Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: In Mass., Judge Rejects Partners' Hospital Acquisition Deal; Iowa Physician Assistants Seek To Have Oversight Rule Eased
The state health care market is reverberating with the aftershocks of a major court decision Thursday which rejected a deal that would have let Partners HealthCare, the state鈥檚 largest hospital network, acquire three more hospitals. (Bebinger, 1/29)
A Superior Court judge on Thursday dealt a devastating blow to Partners HealthCare鈥檚 plans to expand its dominance across Eastern Massachusetts, rejecting a controversial deal that would have allowed Partners to acquire three community hospitals and add hundreds of doctors to its network. (McCluskey and Weisman, 1/29)
Ed Friedmann is the top health care provider on most days in this Dallas County town of 876 people, where he has worked for 29 years as a physician assistant. He owns his red-brick clinic, which once was a small hospital but hasn鈥檛 had a full-time physician in decades. He can prescribe most medications. He can stitch up a cut leg or remove a wayward fish hook from a finger. Friedmann鈥檚 work is overseen by a physician 19 miles away in Dallas Center. A state regulation requires the doctor to travel to the Redfield clinic at least every other week to go over cases. But Friedmann is helping lead an effort to get rid of the state requirement that such reviews be done in person. (Leys, 1/29)
State health officials say Mississippi is now the first in the nation to have a third statewide system of care in place to help save the lives of trauma and stroke victims. Hospitals must have 24/7 CT capability and a specific drug available to break up blood clots, and a neurologist available 24/7. (1/30)
State hospital industry officials say Tenet Health is seeking a buyer or a partner for its five Georgia hospitals. The five hospitals are all in greater metro Atlanta, and they include 460-bed Atlanta Medical Center and 202-bed North Fulton Hospital in Roswell. (Miller, 1/29)
Hillsborough County hospitals are scheduled to lose more than $151 million a year in funds for care of the uninsured beginning June 30, according to a report released Thursday. Statewide, the coming annual loss will be $2.1 billion, estimates co-author Charlotte Cassel. The Tampa Bay area report strongly urges that Florida accept the federal funds provided through the Affordable Care Act for states that expand Medicaid expansion to people under the poverty level who are not covered now. That includes close to 1 million uninsured Floridians. (Gentry, 1/29)
For John Cosentino, 50, an intellectually disabled adult with profound autism and self-injurious behavior who does not speak, this routine has been his refuge. He has lived at the sprawling, state-run center in East New York off the Belt Parkway since he was a teenager. Sometime this year, however, his routine will abruptly end, and he, like the other remaining residents of the institution, will probably enter a group home. (Robbins, 1/29)
The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services is attempting to head off opposition to a bill being crafted to allow the state to regulate the use of prescription mental health drugs. Kansas Mental Health Coalition made it clear they would likely continue to oppose any proposal aimed at limiting Medicaid patients鈥 access to brand-name antipsychotic drugs. (Ranney, 1/29)
On a day when Congressman Kevin Yoder testified before a Kansas House committee, it was a 15-year-old Olathe South High School freshman who stole the show. Rachel Mast, who has Down syndrome, ebulliently encouraged the Children and Seniors Committee to approve a bill to allow tax-exempt savings accounts for Kansas children with disabilities that would not jeopardize their Medicaid benefits. Yoder said with federal bill鈥檚 passage in December Kansas should now act quickly to become the first state to take advantage of it. (Marso, 1/29)
Legislators heard emotional testimony Thursday from an Emporia woman about a bill to allow access to drugs in preliminary federal testing. They also heard questions about whether the 鈥淩ight to Try鈥 legislation is sound policy or an ideological quest that will give terminal patients false hope. Versions of 鈥淩ight to Try鈥 have passed in Colorado, Arizona, Michigan, Missouri and Louisiana. (Marso, 1/29)
Gov. Larry Hogan will allow implementation of three health care regulations his administration had previously flagged for further review, including one that bans discrimination against Medicaid patients based on sexual orientation and gender identity. Hogan's withholding of the regulation, which also prevents discrimination based on religious affiliation, had riled advocates for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. (Rector, 1/29)