Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Ga.'s 'Surprise' Medical Bill Legislation Hits Snag; Mass. Commission Urges State To Up Oversight Of Hospital Rates
The major snag is a lack of agreement on a formula to determine reimbursement rates for doctors, said Sen. Renee Unterman, the bill鈥檚 sponsor, at a legislative hearing Tuesday. Unterman, a Republican from Buford, is also a nurse and has been concerned about the problem for a long time. Surprise medical bills 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 in the network. (Miller, 2/14)
Commissioners said the Division of Insurance should have greater authority to oversee hospital-insurer contracts, including the amount hospital rates can increase each year. The controversial proposal comes after months of discussions at the commission, which was convened to study the wide variation in prices at Massachusetts hospitals. Studies have shown that price disparities contribute to higher health spending because the most expensive providers also tend to have the top reputations and attract the most patients. (Dayal McCluskey, 2/15)
Two contentious nursing strikes cost Allina Health more than $149 million last year 鈥 wiping out the year鈥檚 operating revenues for the Minneapolis-based hospital and clinic system. More than 4,000 nurses struck twice 鈥 for seven days in June and again for 37 days in the fall 鈥 after Allina demanded that they give up a union-backed health insurance plan and accept the same coverage offered other employees. (Olson, 2/14)
The Department of Public Health said that through the week of Jan. 29 through Feb. 4, there had been 376 hospitalizations in metro Atlanta due to influenza so far this season. That鈥檚 up from 61 at the same time a year ago. The state reported last Friday that it had two confirmed flu-associated deaths this season, the same number as the same period a year ago. (Miller, 2/14)
Advocates for hygienists say that poor and disabled people, often minority children, struggle to find good dental care because of a shortage of dentists willing to serve them. The group is pushing for a new class of advanced hygienists, sort of nurse practitioners for the mouth, who could offer the kind of help that they say these patients aren鈥檛 getting. Traditional dentists, though, said such a role would endanger rather than help the poor by putting them in the hands of people who lack proper training and skills. (Krantz, 2/15)
Community Dental Care Program director Ann Copeland said it鈥檚 important for immigrant populations to see a diverse, welcoming staff. Copeland聽said 83 percent of their clients are on public assistance, and 8 percent are uninsured. More than half are children. Many of the refugee populations qualify for public assistance but have trouble navigating the healthcare system due to language and cultural barriers. Some are unfamiliar with modern dental hygiene, such as fluoride treatments, or don鈥檛 realize that soda contains sugars and acids that can lead to tooth decay. Legal status can also be a barrier. Some Mexican-American families are undocumented and resist applying for public assistance and making their presence known to state and county government, Copeland said. (Melo, 2/14)
AmeriCares Free Clinics opened a new facility聽to treat the uninsured in Stamford last month, it didn鈥檛 take long to see what Executive Director Karen Gottlieb called the 鈥渦nmet need." And Gottlieb figures that need will grow. Like others in health care, she and her counterparts at other free clinics are watching closely as Congress and President Trump look to repeal and replace the federal health law, and change how Medicaid is funded. (Levin Becker, 2/15)
Following months of study, officials with Methodist Hospital in St. Louis Park have decided to adopt new hospital gowns that feature sharper colors, a different mix of fabrics and a design that aims to keep patient posteriors under wraps. The key difference: Patients tie new gowns closer to their sides, so there鈥檚 less straining with knots at the middle of their backs. In focus groups, patients told hospital officials they feel exposed with current hospital gowns. (Snowbeck, 2/15)
CHI St. Luke's Health system has or will be closing four facilities and laying off 89 workers at locations in The Woodlands and Conroe, according to a letter from the Texas Workforce Commission. The Feb. 9 letter announced the CHI St. Luke's Health Woodlands Ambulatory Surgery Center closed on Jan. 27 and its 7 employees will be laid off effective next month. In addition The health system's Emergency center in The Woodlands will also close on March 3 and 29 employees will lose their job. The same day the CHI St. Luke's Health Pinecroft is closing its pharmacy, sleep lab and laboratories, also in The Woodlands, and 27 people there will be laid off. (Deam, 2/14)
Michigan ordered a Flint hospital Tuesday to immediately comply with federal recommendations that were issued due to its association with a deadly Legionnaires' disease outbreak, saying the hospital's water system is unsanitary and a possible source of illness. (2/14)
A federal judge has ruled the Texas prison system and its top leaders must stand trial in a civil rights lawsuit over the heat-related death of an inmate, a sharp rebuke that focused new attention on the deaths of more than 20 other inmates in prison units that lack air-conditioning. The 83-page order by U.S. District Judge Keith Ellison - who personally visited a prison in the summer heat - cites the state's own records documenting a heat index of about 150 degrees inside the Hutchins State Jail near Dallas where inmate Larry Gene McCollum, 58, a cab driver from Bellmead near Waco, died during a heat wave in 2011. (Banks, 2/14)
Missouri corrections officials are not required to disclose the identities of the pharmacists who supply the state鈥檚 lethal execution drugs, an appeals court ruled Tuesday. Reversing a lower court judge who had ordered the Department of Corrections to reveal their names, the Missouri Court of Appeals found that the DOC did not violate the state鈥檚 Sunshine Law by refusing to provide them. The court cited a Missouri law that gives the director of the DOC discretion to select the members of the execution team, including those who administer the lethal chemicals or gas used in executions and those who provide them with 鈥渄irect support.鈥 (Margolies, 2/14)
People also like the security of buying into a proven concept, which franchising provides, Fagan said. While food has always been a popular franchise model, essential services like home or auto repair, air conditioning and health care are strong franchise options. The projected growth of the elderly population is also fueling strong demand for in-home care, experts say, but it鈥檚 no small task to start a franchise in the sector. (Sciacca, 2/14)
The state has lost its effort to impose a greater penalty on a nurse whose license was suspended after letting a disoriented patient leave a hospital during a snowstorm. The 61-year-old patient was found dead the next day just 380 feet from the entrance of Down East Community Hospital in Machias, leading to an investigation of nurse John Zablotny鈥檚 actions and an effort by the Maine State Board of Nurses to revoke his license for two years. (2/14)
The Los Angeles County Department聽of Public Health is investigating the death聽of an 18-year-old Santa Monica High School student. Kelly Cano, a senior, died Saturday. She is the second student that the high school has lost this school year. Sophomore Vanai Jelks, 15,聽died in October. (Kohli, Karlamangla and Etehad, 2/14)
A proposal to build a fifth pediatric heart transplant center in Florida is drawing opposition from at least two of the existing centers. Critics of the plan say there aren't enough patients to support another transplant center and spreading existing patients among more centers would have a negative effect on the overall quality of care. (Ochoa, 2/15)
Lobbyists, paid to represent various interests, are normally the ones watching as state lawmakers cast votes, but their interest in pot is so great that the first House subcommittee meeting on the subject was standing-room only. Sergeant-at-arms staffers blocked the door, turning people away. At the final stop in the Department of Health's statewide tour of public hearings, Chelsie Lyons, a Tallahassee-based activist with Minorities for Medical Marijuana called out the process that will turn Amendment 2 into a state laws and rules governing medical cannabis. (Auslen, 2/14)