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Friday, Oct 14 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Insurance Market Has Inequity Problem, Mass. AG Says; In N.C., Carolinas Blasts Feds' Challenge To Hospital Contracts

Outlets report on health news from Massachusetts, North Carolina, Connecticut, Florida, Maryland and Georgia.

Massachusetts鈥 health insurance market has an income inequality problem, according to a report from Attorney General Maura Healey鈥檚 office, whose findings mirror national studies. The analysis found that more health care dollars are spent on higher-income communities than on lower-income communities 鈥 even though the latter tend to have greater medical needs. Healey鈥檚 office called this a 鈥渄istressing鈥 trend that has persisted for years. (Dayal McCluskey, 10/13)

North Carolina's largest healthcare system is fighting back against a lawsuit by the U.S. Justice Department that alleges the system imposed anti-competitive contract requirements on insurers, saying a federal appeals court has completely rejected the government's arguments. Carolinas HealthCare System urged a North Carolina federal judge on Wednesday to toss out Justice Department's suit after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit rejected the government's arguments against similar contract arrangements in a case involving American Express. (Teicert, 10/13)

Henry [Lloyd]聽is one of three minors who now have approval to participate in Connecticut鈥檚 medical marijuana program. Two other minors have applications pending. Another, whose application was approved, died. To qualify, children or teens must have one of six conditions 鈥 cerebral palsy, cystic fibrosis, severe epilepsy, a terminal illness requiring end-of-life care, or irreversible spinal cord injury with objective neurological indication of intractable spasticity. (Levin Becker, 10/13)

Partners HealthCare and Boston Medical Center are joining a sweeping national effort to gather medical data on at least 1 million people and use it to better understand how disease works. They are among several health care organizations across the country that will participate in the national Precision Medicine Initiative, federal officials said Thursday. Precision medicine is an emerging approach in which a patient鈥檚 medical treatments are based on his or her genes, lifestyle, and other factors. (Dayal McCluskey, 10/13)

The number of unfilled nursing jobs has climbed since 2013, and the state is expected to add about 10,000 new registered nurse positions by the end of this year. Despite that demand, some of the region's state colleges and the University of Central Florida 鈥 all with well-regarded nursing programs 鈥 routinely turn away qualified applicants because they cannot afford to expand their programs. UCF's College of Nursing, for example, this year rejected more than half of the 306 students who applied and met admission requirements, enrolling 126 of them in the nursing program on its main Orlando campus. (Postal, 10/13)

State employee unions plan to ask a judge to block the privatization of group homes for people with intellectual or developmental disabilities, saying the layoffs caused by those changes violate Connecticut law and will eventually be blocked by the state labor board. If that happens, the unions say in their聽request for an injunction, clients would have their lives upended twice 鈥 first by having to go through a change in staff in state-run group homes where they have developed relationships with caregivers, and then again if the labor board orders the laid-off state employees to be reinstated. If the unions are successful, they聽could block a major component of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy鈥檚 plan to shrink the state workforce 鈥 a plan that already is lagging behind schedule. (Levin Becker and Phaneuf, 10/13)

Once again, government actions against a controversial for-profit company鈥檚 chain of group homes for the disabled may have come too late to protect a child. ProPublica has learned that Maryland had begun pulling about 30 children out of homes owned and managed by AdvoServ in August, but hadn鈥檛 yet relocated a teenage girl when she died a month later after being manually restrained by staff. Maryland鈥檚 Department of Human Resources had also stopped placing children in AdvoServ homes, following inspections that identified deficiencies in quality control, record-keeping, and conditions in residential and common areas. (Vogell, 10/13)

Quitting smoking can be hard to do, but it's a step that most cigarette smokers want to take, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And despite its difficulty, many people succeed. In fact, the CDC reports that the number of former smokers has exceeded the number of current smokers since 2002. (Caldwell, 10/13)

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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