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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Jul 31 2019

Full Issue

State Highlights: Colorado Lawmakers Open Wide-Ranging Discussions On How To Create Public Option; North Carolina Looks At 'Innovative' Ways To Expand Oral Health Care

Media outlets report on news from Colorado, North Carolina, New Hampshire, California, Ohio, Indiana, Massachusetts, Florida, Missouri, Texas, Louisiana, Maryland and Oregon.

State lawmakers this year passed a bill making Colorado one of the first states in the country to create such a plan. It would guarantee consumers have at least one comprehensive health insurance option across the state, even if private carriers pull out. It would offer coverage at prices competitive to or below current rates. Access and affordability were its buzzwords. But lawmakers left the rest of the details blank. It would be up to [Insurance Commissioner Michael] Conway and Kim Bimestefer, the head of the state鈥檚 Medicaid department, to make it all work, a task no state official anywhere in the country has ever actually done. (Ingold, 7/30)

Hygienists in North Carolina have been lobbying for years to be able to clean teeth, take X-rays, check gum health and apply sealants when a dentist is not on-site with them. At long last, they seem to be one step closer to being able to do just that in certain schools, elder care facilities and special-needs centers in some parts of the state. The N.C. Board of Dental Examiners recently endorsed a rule change that could give hygienists a slightly broader scope of practice in one of the most restrictive states in the country. (Blythe, 7/31)

The Manchester VA announced Monday that it has expanded its network of walk-in and urgent care providers across the state, including a couple in the capital area. Eligible veterans enrolled in the VA health care system can visit a provider in the network without prior authorization from the VA, as long as they have received care from the VA or a community provider in the previous two years. (7/30)

Authorities have charged a woman with impersonating a pharmacist and illegally filling more than 745,000 prescriptions in the San Francisco Bay Area. Charges against Kim Thien Le were announced Tuesday. Prosecutors say that from late 2006 through 2017, Le 鈥 who didn鈥檛 have a pharmacist license 鈥 used the license numbers of registered pharmacists in order to impersonate them and dispense prescriptions at Walgreens pharmacies in Santa Clara and Alameda counties. (7/30)

UnitedHealthcare is giving $1.1 million in grants to four Northeast Ohio nonprofits to improve access to health care, according to a news release. The grants are part of UnitedHealthcare鈥檚 Empowering Health initiative, which aims to address the social determinants of health, things like access to healthy food, transportation and housing. (Christ, 7/30)

Kaiser Health News: This Indiana Clinic Has Patient-Care Stats Worth Bragging About

When I visited Dr. James Gingerich, he launched into some of the nerdiest bragging I鈥檝e ever heard. We were chatting in front of his stand-up desk at Maple City Health Care Center, the clinic he founded and runs in Goshen, Ind. 鈥淗ere鈥檚 our data,鈥 he said, and started clicking through a set of preventive care benchmarks. (Weissmann, 7/31)

The city is looking for partner communities willing to join it in a lawsuit against the state鈥檚 new rules on PFAS chemicals in water, City Manager Shaun Mulholland said Tuesday. 鈥淲e are considering possibly filing an injunction against the process in which the rules were implemented,鈥 Mulholland said. The state is changing the limits on PFAS, a group of man-made chemicals that includes PFOA, PFOS, GenX, and many others that are used in manufacturing. The state had set the limit of PFAS in drinking water at 70 parts per trillion, identical to the United States Environmental Protection Agency鈥檚 limit, but the outcry after the chemicals were found in water in several communities is prompting action in Concord. (Fisher, 7/30)

Calling on Congress to reduce toxic chemicals in drinking water, Attorney General Maura Healey joined her counterparts in 21 states Tuesday in urging federal lawmakers to pass legislation to help states address their threat to public health. The manmade chemicals, known as PFAS, are widespread and have been used for decades in products such as flame retardants, pans, pizza boxes, clothing, and furniture. (Abel, 7/30)

A top Florida health official on Monday disagreed with the findings of a draft federal audit that contends the state overpaid hundreds of millions of dollars to one of Florida鈥檚 biggest public hospitals and that $436 million should be returned to the federal government. Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Mary Mayhew said in a statement that the agency 鈥渄isagrees with the findings鈥 of the draft audit and that returning the money would impair Jackson Memorial Hospital鈥檚 ability to serve uninsured and poor patients in Miami-Dade County. (Sexton, 7/30)

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation on Tuesday that prohibits condoms as evidence of prostitution when prosecuting someone for sex work crimes. Sex workers are also protected under the new law from arrest when they report rape and other serious felonies. (Wiley, 7/30)

Two healthcare giants are expanding a pilot program in the Kansas City area aimed at using their drug stores to provide primary care and other services to Medicare beneficiaries. Humana and Walgreens announced on Tuesday that they plan to open two primary care centers in area Walgreens stores in addition to the two they opened last year. (Margolies, 7/30)

However, the rates of vaccinations for Texas students have been dropping as more and more parents are seeking waivers to the required vaccinations. According to the Texas Department of State Health Services, kindergartners are required to have 10 immunizations to be enrolled in Texas schools. They are not required to have the meningococcal vaccination. However, parents of kindergartners have been seeking more and more exemptions. Since the state first reported exemption rates in 2006, the rate for kindergartners has risen from 0.3 percent in the 2005-06 school year to 2.15 percent for the 2018-19 school year. (Kent, 7/31)

Students in the New Orleans area will get more than just a free backpack at the back-to-school event held by Inspire NOLA this year. Eye, ear and teeth check-ups will be offered, along with access to mental health care at the event on Saturday, August 3. Doctors will also be on hand to sign off on the required physical for student athletes. Inspire NOLA, which operates seven charter schools in New Orleans, started Passport to Student Success, in 2017, but moved to offer health screenings along with backpacks and school supplies this year. (Woodruff, 7/30)

A spiritual retreat center in Western Massachusetts, home to 19 acres of bucolic fields and forested trails, may become a residential treatment facility for young men who need to detach from technology and overcome their debilitating addiction to video games. Odyssey Behavioral Healthcare is awaiting a special permit approval from the town of Leyden, near the Vermont border, to launch the Greenfield Recovery Center, intended for people with 鈥済aming disorder.鈥 (Kuznitz, 7/30)

Braving the weather, nearly 200 residents and hospital employees joined state and local officials to break ground for the new $11.2 million expansion and renovation at St. Martin Hospital in Breaux Bridge. The project, which is funded through a bond approved by Hospital Service District No. 2 voters in March of 2018, will see the hospital more than double in size with an additional 30,000 square feet that will include a new nursing unit with 25 new patient rooms, a new, state-of-the-art MRI suite and a new surgical suite that will allow the hospital to offer surgical services for the first time.聽(Boudreaux, 7/30)

The University of Maryland School of Medicine appointed the first woman in its history to head the department of surgery, after Dr. Stephen Bartlett left the position in 2017 to take another job within the university. Dr. Christine Lau also was named chief of surgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center. Currently a professor of surgery and chief of the division of thoracic surgery at the University of Virginia, Lau will start at the University of Maryland in December. (Bowie, 7/30)

A transgender woman in Oregon has filed a $375,000 lawsuit against her insurance companies and her employer, saying they鈥檝e discriminated against her by refusing to pay for facial surgery that would make it more likely that strangers would perceive her as female. Christina Ketcham, a 59-year-old Clatsop County employee, has already undergone sex reassignment surgery, hormone replacement therapy, worked with a voice coach and changed her name, clothes and hairstyle to reflect her gender identity, but her doctors also recommend that she undergo 鈥渇acial feminization surgery鈥 to continue on that path. (Green, 7/30)

President Trump suggested Tuesday that Baltimore is 鈥渨orse than Honduras鈥 in terms of violent crime, escalating his criticism of the district of House Oversight Committee Chairman Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.). Trump made the remarks in an interview with The Washington Post. (Kranish and Sonmez, 7/30)

The Cannabis Control Commission has been wrestling with host community agreement (HCA) policy for nearly a year while activists and business owners have pointed to the required agreements as one reason for the slower-than-anticipated rollout of the retail marijuana market and as a barrier that鈥檚 keeping small businesses from establishing themselves in the new industry. (Young, 7/30)

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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