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Thursday, Mar 30 2017

Full Issue

Minn. Lawmakers, Unwilling To Wait For Federal Action, Tackle Soaring Health Costs In State

It's uncertain whether Gov. Mark Dayton will sign the reinsurance legislation, though, if it's sent to him. More news from state legislatures comes out of Colorado, Texas, Maryland and California.

Saying they cannot afford to wait for a congressional rewrite of the nation's health laws, House and Senate negotiators announced a deal on a bill that aims to rein in soaring health insurance costs in Minnesota. The proposal would prop up the individual insurance market by creating a reinsurance program to help insurers cover expensive medical claims. (Bakst, 3/29)

Minnesota lawmakers have adopted a plan to try to stabilize the state鈥檚 individual health insurance market 鈥 but it鈥檚 uncertain whether Gov. Mark Dayton will sign it. The measure, called 鈥渞einsurance,鈥 would spend $542 million in state money over two years to try to lower premiums in the individual market. That covers roughly 4 percent of Minnesotans who have neither employer-sponsored insurance nor a government health plan such as Medicare or Medical Assistance. If implemented, the $271 million per year would pay for some high-cost claims borne by the state鈥檚 HMOs. (Montgomery, 3/29)

A handful of rural Colorado hospitals are facing the risk of closure from the spending cuts embedded in聽the $26.8 billion state budget bill聽that won聽preliminary approval Wednesday in the state Senate. The budget package cuts more than $500 million in payments to the state鈥檚 hospitals for uncompensated care in part of an effort to balance a spending bill in a year mired by fiscal constraints and increasing demands. (Frank, 3/29)

Just one day after the Texas Senate passed its two-year budget, a key House committee聽sent their own spending proposal to the full House 鈥 but not before cutting聽$2.4 billion from聽the state鈥檚 largest health care program for the poor and disabled. Emboldened by the election of President Donald Trump, Texas House budget writers voted to cut $1 billion in state funding for Medicaid, the federal-state insurance program that mostly serves children, pregnant women and people with disabilities. (Walters, 3/29)

A longstanding fight over the use of telemedicine in Texas appeared to end Wednesday, as the Texas Senate unanimously approved legislation to legalize online doctoring on a wide scale for the first time. Sen. Charles Schwertner, the Senate's health and human services chairman who authored the measure, said Senate Bill 1107 will allow doctors to see patients electronically in what will benefit patients, especially in rural areas. (Ward, 3/29)

A measure to create a commission to monitor federal actions that could affect health care in Maryland has cleared the General Assembly. The Senate voted 32-14 on Wednesday for the bill, sending it to Gov. Larry Hogan. (3/29)

A bill before the Senate Health Committee today attempts to crack down on the more than 550 chronic dialysis clinics in California. The centers serve roughly 63,000 patients with end-stage kidney failure, according to the state. Patients sit at stations for hours as machines clean and filter the blood back into the body, taking on the role of a healthy kidney. (Luna, 3/29)

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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