Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Calif. To Step Up Scrutiny Of Hospitals With High Rates Of Patient Infections; Fla. Lawmakers Poised Take On Hospital Deregulation, Funding
After complaints that the state is doing little to stop deadly hospital outbreaks, the California Department of Public Health said this week that it would prioritize inspections at those facilities with high rates of patient infections. The state disclosed the changes in a Tuesday letter to Consumers Union. The national nonprofit group had filed a petition with the state early this year listing scores of hospitals with abnormally high infection rates that had not been inspected in five years. (Petersen, 3/1)
The Florida Legislature stands poised to address some hot-button issues in health care this session, including hospital deregulation and funding... In November, more than 70 percent of voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing people with "debilitating medical conditions" to use medical marijuana as prescribed by a doctor. Before then, only cancer patients and people with intractable seizures could use the drug legally. (McGrory, 3/1)
When officials at Nemours Children鈥 Hospital in Orlando tried to establish a pediatric heart transplant center they learned how restricting a state law regulating the opening of new health facilities can be. The so-called certificate of need regulations have come under fire from legislators who want to improve competition in the health care industry. The rules forced the hospital to prove that the state needed a fifth heart transplant center. (Ochoa, 3/1)
Kansas continues to rank among the worst states when it comes to sedating nursing home residents with powerful antipsychotic drugs. Janell Wohler and Kate Rieth of the Linn Community Nursing Home told their colleagues Tuesday that it doesn鈥檛 have to be that way.聽Wohler is the administrator and Rieth is the director of nursing at the facility, which has eliminated off-label use of antipsychotics for residents over the last five years. Rieth said it鈥檚 a matter of educating staff to look for the underlying reasons behind residents鈥 non-compliant behavior and addressing those, rather than reaching for a phone to call a doctor who can prescribe a 鈥渃hemical restraint.鈥 (Marso, 3/1)
You don鈥檛 have to drive far in Missouri to see billboards offering help to pregnant women. They鈥檙e part of the state鈥檚 Alternatives to Abortion program, which has seen a big increase in public funding in recent years.This year鈥檚 legislative debate on the program focuses on a new question: What kind of information should these centers provide to women?...The Alternatives to Abortion program does not require centers to have medically trained staff or provide medically accurate information. And a 2012 survey by the abortion rights group NARAL found that many of the centers in the St. Louis area provided inaccurate or misleading information about the risks of abortions. (Smith, 3/2)
Texas legislators from both chambers unanimously passed bills on Wednesday that would change how the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services cares for vulnerable children. The simultaneous debates in both chambers came as advocates have pushed for months for lawmakers to take drastic measures to fix the state鈥檚 broken child welfare system. Gov.聽Greg Abbott聽announced the issue as聽one of four emergency items聽during his State of the State address in January. (Evans, 3/1)
For more than a decade, California air quality officials have warned against building homes within 500 feet of freeways. And with good reason:聽People there suffer higher rates of asthma, heart attacks, strokes, lung cancer and pre-term births. Recent research has added more health risks to the list, including childhood obesity, autism and dementia. (Barboza and Shleuss, 3/2)
After eight years of legal struggle among state regulators, investors, and policyholders, Commonwealth Court Judge Hannah Leavitt signed off on a plan Wednesday to liquidate Penn Treaty Network America Insurance Co. and its affiliate, American Network Insurance Co. of Allentown. The decision leaves solvent insurers, their owners, and customers to pick up the cost for more than 70 percent of the up to $4.6 billion in projected long-term-care claims expected for 76,000 aging Penn Treaty customers nationwide. (DiStefano, 3/1)
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan's chief executive saw his bonus jump last year as the health insurance giant saw聽better financial results and is聽now planning to聽lower rates for its聽small businesses coverage. Total compensation聽for Daniel Loepp, CEO of Blue Cross since 2006, hit $10.9 million in聽2016, up from聽$9 million in 2015. His specific compensation was聽$1.5 million in base salary, $8.3聽million in bonuses and $1 million in "other" compensation, such as car allowance and life insurance, company officials said. (Reindl, 3/1)
The California Department of Public Health fired an out-of-state contractor Wednesday that had taken over part of a program designed to help people pay for HIV drugs, months after advocacy groups complained that management problems were interfering with patients鈥 access to life-saving medications. The abrupt ouster of the state鈥檚 contract with Michigan-based A.J. Boggs surprised patient advocates, many of whom learned about the change on a state conference call Wednesday morning. A termination letter was sent to A.J. Boggs just before the meeting. (Allday, 3/1)
The parents of a 14-month-old girl who died during a dental procedure last year have filed a wrongful death lawsuit, claiming the procedure was unnecessary and an attempt to 鈥渓ine the pockets鈥 of Austin Children鈥檚 Dentistry with Medicaid funds. ... According to the suit filed in Travis County district court Tuesday, Torres was taken to the dentist to have two cavities filled by Michael Melanson. ... 鈥淎fter (Torres) was under, Melanson came out and indicated to her mother that for Daisy鈥檚 well-being, he needed to perform multiple pulpotomies, or baby root canals, and then place crowns on four of her eight total teeth 鈥 baby teeth,鈥 the suit said. According to the document, Melanson told Squire the procedure was normal and necessary, then went back into the room. ... The suit alleges that Torres鈥 procedure was only done because it was covered by Medicaid, and that no sign of disease was evident in dental radiographs taken on the day Torres died. (Wilson, 3/1)
Attorney Sean Breen is representing the family and said that the suit serves two purposes. One, to be a voice for Daisy Lynn and two, to get others to pay attention to what he calls a "problem." "The problem is that around the country, Dentists and dental clinics are committing fraud - Medicaid fraud. They're doing procedures that aren't necessary and they're collecting money from it. Not everyone dies from that, but Daisy Lynne Torres did." ... Austin Children Dentistry's attorney said they are aware of the lawsuit, but will not comment on pending litigation. (3/1)
State Rep. Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, said his bill聽aims to address the state's聽shortage聽of psychiatrists,聽currently the only mental health doctors allowed prescription privileges. House Bill 593聽would grant psychologists a prescriptive authority certificate, but only after they鈥檝e been supervised for a year by a licensed physician and completed a postdoctoral training program in psychopharmacology, among other requirements. (Samuels, 3/2)
In her role chairing the House Aging Committee, State Rep. Anna Moeller (D-Elgin) will be overseeing a hearing March 9 on a proposal that would change the mechanism through which thousands of Illinois senior citizens receive home care.The plan put forward would create a two-tiered system out of the current Illinois Department on Aging's Community Care Program, which is designed to help seniors stay living in their own homes as long as they can. (Danahey, 3/1)
Major business interests are lining up against one of Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick鈥檚 top priorities 鈥 a bill that would make it harder for Texans to force their insurance companies to pay up when calamity strikes. Patrick and his allies say the bill, Senate Bill 10, is needed to stop greedy trial lawyers from cashing in on hail damage lawsuits. But the word "hail" doesn鈥檛 appear anywhere in the legislation, and this week businesses ranging from 7-Eleven to Ryan LLC 鈥 founded and led by Republican mega-donor Brint Ryan 鈥 conveyed their deep opposition to it in a letter sent to Patrick and other top Republican leaders. (Root, 3/1)
Governor Branstad鈥檚 goal to open up more competition in the health care industry ran into some serious trouble at the statehouse Wednesday. A bill to clear the way for more for-profit health care facilities failed to clear a Republican-dominated panel. The governor wanted to do away with the state鈥檚 Certificate of Need program that requires new health care facilities to prove there鈥檚 a need for their services. (Russell, 3/1)
The state House on Wednesday backed a much broader expansion of Georgia鈥檚 medical marijuana law, a statement vote after the Senate backed a similar measure that left many advocates unhappy. House Bill 65, sponsored by state Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, would among other changes double the list of illnesses and conditions eligible for treatment with medical marijuana in Georgia to include AIDS, Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, autism, autoimmune disease, epidermolysis bullosa, HIV, peripheral neuropathy and Tourette鈥檚 syndrome. (Torres, 3/1)