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Thursday, Jul 2 2015

Full Issue

State Highlights: Drones Deliver Supplies To Rural Va. Field Hospital; N.C. Autism Bill Nears Finish Line

News outlets report on health care developments in Virginia, North Carolina, California, Massachusetts and New York.

The sprawling field hospital that springs up in rural southwest Virginia every summer has been called the largest health-care outreach operation of its kind. This year, the event will host another first. Unmanned aerial vehicles 鈥 drones 鈥 will deliver medicine to the Wise County Fairgrounds in part to study how the emerging technology could be used in humanitarian crises around the world. (Portnoy, 7/1)

After years of waiting, families of kids with autism may finally get insurance coverage for treatment. A bill that would have North Carolina insurers reimburse for some evidence-based treatment is finally looking like it may pass both chambers of the General Assembly 鈥 but not before withstanding significant opposition and leaving advocates angry. (Editor in Childrens Health, 7/1)

[Virginia] is taking another stab at evaluating whether it鈥檚 time to ditch the regulatory framework for approving new health care facilities, given the dramatic changes that have occurred in health care since the last attempt to dismantle the state certificate of public need program more than a decade ago. (Smith, 7/1)

The nurses who showed up at state Senator Richard Pan鈥檚 Capitol office in May were furious. They had been assured by Pan, a Democrat from Sacramento, that he would be on their side when it came time to vote on Senate Bill 346, a charity care measure aimed at providing transparency to the state鈥檚 currently murky rules governing tax-exempt status for nonprofit hospitals. (Raden, 7/1)

If you鈥檙e one of the roughly 70,000 women who will give birth in Massachusetts this year, you may be planning to deliver at a hospital close to home or where your OB practices. But what you might not realize is that when it comes to childbirth, there are big differences in hospital quality across the state. (Bebinger, 7/2)

A former state assemblyman known for his defiant conservatism is seeking to reverse California鈥檚 newly passed vaccination mandate. The day after Gov. Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 277, an intensely controversial bill requiring all California schoolchildren to be fully vaccinated, former Assemblyman Tim Donnelly submitted paperwork to overturn the law. Opponents of the bill have also predicted a legal challenge, arguing the law will unconstitutionally block unvaccinated children from receiving an education. (White, 7/1)

Jim Carrey has come out swinging against Gov. Jerry Brown for signing one of the nation鈥檚 toughest vaccination laws this week, barring religious and other personal-belief exemptions for schoolchildren. The Golden Globe-winning actor slammed Brown on Twitter, calling him a 鈥渃orporate fascist鈥 who was poisoning children by signing into law the vaccination requirements. (Rocha, 7/1)

A review by his office concerns an arcane payment method known as PON1, ostensibly used to make payments for 鈥渟pecial, non-procurement expenditures,鈥 Mr. Stringer wrote. These include payments to pension funds, health insurance companies and the United States Postal Service, among others. (Flegenheimer, 7/1)

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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