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Thursday, Oct 19 2023

Full Issue

Attorneys: Medicaid Unwinding Notices In Florida Were 'Incomprehensible'

As part of a potential class-action lawsuit alleging Florida did not provide adequate information before removing people from health care rolls, attorneys suggested the state's notices led people to make the wrong decisions. Also in the news: North Carolina's mental health system.

Saying that notices sent by the state 鈥渂order on incomprehensible,鈥 attorneys for Medicaid beneficiaries fired back this week in a potential class-action lawsuit alleging Florida has not provided adequate information before dropping people from the health care program. (Saunders, 10/18)

More health news from across the U.S. 鈥

North Carolina鈥檚 six local behavioral health management companies 鈥 known as LME-MCOs 鈥 will see some significant restructuring soon.聽For years, patients, their families and mental health advocates have lodged repeated complaints聽about the lack of services some of the LME-MCOs provide and about the difficulty people have navigating the mental health system. State lawmakers have also had their share of frustrations with trying to hold the organizations accountable when problems arise.聽(Knopf, 10/18)

A Mississippi man's religious objections to being forcibly treated with psychiatric medication must be considered first before he can be involuntarily medicated and made to stand trial for threatening a judge, a federal appeals court has concluded. A three-judge panel of the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reached that conclusion in a Tuesday opinion that replaced their own earlier, less-expansive ruling in August in favor Bryant Lamont Harris. (Raymond, 10/18)

L.A. General's locked psychiatric unit has restrained patients at a higher rate than in any other in California, a Times analysis has found. (Poston and Reyes, 10/19)

The $2,000 per month that Anna Hegwer receives from Medicaid to take her 11-year-old daughter on outings and teach her to cook and clean is helping keep her family from its breaking point.聽Without it, the Parker mom would feel overwhelmed by the stress of trying to figure out how to pay the bills when she can鈥檛 take her eyes off her daughter, Chloe, who has an intellectual disability and severe attention deficit disorder.聽(Brown, 10/17)

鈥淓merging research is making it clear that artificial turf poses an environmental threat due to its lack of recyclability and presence of toxins such as lead and PFAS,鈥 said state Sen. Ben Allen, the Redondo Beach Democrat who authored the bill. With the new law 鈥渓ocal governments will again be able to regulate artificial turf in a way to both protect our environment in the face of drought and climate change but also by preventing further contribution to our recycling challenges and toxic runoff,鈥 he said. (Agrawal, 10/18)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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