned the decision as a “biased, dangerous, & retaliatory clap back on constitutional free speech,” thanking supporters who attended the meeting.

He later doubled down on his criticism, calling the Republican Party “hypocrites” and sharing a text exchange that appeared to show another commissioner using the same insult against him.

Despite his removal as vice chairman, Lewis remains a voting member of the commission. Skrmetta, a Republican, will now serve as vice chairman. The commission did not publicly comment on whether further action against Lewis is being considered.

Several individuals testified before the LPSC in defense of Lewis, arguing that Lewis’ posts were “constitutionally protected.” 

“We are here today because Chairman Mike Francis alleges that he was embarrassed that Devonte Lewis…exercised his first amendment right, a constitutional right to free speech, to criticize Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry,” Alfreda Tillman Bester, general counsel in Louisiana for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said at Wednesday’s meeting. “I’m embarrassed that [Landry] posted a picture on social media of former Health and Human Services Director, Secretary Rachel Levine, a physician, a four star officer in the nation’s uniform services, beside a picture of vaccine denier Robert F. Kennedy Jr., in an apparent juvenile insult.”

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Wellness Wednesday on 4: What is Flush ride cardio?

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www.youtube.com – WWLTV – 2025-02-19 09:03:15

SUMMARY: In today’s Wellness Wednesday, the importance of recovery alongside workout routines is emphasized. Low-intensity workout days, or “flush days,” accelerate muscle repair and improve circulation, helping alleviate post-workout soreness. Functional performance specialist Spencer Shellstone suggests incorporating activities like using an elliptical, stationary biking, or going for a walk to keep movement light and enjoyable without straining. This approach helps flush out lactic acid and allows for more calorie burn throughout the week, enhancing overall fitness. Additionally, these low-impact days maintain motivation, making intense workout days feel more manageable. Consistency is crucial for effective training and dieting.

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Spencer Shilstone, Functional Performance Specialist explains Flush ride is a very low intensity (30% V02max) bout of cardio.

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