Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Conn. Hospital CEO Salaries Draw Scrutiny; Calif. Counties Provide Non-Emergency Care To Undocumented Adults
As hospital leaders warn of potential job and service reductions in response to state funding cuts, the six- and seven-figure pay packages of Connecticut hospital executives have emerged as a point of contention. (Levin Becker, 9/25)
A California county voted Tuesday to restore primary health care services to undocumented adults living in the county. Contra Costa County, east of San Francisco, joins 46 other California counties that have agreed to provide non-emergency care to immigrants who entered the country illegally. (Romero, 9/24)
Two days after the U.S. Department of Justice announced a $115 million legal settlement with Adventist Health System, Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi said Wednesday her office has reached a $3.5 million settlement with the Altamonte Springs-based hospital system. Both settlements, which stem from whistleblower lawsuits filed by Adventist employees, involve allegations that the hospital firm had improper financial arrangements with physicians. (9/24)
The state Assembly voted Thursday to strip Planned Parenthood of about $3.5 million in government funding a year. The measure passed, 60-35, with all Republicans backing it and all Democrats opposing it. It now goes to the Senate, which like the Assembly is controlled by Republicans. (Marley, 9/24)
New Jersey Democrats unsuccessfully attempted on Thursday to override Gov. Chris Christie鈥檚 veto of a gun-control bill when most GOP supporters of the legislation decided not to buck the presidential candidate. The legislation would have prevented people with a documented history of mental illness from expunging that record to buy a gun. (Haddon, 9/24)
The 2-to-1 margin of victory at the small factory, which makes seats for trucks, represents an unusual win in the uphill battle to organize autoworkers in the South. But it was unclear whether the vote signaled a broader breakthrough for labor and the U.A.W. in a region that has historically been allergic to most unions. Employees at C.V.G. cited low pay, which tops out at $15.80 an hour, the growing use of temporary workers at even lower wages and rising health insurance costs as reasons they voted to join the union. (Cohen, 9/24)
Under a new law, District of Columbia women will be able to scratch one item off their list of things to worry about: running out of birth control pills. Under the law, which passed its congressional review period this month, women will be able to get a year鈥檚 supply of pills at once. Prescriptions for birth control pills typically have to be renewed every 30 or 90 days, potentially resulting in women missing scheduled pills. The yearlong provision will begin in 2017. (Andrews, 9/25)
Lawwmakers worried about Utah's reliance on U.S. government funds unveiled an online calculator Thursday that shows how the state would be hit by various federal budget disasters like a shutdown. ... The calculator comes with several built-in scenarios that the commission says are "extreme but possible," such as broad federal spending cuts and or deep slashes to Medicaid money. On the website, the public can access a slimmed down version of a more sophisticated tool that legislative budget staff can use. (Price, 9/24)
Several advocates for people with mental illness on Wednesday panned a proposal that would allow treatment facilities to hold people in crisis situations for up to 72 hours as involuntary patients. 鈥淭his is a deprivation of liberty,鈥 Mike Burgess, a spokesperson with the Disability Rights Center of Kansas, said during a meeting of the Kansas Mental Health Coalition. It would be better, he said, to expand access to voluntary treatment. (Ranney, 9/24)
Orlando Health mailed letters today to more than 5,300 patients who may have gotten bad mammograms. Women who went to the Boston Diagnostic Imaging location on Orange Avenue from May of 2013 to July of 2015 are asked to call Orlando Health. It鈥檚 unclear why the Boston Diagnostic center has lost its accreditation, but Orlando Health bought the center last December. (Aboraya, 9/24)
Florida's rural counties are seeing suicide rates for youth almost double that of the state's large cities. And experts say isolation, poverty, access to firearms and a lack of mental health resources are to blame. ... the teen suicide rate in Florida's small towns has doubled in the past 20 years. From 2012 through 2014, almost 8,000 youth younger than 21 killed themselves in Florida. Of those, 520 come from rural communities -- a significant number given their populations. Also, experts say the number of teen suicides could be much higher, in part because medical examiners and law enforcement don't have an objective set of criteria to decide whether to label a death as suicide. (Miller and Klingener, 9/24)
A chiropractor accused of improper Medicaid billings says Iowa officials are wrong about coverage eligibility for some conditions. Prosecutors said Thursday that Elizabeth Kressin, of Spencer, had submitted improper claims for more than seven years for what the prosecutors said were medically unnecessary chiropractic procedures for which payments weren't allowed. They include bed wetting, colic and ear infections. (9/25)
An annual health survey of Nevada kindergartners shows a big drop in the percentage of children without health insurance, a change that researchers attribute to more use of Medicaid benefits. The seventh annual report from the Nevada Institute for Children's Research and Policy at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, showed 7.6 percent of kindergartners were uninsured last school year, down from 12.6 percent a year earlier. (Rindels, 9/24)
Charlotte鈥檚 new Veterans Affairs Health Care Center won鈥檛 open officially for more than six months. ... The Charlotte site is one of seven new VA health centers approved by Congress in 2010. The Salisbury hospital region is one of the fastest growing in the country, said VA spokesman Barthalomew Major. An estimated 140,000 veterans live in the Charlotte metropolitan area, about 60,000 in Mecklenburg County alone. Although the number of veterans nationwide is declining, the number of veterans enrolled in the VA health-care system in increasing, Major said. Over the past 10 years, the number of VA patients nationwide has increased by 23 percent, but in the Salisbury region, the increase has been 66 percent, he said. (Garloch, 9/24)
Flint鈥檚 ongoing water woes are now associated with an immediate and irreversible danger 鈥 possible lead poisoning of some of the city鈥檚 children, according to a review of blood test results by a Hurley Children鈥檚 Hospital pediatrician. ... State officials say their own review of blood test results have not shown the same increase that [Dr. Mona] Hanna-Attisha found. Moreover, water tests have similarly shown lead within federally accepted levels, they say. (Erb, 9/24)
A judge has decided to temporarily block tens of millions of dollars in planned Medicaid funding cuts, likely ensuring that thousands of children with disabilities will continue to access therapy services after Oct. 1. (Rosenthal, 9/24)