Government Funding Stopgap Plan Puts Some Health Care Measures On Pause
Although Congress has worked to reach a tentative government funding deal that would direct money to key health programs into March, Modern Healthcare says funding for some critical health issues are left in an uncertain state.
Congressional leaders have made another tentative deal to keep the government open and fund key health programs into March, but hospitals and other healthcare industries continue to await action on vital matters. Congress will act this week to advance a third stopgap appropriations bill, which would prevent a partial government shutdown from commencing Friday and fund operations until March 8. The legislation offers only short-term relief for a healthcare sector that needs Congress to approve funding for the rest of fiscal 2024. (McAuliff, 1/16)
The Senate on Tuesday took the first step in advancing a stopgap spending bill to avoid a partial government shutdown at the end of the week, buying time to enact a broader bipartisan funding agreement for the remainder of the year. By a 68-to-13 vote, senators voted to take up the legislation, which would temporarily extend funding for some federal agencies until March 1 and for others through March 8. It would keep spending levels flat while lawmakers and aides hammer out the details of a $1.66 trillion deal reached between Speaker Mike Johnson, the Louisiana Republican, and Democrats. (Edmondson, 1/16)
The oldest member of the Senate is hospitalized 鈥
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) has been admitted to a local Washington hospital to treat an infection, his office announced Tuesday.聽鈥淪enator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) is receiving antibiotic infusions at an area hospital to treat an infection,鈥 Grassley鈥檚 office聽said in a statement. 鈥淗e is in good spirits and will return to work as soon as possible following doctors鈥 orders.鈥 Grassley, 90, is the chamber鈥檚 oldest member. He earned that distinction after Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) passed away in September after health troubles that consumed her final years in office. (Weaver, 1/16)
In related news about elderly care in America 鈥
The chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging is launching a review of safety lapses in the assisted-living industry, saying an investigation by The Washington Post into the deaths of dementia-care residents who have wandered from facilities had revealed 鈥渉orrific鈥 neglect and a 鈥渧iolation of trust.鈥 In response to The Post鈥檚 finding that nearly 100 seniors have died over the past five years after leaving facilities unnoticed or being left unattended outside, Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) sent letters Tuesday to the nation鈥檚 three largest assisted-living chain owners seeking information about their practices. The Post鈥檚 report is the first nationwide accounting of such deaths. (Rowland, 1/16)
麻豆女优 Health News:
America鈥檚 Health System Isn鈥檛 Ready For The Surge Of Seniors With Disabilities聽
The number of older adults with disabilities 鈥 difficulty with walking, seeing, hearing, memory, cognition, or performing daily tasks such as bathing or using the bathroom 鈥 will soar in the decades ahead, as baby boomers enter their 70s, 80s, and 90s. But the health care system isn鈥檛 ready to address their needs. (Graham, 1/17)
For lessons on how to age well, we could do worse than turn to Richard Morgan. At 93, the Irishman is a four-time world champion in indoor rowing, with the aerobic engine of a healthy 30- or 40-year-old and the body-fat percentage of a whippet. He鈥檚 also the subject of a new case study, published last month in the Journal of Applied Physiology, that looked at his training, diet and physiology. (Reynolds, 1/16)