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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Apr 14 2016

Full Issue

Report: KidsCare Expansion Would Deliver $75M In Economic Benefits To Arizona Next Year

Lawmakers in the state are at an impasse over the legislation, which would extend health coverage to 30,000 or more kids. News outlets also report on developments out of legislatures in Kansas, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

If Arizona lawmakers decide to restore the KidsCare program during state-budget negotiations, it would deliver $75 million in economic benefits to Arizona next year as well as extend health coverage to 30,000 or more kids, a new report concludes. (Alltucker, 4/13)

Telemedicine experts speaking at a national health journalism conference were split on the usefulness of Kansas legislation aimed at expanding health care access in underserved parts of Kansans through videoconferencing technology. (Marso, 4/13)

The top-ranking Democrats on the House and Senate insurance committees want the state to conduct its own investigation into the proposed mergers involving four of the nation鈥檚 five largest health insurance companies. (Siegel, 4/14)

An Ohio House committee recommended passage of two bills Wednesday that would require abortion providers to bury, cremate or incinerate fetal remains. The moves raised concerns about the privacy of women who undergo the procedure and arguments that the legislation creates additional obstacles for those obtaining an abortion. (Candisky, 4/14)

Gov. Tom Wolf says he'll sign medical marijuana legislation and make Pennsylvania the 24th state to legalize a comprehensive medical marijuana program. Wolf said he'll sign the bill Sunday. (4/13)

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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