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Tuesday, Oct 13 2015

Full Issue

State Highlights: Conn. Hospital's Service Cuts May Foreshadow Health System Issues, Changes; Mo. Confronts Boost In Painkiller Abuse Cases

News outlets report on health issues in Connecticut, Missouri, Indiana, New York, Kansas, Maryland, North Carolina, Michigan, Wisconsin and California.

Depending on who you ask, the decision by its parent company to scale back the services at Windham Hospital was a prudent one that will help preserve the financially struggling facility, or it was a troubling sign of the need for better state oversight to ensure that communities don鈥檛 lose access to care. And to one key lawmaker, that鈥檚 a sign of the debates that are likely to become more common as more Connecticut hospitals join larger systems, raising the possibility that parent companies will seek to consolidate services rather than offering every type of care at each hospital in their network. (Levin Becker, 10/13)

Missouri hospitals have seen a drastic increase in prescription painkiller abuse over the past decade. According to a study from the Missouri Hospital Association, the rate of hospitalization due to the abuse of prescription opioids has increased by 137 percent since 2005. The numbers localize a problem usually shown through national statistics. For instance, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 44 people die every day in the United States from prescription painkiller overdoses. (Phillips, 10/12)

Republican Gov. Mike Pence announced Monday that he will expand Indiana's affiliation with a nonprofit organization that counsels pregnant women against abortion and pushes abstinence as the only method of birth control. Pence cited the successes of a $1 million pilot program as reason for granting a new $3.5 million contract to Real Alternatives, a Pennsylvania-based charity that provides "life-affirming" counseling on everything from breastfeeding to finding maternal homes, adoption agencies and social services, according to its website. (Slodysko, 10/13)

New York Health Commissioner Howard Zucker and Secretary of State Cesar Perales joined Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul for the visit Monday. The trip comes after Gov. Andrew Cuomo traveled to the island last month to offer New York's assistance as it deals with billions in public debt, much of it related to the state's Medicaid and Medicare programs. (10/12)

Rhonda Enzinna has discovered it鈥檚 nice to be in a room where people accept that her hurting is real. She knows that tepid 鈥渉mm鈥 that clinicians and others express when Enzinna, 61, of Kansas City, tells them she has lived with pain since she was a girl. In chilly or windy weather, and when she touches an ice cube, her neck, limbs and joints feel as if they鈥檙e on fire. (Montgomery, 10/12)

A proposal for paid sick leave will be debated Tuesday at a Prince George鈥檚 County Council hearing that could offer a preview of the 2018 county executive鈥檚 race. The council鈥檚 planning, zoning and economic development committee is considering a bill that would require all businesses in the county to offer employees up to seven paid sick days annually 鈥 a benefit that was approved in Montgomery County earlier this year and has been touted by President Obama (D). (Hernandez, 10/13)

A non-profit health care group focused on serving low-income patients plans to expand its medical services on four extra acres of land located in one of Rock Hill鈥檚 business parks. On Monday, the Rock Hill City Council voted to sell some city-owned land on Lakeshore Parkway to Affinity Health Center, a medical office looking to expand its offerings. Affinity bills itself as providing inexpensive care and other services to address more than a patient鈥檚 medical needs. The center uses a case management system that helps patients access community resources such as housing and transportation, as well as insurance. The group fills a need for local low-income residents. The federal government estimates 65,000 low-income residents in York County need access to health care, but only about 15 percent of them are served by a community health care center or a free medical clinic. (Marchant, 10/12)

J.R. Robinson rubbed his hands together. A hollow sadness sits behind his eyes, punctuating a broken expression. "I'm struggling every day," said the 51-year-old Holland resident; a Tennessee accent filling soft, steady words. His appearance at the Holland Drop-In-Center on Sept. 29, was no easy feat. Without scheduled classes two days a week at Community Mental Health of Ottawa County, motivating himself to leave his apartment is a battle. (Biolchini, 10/12)

The state Senate's health committee is expected to vote on a pair of bills that would strip Planned Parenthood of federal funding and raise its Medicaid expenses. One measure would require the state to apply for $3.5 million in federal Title X grant money, which currently all goes to Planned Parenthood. The bill would forbid abortion providers from getting any of that money and instead give it to the state's Well Woman program that provides breast and cervical cancer screenings. The bill passed the full state Assembly in September. (10/13)

Crisis pregnancy centers that discourage women from getting abortions are suing to block a new law that would make California the first state to require them to provide information about abortions. (10/12)

Most developers in the medical-office-building business put speculative projects on hold during the recession. Now some are revisiting the idea, breaking ground on new projects without having any tenants lined up. Consider Downtown West Medical Offices, a medical-office-building project in central Los Angeles expected to be announced this week. The developers plan to build a four-story, 60,000-square-foot contemporary building consisting of primary- or specialty-care medical space that may include a pharmacy or physical-therapy facility on the ground floor. (Friedman, 10/13)

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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