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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Sep 27 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: In Wash., Fifth Patient Diagnosed With Legionnaires; Former Ohio State Doctor Scores Age Discrimination Settlement

Outlets report on health news from Washington, Ohio, Minnesota, Connecticut, California, New York and Massachusetts.

A fifth patient has been diagnosed with Legionnaires鈥 disease at the University of Washington Medical Center, days after health officials said the deadly outbreak appeared to be contained. (Aleccia, 9/26)

Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center will pay $100,000 as part of a settlement unveiled Monday to a former doctor who alleged age discrimination in a 2015 lawsuit filed in the Ohio Court of Claims. In 2004, Dr. Nathan C. Hall became an assistant professor in the OSU College of Medicine's radiology department. Within two years, he was promoted to division chief of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging. In his lawsuit, Hall states that he met or exceeded the productivity expectations outlined in his employment agreement as well as received positive performance reviews until Dr. Richard D. White was appointed to department chair in 2010. (Forchesato, 9/26)

Negotiators for Allina Health and the nurses union resume contract talks today 鈥 three weeks after more than 4,000 hospital nurses went on strike over health benefits. A federal mediator called negotiators back to the bargaining table last week, but that doesn't mean the two sides are ready to cut a deal. Both Allina and the Minnesota Nurses Association have been loathe to make the first move in resuming contract negotiations after a 22-hour bargaining session in early September. (Benson, 9/27)

Two Connecticut regulators last week upheld a controversial state tax on hospitals' net patient revenue, opening the door for dozens of hospitals to take their challenge to court. (Teichert, 9/26)

Foster youth advocates and Bay Area legislators on Monday told a panel of state officials that the alarming conclusions of a recent state audit highlighting California鈥檚 weak oversight of psychiatric drugs for foster kids could be solved if Gov. Jerry Brown signs three pieces of key legislation into law this week... The audit, released Aug. 23, mirrored many findings of this newspaper鈥檚 series 鈥淒rugging Our Kids鈥 that disclosed the state鈥檚聽dependence on psychotropic medications聽to control troubled children in聽the state鈥檚 foster care system and the failure to track how the drugs are prescribed. Beall said that one solution is his own Senate Bill 1291, which would require better transparency and tracking of mental health services for foster kids in every California county. (Seipel, 9/26)

A doctor who trained for two years at the psychiatric unit of a New York hospital said in a lawsuit Monday that poor adolescent patients were routinely provoked into acting out, then restrained and drugged, extending their hospitalization and Medicaid payments. Dr. Alfred Robenzadeh said that supervisors at Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla retaliated against him when he tried to address what he says was chronic patient abuse that increased the severity of diagnoses, with usual two-week inpatient stays often extended days or weeks. He alleges the practice defrauded Medicaid. (9/26)

Medical Properties Trust will buy Steward Health Care鈥檚 hospital properties for $1.2 billion and take a $50 million stake in the company...聽Steward, the largest for-profit hospital operator in Massachusetts, was created in 2010 when Cerberus Capital Management bought the former Caritas Christi network of Catholic hospitals. It said it will return the New York-based firm鈥檚 original investment, though Cerberus will continue to hold a majority stake. (Dayal McCluskey, 9/26)

For the past 11 months, Cleveland officials say they've been at work rebuilding a beleaguered program meant to respond to children poisoned by lead. Yet homes that city health workers knew contained hazardous levels of the toxin still linger in neighborhoods, posing a potential threat to young children and pregnant women. Right now, the city knows about more than 300 properties that it should have evacuated and posted signs warning of lead hazards. (Dissell and Zeltner, 9/26)

More than 1,500 former patients of Seattle Pain Centers have sought help in Washington emergency rooms since the chain of clinics was closed abruptly in July 鈥 and hundreds more have swamped local hospital programs. (Aleccia, 9/26)

California voters favor reforming the state parole system, but are more closely divided about slapping a two-buck-a-pack tax on cigarettes, a new Field Poll shows. And voters also favor extending a tax on the wealthy that they first approved in 2012, the poll shows. The new poll shows what could be a softening of voters鈥 appetite for a new tobacco tax to fund health care and tobacco prevention efforts, as the deep-pocketed opposition rolls out a heavy ad campaign attacking the measure as a tax grab for special interests. (Peele, 9/26)

In five states this fall 鈥 California, Arizona, Nevada, Maine and Massachusetts 鈥 voters will be deciding whether marijuana should be legal for recreational use. And any of those states that do legalize marijuana will have to wrestle with the question of how to enforce laws against聽stoned drivers. It has been legal to smoke pot for fun in Colorado since January 2014, and the state modeled its聽marijuana driving-under-the-influence law on the one for alcohol. If a blood test shows a聽certain聽level of聽THC, the mind-altering compound in marijuana, the law says you shouldn鈥檛 be driving." (O'Neill and Markus, 9/27)

A Massachusetts physician should not have had his medical license suspended for allowing nurse practitioners in his office to certify patients for medical marijuana use, according to a state administrative law judge. Regulators in May suspended the license of Dr. John C. Nadolny, medical director of Canna Care Docs, a practice with eight Massachusetts locations that specialize in screening and approving patients for marijuana use. The Board of Registration in Medicine had ruled that Nadolny was an immediate threat to public safety, saying his office improperly used nurse practitioners to certify that thousands of patients were eligible to receive medical marijuana. (Lazar, 9/26)

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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