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Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Oct 3 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Calif.'s Biggest Industry Is Now Medical Care; Urgent Care Biz Takes Hold In Twin Cities

Outlets report on health news from California, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Kansas, North Carolina, Virginia, Missouri, Iowa and Michigan.

A new UCLA Center for Health Policy Research study reveals that we Californians are directly or indirectly spending a mind-numbing $367.5 billion a year on our physical well-being, equal to 15 percent of the state鈥檚 $2.5 trillion economy. That makes it, by a huge margin, our largest industry, dwarfing such high-profile California mainstays as movies, agriculture, aerospace and tourism. The $50 billion film industry, for instance, is scarcely one-seventh the size. (Walters, 10/1)

Urgent care clinics are proliferating across the Twin Cities as patients footing a bigger share of their medical bills hunt for convenience. Up to 19 new urgent care centers will be rolled out across Minnesota by the end of next year by the Optum unit of Minnetonka-based UnitedHealth Group, bringing a 20 percent increase in the state from just one provider. Hospitals and clinics that have been offering urgent care for several years also are promising expansions, setting up a battle to retain patients and capture new business. (Snowbeck, 10/1)

When Stacey Nee delivered her second child, nurses talked to her about breastfeeding, safe sleeping practices, and postpartum depression, but she took note of what they did not mention: the potentially angry emotions, even dangerous actions, that can be stirred by a chronically crying baby. The omission was particularly jarring to Nee, who works at the Children鈥檚 Trust in Boston, an agency that helped implement a 2006 state law calling on maternity wards to train parents, before discharge, about the dangers of shaken-baby syndrome. (Wen, 9/30)

Many thousands of Californians are dying every year from infections they caught while in hospitals. But you鈥檇 never know that from their death certificates. Sharley McMullen of Manhattan Beach聽came down with a fever just hours after being wheeled out of a Torrance Memorial Medical Center operating room on May 4, 2014. A missionary鈥檚 daughter who worked as a secretary at Cape Canaveral, Fla., at the height of the space race, McMullen, 72, was there for treatment of a bleeding stomach ulcer. Soon, though, she was fighting for her life. (Petersen, 10/2)

Kansas recorded its lowest-ever infant mortality rate in 2015, when 230 infants died before their first birthday, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. (Thompson, 9/30)

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health has recommended a planned $1 billion clinical building at Boston Children's Hospital be approved. In a statement released Friday, DPH says its staff has determined the proposed building "meets the regulatory requirements and includes many positive aspects to improve care for the children and families the hospital serves. "The agency's Public Health Council will vote on the project on Oct. 20. (Jolicoeur, 9/30)

Massachusetts health regulators said Friday that Boston Children鈥檚 Hospital should be allowed to go forward with a $1 billion expansion project, a recommendation that seeks to support one of the state鈥檚 premier hospitals without undermining efforts to control medical spending. The staff at the Department of Public Health recommended approval of the plan to build an 11-story building in Longwood and an eight-story outpatient clinic in Brookline. The expansion has sparked controversy over its potential to drive up health care costs. (Dayal McCluskey, 9/30)

Gov. Jerry Brown signed off on a variety of bills in September that aim to protect patients and health care consumers. The following laws are set to go into effect in 2017. (Ibarra, 10/3)

National Breast Cancer Awareness Month starts Saturday, and clinics around Sacramento will be offering free breast cancer screenings to promote early detection of the disease. A mammography screening can help reduce the likelihood of death from breast cancer among women ages 40 to 74, especially for those older than 50, according to the National Cancer Institute. (Caiola, 9/30)

State health investigators are intensifying efforts to pinpoint the source of the Hopkins outbreak of Legionnaires鈥 disease even as three new cases were confirmed Friday. The outbreak has now sickened 23 people and led to one death. After weeks of testing and disease tracking, epidemiologists at the Minnesota Department of Health still have not found ground zero of the outbreak, but they are looking at a likely culprit. (Howatt, 10/1)

North Carolina has fallen behind in the quality of and access to its health care system, according to a new survey by the personal-finance website Wallet Hub. One of the state鈥檚 leading health economists said it鈥檚 not surprising given some of the economics of North Carolina and the fact that its residents have some of the highest rates of obesity, diabetes and heart disease in the United States. (Hoban, 9/30)

Dr. Ted Abernathy has fundamentally changed the way his medical practice operates. Now, patients know the nurses and receptionists as well as their physicians. Day-to-day tasks are distributed among the staff to streamline operations, freeing up time that providers can then spend with patients. It took more than year for Abernathy鈥檚 practice, Midlothian-based Pediatric & Adolescent Health Partners, to achieve certification as a patient-centered medical home, a philosophy of care that calls for a coordination among providers and staff that is always focused on the patient. (Demeria, 10/1)

A Worcester-based home health agency and three people involved with the company have been indicted by a grand jury for allegedly defrauding the state鈥檚 Medicaid program of more than $800,000. Compassionate Homecare Inc. provided nursing and other services for low-income patients on the government program known here as MassHealth. The agency is accused of conducting 鈥渘umerous fraudulent schemes鈥 and billing the state for providing services to patients who didn鈥檛 need them, and for services that were never authorized by a doctor, in violation of rules. (Dayal McCluskey, 9/30)

About 12 years ago, Nancy Menchhofer鈥檚 husband was diagnosed with Alzheimer鈥檚 at the age of 59. When she moved him to a care facility five years ago, it was the hardest thing she had ever done. Menchhofer visits him once a week and feeds him lunch. He doesn鈥檛 know who she is or why she鈥檚 there. (Munz, 10/2)

A 16-year-old boy who was sexually abused while under anesthesia at Stanford Health Care is suing the hospital system for negligence. The lawsuit, filed in San Mateo County Superior Court on聽Thursday,聽alleges that some Stanford employees did not report what they saw and hospital officials should have known the abuser had a 鈥減roclivity to have inappropriate sexual contact鈥 because of past encounters. The suit also stated some Stanford leaders fostered聽a toxic environment by allowing a group of managers to band together and look out for each other, including the abuser, while retaliating against those who spoke out. (Lee, 9/30)

Almost without exception, when a student who鈥檚 being abused by a parent or caregiver goes to any school in Iowa, every teacher, counselor and building administrator knows what to do. But that's not necessarily the case if the same student reports she or he has been sexually assaulted by another student or staff member, a Des Moines Register survey of 25 school districts suggests. (Rood, 10/2)

ith the Legislature only in session for three weeks after its summer break, there weren't a whole lot of bills for Gov. Rick Snyder to sign. But he did sign long-stalled bills to regulate and tax the medical marijuana industry. The bills will allow communities to decide whether and where they want medical marijuana dispensaries located in their towns. The bills also provide for licensing fees, annual assessments and a 3% tax on retail gross income of dispensaries. (Gray, 10/1)

Four years after Massachusetts residents 鈥 including voters in Hopkinton, Seekonk, and Southborough 鈥 overwhelmingly approved legalizing marijuana for medical use, dispensaries have become the ultimate not-in-my-backyard symbol in many towns. Just seven dispensaries have cleared local hurdles and opened since voters backed medical marijuana in 2012. Yet the law put no restrictions on the number of dispensaries allowed after the first year. (Lazar, 10/3)

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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