State Highlights: Bill Allowing Family Members To Visit Ill Relatives Makes Strides In States; New N.J. Medical School Aims To Reverse Talent Drain
Media outlets report on news from New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland, D.C., Texas, California, Florida, Colorado, Ohio, Nebraska, Arizona, Wyoming and Missouri.
Experiences like [Toby] Davidow鈥檚 have prompted at least 11 states to enact laws that would provide a legal remedy, besides seeking guardianship, which can be costly and complicated, for relatives who have been prevented from seeing infirm or disabled family members. Under the laws, relatives can seek a court order permitting visitation and communication. The order must be granted, unless the ailing relative is found to be mentally competent and objects to contact. (Ollove, 3/26)
Years in the making, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine at Seton Hall University is finally ready for students. The school, located at the former Hoffmann-La Roche campus in Nutley, N.J., is a joint venture of Seton Hall University and Hackensack Meridian Health. The college began accepting applications this week for its first class of 55 students, who will begin studies this July. (West, 3/24)
Texas is asking for federal family planning funding to be returned to the state聽five years after it was pulled by the Obama administration for defunding Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers.聽In a聽letter to Health and Human Services聽(HHS)聽Secretary Alex Azar, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton asked HHS to reverse the Obama administration's exclusion of Texas from the Title X family planning grant program, which聽helps fund reproductive health care聽services for low-income women. (Hellmann, 3/23)
California Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon is refusing to advance this year a controversial single-payer health care bill that would dramatically reshape the state's health care financing and delivery system. Instead, he's orchestrating an alternative, narrower approach that seeks to achieve universal coverage and make Obamacare more affordable. (Hart and Luna, 3/26)
When it comes to health system governing boards, for the most part, experts agree: Less is more. It's an important message for the hospital industry, which has been slow to shed its bureaucratic layers. Industry gurus praised St. Joseph Health's recent move to strip key decision making authority from four California hospital boards and shift that control to a regional board, saying it aligns with a governance style that keeps health systems nimble and efficient, even as they add new hospitals. (Bannow, 3/24)
A bill called the "Women鈥檚 Cancer Prevention Act" would have required children entering Florida public schools to receive the vaccine that protects against cervical and other cancers caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) infections. While it didn鈥檛 get much traction in the Capitol this time around, the bill is likely to pop up again next year as other states begin to pass and consider similar legislation. (Griffin, 3/26)
But people who can鈥檛 afford the ride, who don鈥檛 use a smartphone or who require specially equipped vehicles are often left out 鈥 even though they form the group most in need of transportation help. Advocates for those with disabilities argue that the disparity violates the law. Uber has been sued at least twice nationwide over accessibility. ...There are other medical transportation services in Colorado 鈥 the Regional Transportation District offers one, and there are others available to people who qualify for Medicaid 鈥 but those services need to be scheduled well in advance and aren鈥檛 as conveniently on-demand. In lieu of better options, patients sometimes call for expensive ambulance rides, even if it鈥檚 not an emergency. (Ingold, 3/23)
Cleveland officials will begin聽posting warning signs on homes with lingering lead hazards and where children have been poisoned. The signs, known as home placards, are mandated聽by Ohio law and will begin April 2. (Madden, 3/26)
So far, nine states have exempted menstrual products from their sales tax, and seven have introduced legislation aimed at doing the same. Three of the seven 鈥 Nebraska, Virginia and Arizona 鈥 introduced their legislation this year. (Sagner, 3/25)
In an effort to curb the rising costs of K-12 education, the state legislature聽voted to cap spending聽on special education during the 2018 Budget Session. Lawmakers also directed the Wyoming Department of Education to come up with efficiencies. While educators agree there鈥檚 room for improvements, they say Wyoming鈥檚 rural nature complicates things. (Watson, 3/23)
St. Louis public safety officials want city residents to know people jailed at the St. Louis Medium Security Institution are treated humanely despite allegations to the contrary. In March, the mayor鈥檚 spokesman invited reporters to tour the jail 鈥 commonly known as the Workhouse 鈥 after weeks of requests for access from local press. (Lisenby, 3/26)
State public health officials have linked synthetic marijuana to four cases of severe bleeding that have been reported this month in northeast Illinois. The first case was reported to the Illinois Poison Center on March 10, according to a statement released Friday by the Illinois Department of Public Health. In total, the 鈥渦nusual cluster of cases鈥 has left four people hospitalized.聽Each person has suffered severe bleeding from a condition that reduces the blood鈥檚 ability to clot. (Schuba, 3/24)