Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Ga. House Approves Bill Mandating Insurance Broker Commissions; Colo. AG OKs Sale Of Nonprofit Insurer
Legislation that聽mandates Georgia health insurance agents be paid a commission for all sales passed the state House on Thursday.聽聽House Bill 64 is the second attempt from state聽Rep. Shaw Blackmon, R-Bonaire, to protect agents. It passed the House by a vote of 172-1. (Gould Sheinin, 2/9)
Colorado鈥檚 attorney general has given her blessing to the proposed sale of Rocky Mountain Health Plans, a Western Slope insurer, to UnitedHealthcare. In an opinion issued Thursday, Attorney General Cynthia Coffman wrote that she had concluded the sale can proceed legally. Rocky Mountain Health Plans is a nonprofit, and the sale will require it to convert to a for-profit company and leave聽the proceeds of the sale 鈥 some $36 million, according to Coffman鈥檚 opinion 鈥 to the聽Rocky Mountain Health Plans Foundation, which will use that money for charitable projects on the Western Slope. (Ingold, 2/9)
Texas nurse practitioners are once again seeking independence from costly agreements that require them to sign contracts with doctors in order to treat and write prescriptions for their patients.聽State Rep.聽Stephanie Klick, R-Fort Worth, introduced House Bill 1415 Thursday, saying the bill would get rid of so-called prescriptive authority agreements that require nurse practitioners 鈥 who have advanced degrees in a nursing speciality 鈥 to pay up to six-figure fees to "delegating" doctors. (Alfaro, 2/9)
Supervisor Jane Kim is working on legislation to require that San Francisco pick up the tab for birth control for any woman living in the city whose free prescription stands to be cut off under President Trump. While Trump has so far focused mostly on immigration policy and working himself into a lather over 鈥淪aturday Night Live鈥 skits, Kim said she is bracing for an anticipated crackdown on birth control access from the new administration. (Knight, 2/9)
State officials have decided聽to end the state-funded subsidies that since 2014 had helped Flint residents pay their water bills after the city's water system became contaminated with lead.聽Word of the subsidies' impending cutoff surfaced Thursday after a senior adviser to Gov. Rick Snyder sent a letter to Flint鈥檚 interim chief financial officer, saying the subsidies will stop after Feb. 28, according to a news release from the City of Flint.聽The reaction聽of Flint's mayor and other city officials was聽mild, characterizing the governor's decision as a sign that the city's water quality had improved although they stopped short of saying it was entirely safe. (Laitner and Zaniewski, 2/9)
A torrent of civil lawsuits over alleged sexual abuse by a former employee of the Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Leavenworth is expected now that a federal judge has refused to dismiss one of the cases. Three more lawsuits were filed this week in federal court, bringing the total to 15 so far, and dozens more are expected to be filed in coming months. The suits by military veterans accuse Mark E. Wisner, a one-time physician鈥檚 assistant at the hospital who held himself out as a doctor, of sexually molesting them during physical exams. (Margolies, 2/9)
A bill that would restrict the funds available to Planned Parenthood clinics operating in Virginia has passed a state Senate committee. House Bill 2264, sponsored by Del. Benjamin L. Cline, R-Rockbridge, does not mention Planned Parenthood by name but proposes to restrict the state鈥檚 Department of Health from providing any funds to a Virginia clinic that provides abortions that are not covered by the state鈥檚 Medicaid program. (Demeria, 2/9)
Trump鈥檚 order was designed to stop terrorists and others who would commit violence in the United States. But it has also ensnared a highly educated community of Iranian scholars, researchers, and professionals who, over the last century of immigration, have risen to the top echelons of Boston鈥檚 academic, health care, and high-tech institutions. (Levenson, 2/10)
LCMC Health, the not-for-profit, academic health care system that includes Children's Hospital and University Medical Center in New Orleans, has purchased Fairway Medical Center in western St. Tammany Parish. LCMC Health bought the surgical hospital near Mandeville in partnership with several local, specialty surgeons, the system announced Thursday (Feb. 9). The joint ownership is effective immediately. In addition to Children's Hospital and the University Medical Center, LCMC is also comprised of New Orleans East Hospital, Touro Infirmary and West Jefferson Medical Center. The purchase price was not disclosed. (Chatelain, 2/9)
Humana, Florida鈥檚 largest Medicare managed-care company, says it will lay off hundreds of employees in April, including 328 in Florida. Of those, 260 are in the Tampa Bay area, according to Humana spokeswoman Nancy Hanewickel. (Gentry, 2/9)