News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Louisiana’s surgeon general puts basic health care out of reach in a poor, unhealthy state
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
Drugs, stolen vehicles and illegal firearms allegedly found in Slidell home
SUMMARY: Three people were arrested following a July 30 search of a Slidell home where stolen vehicles, drugs, and illegal firearms were found. Police seized marijuana, THC edibles, ecstasy with methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, $13,000, eight illegal firearms (two stolen), and three stolen vehicles. 17-year-old Ma’layja Williams faces charges including possession with intent to distribute marijuana and obstruction of justice. William Williams, 45, and Demetra Williams, 42, were arrested with multiple charges such as possession with intent to distribute drugs, possession of stolen firearms, and illegal weapon possession. All suspects are presumed innocent until proven guilty.
The post Drugs, stolen vehicles and illegal firearms allegedly found in Slidell home appeared first on wgno.com
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Where do we belong? A search for queer spaces in Lafayette
SUMMARY: After Bolt’s Downtown closure, Lafayette’s queer community faced challenges finding safe, visible spaces amid political erasure of queer identity. Candice Broussard, a late-coming-out queer artist, found most community spaces were intimate and hidden, discovered through word of mouth, making belonging isolating yet meaningful. Pride Acadiana and queer-owned businesses like Straw Cove Bakery foster inclusivity year-round, not just during Pride Month, offering visibility and belonging. Events like Queer Kickball and grassroots gatherings fill gaps but highlight the lack of permanent safe spaces. With Bolt reopening as The Library, there is hope for more accessible, enduring queer community hubs in Lafayette.
The post Where do we belong? A search for queer spaces in Lafayette appeared first on thecurrentla.com
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
In Louisiana, you can now take your gun while frogging at night
by Julie O’Donoghue, Louisiana Illuminator
August 6, 2025
It’s now legal to take your firearm while hunting frogs at night in Louisiana.
Act 109, by Sen. Eddie Lambert, R-Gonzales, repealed a prohibition on carrying a rifle, shotgun or firearm while frogging after the sun goes down. The law change went into effect Aug. 1.
Lambert said the firearm ban was likely unconstitutional after state lawmakers expanded gun rights a few years ago and allowed firearms to be carried in more locations. The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries asked him to carry the legislation to undo the restriction over concern it conflicted with other state laws.
Lambert, an attorney, also owns vacation cottages in Pierre Part and takes guests on frog hunts.
“Catching frogs is one of my favorite activities,” Lambert said.
Guns aren’t used to hunt frogs. The prohibition was likely put in place to deter people from illegally hunting deer at night. Lambert said people who had rifles with them to shoot deer could, in theory, claim they were hunting frogs when caught by state Wildlife and Fisheries agents.
Lambert said the ban on guns while frogging could pose a safety concern, especially when it’s dark.
“You’re coming back to a landing at night. No one is around. You never know if you will be accosted,” he said earlier in the year during a legislative hearing.
Frogging season runs from June 1 through March 31 each year. State law allows people to use frog catchers, including devices such as a gig or spear that punctures the frog’s skin, but no equipment is necessary.
“Real people catch frogs with their hands,” Lambert joked during a hearing earlier this year.
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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 In Louisiana, you can now take your gun while frogging at night appeared first on lailluminator.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
The content focuses on a legislative change in Louisiana expanding gun rights in a specific, narrowly defined context—allowing firearms while frogging at night. The article neutrally reports on the rationale behind the law, emphasizing constitutional and safety concerns voiced by a Republican state senator, with no overt editorializing. The subject matter and framing tend to align with a center-right perspective that supports gun rights and individual protection, while maintaining an informative tone without partisan language or broad ideological commentary.
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