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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Jun 20 2019

Full Issue

State Highlights: Homeless Activists Call For L.A. Mayor To Step Down: 'He Can't Handle The Crisis'; Connecticut Raises Legal Age To Purchase Tobacco, Vaping Pens to 21

Media outlets report on news from California, Connecticut, Iowa, Tennessee, Ohio, New York, Illinois, Arizona, Minnesota, Georgia, Washington and Missouri.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti is being targeted for removal from office over his handling of the homelessness crisis. On Wednesday, Alexandra Datig, a political commentator who is leading the effort, told reporters at a news conference outside City Hall that the mayor was served with a notice of intent for recall 鈥 the first step of a long-shot attempt. (Smith, 6/19)

Starting in October, Connecticut residents must be 21 to purchase tobacco or vaping products. Gov. Ned Lamont signed a bill Tuesday raising the legal age to buy cigarettes, cigars, vaping pens and other tobacco paraphernalia from 18 to 21. (Carlesso, 6/19)

Gov. Kim Reynolds said Wednesday that many factors聽led her to ask the director of Iowa's largest聽state agency to step down, although she declined聽repeatedly to say whether her request was聽tied聽to disciplinary action. "It was a lot of factors that went into that decision. Just a lot of factors," Reynolds told reporters at the Capitol. A reporter had asked her聽if聽Jerry Foxhoven's exit from the Iowa Department of Human Services聽was related to human resources issues, including disciplinary action. (Rodriguez and Akin, 6/19)

PainMD, a Nashville-area pain management聽company that recently shuttered clinics and stranded patients without medicine, disclosed in a court filing this week they've lost access to countless patient medical records that are stuck聽in storage units spread across Tennessee, Virginia and South Carolina.聽PainMD said it can no longer reach the records because, as the company has been聽crumbled into bankruptcy while accused of widespread fraud, all the employees with access the storage units have left. (Kelman, 6/19)

Black mothers are more likely to die in childbirth or within a year of giving birth, but state Rep. Erica Crawley contends that putting those women into broad race categories can confuse the conversation about disparities in health care. The Columbus Democrat wants a pregnancy-associated mortality review board that 鈥 if the proposal is kept in the final version of the state budget 鈥 would be established under state law to 鈥渄isaggregate鈥 more granular race data in order to help officials study the medical and social factors that contribute to mothers dying in pregnancy. (Rouan, 6/19)

New York鈥檚 plan to legalize marijuana this year collapsed on Wednesday, dashing hopes for a potential billion-dollar industry that supporters said would create jobs in minority communities and end decades of racially disproportionate policing. Democratic lawmakers had been in a headlong race to finalize an agreement before the end of the legislative session this week. But persistent disagreement about how to regulate the industry, as well as hesitation from moderate lawmakers, proved insurmountable. (Wang, 6/19)

Rush University Medical Center will no longer offer inpatient mental health care for children, making it the latest Chicago hospital to cut back on overnight stays for kids. The West Side hospital had 15 beds for child and adolescent behavioral health. It temporarily closed that unit in March, along with two adult inpatient mental health units, after the state found deficiencies in how the hospital protected its psychiatric patients from harming themselves through hanging or strangulation. The units were supposed to reopen following renovations to correct the issues and the state鈥檚 approval, but Rush has decided the pediatric unit will not reopen. (Schencker, 6/19)

Balladares enrolled in the Army when he was only 19, in the years following 9/11. He served as special forces and was trained as a sniper. He spent the next decade going back and forth between two separate worlds of the Army and home. Coming back home was almost as hard as leaving. (Burkitt, 6/19)

By 2030, the U.S. Census Bureau predicts, people over the age of 65 will outnumber children under the age of 18 for the first time in the nation鈥檚 history. It鈥檚 already happening in Ohio.According to census population estimates released Thursday, 13 of Ohio鈥檚 88 counties already had more people of retirement age in 2018 than they had children. (Caruso, 6/20)

Allina Health has reached a deal with its nurses鈥 union that provides raises each of its 3 years. The tentative agreement was announced Wednesday morning by the Minnesota Nurses Association. The contract would provide annual raises of 3 percent, 3 percent and 2.25 percent. It must still be ratified by the union membership. A contract vote has been scheduled for June 27 by the union. The Minnesota Nurses Association had stressed safety issues early and said the new deal addresses workplace violence. (Chaudhry, 6/19)

In a departure from contentious contract negotiations in the past, the Minnesota Nurses Association has reached tentative contract agreements with five Twin Cities hospital systems, including four more announced Tuesday and Wednesday. In 2016, Allina Health nurses spent 47 days on strike in a failed attempt to keep their union-only health insurance coverage. (Enger, 6/19)

Four major medical companies plan to announce Thursday that they have joined an innovation program at Emory Healthcare aimed at lowering health costs and improving patient care. The companies will develop and refine new systems, from health information technology to mobile diagnostic tools, at Emory facilities across the metro area. (Trubey, 6/20)

Sacramento County Public Health tweeted the image almost a month ago, in May. It鈥檚 a clever enough concept for a public service announcement, but it didn鈥檛 appear to get any attention at the time 鈥 not a single retweet. But a few weeks later, many local social media users can鈥檛 help but laugh about the poor model in the stock photo, who鈥檚 now inextricably linked to the STD. (McGough, 6/19)

Madigan Army Medical Center has been hit with a $12.3 million verdict after the Army admitted it was negligent and responsible for a 2015 operating room fire that severely disfigured a 13-month-old child undergoing a routine, minor surgical procedure. The child鈥檚 face was engulfed in a fireball when a surgeon activated an electrocautery device 鈥 a sort of electric scalpel 鈥 while an anesthesiologist administered concentrated oxygen through a face mask, leaving the boy with severe burns on one side of his face and his nose, according to court documents. (Carter, 6/19)

A nurse has been charged with raping a patient last weekend at Centerpoint Medical Center, the Jackson County Prosecutor鈥檚 Office announced in a news release. The nurse, identified in charging documents as Chukwuemeka U. Emmanuel, a 35-year-old Overland Park resident, is charged in Jackson County Circuit Court with first-degree rape. (Schwers, 6/19)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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