Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Nearly 300 Gun Seekers Blocked Since Michigan Passed Red Flag Law
Nearly 300 people in Michigan were barred from possessing guns in 2024 under a new law that empowers courts to intervene if there鈥檚 evidence they could harm themselves or others, according to a report released Wednesday. Michigan joined at least 20 states in passing a so-called red flag law, which allows police, health professionals, family members or roommates to ask local judges to ban someone from possessing guns for a year. (White, 2/12)
A bipartisan coalition of mayors, lawmakers and law enforcement in Alabama endorsed a public safety package on Thursday that would ban the devices that convert semi-automatic weapons into machine guns 鈥 a rare consensus on gun restrictions and a departure from years of conflict about how to stem gun violence. Conversion devices that speed the firing of semi-automatic weapons are already banned under federal law, but there鈥檚 currently no state law prohibiting possession. (Riddle, 2/12)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Macon State Prison has become one of the bloodiest correctional facilities in Georgia, and no one knows that better than the men and woman who work for Macon County EMS. As the violence at the prison just south of Oglethorpe has intensified, so, too, have the calls for ambulance service. And because of those calls, the county now finds itself dealing with an unexpected and costly burden: more than $100,000 in unpaid bills. (Robbins and Teegardin, 2/13)
Lawyers for 25,000 people incarcerated in Arizona have asked a judge to take over health care operations in state-run prisons and appoint an official to run them, saying the state is not capable of fixing deep failures in care even though it has been required to do so over the last decade. In a filing Tuesday, the attorneys said a takeover is urgently needed because the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry lacks the leadership to comply with changes ordered by a judge in a 2012 lawsuit over the quality of medical and mental health care for prisoners. (Billeaud, 2/12)
Colorado鈥檚 spending on highly effective but costly weight-loss drugs for state workers more than quadrupled from 2023 to 2024 鈥 and costs have been doubling every six months. Now, the state wants to scrap the benefit, arguing that it鈥檚 financially unsustainable. (Hooper, 2/12)
Pharmacies in Minnesota are closing their doors because of lower reimbursement rates for prescription drugs and dwindling profit margins 鈥 especially for pharmacies with a large customer base on public insurance.聽This lack of access creates problems, but some small towns are finding possible solutions by working together to get medications delivered right to their doorstep. (Yang, 2/13)
麻豆女优 Health News: Montana Looks To Regulate Prior Authorization As Patients, Providers Decry Obstacles To Care
When Lou and Lindsay Volpe鈥檚 son was diagnosed with a chronic bowel disease at age 11, their health insurer required constant preapproval of drugs and treatments 鈥 a process the Volpes say often delayed critical care for their son. 鈥淵ou subscribe to your insurance policy, you pay into that for years and years and years with the hope that, if you need this service, it will be there for you,鈥 Lou Volpe said. 鈥淎nd finally, when you knock on the door and say, 鈥楬ey guys, we need some help,鈥 they just start backpedaling.鈥 (Dennison, 2/13)
麻豆女优 Health News: Top California Democrats Clash Over How To Rein In Drug Industry Middlemen
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and state legislators in Sacramento seem to agree: Prescription drug prices are too high. But lawmakers and the second-term governor are at odds over what to do about it, and a recent proposal could trigger one of the biggest health care battles in Sacramento this year. A California bill awaiting its first hearing would subject drug industry intermediaries known as pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, to licensing by the state Department of Insurance. And it would require them to pass along 100% of the rebates they get from drug companies to the health plans and insurers that hire them to oversee prescription drug benefits. (Mai-Duc, 2/13)