State Highlights: Ga. Gov. Outlines Plans To Boost Mental Health Services, Medicaid, Autism Coverage; Mass. Commission Reports On Wasteful Medical Procedures
Outlets report on health news from Georgia, Massachusetts, Virginia, Illinois, North Carolina, California, Wisconsin, Washington and Florida,
Gov. Nathan Deal, in his annual State of the State address Wednesday, outlined several health care initiatives to boost mental health services, DFCS, Medicaid and autism coverage. Deal said his fiscal 2018 budget proposal includes, on average, a 19 percent pay raise for DFCS caseworkers to help ensure 鈥渁 competitive salary,鈥欌 so the state can recruit and retain the best people for the job. The Georgia agency, facing an increase in foster kids, continues to struggle with a high turnover rate among caseworkers who help these children, GHN reported recently. (Miller, 1/11)
Massachusetts health care providers routinely order wasteful and unnecessary medical tests and procedures, driving up costs, according to a new report from the state Health Policy Commission. The findings released Wednesday offered new details about what鈥檚 called nonrecommended care. Most of the state鈥檚 large physician and hospital networks, especially Partners HealthCare, Lahey Health, and Steward Health Care System, regularly ordered unnecessary tests and procedures, the report said. (Dayal McCluskey, 1/11)
The General Assembly had not even convened when Senate Republicans sent a message to Gov. Terry McAuliffe to put money into state police salaries inside of hiring people for new public safety and mental health initiatives. Members of the Senate Finance subcommittee on public safety made clear on Wednesday morning that they were not interested in funding new positions the governor proposed for the Board of Corrections to oversee mental health in regional jails, or mental health screening at jails, or new law enforcement training, or part-time parole investigators, or more full-time workers at state liquor stores. (Martz, 1/11)
Dozens of mental health workers and child advocates are urging Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe to spare the life of a convicted killer scheduled to be executed next week. More than 50 people sent a letter to McAuliffe this week asking him to support Ricky Gray鈥檚 request to have his sentence commuted to life in prison. Gray鈥檚 execution is scheduled for Jan. 18. Gray鈥檚 attorneys say he was raped repeatedly by his brother as a child and began using drugs to deal with the effects of that abuse. Gray claims he doesn鈥檛 remember much about slaying a family because he was high. (1/11)
Governor Charlie Baker on Wednesday signed into law a bill that creates a licensing board to regulate naturopaths, alternative medicine practitioners who have fought for two decades for the right to be licensed in the same way as medical professionals. The bill, pushed through on the Legislature鈥檚 final day, stirred controversy as opponents 鈥 primarily the Massachusetts Medical Society 鈥 said licensure would grant legitimacy to practices that are merely 鈥渁 combination of nutritional advice, home remedies, and discredited treatments.鈥 (Freyer, 1/11)
The new $39 million Level 1 adult trauma center, the first on the South Side in 25 years, is scheduled to open a year from now, then it will begin accepting adult trauma patients in spring 2018...The university launched a national search in June for a leader for the long-awaited E.R. in a violence-besieged area devoid of adult trauma care since Michael Reese Hospital closed in 1991. The ideal candidate, officials said then, would not only be a skilled physician administrator, but bring expertise on violence intervention. Chicago saw more than 780 people killed last year 鈥 its deadliest in over two decades. (Ihejirika, 1/12)
In a move designed to safeguard their survival, the state鈥檚 community health centers have agreed to a partnership with one of the nation鈥檚 largest for-profit managed care companies to provide and coordinate care to Medicaid patients under the state鈥檚 reform plan. A press release Tuesday from the North Carolina Medical Society, another plan partner, described how the joint venture will 鈥渆stablish, organize and operate a physician-led health plan to provide Medicaid managed services.鈥 (Hoban, 1/11)
Yolo County reported its first flu-related death this season, prompting health officials to remind Californians there鈥檚 still time to get a flu shot. 鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely not too late,鈥 said Dr. Stuart Cohen, chief of the infectious diseases division for the UC Davis Health System. Last week, he said, UC Davis lab technicians confirmed 32 new cases of flu, roughly double the number during the week between Christmas and New Year鈥檚. (Buck, 1/11)
A new facility planned in New Lenox could help provide mental health services to area residents, as well as help alleviate pressure on Will County programs dealing with mental health and drug addiction issues. Silver Cross Hospital plans to partner with a national firm to build a $22 million behavioral health hospital to help address the need for such services in Will County. (Fabre, 1/11)
UC San Francisco announced Wednesday that it has received a stunning $500 million donation 鈥 the single largest gift in University of California history and one of the most generous gifts ever given to an American university. The gift, which comes at a time of dwindling financial support from the state, was pledged by the family foundation of the late Helen Diller, a San Francisco native and longtime champion of UCSF whose husband, Sanford, founded the聽Prometheus Real Estate Group, a聽San Mateo-based commercial real estate firm. (Krieger, 1/11)
The Helen Diller Foundation is pledging $500 million to UCSF 鈥 the biggest gift in campus history and among the largest to any public university in the United States 鈥 to recruit faculty and students and fund 鈥渉igh-risk, high-reward鈥 research. The gift, to be announced Thursday, comes on top of a series of hefty donations to the school over the past decade, including a previous $35 million contribution to support cancer research from Diller, a philanthropist who died in 2015 at her home in Woodside, and two $100 million gifts from Salesforce founder Marc Benioff and his wife, Lynne Benioff, for the UCSF children鈥檚 hospital. (Allday, 1/11)
Gov. Scott Walker's proposal聽to drug test some food stamp recipients violates federal law and cannot proceed聽without an act of Congress, a top appointee in the Obama administration says. Wisconsin's Republican governor has called on President-elect Donald Trump to act immediately on taking office to allow聽the Walker administration to start testing able-bodied recipients of Wisconsin's Food Share program. (Stein, 1/11)
A bill offering a small expansion to Georgia鈥檚 medical marijuana law will be introduced Thursday in the state Senate, the same day the law鈥檚 architect expects to file much broader legislation attempting to legalize growing and distributing the drug in-state for medicinal purposes. Senate Bill 16 represents an olive branch of sorts from the chamber鈥檚 conservative majority, which last year blocked attempts by the House to expand the 2015 law. Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle acknowledged last week that it was coming, saying he thought Senate Republicans may be ready to compromise. (Torres, 1/11)
Since January 2014, the pilot project run by Seattle/King County Health Care for Homeless Network and UW Medicine鈥檚 Harboview Medical Center has served more than 100 seriously ill men and women in the Seattle area, tracking them down at shelters and drop-in clinics, in tents under bridges and parked cars. This KHN story also ran in USA Today. It can be republished for free (details). 鈥淚t鈥檚 really necessary that people be taken care of where they are,鈥 said Dr. Daniel Lam, director of inpatient and outpatient palliative care services."(Aleccia, 1/12)
Spanish speakers in the Tampa area have a new health care provider that they can understand. Located on West Hillsborough Avenue, CliniSanitas calls itself Tampa's first multicultural medical center. The clinic鈥檚 staff is 100 percent bilingual and though it provides urgent care, the clinic really aims to be your family doctor. (Ochoa, 1/11)
Gov. Rick Scott will name Justin Senior the secretary of the Agency for Health Care Administration, his office confirmed Wednesday. Senior, 45, has been serving in the job as interim secretary since October, when the previous secretary, Liz Dudek, left the agency. He earns $142,000 a year. As secretary, Senior will oversee one of the state鈥檚 largest budgets and the department that runs Florida鈥檚 Medicaid program. He鈥檒l face confirmation from the state Senate, but the Republican-controlled chamber almost never rejects appointees of the Republican governor. (Auslen and Bousquet, 1/11)
Quick'rCare is an online platform that allows consumers to find the nearest emergency rooms and urgent care centers, compare their wait times, and reserve their spot online before heading to the facility. To make this possible, the one-year-old startup sells its software to various providers, including health systems, so that their emergency room and urgent care center data show up on Quick'rCare website when consumers plug in their zip code.The service is free for consumers. (Miller, 1/11)