Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Flint Crisis Continues To Shape Residents' Lives; Rikers Embraces Telemedicine For Inmates
Even now, the people of Flint, Mich., cannot trust what flows from their taps. More than one year after government officials finally acknowledged that an entire city鈥檚 water system was contaminated by lead, many residents still rely on bottled water for drinking, cooking and bathing. Parents still worry about their kids. Promised aid has yet to arrive. In ways large and small, the crisis continues to shape daily life. (Dennis, 10/22)
Inmates can spend six to eight hours shackled in holding pens and sitting in traffic as they travel to NYC Health & Hospitals' Bellevue campus for five minutes with a doctor...[Dr. Vinh]聽Pham and his colleagues came up with a solution. Earlier this year, they introduced telemedicine to Rikers Island, which has some 55,000 inmates come through its doors annually.聽Since the initiative began in May, 52 inmate patients have had virtual checkups and information visits with Bellevue's infectious disease, gastroenterology and urology specialists. They allow Pham and others to spend up to 30 minutes with a patient answering questions and ordering treatment when necessary. (Teichert, 10/22)
Many of the people most at risk of contracting HIV in Baltimore know nothing about a drug that is 92 percent effective in preventing the infection, according to new research from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.聽Only about 40 percent of gay and bisexual men with no HIV diagnosis had heard of pre-exposure prophylaxis medication, or PrEP, according to findings published this month in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. (McDaniels, 10/21)
The New Hampshire Republican State Committee will launch a Right-to-Know lawsuit today, charging that Gov. Maggie Hassan and key state agency heads refused to turn over damaging information about the controversial, Dartmouth-Hitchcock contract to staff the state psychiatric hospital. The suit being filed in Merrimack County Superior Court comes after the Hassan administration answered Right-to-Know requests from GOP State Chairman Jennifer Horn about the $37 million contract for New Hampshire Hospital. (Landrigan, 10/23)
Nashville health care and business leaders 鈥斅爁rom HCA, Bridgestone Americas and Bank of America, among others 鈥斅爃ave joined the board of former Sen. Bill Frist's initiative to not only make the city healthier but a model for other cities trying to tackle bad health.聽NashvilleHealth, Frist's one-year-old organization, is trying to tackle the gulf between the health care expertise in Davidson County and the health of residents, which lags many of its metro peers. The state, too, is struggling with years of residents with poor health and chronic disease despite being home to many top health care companies. (Fletcher, 10/23)
The room at UPMC Presbyterian, known as a negative-pressure room, is intended to house patients with an infectious disease so any air they might infect does not flow to other areas. The ventilation system, which is designed to pull outside air into a room, could increase infection probability for a transplant patient taking immunosuppressant drugs. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report in December advised UPMC not to house transplant patients with compromised immune systems in negative-pressure rooms...聽The report was issued after three transplant patients who contracted fungal infections at Montefiore or Presbyterian died within a year. (Schmitt, 10/24)
The former medical director of a shuttered chain of Washington pain clinics is forcefully denying allegations he failed to properly monitor Medicaid patients鈥 opiate use, possibly contributing to 18 deaths since 2010. In a 19-page response to charges by the state Medical Commission, Dr. Frank Li contends he never saw five of the patients himself, treated eight of the 18 only one or two times and shouldn鈥檛 be held liable for the acts of providers he supervised at Seattle Pain Centers. In addition, Li, 48, denied that his business model focused on hiring newly licensed practitioners with little pain-management experience or that he ordered excessive numbers of urine screenings and unnecessary medical equipment to boost fees. (Aleccia, 10/21)
Internal emails from DaVita HealthCare Partners Inc. show the Denver-based company targeted some patients in a campaign to get them to buy insurance they didn鈥檛 necessarily need, saying their monthly premiums would be paid by a nonprofit foundation. DaVita, one of the nation鈥檚 largest dialysis providers, with a major presence in St. Louis, had a financial incentive to get certain Medicaid-eligible dialysis patients to enroll in private insurance. Medicaid, the government-run health insurance program for low-income Americans, pays significantly less than traditional commercial insurance for dialysis treatment. (Liss,10/23)
For the past three years, HCA Virginia has contracted with VCU to operate the NICUs at HCA Virginia鈥檚 Johnston-Willis and Chippenham hospitals and bring its neonatologists and specialists to those hospitals. Officials with both health systems describe the relationship as a partnership 鈥 an example of an academic medical institution partnering with community hospitals to bring evidence-based practices and the newest research advances to the general public faster. The cooperation comes despite the hesitancy among Richmond鈥檚 three major health systems in recent years to join together for children鈥檚 issues, particularly in the development of an independent children鈥檚 hospital in the area. (Demeria, 10/22)
Dr. Demian聽Naguib was聽charged in December 2015聽following an investigation by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Michigan Attorney General's Office and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. Naguib, who was employed through Physician HealthCare Network, is charged by the Attorney General's office with conducting a criminal enterprise, a 20-year felony; nine counts of Medicaid fraud, 4-year felonies;聽and nine counts of health care fraud, also 4-year felonies. He is alleged to have billed Medicaid, Medicare and Blue Cross Blue Shield for pricey procedures that were not actually completed or providing unnecessary procedures to patients to result in higher pay. (Smith, 10/22)
Consumer advocates are heralding a new Florida law that bans most balance billing. But legislators left ambulance services out of the legislation, largely because local governments play such a big role. Insurance Consumer Advocate Sha Ron James says it鈥檚 too early to say whether the group will recommend expanding a balance billing ban to cover ambulances. (Ash, 10/23)
One of South Florida鈥檚 most notorious plastic surgeons 鈥 linked to a string of high-profile botched surgeries and two patient deaths over the years 鈥 pleaded not guilty Friday to allegations he mangled a man鈥檚 penis during an illegal cosmetic surgery in Hialeah. A Miami-Dade judge also ordered that Mark Schreiber must post a $250,000 bond and remain on house arrest while he awaits trial for what a prosecutor called the 鈥渂utchery of a human being.鈥 (Ovalle, 10/21)
A Portsmouth woman is suing a Hampton nursing facility, claiming a chemical reaction from a perm that her mother was given in a hair salon eventually led to her death.Betty Ann Fraser filed suit earlier this month against Genesis Health Care LLC, which operates Oceanside Center. The facility provides short-stay rehabilitation and long-term care, skilled nursing and dementia services. According to the suit in Rockingham County Superior Court, Fraser鈥檚 mother, Betty M. Pettigrew, suffered a reaction after getting her hair done while she was a resident of the facility in November 2014. (Schreiber, 10/23)
California鈥檚 Office of the Patient Advocate Friday released its annual report cards on health plans and medical groups 鈥 tools meant to help guide consumers and employers as they shop for coverage during the upcoming open enrollment season. The report cards assign ratings to the 10 largest HMOs and five largest PPOs in the state, based on quality of care and patient experience. It also rates more than 200 physician groups. Quality of care measures include ensuring that heart patients鈥 blood pressure is well managed and that children get their immunizations. (Ibarra, 10/24)
After nearly four decades of a war on drugs, Americans鈥 opinion of marijuana appears to be changing dramatically. This month Pew Research found 57 percent of Americans support full legalization. A June Quinnipiac Poll returned a slight majority in favor of legalization as well.聽But it鈥檚 the narrower question of medical cannabis where the numbers are truly striking. The same nationwide Quinnipiac poll showed 89 percent favor medical use鈥攚ith strong majorities in all categories whether political party, age, race, or education. (Evans, 10/23)