State Highlights: Diabetes Treatment Resulted In ‘Zombie-Like State,’ Calif. Patient Claims; Ill. Bill To Improve Care For Sexual Assault Victims Moves Forward
Media outlets report on news from California, Illinois, Minnesota, Connecticut, South Carolina, Florida, Ohio and Texas.
A San Diego woman says she was put at risk of hospitalization last year after receiving a series of insulin infusions at Dr. James Novak鈥檚 Trina Health clinic in Pacific Beach. The woman and her endocrinologist said the infusions spiked her blood sugar to dangerously high levels. The nation has a limited supply of healthcare dollars to spend on drugs and services, which is why the government and health plans require scientific evidence of patient benefit. This is especially important for the 30.3 million people in the U.S. with diabetes, whose medical costs in 2012 totaled $245 billion.Leadership at Scripps Health started an investigation of Novak鈥檚 practice when they learned about the incident, the endocrinologist said. And the founder of the Trina infusion procedure, Sacramento lawyer G. Ford Gilbert, faces federal criminal charges related to his network of clinics. (Clark, 5/25)
The Illinois Senate passed legislation Friday to ensure that rape and sexual assault victims in emergency rooms are seen by someone trained to treat them. The legislation, which passed the Illinois House in a similar form in April, was approved 49-0 by the Senate. It would require that, by 2022, hospitals in the state that treat sexual assault victims have a specially trained provider present within 90 minutes of a patient鈥檚 arrival in an emergency room. (Bowen, 5/25)
Here in Illinois, 220,000 people are living with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, which gradually, irreversibly degrades cognitive functions, according to the Alzheimer鈥檚 Association. By 2025, an estimated 40,000 others are expected to develop the condition, a more than 18 percent increase in this state alone. And though diagnoses of Alzheimer鈥檚 are expected to increase as the senior population continues to grow nationally, Latinos like Salvador Campos are 50 percent more likely to develop the disease than their white counterparts, researchers from the University of Southern California say. Between 2012 and 2060, the number of Latinos in the United States living with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease is projected to increase 832 percent 鈥 from 379,000 to more than 3.5 million, this research indicates. (Olumnhense, 5/29)
California鈥檚 historic aid-in-dying law is suspended, for now, after a Riverside Superior Court issued a final ruling on Thursday night that called it unconstitutional. The action follows a May 15 ruling by the same judge that the law was passed illegally, and the 4th District Court of Appeal鈥檚 refusal Wednesday to grant an emergency stay requested by California Attorney General Xavier Becerra. (Krieger, 5/25)
A major tobacco company is pumping millions of dollars into a campaign to persuade San Francisco voters to reject a ban on selling flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes, certain chewing tobaccos and vaping liquids with flavors like cotton candy, mango and cool cucumber. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. has contributed nearly $12 million to the "No on Proposition E" campaign, filling television and radio airwaves and mailboxes with ads urging voters to reject a law supervisors approved last year that is now on the June 5 ballot. (5/28)
The city ordinance to restrict tobacco sales, including vaping products, to those who can legally buy alcohol goes into effect Oct. 1. Minneapolis is joining seven other Minnesota cities and 300 nationwide that have raised the tobacco-buying age in an effort to discourage young people from picking up the habit. (Ibrahim, 5/25)
When adequate investment in human capital 鈥 higher education, adequate health care and decent housing 鈥 are impossible because of debt or under-employment, inequality becomes a significant drag on economic growth. Further complicating Connecticut鈥檚 struggle with accelerating inequality, the state is divvying up responsibility for paying a historic bill brought on by its own fiscal imprudence over decades: unprecedented pension and other debt costs that already are placing extreme pressure on services and taxpayers. (Phaneuf, 5/29)
A 9-year-old South Carolina boy selling lemonade to help his sick baby brother has raised nearly $6,000 in two hours. Andrew Emery wants to help his parents pay for the medical bills for his little brother Dylan. The infant suffers from Krabbe disease, a rare and often lethal neurological condition. So on Saturday, Emery spent two hours at used truck dealership Southern Wheels in Greenwood, selling lemonade and #TeamDylan t-shirts. He raised $5,860 to be added to $1,300 raised at a Friday benefit concert and $5,600 from a GoFundMe site for his brother, currently in a Pittsburgh hospital. (5/28)
Florida's ban that prevents medical marijuana patients from smoking their cannabis has gone up in smoke. Leon County Circuit Court Judge Karen Gievers on Friday ruled that a state's ban on smokable cannabis is unconstitutional. Florida's Department of Health said in a statement it has appealed the ruling, which will impose an automatic stay. (5/25)
A Florida judge on Friday ruled that the state鈥檚 ban on smokable medical marijuana is unconstitutional. Leon County Circuit Court Judge Karen Gievers wrote in her ruling that residents 鈥渉ave the right to use the form of medical marijuana for treatment of their debilitating medical conditions as recommended by their certified physicians.鈥 (Anapol, 5/26)
The new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study found students living in Health Zone 2, encompassing the Greater Arlington area, had the highest rate of suicide attempts. And more female students than male said they鈥檝e made a suicide plan. (Kilbride, 5/25)
Ignition interlocks, which keep drunken drivers from starting their cars, are proven to reduce alcohol-related fatal crashes. But in central Ohio, the majority of first-time offenders aren鈥檛 using them, attorneys say. (Cooley, 5/27)
A 54-year-old man who called himself "Dr. Dave" has been convicted of swindling health care insurers through millions in bogus claims.聽David Roy Williams聽was convicted this week in federal court of four counts of health care fraud for falsely billing insurance companies.聽Each count carries a 10-year sentence in federal prison and a $250,000 fine. Williams is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 27. (Tsiaperas, 5/26)
Mayor Darrell Steinberg, who has made curbing homelessness a centerpiece of his administration, announced earlier this week plans to place pop-up structures resembling giant tents in at least three neighborhoods he has yet to identify. Known as "Sprung" shelters, they would each have beds for as many as 200 clients, as well as paid "navigators" who would help connect people to insurance, health care, social services and ultimately permanent housing. (Hubert, 5/27)