Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
New York鈥檚 Program For Monitoring People With Serious Mental Illness Has Broken Down Repeatedly
After John Skeene served prison time for beating his mother to death with a chair leg, after he attacked a man with a radiator cover and threatened to murder his therapist, New York State placed him in its gold-standard program for treating mentally ill people at risk of committing violence. The program, which grew out of legislation known as Kendra鈥檚 Law and has been held up as a national model, was supposed to ensure that Mr. Skeene complied with a court-ordered treatment plan despite being homeless and living with schizoaffective disorder. (Julia Harris and Ransom, 12/21)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
Federal officials are raising concerns about New Hampshire and eight other states they say are leading the country in terminating Medicaid coverage for children now that pandemic protections have ended. According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, New Hampshire ended coverage for 19,810 children between March and September, an 18% drop. Only South Dakota and Idaho had bigger decreases, each with a 27% drop, according to CMS. (Timmins, 12/20)
Falls were the leading cause of traumatic injuries last year in Palm Beach County. They can lead to chronic pain and even the loss of independence. Now, the Health Care District of Palm Beach County is promoting a free smartphone application about fall prevention. (Zaragovia, 12/20)
A member of One Brooklyn Health鈥檚 board is suing chair Alexander Rovt, a billionaire businessperson and major political donor in New York, over a recent vote to oust the hospital network鈥檚 chief executive. The yet-to-be-reported petition , which was filed by board member Maurice Reid and former State Assemblymember Annette Robinson, accuses Rovt of breaching his fiduciary duties by making 鈥渞eckless鈥 and false statements maligning One Brooklyn Health CEO LaRay Brown in an interview with POLITICO in September and 鈥渓avishing expensive perks鈥 on fellow board members. (Kaufman, 12/20)
A Culver City-based developer that specializes in bringing capital to low-income communities has been selected to renovate the landmark General Hospital building in Boyle Heights and develop its 25-acre grounds as a community and wellness center. 鈥淩evitalizing the historic General Hospital building and developing the surrounding land represents an opportunity to create a significant number of housing units,鈥 said Supervisor Hilda Solis, who spearheaded the project. (Smith, 12/20)
United Memorial Medical Center,聽a Houston hospital that entered the national spotlight during the pandemic, has been ordered to pay more than $2 million after allegedly overbilling the government for COVID-19 tests and patient care, the U.S. Attorney's Office announced Wednesday.聽 Positioned in a low-income and medically vulnerable part of the city,聽UMMC provided rare media access in the heat of the public health crisis, making the relatively small, unknown hospital a nationwide symbol of tireless frontline health care workers and reaping millions from the City of Houston.聽(Gill, 12/20)
Nearly half of the Legislature signed onto a letter to Attorney General Andrea Campbell this week, imploring the state to join Worcester firefighters diagnosed with cancer in their lawsuit against companies that make firefighting gear alleged to include toxic PFAS chemicals. 鈥淥ur firefighters place themselves in harm鈥檚 way to protect the Commonwealth鈥檚 residents and property. In doing so, they utilize gear, procured by the government, with the expectation that the gear will help protect them from harm." (Young, 12/20)
The walls inside Bridge Healing Center in St. Cloud are painted soothing hues of blue and green, a deliberate effort to help visitors feel relaxed and welcome.聽The hallways are lined with colorful paintings by a local artist featuring people in East African dress, with encouraging phrases in both English and Somali. (Marohn, 12/21)
A federal judge heard diverging arguments Wednesday about the humaneness and risks of execution by nitrogen gas as he weighs whether to let Alabama attempt the nation鈥檚 first use of the method. Attorneys for Kenneth Eugene Smith are asking a judge to block his Jan. 25 execution by nitrogen hypoxia. They argued that the method violates the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment and said the mask, which is fitted seal over his nose and mouth, would interfere with his ability to pray with his spiritual adviser. (Chandler, 12/21)
Tuerk House, a nonprofit substance use disorder treatment health system, announced this week that it is developing a second residential treatment facility in Baltimore that will care for pregnant people and teenagers struggling with addiction and provide another crisis stabilization center. (Roberts, 12/21)
When Idaho had a rare measles outbreak a few months ago, health officials scrambled to keep it from spreading. In the end, 10 people, all in one family, were infected, all unvaccinated. This time, the state was lucky, said the region鈥檚 medical director Dr. Perry Jansen. The family quickly quarantined and the children were already taught at home. The outbreak could have been worse if the kids were in public school, given the state鈥檚 low vaccination rates, he said. (Shastri, 12/20)