Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: In Calif., New Rules Limiting Narrow Networks Kick In; Md. Sick-Leave Bill Triggers Committee Debate
New regulations requiring California health care insurers to follow stricter guidelines for provider network adequacy, out-of-network notifications and accuracy of provider lists when dealing with the state Department of Insurance went into effect on Monday. (Gorn, 2/3)
A bill that would mandate paid sick leave for Maryland businesses with 10 or more employees drew strong support and criticism Tuesday during a Senate Finance Committee hearing. Advocates said the legislation, sponsored by Sen. Catherine E. Pugh (D-Baltimore), would help employers by allowing their workers to stay home while ill, preventing the spread of disease and getting them back on the job faster. About 40鈥塸ercent of private-sector workers 鈥 or more than 700,000 Marylanders 鈥 lack paid sick leave, according to the advocacy group Working Matters. (Hernandez, 2/4)
The suit seeks a series of remedies, ranging from an increase in foster homes to timely medical care. The suit uses pseudonyms for the 10 child plaintiffs, who range in age from 3 to 14. It seeks class action by the court on behalf of all children in state foster care. As of September, there were 16,990 children in state custody, according to the latest data from the Department of Child Safety. (Pitzl, 2/3)
Child-welfare advocates filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday accusing Arizona officials of jeopardizing the well-being of nearly 17,000 children in the state鈥檚 foster-care system by failing to provide sufficient health-care services and an adequate number of foster homes. The complaint comes as Arizona鈥檚 foster-care population rose more rapidly in recent years than any other state in the nation. Some foster children, the lawsuit alleges, slept in offices because they didn鈥檛 have homes. (Lazo, 2/3)
Children's advocacy groups on Tuesday sued the state of Arizona, claiming it violated the civil rights of nearly 17,000 children in its foster care system by exposing them to possible harm. The suit filed in U.S. District Court in Phoenix said the state fails to provide needed mental and other health care, and enough foster homes to house children removed from their families. (Christie, 2/3)
A Kansas House committee unanimously passed a bill Tuesday to allow for tax-free savings accounts for children with disabilities. But even as they sent the bill to the full House, committee members expressed concern that cost could keep it from coming up for a vote there. House Bill 2100 would allow the families of Kansas children with disabilities up to age 26 to set aside up to $14,000 a year for them, with up to $100,000 not counting against their Medicaid benefits. (Marso, 2/3)
Gov. Sam Brownback鈥檚 plan for plugging a more than $325 million hole in the current fiscal year鈥檚 budget includes a $254,000 cut in state-funded grants for safety net clinics that provide care for the poor and uninsured. The governor also has proposed taking an additional $378,000 from the grant program in fiscal 2016 and 2017. (Ranney, 2/3)
Beginning in the 1920s, when heroin became illegal, people tended to think of heroin abuse as a problem plaguing people of color in the big cities. But in the past decade, heroin abuse has exploded鈥攁nd it is hitting white people in suburbs and rural areas particularly hard. As the demographics of heroin use have changed, so have states鈥 efforts to combat the problem. Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia now have laws designed to make naloxone, a heroin antidote that is 99 percent effective, more easily accessible to overdose victims, according to the Network for Public Health Law. Last year, 21 states and the District adopted so-called 鈥淕ood Samaritan laws鈥 that provide some type of immunity for people calling 911 to report or seek help for an overdose. (Wiltz, 2/4)
As the role of a county jail evolves into more than a prison to a mental and medical health provider for the incarcerated, paying for the ever-growing costs associated with that care has become a problem for sheriffs across the state. And with recent changes in legislation last year that forced county jails and community corrections programs to house low-level state offenders instead of sending them to the Indiana Department of Correction an anticipated influx of as many as 14,000 new inmates, many with special mental health needs, has sheriffs looking for more funding from the state to help pay for those costs. (Napoleon, 2/3)