Health Highlights: Nov. 5, 2018

First-of-a-Kind Surgery Restores Boy's Ability to Walk After Polio-Like IllnessSoda Makers Using Ballot Measures to Fight Soda Taxes

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

First-of-a-Kind Surgery Restores Boy's Ability to Walk After Polio-Like Illness

A first-of-its-kind surgery has restored the ability to walk in a boy paralyzed by a polio-like condition called acute flaccid myelitis (AFM).

The condition occurs most often in children and includes symptoms such as sudden arm or leg weakness, and reflex loss, CBS News reported.

Brandon Noblitt was struck by the disease in 2016 and could no longer walk. He was eventually seen by Dr. Amy Moore, of Washington University in St. Louis.

"My goal with the children with AFM was to restore hip stability, and then motion of the upper legs," she told CBS News.

Fourteen months ago, Moore performed nerve transfer surgery on Brandon's leg at St. Louis Children's Hospital. She said she's the only doctor in the U.S. to perform nerve transfers on children's lower extremities.

"I used what they have. They were wiggling their toes, and so I was able to move a nerve that wiggles the toes to the hips," Moore told CBS News.

At a check-up last week, Brandon was walking again.

The cause of AFM is unknown, but it seems to develop after a viral illness. Nearly 400 people in the U.S. have been diagnosed since 2014, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. So far this year, there have been 80 confirmed cases in 25 states, NBC News reported.

CDC director Dr. Robert Redfield recently called for a special task force to investigate AFM, which affects about one in a million people.

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Soda Makers Using Ballot Measures to Fight Soda Taxes

Campaigns supporting ballot measures in Washington and Oregon that would prevent municipalities from taxing food sales are being bankrolled by beverage companies trying to block attempts to tax sugary drinks, a new report suggests.

Soda taxes are seen as a way to reduce rates of obesity and other health problems linked to high sugar consumption, such as heart disease, type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure, The New York Times reported.

Nearly 40 countries have them, as do seven cities in the United States, including Philadelphia, San Francisco and Boulder, Col. And other U.S. towns and cities are considering such taxes.

In response, soda makers like Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo are pushing ballot measures and statewide legislation that would permanently prevent municipalities from taxing a broad range of goods and services. But instead of talking about taxes on soda, the campaigns claim to be fighting taxes on groceries, The Times reported.

Neither Washington nor Oregon has a plan to tax groceries.

"No one is even talking about taxing food," Jim Krieger, a professor of medicine and health services at the University of Washington, told The Times. "This is simply the soda industry trying to protect its profits at the expense of public health and local democracy."

In Washington, the soda industry has spent $20 million to promote the ballot measure opposing such taxes, according to state finance filings. Opponents of the ballot measure have raised $100,000.

Since last year, legislatures in Michigan, Arizona and California have passed laws that forbid local governments from imposing such taxes in the future. Experts say the outcomes in Oregon and Washington could determine the future of the soda tax movement in the United States.

"It's a pivotal moment," Mark Pertschuk, director of the advocacy group Grassroots Change, told The Times. "It's hard to overstate the chilling effect of having soda taxes barred from the whole West Coast, where so many progressive policies are born."

"These pre-emptive measures undermine democracy and completely take away a local government's ability to do what's best for their communities," Jennifer Pomeranz, a professor of public health at New York University, told The Times. "It's a true corporate takeover of America."

But such ballot measures are by their very nature democratic, according to William Dermody, a spokesman for the American Beverage Association, the industry group backing the measures.

"We believe there is a better way to help people reduce the amount of sugar consumed from beverages and bring about lasting change, including working alongside the public health community and offering more low- and no-sugar options," he told The Times.

Studies have found that soda taxes have a significant impact. For example, they reduced soda consumption by 21 percent in Berkeley, Calif. and by 40 percent in Philadelphia.

"We know that even modest soda taxes work, Laura MacCleery, policy director at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, told The Times. "Because they work, soda companies fight the taxes tooth and nail."

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