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Morning Briefing

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Friday, Apr 29 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Calif. Nurses' Union Reaches Tentative Deal With Stanford Hospitals; Tribe Sues Feds For Closing S.D. Reservation's Only E.R.

News outlets report on health issues in California, South Dakota, Nebraska, North Carolina, New Jersey, Illinois, Ohio and Washington.

The union that represents thousands of nurses from Stanford Health Care and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford said Thursday it has reached a tentative three-year agreement on benefits and wages that will make its members the highest paid nurses in the Bay Area. (Seipel, 4/28)

A Native American tribe in South Dakota sued the federal government Thursday over the nearly five-month closure of the only emergency room on its reservation. The federal lawsuit filed Thursday by the Rosebud Sioux Tribe asks that federal officials be forced to re-open the emergency room at the hospital administered by the Indian Health Service. The agency shuttered the ER in early December, two weeks after federal inspectors uncovered serious failures that they said put patients' lives at risk. (4/28)

The White House has chosen Sacramento and six other cities as pilot sites for its new Health Career Pathways program, a federal initiative that aims to increase the number of Americans working in sustainable, well-paying health care jobs. (Caiola, 4/27)

Two years ago, the president of Credit Management Services, a collection agency in Grand Island, Nebraska, presented a struggling local family with the keys to a used 2007 Mercury Grand Marquis. To commemorate the donation, the company held a ceremony that concluded outside its offices, where the couple and their two young girls could try out their new car. (Kiel, 4/29)

The good news is that half of North Carolina鈥檚 hospitals are making the grade when it comes to patient safety. The bad news is that half are not. Those are the findings of the most recent hospital safety scores produced by the Leapfrog Group, an organization founded by employers and health care purchasers that has been pushing hospitals to become safer for 15 years. (Hoban, 4/28)

A New Jersey doctor accused of giving unnecessary steroid injections and creating fake patient records has been stripped of his license. (4/28)

Gaileen Roberts' daughter Jody has cerebral palsy, is quadriplegic and developmentally delayed. But she can live at home because her mother earns a taxpayer-subsidized $13 an hour as her caregiver. (O'Connor, 4/28)

After years of speculation in Berkeley, the future closure of Alta Bates Hospital appears to be certain. Sutter Health, owner of Alta Bates, said it will close the inpatient hospital and its emergency department sometime in advance of 2030, when state seismic standards kick in. Those standards require that all inpatient hospitals are built both to withstand a major quake and to remain fully operational after the event. (Aliferis, 4/28)

Nobody likes to see an unhappy baby, especially one that鈥檚 irritable, crying and spitting up milk. But should a doctor try to treat that unhappiness with medication? But should a doctor try to treat that unhappiness with medication? (Kurtzman, 4/28)

Work to empty a Hanford tank with an interior leak has been stopped after several workers reported suspicious odors that may have been from chemical vapors on Thursday. (Cary, 4/29)

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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