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Tuesday, Mar 7 2017

Full Issue

State Highlights: Kan. Legislators Hear Testimony Against Doctor-Assisted Suicide; Why Doesn't Mo. Track Prescription Drug Use?

Outlets report on news from Kansas, Missouri, Texas, Georgia, Connecticut, California, Arizona and Minnesota.

Kansas legislators heard testimony against physician-assisted suicide Monday from a former state representative. 鈥淭his is a direction we don鈥檛 want to go,鈥 said Steve Brunk, a Republican who represented a Wichita-area district for 12 years. 鈥淲e value life, and we don鈥檛 want to take the step of looking down this corridor where we negate the value of life and we assist people in dying.鈥 It鈥檚 already a felony for physicians to help patients end their lives in Kansas. (Marso, 3/6)

Along-running battle to establish a database to monitor for prescription drug abuse in Missouri 鈥 the only state without one 鈥 is about to hit a boiling point. On one side is Republican state Senator Rob Schaaf, who once said that when people die of overdoses that 鈥渏ust removes them from the gene pool.鈥 Schaaf, who is a physician, has squashed legislation in the past six sessions to establish a prescription drug monitoring program, or PDMP. But sensing urgency that the legislation might pass this session, Schaaf introduced his own bill to set up a PDMP that鈥檚 unlike those in any聽other state 鈥 a proposal that medical experts have called a 鈥渟ham.鈥 (Thielking, 3/7)

A group of British health-care organization officials kicks off a Texas tour in Houston on Monday in an effort to forge new connections and share knowledge. The delegation from six medical technology companies in the United Kingdom will be making stops in its week-long visit to Texas in Houston, Dallas and Austin to meet with American counterparts, according to a statement released by the Association of British Healthcare Industries. The group is scheduled to meet with representatives from Texas Children's Hospital, the Greater Houston Partnership, Houston Technology Center and Baylor College of medicine. (Deam, 3/6)

A large number of health care bills had moved from one legislative chamber to the other by the end of Crossover, which was Friday, the 28th day聽of the 40-day聽legislative session.聽That鈥檚 the last day for a bill to move from one chamber of the Legislature to the other and thereby retain a path to becoming law this year... The Legislature overwhelmingly approved the renewal of the hospital 鈥減rovider fee,鈥欌 a mechanism that draws an extra $600 million in federal funding for the state鈥檚 Medicaid program. And Gov. Nathan Deal has already signed the measure, a priority of his, into law. (Miller, 3/6)

They were surrounded by Democratic allies, but gay activists tried to avoid partisan politics Monday as they called for passage of a state law banning conversion therapy, the discredited practice of using psychological aversion techniques such as electric shock to change a young person鈥檚 sexual orientation. The LGBT community sees potential in Connecticut for a bipartisan victory: The proposed ban is co-sponsored by a half-dozen GOP legislators, including House Minority Leader Themis Klarides of Derby, who objected to what appears to be the tacit endorsement of conversion therapy in the platform adopted last summer at the Republican National Convention. (Pazniokas, 3/6)

Besides HB 742, which would allow nursing moms to breastfeed virtually anywhere they want,聽lawmakers took聽testimony Monday聽on House Bill 443, which would require Texas聽employers to provide a place for nursing moms聽to breastfeed other than a bathroom, and House Bill 329, which would require state agencies to develop 鈥渕other-friendly鈥 workplace聽policies.聽Krisdee Donmoyer, legislative director for the Texas Breastfeeding Coalition, said her group has gained traction among state legislators in recent sessions as more members have become aware of the troubles women endure when trying to nurse. It's a rare issue that enjoys wide聽bipartisan support thanks to increased awareness of the聽public health benefits of breastmilk. (Evans, 3/6)

San Francisco could soon have the most sweeping lactation policy in the nation, making it easier for mothers to pump breast milk in the workplace. Supervisor Katy Tang will introduce legislation Tuesday that would require all workplaces in the city 鈥 private and public 鈥 to have a lactation space that would include a seat, surface, electrical outlet and sink. The city Department of Public Health would provide a form for women to request time from their bosses to pump, and the bosses would be legally required to accommodate the request. (Johnson, 3/6)

A judge on Monday awarded $2.5 million to a military veteran who said that his now-terminal cancer would have been curable had the Veterans Administration hospital in Phoenix diagnosed it sooner. U.S. Magistrate Judge Michelle Burns ruled a nurse practitioner who found abnormalities in Steven Harold Cooper鈥檚 prostate during an examination in late 2011 at the Carl T. Hayden VA Medical Center had breached the standard of care by failing to order more testing and refer him to a urologist. (Billeaud, 3/6)

A Houston medical clinic manager has been sentenced to 33 months in federal prison for her role in a $1 million Medicare and Medicaid conspiracy.聽Verona Spicer partnered with a physician for the City of Houston in order to run a scam out of clinics in Houston and Port Arthur.聽The 47-year-old owner of Elite P. Care Medical Services paid off Dr. Jocelyn Pyles of Sugar Land to stop by the clinics after work and sign聽medical records for patients who'd actually been seen by a foreign medical graduate who wasn't licensed to practice in the U.S., according to a press release聽from U.S. Attorney Kenneth Magidson in Houston. (Blakinger, 3/6)

Two people from Santa Clara County are among a dozen in several states who may have become infected by an E. coli outbreak after eating聽 I.M. Healthy brand SoyNut Butter or granola coated with SoyNut Butter, health officials said Monday in a release. The California Department of Public Health, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are聽investigating a multistate outbreak of the infections and warning people not to eat the product. Young children and the elderly are most vulnerable, officials said. (Turntine, 3/6)

An electronic program launched in 2012 by Los Angeles County鈥檚 public health care system has reduced wait times for specialty care and eliminated the need for some safety-net patients to see specialists at all, according to a new study in the journal Health Affairs. The program, eConsult, allows primary care doctors to get specialists鈥 advice for their patients and expedite referrals for those who need in-person appointments. About a quarter of the requests included in the study were resolved without patients needing to see an advanced-care doctor, though there was variation among the specialties. (Gorman, 3/7)

Mary Brainerd, who as HealthPartners chief executive for about 15 years presided over one of the country鈥檚 major healthcare organizations at a time of growth and upheaval in the industry, said Monday that she plans to retire effective June 1.聽Brainerd will be succeeded by Andrea Walsh, another longtime executive at the nonprofit healthcare organization, which is a top insurance provider and a leading hospital and medical-clinic network. (Ojeda-Zapata, 3/6)

From San Jose to Felton to Guerneville and beyond, floods this winter have Northern California home recovery and restoration experts scurrying from one water disaster to the next, alerting panicked residents that time is critical in the battle against mold.聽For many San Jose residents, the floodwaters from Coyote Creek triggered a cascade of聽confusion: The sudden loss of personal property was followed by headaches over insurance issues and scam-artist contractors. Then came worries that the filthy flood water left behind and the resulting mold could jeopardize their health. (Seipel, 3/7)

Now out of elected office, former Oakland Mayor Jean Quan and her husband, Floyd Huen, are embarking on a new venture: a medical marijuana dispensary. Quan and Huen, a physician, are partnering with Apothecarium to open a dispensary in the Outer Sunset, in a predominantly Chinese聽American neighborhood in San Francisco. Apothecarium already operates a dispensary in the Castro, but Huen said there is a great need for one in the Sunset. (Debolt, 3/6)

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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