Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Ryan Vows To Have Health Care Platform Ready For Republican Nominee
Ryan promised it would be a specific policy outline, despite the caucus鈥檚 inability to forge consensus for years on complicated issues, such as alternatives to the Affordable Care Act. 鈥淏elieve you me, the people of this country will know who we are and what we stand for when this is done, and they will be given a choice in 2016,鈥 Ryan said. (Kane, 1/15)
It was unclear, for instance, whether Republicans will actually present a plan to replace the current health care law that has been their central policy punching bag since they took over the House. Republican leaders in the House and Senate demurred on whether they would write and vote on a bill this year. But members were concerned by a presentation of polling data, some Republicans said, that found that while the health care law remained unpopular with many people, Democrats had a double-digit lead over their party on the issue of health care. (Steinhauer and Herszenhorn, 1/15)
The chairman of a U.S. House committee that oversees child abuse issues opened an inquiry Friday into whether the federal government is failing to enforce a law meant to protect thousands of babies born dependent on drugs each year. The inquiry, launched by Representative John Kline of Minnesota, comes in response to a Reuters investigation last month that identified 110 examples of children who were exposed to opioids while in the womb and later died preventable deaths after leaving the hospital. No more than nine states comply with a 2003 law that calls on hospitals to alert social workers whenever a baby is born dependent on drugs, the news agency found. (Schiffman and Wilson, 1/16)