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Wednesday, Mar 23 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Lead In Florida's Water; In Pennsylvania, Some Ambulance Operators Face Financial Pressures

News outlets report on health issues in Florida, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Ohio and Connecticut.

It’s not just Flint that’s got lead issues: It’s in all 50 states, and it’s in schools and day cares. Florida ranked ninth in the country for the number of water systems with excessive lead levels. Lead levels were at actionable levels 80 times from from 2012 to 2015. In Florida, tests ranged from 15.5 parts per billion to 340 parts per billion at the highest level. (Aboraya, 3/22)

In the Philadelphia region the business of moving patients by ambulance is on financial life support. The industry is reeling, operators say, because of poor pay from hospitals and private health insurers, a sharp rise in Medicaid patients, and efforts to squeeze bad operators out of the business of nonemergency care. (Brubaker, 3/22)

Wisconsin Attorney General Brad Schimel asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday to reinstate a requirement that doctors who provide abortion have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals — a regulation that has been blocked by lower courts as unconstitutional. (Marley, 3/22)

Ohio lawmakers should increase the tobacco tax, raise the tobacco-buying age to 21 and ban the sale of crib bumpers, according to a state panel tasked with addressing infant mortality. The recommendations are among dozens in a report by the Ohio Commission on Infant Mortality released Tuesday. (Sanner, 3/22)

The Public Health Committee voted 20 to 7 Monday to move forward a proposal that would allow minors with certain medical conditions to use medical marijuana. Under the proposal, minors would be allowed to participate in the state’s medical marijuana program if they have one of six conditions and permission from a parent or guardian, their primary care provider, and a physician who specializes in the patient’s condition. The qualifying conditions would be: severe epilepsy, a terminal illness that requires end-of-life care, cerebral palsy, cystic fibrosis, uncontrolled intractable seizure disorders, and irreversible spinal cord injury with objective neurological indication of intractable spasticity. (Levin Becker, 3/22)

A prison health-care company is asking a judge to allow it to pursue a challenge to the Florida Department of Corrections' decision in January to award a contract to another firm to provide health services at the majority of the state's prisons. Wexford Health Sources, Inc., filed a document Friday in the state Division of Administrative Hearings arguing that it should be able to continue a formal protest against the department's award of a $268 million contract to Centurion of Florida, LLC. (3/22)

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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