Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Connecticut Gov. Faces Pushback Over Medicaid 'Managed Care' Possibility
Gov. Ned Lamont is exploring the possibility of returning the state鈥檚 Medicaid program to a model known as managed care, which has garnered a reputation among some Connecticut legislators and advocates for increasing costs and reducing access. (Golvala, 7/25)
Gay and transgender 鈥減anic鈥 defenses are no longer viable in Michigan courtrooms under legislation signed Tuesday by Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.聽Michigan is the 20th state to outlaw such defenses, which allow individuals accused of violent crimes to receive lesser sentences by arguing that the victim鈥檚 sexual orientation or gender identity caused them to panic. While gay and trans 鈥減anic鈥 defenses 鈥 referred to collectively as the LGBTQ 鈥減anic鈥 defense 鈥 are not freestanding defenses, they are used聽in conjunction with other legal strategies to reduce the severity of charges or sentencing.聽(Migdon, 7/24)
麻豆女优 Health News: California Speeds Up Indoor Heat Protections Amid Sweltering Summer Weather
Californians working indoors are getting immediate protections from extreme heat as much of the state bakes in triple-digit temperatures this week. California has had heat standards on the books for outdoor workers since 2005, but the state announced Wednesday that a set of rules for indoor workers had been finalized following an expedited review. The state鈥檚 Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board approved the regulation last month, but it needed to be vetted for legal compliance. (Young, 7/24)
Maryland's health department rolled out a new tool that can paint a clear image of the opioid crisis. The interactive dashboard allows people to zoom in and see where fatal doses are located and who is impacted the most by the ongoing opioid crisis. The dashboard is a new iteration of the state's previous site. It will be updated monthly rather than every 90 days to track the crisis that is plaguing the state. Right now, Maryland is looking at nearly 2,100 overdose deaths in the past year, with fentanyl as the leading cause. (Davila, 7/24)
Over the course of about a year, a 43-year-old Middle River man called police 62 times, often 鈥渞ambling鈥 or 鈥渟peaking in nonsensical speech鈥 about such things as the military infiltrating his home or his neighbors operating a sex trafficking ring involving the Baltimore Ravens. Police described his 911 calls in court documents charging him with making false statements to officers. He was eventually convicted of two such counts and sentenced to two years of supervised probation, with the condition that he undergo mental health treatment. (Mann, 7/25)
The Alzheimer鈥檚 Association of Wyoming recently received a more than $15,000 grant from the Wyoming Community Foundation to bring in-person education programs to the southwest and northeast corners of the state. The grant will support programming in Lincoln, Sublette, Sweetwater, Uinta, Crook, Niobrara and Weston counties. (Habermann, 7/23)
Chelsea residents who received a no-strings-attached cash benefit early in the pandemic saw vastly better health outcomes than those who didn鈥檛, a new study found. Researchers said the Chelsea Eats guaranteed income program reduced emergency visits among participants by 27 percent, simply by doling out $400 each month to families between November 2020 and August 2021. (Kohli, 7/24)