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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Mar 31 2025

Full Issue

Colorado Triumphs In Drug Affordability Case

In the case filed by Amgen last year, U.S. District Court Judge Nina Wang ruled that a Colorado state board can proceed with plans to limit the costs for medications. This is the first court decision allowing a state control over prescription drug costs, Stat reported. Other states making news include Minnesota, Montana, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Missouri.

In a blow to the pharmaceutical industry, a U.S. court judge ruled that a Colorado state board can proceed with plans to place limits on the prices paid for medicines, the first such decision to support the controversial attempts by some states to control their prescription drug spending. (Silverman, 3/28)

A federal judge has tossed out a lawsuit against Wells Fargo from a group of former employees arguing that the bank violated its fiduciary obligations by agreeing to pay steep prices for prescription drugs. It鈥檚 a victory for employers concerned they could be the next company accused of mismanaging health benefits. The litigation against Wells Fargo is the second lawsuit accusing a large, self-funded employer of failing to bring down drug costs for their workers and acting as a poor steward of their healthcare dollars in violation of ERISA. (Pifer, 3/26)

麻豆女优 Health News: Montana鈥檚 Small Pharmacies Behind Bill To Corral Pharmacy Benefit Managers

Montana鈥檚 small, independent pharmacies say they鈥檙e getting increasingly squeezed on reimbursements by pharmacy benefit managers 鈥 and are pushing an ambitious bill to rein in what they say are unfair practices by the powerful industry negotiators known as PBMs. 鈥淲ho in their right mind would subject themselves to this sort of treatment in a business relationship?鈥 said Mike Matovich, a part owner of eight small-town pharmacies in Montana. 鈥淚t鈥檚 such a monopoly. We can be the best pharmacy in the world, and they can still put us out of business.鈥 (Dennison, 3/31)

More health news from across the U.S. 鈥

As Florida officials enable Trump鈥檚 mass deportation policies, lawmakers in the state are looking to children to take on some of the jobs聽that have typically been done by immigrants. Making its way through the state Senate is a new law, Senate Bill 918, that aims to loosen child labor laws and allow teenagers to work overnight shifts. S.B. 918 also 鈥渋ncludes a number of changes including eliminating working time restrictions on teenagers aged 14 and 15 if they are home-schooled and ending guaranteed meal breaks for 16 and 17 year olds,鈥 CNN reported. (Jones, 3/27)

A bill that would ban the manufacture and drastically restrict the sale of certain semiautomatic firearms that can accept detachable ammunition magazines in Colorado is now headed to Gov. Jared Polis鈥 desk after it cleared its final legislative hurdle Friday. (Paul, 3/28)

Between 74% and 95% of incarcerated women have survived domestic abuse or sexual violence, according to the Georgia Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Many were tried without fair opportunities to prove the scope of the abuse and how it led them to act in self-defense, while others were coerced into crimes, according to advocates, who add that certain laws disproportionately criminalize abused women. At other times, they say, people simply don鈥檛 believe women鈥檚 stories, with women of color like Favors who survive abuse especially likely to end up in prison. But under the Georgia Survivor Justice Act, which passed the state House overwhelmingly with bipartisan support and still awaits Senate consideration ahead of the session鈥檚 end this week, abuse survivors could secure early release from prison. (Kramon, 3/30)

For years, North Carolina鈥檚 Republican-majority Legislature has taken steps big and small to wrench power from Democratic governors and the agencies under their control. One move that didn鈥檛 get much attention 鈥 tucked into a聽628-page budget bill聽four years ago 鈥 was to direct $15 million in funding for sexual assault victims away from Democratic-led agencies that had long overseen such money. The money instead would be funneled through the North Carolina Human Trafficking Commission, an obscure group that鈥檚 part of the state鈥檚 GOP-helmed courts system. (Clark, 3/30)

More than four months after Missouri voters approved a measure that gave residents the right to an abortion, Planned Parenthood has begun offering the procedure at one of its St. Louis clinics. Clinic officials announced Friday that staff this week have started offering patients procedural abortions, sometimes known as surgical abortions. (Fentem, 3/28)

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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