Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Responses And Reviews: Action Needed On The Kansas Medicaid Expansion, Kentucky Mental Health Law
More than 140,000 Kansans are tantalizingly close to qualifying for Medicaid, the federal-state program providing health insurance coverage for poor and low-income Americans. Now, all that stands between those Kansans and health care is Gov. Sam Brownback. (3/28)
Gov. Sam Brownback signed a bill into law in 2014 that required an act of the Legislature to expand Medicaid in Kansas. Well, both the Kansas House and Senate have now acted 鈥 approving an expansion bill with large bipartisan majorities. Brownback should respect the will of the Legislature 鈥 and the overwhelming public support for Medicaid expansion 鈥 and allow the bill to become law, either with his signature or without. (3/28)
Lawmakers should override Gov. Matt Bevin鈥檚 veto of a bill allowing judges to order outpatient treatment for mental illness. This humane option is available in almost every state and has long been sought by advocates for the mentally ill in Kentucky, including Kelly Gunning, whose adult son has bounced between psychiatric hospitals and jails. Despite her futile efforts to get him help 鈥 鈥渨e know when he is spiraling down鈥 鈥 he is in jail now. Under the delusion that his parents were conspiring against him, he violently assaulted them last year, using a rock as a weapon. (3/28)
For five years, advocates of people with severe mental illness have fought for legislation in Kentucky designed to break the revolving cycle of hospitals, jails and homelessness. This session, their effort paid off 鈥 almost. Stunningly, Gov. Matt Bevin vetoed the legislation over concerns that it encroaches on individual civil liberties. (3/28)
Governor Matt Bevin announced his veto of Tim鈥檚 Law, a commonsense bill passed nearly unanimously by the legislature to provide needed care for the most severely mentally ill. Unfortunately, the veto evidences both a misunderstanding of both the nature of the bill and the public health crisis it would address. (John Snook, 3/28)
Here is what it took for common sense about prescription drug addiction to gain traction in Jefferson City: more than five years of legislative wrangling, embarrassing national press painting Missouri as backwards and federal maneuvers allowing counties to act because state lawmakers would not. (3/28)