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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Aug 23 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Fla. Regulators Weigh Insurance Rate Hikes; Opioid Overdoses Rise In Ohio

Outlets report on health news from Florida, Ohio, New York, Massachusetts and Michigan.

Florida鈥檚 insurance regulators are considering two major rate increases.聽 The moves would raise rates for workers compensation insurance and property insurance with the state-backed company Citizens.聽Court rulings and water claims are driving the rate hikes insurers say, and across two days of public hearings they worked hard to make their case before the office of insurance regulation. The meetings mark the first major undertakings in the tenure of David Altmaier, the new head of OIR. (Evans, 8/22)

Be on alert: A spike in overdoses in Hamilton County emergency rooms coupled with a lack of effectiveness of the antidote naloxone is leading health officials to believe that deadly opioids are getting to heroin users. The Hamilton County Heroin Coalition issued the warning Monday after Hamilton County Public Health noted a surge in hospital overdose cases. The emergency department-visit surveillance system聽detected the increase over the weekend, beginning on Friday, health officials said. (DeMio, 8/22)

New York's attorney general has reached a settlement requiring a Buffalo-based insurer to pay thousands of improperly denied claims for outpatient psychotherapy and nutritional counseling for eating disorders. (8/22)

Perhaps one of the unintended consequences of the U.K.'s "Brexit" vote earlier this summer is an influx of foreign investments in a local market: high-tech biomedical laboratory space.聽According to reporting today by The Boston Globe's Robert Weisman, roughly half of last year's $46 billion in commercial real estate sales were made by foreign investors.聽And with area lab space in short supply, what does this mean for the biomedical industry in the Boston area? (Bologna and Becker, 8/22)

A company named in a federal lawsuit in聽the 2014 death of a Macomb County jail inmate聽could be聽in line to take over medical services at Wayne County's jails and juvenile detention facility...But many staffers聽say that privatizing medical care is not the solution for Wayne County's jails. Several nurses and social workers who attended a commission meeting Thursday predicted that many current staffers would leave, exacerbating the county's staff-retention problems, although the administration said the goal is to improve care and retention. (Lawrence, 8/22)

Advanced Dermatology is now one of the largest dermatology practices in the United States, with 155 offices in 13 states, including 30 offices in Central Florida.聽"In our model, we purchase [physicians'] practices, and they can practice as long they want," said Leavitt, CEO and chief medical officer of the group. "We make it easier by giving them resources, so they can enjoy being doctors again." 聽(Miller, 8/22)

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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