Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Slain Minnesota Lawmaker Played Key Role In Safeguarding Health Care
Melissa Hortman, a former Minnesota House speaker who championed the passage of ambitious progressive policies in the state, was assassinated early Saturday in what Gov. Tim Walz called 鈥渁n act of targeted political violence.鈥澛(Panetta, 6/14)
Among Representative Melissa Hortman鈥檚 final votes in the Minnesota legislature was one she agonized over. Lawmakers in the evenly split chamber had been in a bitter standoff over a Republican-backed provision that would make undocumented adults in Minnesota ineligible for the state鈥檚 health care program for low-income residents. The fight, which could have led to a government shutdown, was resolved after Ms. Hortman, the top Democrat in the House, cast the lone Democratic vote in support of the measure earlier this month, paving the way for passage of the state budget. (Londono, 6/16)
In a statement shared by Minnesota U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, State Sen. John Hoffman鈥檚 wife says he is stable but not 鈥渙ut of the woods鈥 after being shot nine times on Saturday at his home in Champlin. 鈥淛ohn is enduring many surgeries right now and is closer every hour to being out of the woods. He took 9 bullet hits. I took 8 and we are both incredibly lucky to be alive,鈥 Yvette Hoffman said on Sunday. (Richert, 6/15)
More health news from across the U.S. 鈥
As private equity investors and large companies such as Amazon and UnitedHealth Group acquire doctors鈥 offices at a rapid pace, states are considering tougher measures to stem what one senior legislator described as 鈥渞elentless鈥 consolidation in the healthcare sector. Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek (D) enacted a statute on Monday to strengthen the Beaver State鈥檚 longstanding 鈥渃orporate practice of medicine鈥 law. The new law effectively bars private equity firms and other companies from controlling physician offices and mandates that doctors own at least 51% of their practices. (McAuliff, 6/13)
Under mounting pressure from the Trump administration, Children鈥檚 Hospital Los Angeles will shutter its longstanding healthcare program for trans children and young adults this summer, according to emails reviewed by The Times. The Center for Transyouth Health and Development began telling its nearly 3,000 patient families of the closure on Thursday, saying there was 鈥渘o viable alternative鈥 that would allow the safety-net hospital to continue specialized care. (Sharp, 6/12)
There is a room inside the Gender Health Center where the dead kick it with the living. It鈥檚 in the back, on the two-story building鈥檚 first floor, in a high-ceilinged common area that holds harm-reduction offices, racks of donated clothes, a curtained fitting area and cubbies stocked with free makeup, bra inserts, tucking underwear and skin-color swatches. Against a wall facing some well-worn couches is the altar, where about 30 people who have died, including the center鈥檚 founder, are memorialized in pictures, words, paper flowers, flags and unlit candles. (Hosseini, 6/14)
When Officer Chelsea Johnston came across a wanted felon one evening in May, Johnston jerked her cruiser in front of him, sprinted after him and tackled him to the ground. Still catching her breath, Johnston motioned for someone to step out of the cruiser: Joy Bogese. 鈥淭hank God,鈥 the man said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 you.鈥 (Wernau, 6/15)
Katie Pappas had kept a secret for weeks from her students at northwest suburban Timber Trails Elementary. The 40-year-old health teacher鈥檚 kidney was failing, and she spent around eight to 11 hours every night tethered to a dialysis machine. (Johnson, 6/14)