Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Ga. Lawmakers Wrestle With Surprise Medical Billing Solution; In N.H., Dartmouth-Hitchcock Cancer Center Gets OK In Dispute Over Fundraising Cash
Surprise billing of medical patients 鈥 when people go to a hospital in their insurance network but get surprised by a bill from an out-of-network doctor anyway 鈥 is a big problem. Legislators are still wrestling with a solution. On Tuesday the state Senate鈥檚 Health and Human Services Committee met to discuss one proposal on surprise billing: Senate Bill 8, sponsored by the committee鈥檚 chairwoman, Renee Unterman, R-Buford. (Hart, 2/7)
The Senate Health and Human Services Committee heard testimony on a proposal to halt these medical bills, which can come from ER doctors, anesthesiologists, radiologists, pathologists and others who are not in a patient鈥檚 insurance network 鈥 even though the hospital where they work is. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very complicated issue,鈥欌 said Sen. Renee Unterman (R-Buford), who chairs the panel and is a nurse by profession. She is the sponsor of Senate Bill 8. Health insurers and medical providers can鈥檛 agree on a solution, she said. (Miller, 2/7)
Georgia鈥檚 limited medical marijuana law would be expanded to include autism, under legislation passed Tuesday in a state Senate committee. Senate Bill 16 is the first of several bills dealing with the law鈥檚 expansion to move this year, although medical marijuana advocates oppose the bill because it would also roll back the maximum THC level in the cannabis oil now allowed here. (Torres, 2/7)
Dartmouth-Hitchcock鈥檚 Norris Cotton Cancer Center properly used $6.1 million raised for cancer research, a state regulator has ruled, in a dispute that led its former director to file a whistleblower lawsuit. Thomas Donovan, head of the state Justice Department鈥檚 Charitable Trusts Unit, said the fundraising dollars, including money from the center鈥檚 signature fundraiser, The Prouty, were directed to be used for the cancer center鈥檚 benefit. The review did not find language restricting the gift from being used for the center鈥檚 operations, according to Donovan. (Cousineaug, 2/7)
The mild winter has meant less shoveling, fewer warm layers and something else 鈥 fewer outbreaks of the dreaded winter stomach bug. Beth Daly, chief of the state鈥檚 Bureau of Infectious Disease Control, said there鈥檚 been only 15 reported outbreaks of norovirus illness since December. The norovirus season usually runs from December until March and produces approximately 70 outbreaks, Daly said. While the numbers seem to be lower than usual, Daly said it鈥檚 too soon to predict if this season will be an easier one on Granite Staters鈥 bellies. (Grosky, 2/7)
A company that promised sick 9/11 responders and NFL players with concussion injuries that it could 鈥渃ut through red tape鈥 to get their payouts faster lured them into advances that meant hundreds of thousands of dollars in illegally high interest and fees, authorities said Tuesday. In a lawsuit filed Tuesday, New York鈥檚 attorney general and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau allege that New Jersey-based RD Legal Funding and its founder Roni Dersovitz snared 9/11 responders who are struggling with cancer and respiratory illness as well as former NFL players with brain injuries into taking costly advances on their settlements. (Sweet, 2/7)
New medical marijuana regulations proposed by state health officials would block patients from timely and affordable access to medication, restrict physicians in treating their patients, and potentially undercut the development and distribution of quality medicine, an overflow crowd told Florida Department of Health officials Tuesday morning in Fort Lauderdale. (Smiley, 2/7)
A Culpeper cardiologist faces a misdemeanor assault and battery charge stemming from a reported confrontation with a female nursing director inside Novant Health UVa Health System Culpeper Medical Center last week. According to the official criminal complaint filed in Culpeper County General District Court, Dr. Zia Roshandel, 47, of Blue Ridge Cardiovascular Associates is accused of hitting Irene C. D鈥橤ama in the shoulder following what she described as a heated argument inside her office Thursday. (Simmons, 2/7)
If you fax private medical information to a health management company in Ohio, you don't expect it to arrive instead at a small publishing firm in Milwaukee. But that's exactly what has been happening since the summer of 2015. (Stingl, 2/7)
Shawn Blazsek knew a string of concussions from high school football and boxing was catching up with him. He would go days without sleeping and was forgetting how to tie his shoes. Still, at age 33, he was stunned after being told he had Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. He started planning out who would take care of his four kids if something happened to his wife, and thought about how hard it would be for them when he could no longer recognize his family. So he stuffed fistfuls of sleeping pills into a bottle and wrote himself a note, vowing to swallow all of them when he wasn鈥檛 able to remember the names of his children. That day never came. (Seewer, 2/8)
Details of a long-running health care kickback scheme that allegedly featured prostitutes, cash-stuffed envelopes and private jet junkets began to unfold in federal court Tuesday as a 79-year-old physician went on trial. Dr. Bernard Greenspan isn鈥檛 alleged to have engaged in any of the seamier activities surrounding now-defunct Biodiagnostic Laboratory Services, but prosecutors painted him as eager to accept about $200,000 in bribes from the company over several years in exchange for sending his patients鈥 blood samples there. (Porter, 2/7)
Small sheets of healthy skin are being grown from scratch at a Stanford University lab, proof that gene therapy can help heal a rare disease that causes great human suffering. The precious skin represents growing hope for patients who suffer from the incurable blistering disease epidermolysis bullosa 鈥 and acceleration of the once-beleaguered field of gene therapy, which strives to cure disease by inserting missing genes into sick cells. (Krieger, 2/7)
Soon after the feds broke up a family-run chain of clinics that tried to steal $130 million from Miami-Dade Public Schools and a string of major U.S. companies, a trio of Cuban immigrants fled to Mexico and eventually back home to the island. For almost two years, the chain鈥檚 boss, Reynaldo Castillo, and his right-hand man, Jose Gerardo Gonzalez, hid in Cuba. Castillo and Gonzalez were wanted for their leading roles in an indictment charging a total 16 defendants with healthcare fraud in March of 2015. (Weaver, 2/7)
In uneasy news for medical marijuana users, UC Davis researchers have identified potentially lethal bacteria and mold on samples from 20 Northern California pot dispensaries, leading them to warn patients with weakened immune systems to avoid smoking, vaping or inhaling aerosolized cannabis. (Buck, 2/7)