New Mexico
Editorial: New Mexico worst in nation for deaths due to alcohol
Alcoholism and drunken driving have been an issue in New Mexico for thus lengthy it’s simple to develop into numb and never acknowledge the total influence of alcohol’s damaging drive within the state.
A decline within the charge of deadly crashes involving alcohol can create a misunderstanding N.M.’s alcohol “drawback” is bettering when the information point out it’s as unhealthy as ever, if not worse.
In actual fact, not solely does New Mexico have the best alcohol-related loss of life charge within the nation, its charge is double that of the nationwide common. Contemplate:
• A median of 5 folks died every single day of alcohol-related causes in New Mexico in 2020.
• One in 5 deaths amongst working-age adults (20-64) in New Mexico is attributable to alcohol.
And it’s not drunken driving that’s driving the numbers.
Alcohol-related power liver illness triggered a few third of the 1,878 alcohol-related deaths in New Mexico in 2020, making it the commonest reason for alcohol-related loss of life within the state. In response to the New Mexico Division of Well being, New Mexico’s loss of life charge of 86.6 per 100,000 inhabitants that 12 months was greater than double the nationwide charge of 41.5 per 100,000.
These numbers are significantly increased than figures lawmakers heard Wednesday in an all-day listening to devoted to analyzing the function of alcohol in crime, illness and loss of life in New Mexico. The numbers they noticed have been a number of years older, however they have been nonetheless stunning, and a wakeup name for lawmakers.
The Senate Courts, Corrections and Justice Committee was proven U.S. Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention numbers from 2011-2015. Adjusted for age and inhabitants, the CDC estimated New Mexico averaged 53 deaths a 12 months attributed to alcohol per 100,000 folks, in comparison with a nationwide charge of 28 deaths. The numbers are primarily based on deaths linked to extreme alcohol use, together with binge ingesting and power well being circumstances, automotive crashes and murder.
“That is thoughts numbing to me that we’d be double different states,” stated Sen. Joseph Cervantes, a Las Cruces Democrat and co-chairman of the committee. “We’re not simply worse, we’re off the charts.”
In the meantime, a long time of public-awareness campaigns on the implications of driving drunk together with an increase of ride-sharing companies have helped curb the variety of drunken driving fatalities in New Mexico, though we nonetheless rank excessive amongst states with the largest drunken driving points within the nation.
New Mexicans drink to extra at increased charges than residents of different states.
We’re the nation’s city drunk. One in seven New Mexicans binge drink, in accordance with NMDOH. Even after we’re sensible sufficient to not get behind the wheel when buzzed, extreme alcohol consumption triggers incidents of violence, harm and power illness. Alcohol performs a major function in suicide, baby maltreatment, visitors crashes, accidents brought on by firearms and murder. All of those issues carry an amazing social and financial value.
A dated Facilities for Illness Management determine from 2010 says extreme alcohol use prices New Mexico $2.2 billion — greater than $1,000 per New Mexico resident per 12 months. It’s arduous to consider that determine hasn’t grown over the following decade.
New Mexico has lengthy acknowledged we’ve an issue. However Wednesday’s listening to exhibits as soon as once more that New Mexico’s alcohol drawback is way larger than DWIs.
Aryan Showers, director of the Workplace of Coverage and Accountability for the Division of Well being, acknowledged the state’s alcohol bother goes again a long time. It could be a symptom, she stated, of different societal ills and never simply fastened by extra strictly regulating alcohol.
However lawmakers would do effectively to measure the impacts of the various facets of the 2021’s Liquor Management Act to find out how each bit impacts public well being outcomes. Keep in mind that’s the identical regulation that gave McKinley County retailers the selection to promote both gasoline or liquor, however not each, and so they picked …. liquor.
It additionally banned the sale of miniature bottles of liquor for off-site consumption, however made it simpler for eating places to amass licenses to promote liquor, allowed current license holders to make residence deliveries of alcohol and eating places and bars to promote beer, wine and cocktails beginning at 11 a.m. on Sundays reasonably than midday. There have been good arguments for all of those strikes, however the state ought to do follow-up research to weigh their influence.
Some lawmakers Wednesday took word of a latest sequence by New Mexico In Depth, a nonprofit information group, on the state’s bother with alcohol. The sequence, “Blind Drunk,” concluded the state has largely uncared for the disaster even because it grows worse.
The sequence famous the state’s alcohol taxes — which public well being scientists say must be proportional to the true social value of alcohol — have fallen to their lowest actual worth in 30 years.
Rep. Antonio “Moe” Maestas, D-Albuquerque, stated the 2021 reforms may very well be the beginning of extra modifications, together with how we tax alcohol.
Lawmakers on Wednesday didn’t embrace any explicit answer. Among the many concepts that got here up have been increasing expertise in vehicles to detect alcohol use by the driving force (the 2021 federal infrastructure invoice contains this on new vehicles thanks in nice half to the advocacy of U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M.); making liquor much less obtainable at comfort shops; decreasing the 0.08% presumed degree of intoxication for blood alcohol content material; and bettering behavioral well being packages.
In the meantime, NMDOH intends to bolster its surveillance and information assortment on fetal alcohol syndrome and different alcohol-related issues to offer policymakers extra info on how you can deal with the problem.
Final week’s listening to sounded the alarm that lawmakers must get this challenge on the entrance burner.
As a result of alcohol continues to devastate New Mexicans’ well being, security, pocketbooks and high quality of life.
This editorial first appeared within the Albuquerque Journal. It was written by members of the editorial board and is unsigned because it represents the opinion of the newspaper reasonably than the writers.
New Mexico
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New Mexico
Advocates want New Mexico to track climate change’s impact on public health • Source New Mexico
Health care advocates and officials will renew efforts to track harm to New Mexicans’ health from climate disasters in the forthcoming legislative session.
Healthy Climate New Mexico, a nonprofit collective of health care professionals concerned about climate change, and nine other groups back two proposals to improve preparedness and adaptation to extreme weather driven by human-caused climate change.
The first would beef up a climate health program at New Mexico Department of Health to track health impacts from heat, wildfire smoke, drought, flooding, dust and severe storms. The second is a proposal to offer grant funds for local and tribal governments to better respond to weather disasters.
“Our bills are focused on adaptation and resilience, preparedness and collecting data, which is essential in really knowing who’s at highest risk and where the solutions need to be applied, said Shelley Mann-Lev, the nonprofit’s executive director, who has decades of public health experience in New Mexico.
Both require state funds. First, there’s $1.1 million for a climate health program to fund additional staff for the Department of Health; implement more warning systems; and increase communication between the department, the public and other state agencies.
The request for the Extreme Weather Resilience Fund would be $12 million. Advocates have said they’ll introduce two bills with sponsors in both the House and Senate, but neither was filed as of Friday, Jan. 10.
This would be the third time similar proposals have been brought before lawmakers, and Mann-Lev said there’s been increased support from both the governor’s office and members of the legislature.
A spokesperson from the New Mexico Department of Health declined to comment, saying it’s policy to not speak about legislation proposed by outside groups. A spokesperson from the governor’s office declined to comment since the bills have not been formally introduced.
Sen. Liz Stefanics (D-Cerillos), who plans to sponsor the Senate legislation, and has introduced it before, said there seems to be more momentum and concern around the issues.
‘Beyond the body counts’
Other groups supporting the bill include Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless, New Mexico Voices for children, four public health groups, including the American Lung Association, and two climate organizations.
Advocates note that climate disasters already harm and kill New Mexicans. Deaths and injuries from extreme heat are rising; floods across the state, including Roswell, raise concerns for mold development; smoke from wildfires harms lungs, especially for children and the elderly.
Preventable heat injuries and deaths rising in New Mexico
Stephanie Moraga-McHaley ran the environment health tracking program at the New Mexico Department of Health until her retirement in 2024. She supports the bill because it could expand the current program, which tracks the raw numbers of deaths and injuries.
“There’s just so much that needs to be done besides the body counts,” said Stephanie Moraga-McHaley, who retired from the health agency in March. “We need to get some action in place, some coordination with other departments and communities in need.”
Current numbers of impacted people are an undercount, said Nathaniel Matthews-Trigg, a Healthy Climate New Mexico board member and public health researcher.
Matthews-Trigg said New Mexico health officials have made improvements in tracking the number of heat injuries and deaths – which are difficult numbers to pin down – but there needs to be more funding and staff on board.
“We know from emergency department visits that they’re increasing dramatically due to extreme heat,” Matthews-Trigg said. “But, we also know how we’re tracking these is really just giving us a sliver of the actual impact of heat on our communities and on health.”
He said climate disasters pose the “greatest public health threat in our lifetimes,” and warned that impacts will only worsen if heating from fossil fuel emissions doesn’t slow.
“It’s not going to go away,” he said. “And we’re flying blind, without the surveillance.”
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New Mexico
New Mexico supreme court strikes down local abortion pill restrictions
The New Mexico supreme court late on Thursday ruled against several local ordinances in the state that aim to restrict distribution of the abortion pill.
In a unanimous opinion, the court said the ordinances invaded the legislature’s authority to regulate reproductive care.
“Our legislature granted to counties and municipalities all powers and duties not inconsistent with the laws of New Mexico. The ordinances violate this core precept and invade the legislature’s authority to regulate access to and provision of reproductive healthcare,” the court wrote in its opinion by the justice Shannon Bacon.
It declined to address whether the ordinances violated the state’s constitutional protections.
Abortion is legal in New Mexico, which has become a destination for women seeking abortions from Texas, especially, and other states that have banned the procedure following the US supreme court ruling in 2022 ending a woman’s constitutional right to abortion and handing powers over the issue to individual states.
Following that ruling, leaders of New Mexico’s Roosevelt and Lea counties and the towns of Clovis and Hobbs, all on the Texas border, passed ordinances seeking to stop abortion clinics from receiving or sending mifepristone, a pill taken with another drug to perform a medication abortion, and other abortion-related materials in the mail. Medication abortions account for more than half of all US abortions. Last June the supreme court upheld access to the drugs.
The ordinances invoked the federal Comstock Act, a 19th-century “anti-vice” law against mailing abortifacients, which are drugs that induce abortion, and said that clinics must comply with the law.
Under Roosevelt county’s ordinance, any person other than a government employee could bring a civil lawsuit and seek damages of at least $100,000 for each violation of the Comstock Act.
The New Mexico supreme court admonished this, saying that creating a private right of action and damages award was “clearly intended to punish protected conduct”.
The state attorney general, Raúl Torrez, praised the court’s ruling on Thursday, saying that the core of the argument was that state laws pre-empted any action by local governments to engage in activities that would infringe on the constitutional rights of citizens.
“The bottom line is simply this: abortion access is safe and secure in New Mexico,” he said. “It’s enshrined in law by the recent ruling by the New Mexico supreme court and thanks to the work of the New Mexico legislature.”
The New Mexico house speaker, Javier Martínez, called access to healthcare a basic fundamental right in New Mexico.
“It doesn’t take a genius to understand the statutory framework that we have. Local governments don’t regulate healthcare in New Mexico. It is up to the state,” the Albuquerque Democrat said.
Opposition to abortion runs deep in New Mexico communities along the border with Texas, however, which has one of the most restrictive bans in the US.
But Democrats, who control every statewide elected office in New Mexico and hold majorities in the state house and senate, have moved to shore up access to the service.
In 2021, the New Mexico legislature repealed a dormant 1969 statute that outlawed most abortion procedures as felonies, ensuring access to abortion even after the Roe v Wade reversal.
And in 2023, the Democratic New Mexico governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, signed a bill that overrides local ordinances aimed at limiting abortion access and enacted a shield law that protects abortion providers from investigations by other states.
In September, construction began on a state-funded reproductive health and abortion clinic in southern New Mexico that will cater to local residents and people who travel from neighboring states.
The new clinic should open in 2026 to provide services ranging from medical and procedural abortions to contraception, cervical cancer screenings and education about adoptions.
It was not immediately clear whether the ruling can be appealed in federal court. The New Mexico supreme court opinion explicitly declined to address conflicts with federal law, basing its decision solely on state provisions.
The Texas-based attorney Jonathan Mitchell, a former Texas solicitor general and architect of that state’s strict abortion ban, said he looked forward “to litigating these issues in other states and bringing the meaning of the federal Comstock Act to the supreme court of the United States”.
Reuters and the Associated Press contributed reporting
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