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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Jan 30 2017

Full Issue

State Highlights: Efforts To Quantify The Impact Of Del.'s Health Care Data Breaches; In Ariz., A Tanning-Bed Ban For Teens Gains Momentum

Outlets report on news from Delaware, Arizona, New Jersey, California, Texas, Massachusetts, Colorado, New Hampshire, Missouri, Wisconsin, Louisiana, Virginia and Washington.

A growing crime, medical record-pilfering聽represents聽the next frontier of identity theft. As the modern medical workforce increasingly shares information electronically, hackers can use ransomware to聽hijack hospital records by encrypting patient data, and then demand payment to have it returned. Employee negligence, insecure mobile devices and use of public cloud services all threaten the security of highly sensitive information.In 2015 alone, more than 100 million health care records were compromised nationwide 鈥撯 more than one-third of all computer security breaches that year. (Fishman, 1/27)

Arizona could ban teens under age 18 from tanning beds聽if some state lawmakers and physicians get聽their聽way. Currently, parents can sign permission slips for minor children to use tanning beds.聽House Bill 2194, called the Skin Cancer Preventative Act of 2017, would require photo ID to prove a customer is age 18 or older. (Beard Rau, 1/27)

Cooper Hospital officials announced last week that they had improved ambulance-response times since Gov. Christie signed a law allowing Cooper University Health Care to begin providing paramedic and ambulance services. Though the action led to a legal battle with Marlton-based Virtua Health System, which deemed the law unconstitutional, Cooper officials say their results 鈥斅爁aster response times and a reduced reliance on mutual aid from other communities 鈥斅爏peak for themselves. (Steele, 1/29)

City officials have ordered the San Francisco Roman Catholic Archdiocese to pay nearly $3 million in health care costs for more than 1,000 employees after finding that it failed to make years of payments required by a pioneering local health care law. San Francisco has also assessed the archdiocese $113,000 in penalties. (Egelko, 1/29)

The plan was simple: instead of arresting the mentally ill for crimes, treat them for their illness. Keep them out of the jails聽and emergency rooms and instead provide them with a one-stop shop where they can be treated with psychiatric care, counseling and rehabilitation. The plan in this Texas city was to help them heal. This happened in 2008 when the Roberto L. Jimenez聽M.D. Restoration Center聽opened.聽Since that time, close to 50,000 people have been treated, saving the law enforcement more than 100,000 manpower hours that can now be spent on the streets, and saving taxpayers more than $50 million. (Klass, 1/27)

After nearly two centuries of independence, Massachusetts Eye and Ear has agreed to be acquired by Partners HealthCare, its leaders acknowledging that thriving as a specialty hospital has become nearly impossible in a market dominated by larger rivals. Mass. Eye and Ear 鈥 the last independently run hospital of its kind in the country 鈥 already has close ties to Partners, and the proposed combination disclosed on Friday isn鈥檛 expected to lead to big changes for its 2,200 employees or its patients right away. (Dayal McCluskey, 1/27)

California can require Monsanto to label its popular weed killer Roundup as a possible cancer threat even though the chemical giant insists it poses no risk to people, a judge tentatively ruled Friday. California would be the first state to order such labeling if it carries out the proposal. (1/27)

Denver Health and Hospital Authority has selected a Pennsylvania hospital leader as the sole finalist for its vacant CEO position, meaning she will ascend to the safety-net hospital鈥檚 top spot in two weeks.聽Robin聽Wittenstein currently serves as the chief population health officer for Penn State Health, a network of more than a dozen academic and clinical hospitals in central Pennsylvania. Denver Health鈥檚 board of directors approved her hiring in a vote Thursday night, according to a news release. (Ingold, 1/27)

The outgoing Director of the Division of Children, Youth and Families says public scrutiny of her agency鈥檚 shortcomings could provide opportunities to improve the state鈥檚 child safety network. Lorraine Bartlett worked at DCYF for 28 years, with the last three as director. In those three years, Bartlett says the state's drug crisis upped the pressure on an already strained child protection system. (Rodolico, 1/27)

But there鈥檚 debate whether the 鈥渂oxinettes鈥 will reduce sudden infant deaths or introduce new dangers to areas such as St. Louis, where infants die at an alarmingly high rate.聽The boxes are gaining popularity among health policy leaders. Just last week, public health officials in New Jersey announced a universal program to distribute the boxes to all new mothers in the state. Finland has been giving out the boxes to new mothers since the late 1930s, and their prevalence in the Nordic country has been tied to its extremely low infant-mortality rate. The colorfully decorated boxes are filled with clothes and other baby care items, with a bottom lined with a thin pad. (Cambra, 1/29)

GE Healthcare confirmed Friday that it will shut down a plant in Laurel, Md., and shift an unspecified number of jobs to Wisconsin. The transfer of jobs will take place over the next 12 to 24 months, according to GE Healthcare spokesman Benjamin Fox. The jobs to be transferred will be split between the company's offices in the Milwaukee County Research Park in Wauwatosa and the firm's offices in Madison, Fox said. (Barrett, 1/27)

A 34-year-old New Orleans woman is accused of participating in a Medicare kickback scheme run through a local home-health company, according to U.S. Attorney Kenneth A. Polite's office.聽Saquena Griffin, also known as "Queenie" was formally charged Friday (Jan. 27) with receiving about $44,132 in kickbacks to bring Medicare beneficiaries to Comprehensive Nursing and Home Health Service, court records show. (McKnight, 1/27)

Kedrock, a clinical social worker, and others specifically question Gov. Terry McAuliffe鈥檚 $4.5 million budget proposal for a study and redesign of the structure of the behavioral health system that would be contracted out to consultants. The proposal was one of many intended to improve mental health services in Virginia. (Kleiner, 1/29)

Gonzaga University has changed its health-insurance policy after a nonprofit law firm alleged the school was illegally denying maternity care to dependents of employees. The Washington, D.C.-based National Women鈥檚 Law Center (NWLC) filed complaints against Gonzaga and three other institutions that receive federal funding in June 2013, claiming they violated the Affordable Care Act by refusing to provide prenatal care to some women. The law firm said Thursday that each institution has changed its policy in response to the complaints. (Sokol, 1/29)

Texas Republican K. Michael Conaway has taken on tough assignments during his nearly 12 years in the House, including a stint as chairman of the ethics panel. It鈥檚 a job colleagues from both parties gladly avoid. Now as returning House Agriculture chairman, Conaway will take on another tough task in the 115th Congress: Moving a multiyear, multibillion-dollar farm bill through a contentious chamber that in 2013 rejected a committee-passed farm bill largely because of a battle between Republicans and Democrats over the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps. (Ferguson, 1/30)

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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