Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Fla. House Panel Approves Optometry Bill; In Minn., Lawmakers Continue Work, Debate On Measures To Stabilize Insurance Market
It鈥檚 been dubbed the Eyeball Wars: Optometrists want to prescribe more medications and perform surgeries and ophthalmologists are standing firm against them. Optometrists gained some ground Wednesday when a House bill cleared the Health Quality Subcommittee with an 8-7 vote and headed to the House Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee. (Miller, 3/15)
Minnesota Democrats came agonizingly close to scoring an upset victory Wednesday night. During debate over a measure to try to stabilize the individual health insurance market, Democrats in the state Senate offered an amendment to add their preferred program: letting Minnesotans buy in to the state-run MinnesotaCare program.聽Senate Democrats have one fewer seat than do the majority Republicans, so they were expecting to lose. But then came a shock: Republican Sen. Scott Jensen of Chaska, a medical doctor, spoke out in favor of the DFL plan. It wasn鈥檛 perfect, Jensen said, but it might help bring care to residents of greater Minnesota who face dwindling insurance options. (Montgomery, 3/15)
Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton says he鈥檚 interested in passing a 鈥渞einsurance鈥 proposal to stabilize the state鈥檚 individual health insurance market 鈥 if he鈥檚 convinced it will actually work. 鈥淭he insurance industry needs to come forward and tell us, if they get $300 million a year through reinsurance, what effect is that going to have? Are they doing to stay in the market, then? Are they going to lower their rates?鈥 Dayton said last week. 鈥淲e need to know what we鈥檙e getting for this very significant commitment of public funds.鈥 (Montgomery, 3/15)
Through focusing on regular checkups and preventative care, [Alice] Chen says overall health care costs have ticked down over the past decade, due in large part to the system鈥檚 ability to divert patients away from costly emergency room visits and catch health complications before they escalate to severe illness and disease. That concept is fundamental to Healthy San Francisco, the city鈥檚 universal health care program adopted a decade ago that covers everyone regardless of immigration status or ability to pay. (Hart, 3/16)
Under House Bill 6 鈥 part of a sweeping plan to revamp Texas' child welfare system 鈥 the state would slowly create a聽"community-based care"聽model, which would allow contracted organizations to monitor children in foster care and adoptive homes and those who have been placed by the state into a relative's home. That would include making sure children are settling into their new homes and their health needs are being met. (Evans, 3/16)
Three months after Gov. Rick Scott stood in Miami Beach and declared that the Zika virus was no longer spreading in Florida, mosquito control experts are warning people not to be complacent. Zika could come back. (Auslen, 3/15)
Bostwick Laboratories filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization on Wednesday, two days after telling employees of its intentions to sell its business and assets through a court-supervised auction. Once one of the Richmond region鈥檚 fastest-growing companies, Bostwick Laboratories has estimated assets of between $1 million and $10 million and liabilities between $50 million and $100 million, according to the filing. (Demeria, 3/15)
The 94 preschoolers, ages 3 to 5, at Brooksville Head Start, another 146 at Spring Hill Head Start, plus a dozen at Butterfly Wings, a home-based day care in Spring Hill, have put into practice over the past year a quartet of lifestyle suggestions to earn 5210 Healthy Hernando Certification for their schools. The numerals refer to the four daily goals: eat five fruits and vegetables, spend no more than two hours on recreational screen time, engage in one hour of physical activity and consume zero sugary drinks. Based on a nationally recognized child obesity prevention program, 5210 Healthy Hernando was developed as a partnership of the Hernando County Health Department and Mid-Florida Community Services, which sponsors Head Start. (Gray, 3/15)
Texas is trying to take the federal government to task for failing to find a permanent disposal site for thousands of metric tons of radioactive waste piling up at nuclear reactor sites across the country. In a lawsuit filed Tuesday night, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton accuses U.S. agencies of violating federal law by failing to license a nuclear waste repository in Nevada聽鈥 a plan delayed for decades amid a highly politicized fight. (Malewitz, 3/15)