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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Nov 5 2014

Full Issue

How America Voted On Health Issues

In California, voters defeated measures to raise medical malpractice caps and regulate health insurance rates. "Personhood" amendments in South Dakota and Colorado are defeated, Ariz. approved a "right to try" proposal, and Massachusetts approves mandated paid sick time.

Voters didn't just pick who they're sending to Congress and their state legislatures Tuesday 鈥 they also spoke up on a staggering range of fiercely debated issues, from abortion and legal pot to gun rights and hiking the minimum wage. (Arkin, 11/5)

Voters on Tuesday soundly defeated a proposal to lift a decades-old cap on courtroom damages for medical negligence, after a multimillion-dollar political duel pitting trial lawyers against doctors and insurers. The defeat of Proposition 46 came after a cascade of negative advertising financed by insurance and physician groups. They warned the change would send medical costs soaring and drive doctors from the state. (Blood, 11/5)

Californians Tuesday overwhelmingly voted down Proposition 46, an initiative that would have raised a cap on medical malpractice awards and required routine drug and alcohol testing for hospital doctors. (Lazo, 11/5)

Proposition 45, a ballot measure that would have allowed regulation of some health insurance premiums, has failed, AP reports. The measure was targeted by a $57-million opposition campaign. The initiative would have given California's elected insurance commissioner the power to review proposed health insurance rates for the individual and small-employer markets. Premium hikes, if deemed excessive after an actuarial analysis, could have been denied under the measure. (Lifsher, 11/4)

Voters rejected Prop. 45, a measure that would have given the state insurance commissioner the power to approve or reject health insurance rate changes. ... Voters also rejected Prop. 46, one of the most controversial initiatives on the ballot. It sought to require drug testing for doctors and increased payouts in medical malpractice lawsuits. (Gutierrez and Garofoli, 11/5)

On the heels of an advertising blitz funded by health insurance companies, California voters on Tuesday tanked a proposal to give the state's insurance commissioner veto authority over health insurance premiums. About 60 percent of voters cast ballots against the plan to give the elected commissioner expanded authority over small group and individual health plans. (Taxin, 11/4)

The anti-abortion personhood movement failed key tests Tuesday in North Dakota and Colorado, with voters rejecting amendments to grant the unborn constitutional rights. In North Dakota 鈥 a strongly anti-abortion state considered the personhood movement鈥檚 best chance of victory 鈥 the proposed ballot measure would have amended the state constitution to say the 鈥渋nalienable right to life of every human being at any stage of development must be recognized and protected.鈥 The Associated Press reported that with 91 percent of precincts reporting, it was losing by about a 2 to 1 margin. (Pradhan and Haberkorn, 11/5)

Arizona voters easily approved Proposition 303, a measure to allow terminally ill patients to potentially access experimental drugs not fully vetted by federal regulators. Voters also approved Proposition 480, a $935 million bond measure to renovate and expand Maricopa County's public-health-care system. (Hansen, 11/4)

Voters have approved a ballot question that supporters say will give Massachusetts the nation鈥檚 strongest requirement for providing paid sick time to workers, according to the Associated Press. (11/5)

The Berkeley measure levies a penny per ounce for sugar-sweetened beverages sold in the city, including soda, sports and energy drinks, juice with added sugar and syrups that go into sugary drinks at cafes, like Starbucks' Frappucinos, the measure's backers say. Diet sodas and alcohol won't be taxed under the law. About 75% of Berkeley voters backed Measure D. The measure was backed by public health advocates and the city's elected leaders, who said the tax would reduce consumption of sugary drinks and raise awareness of the link between sugary drinks, diabetes and other diseases. The measure's backers say a national soda tax in Mexico has caused people there to consume fewer sugary drinks. (Lin, 11/5)

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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