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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, May 13 2024

Full Issue

California Governor Redirects Funds Intended For Health Care Priorities

The change in plans comes amid a state budget crisis. Elsewhere, in New Jersey, a task force says the state should aim for more home- and community-based care instead of nursing homes. And, thanks to New York, a paid parental leave initiative could go national.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is walking back promised pay raises for some health care workers and other health care investments generated from a tax agreed last year, instead using those funds to help balance the state budget amid a major deficit. In his new budget blueprint unveiled Friday, Newsom proposed using nearly $7 billion from the managed care organization tax 鈥 aka MCO 鈥 to balance the budget instead of using it to help hospitals. (Bluth, 5/10)

A highly anticipated state report said Friday that New Jersey is overly reliant on nursing homes and should change its policies to incentivize home- and community-based care. The report released by the New Jersey Task Force on Long-Term Care Quality and Safety recommends policies that would drastically reshape long-term care as well as reimbursement models. (Han, 5/10)

In other news from around the country 鈥

Paid leave for prenatal care is poised to become a national women鈥檚 health initiative. That鈥檚 now that New York has become the first state to mandate a standalone entitlement to paid prenatal leave. (Munk, 5/12)

Requests for help to a Colorado fund that pays for abortions and associated travel expenses have climbed to an estimated $2.5 million this year, up from $212,000 before the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the constitutional right to abortion. (Brown and Ingold, 5/10)

A New Jersey mom had just given birth when she received a life-changing cancer diagnosis 鈥 and her biggest fear was she wouldn鈥檛 be able to have more children. When Kelly Spill first started experiencing bleeding, her doctors chalked it up to pregnancy and childbirth, especially given her young age of 28. But then came the weight loss, fatigue and loss of appetite. "I knew deep down that it was cancer," she told Fox News Digital. (Rudy, 5/12)

Texas' highest court on Friday limited women's ability to obtain monetary damages from medical providers whose alleged negligence led them to have unwanted pregnancies, ruling that state law does not treat the birth of a healthy child as an injury for which a parent must be compensated. The Texas Supreme Court ruled, opens new tab that a mother in El Paso who alleged her doctor negligently failed to perform a sterilization procedure known as a tubal ligation was not entitled to recover any damages from him. (Raymond, 5/10)

The City Council of Clarendon, a rural Panhandle town, rejected a proposed ordinance seeking to prohibit traveling through city limits to get an abortion in another state. Their 3-0 decision on Thursday makes Clarendon one of the first cities in Texas to reject an abortion travel ban as more conservative cities are approving similar measures. (Carver, 5/10)

Two bills aimed at expanding fertility access for those on Medicaid, LGBTQ+ families and would-be single parents stalled during a legislative session with little room in its budget for new expenses. (LeMaster, 5/10)

Also 鈥

A former owner of a Massachusetts compounding pharmacy whose mold-tainted drugs sparked a deadly U.S. fungal meningitis outbreak in 2012 was sentenced on Friday to at least 10 years in prison for his role in the deaths of 11 Michigan residents. (Raymond, 5/10)

A 2023 outbreak of Shiga toxin鈥損roducing Escherichia coli聽O157:H7聽in Utah that sickened at least 13 children was traced to contaminated irrigation water the children used for drinking and playing, according to a聽report from scientists from Utah and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The account, published yesterday in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, points to the need to educate residents of communities that have untreated, pressurized municipal irrigation water (UPMIW) about the risks. (Van Beusekom, 5/10)

Paramedic Leonard Brown knew the patient 鈥 a pale, Berks County man who could barely speak after days of internal bleeding 鈥 needed a blood transfusion fast. But Brown did not have blood on his ambulance. On that day in April, the TowerDIRECT paramedic had to wait for dispatchers to send to the scene a critical care transport, a specialty truck staffed with a nurse and equipped with blood units. (Gutman, 5/13)

A decade after Alaska voters legalized recreational marijuana, the Alaska Legislature is advancing the first major change to the law that opened commercial sales here. On Friday, the Alaska House of Representatives voted to change the state鈥檚 $50 per ounce marijuana tax to a 7% sales tax. (Brooks and Beacon, 5/12)

麻豆女优 Health News: San Francisco Tries Tough Love By Tying Welfare To Drug Rehab

Raymond Llano carries a plastic bag with everything he owns in one hand, a cup of coffee in the other, and the flattened cardboard box he uses as a bed under his arm as he waits in line for lunch at Glide Memorial Church in San Francisco. At 55, he hasn鈥檛 had a home for 15 years, since he lost a job at Target. Llano once tried to get on public assistance but couldn鈥檛 鈥 something, he said, looking perplexed, about owing the state money 鈥 and he鈥檇 like to apply again. (Cohen, 5/13)

麻豆女优 Health News: First Responders, Veterans Hail Benefits Of Psychedelic Drugs As California Debates Legalization

Wade Trammell recalls the time he and his fellow firefighters responded to a highway crash in which a beer truck rammed into a pole, propelling the truck鈥檚 engine through the cab and into the driver鈥檚 abdomen. 鈥淭he guy was up there screaming and squirming. Then the cab caught on fire,鈥 Trammell says. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 move him. He burned to death right there in my arms.鈥 (Wolfson, 5/13)

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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