Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Mass. Fight Against High Drug Costs; Kansas May Drop IG For Private Medicaid Plans
Congress Thursday will weigh in once again on the ongoing saga surrounding drug prices and the CEOs who set them. But experts say one state official may have found a way to combat the high costs of drugs by using consumer protection laws. A potential lawsuit in Massachusetts against drugmaker Gilead over its costly hepatitis C drugs could, if successful, forge a new path for states, which in recent months have actively fought high drug costs, even as Congress has ramped up its own efforts. (Schencker, 2/3)
The state鈥檚 $3 billion privatized Medicaid system has been without an inspector general for more than a year. The Kansas Senate unanimously approved a bill Wednesday that would eliminate the position. Senate Bill 182 as originally introduced would have changed the inspector general position for the program known as KanCare from classified to unclassified. Officials from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment requested that change to allow them to offer a higher salary because they said they were struggling to find qualified candidates at the classified salary level. (Marso, 3/3)
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy鈥檚 proposed budget calls for cutting funding for mental health and substance abuse treatment, hospitals, community health centers, school-based health clinics, asthma treatment, and respite programs for those who care for people with dementia 鈥 and counts on millions more in unspecified cuts to health care and social service systems that advocates say are already stretched thin. (Levin Becker, 2/3)
A health insurer鈥檚 data breach has affected 148,334 Georgians on Medicaid or PeachCare for Kids, state officials say. That total includes current and former Medicaid and PeachCare members from 2009 to 2015. (Miller, 2/3)
The federal government overpaid University of Minnesota Medical Center by at least $3.2 million between 2012 and 2013, according to a report released Wednesday by the Inspector General for the Department of Health and Human Services. The feds analyzed 255 inpatient and outpatient claims from the U's medical center and found about half did not fully comply with Medicare billing requirements. (Cox, 2/3)
Nearly $600,000 in public funds for people with developmental disabilities instead goes to a trade association whose lobbying at the state Capitol has resulted in a contentious relationship with parents of children with disabilities. Parents whose young or adult children have developmental and intellectual delays have simmered for years knowing that lobbyists receive a portion of government funds dispensed for therapy, respite care, wheelchair ramps and bathroom renovations. (Brown, 1/31)
State officials, hit with a surge in spending on home health care services, have asked Attorney General Maura Healey to investigate providers that they suspect of submitting fraudulent bills. Governor Charlie Baker鈥檚 Executive Office of Health and Human Services referred a dozen agencies to the attorney general鈥檚 Medicaid Fraud Division after reviewing internal data and fielding consumer complaints that pointed to possible fraud. Officials did not name the agencies. (Dayal McCluskey, 2/3)
Swedish Medical Center is asking about 2,900 patients to get tested for HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C after discovering that a former employee may have stolen narcotic pain medicines. Sgt. Brian Cousineau of the Englewood Police Department said police are investigating 28-year-old Rocky Allen. The surgical technologist worked in operating rooms at the hospital from Aug. 17 to Jan. 22, officials said Wednesday, and could have put at risk patients who had surgery during that time. (Olinger and Hernandez, 2/3)
Initially scheduled to open in Asheville last fall, Western North Carolina鈥檚 newest community health center has seen substantial delays, but the facility鈥檚 director says he expects it to open Feb. 8. After a two-year process, Appalachian Mountain had been awarded status as a federally qualified health center 鈥 independent nonprofit organizations that provide care to 鈥渕edically underserved populations/areas or special medically underserved populations comprised of migrant and seasonal farmworkers, the homeless or residents of public housing,鈥 according to HRSA guidelines. (Williams, 3/4)
Proponents of limiting the consumption of sugary drinks have mostly fallen short in the political arena in recent years, but Californians are largely supportive of their efforts. A new Field Poll, sponsored by The California Endowment, found that overwhelming majorities of voters favor taxing and putting safety warnings on soda and other sugar-sweetened beverages, proposals that advocates argue would help reduce health conditions such as diabetes. (Koseff, 2/3)
Broward Health reportedly is under two investigations, one federal, another state, that have come to light after the recent suicide of the system's CEO. The FBI is looking into claims of corruption following evidence gathered by a corporate private investigator allegedly hired by Dr. Nabil El Sanadi, according to a not-for-profit investigative journalism organization. (Sandler, 2/3)
A federal judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina last week ruled that the former operator of the Yadkin Valley Community Hospital must pay $36,080 in costs and $112,012 in attorneys鈥 fees to Yadkin County for closing the hospital when a temporary restraining order was in effect. Judge Terrence Boyle ruled in June of last year that HMC/CAH Consolidated Inc., the Missouri-based former operator of Yadkin Valley Community Hospital, and its parent company, CAH Acquisition Company 10 LLC, must pay the county for expenses incurred from the date the hospital was shut down, May 22 of last year, till it should reopen, but not to exceed July 31 of last year. That鈥檚 the date the contract between the county and CAH was due to expire. (Sisk, 2/31)
Lawmakers this year are looking to free-market economics to shape the future of healthcare in Florida. Republican leaders in the Florida House are pushing for an array of new laws that would cut regulations and negate insurance hurdles 鈥 from letting patients negotiate payment plans directly with their doctors to eliminating a statewide licensing program for hospitals. (Auslen, 3/3)
A Glendale, California, company shut down 10 months ago will pay about $10 million to settle claims by the Federal Trade Commission that it wildly exaggerated the results of its diet supplements, used fake endorsements from people like Oprah Winfrey and hired marketers to send millions of spam emails. FTC Midwest Region attorney Matthew H. Wernz said the $43 million settlement allows $33 million to be suspended if the defendants comply with conditions of the settlement. If they fail to comply, the full amount will be reinstated. (2/3)
Two laws addressing coal ash and natural gas drilling are unconstitutional, the N.C. Supreme Court ruled on Friday. In a highly anticipated ruling, the court found that the laws 鈥 the Energy Modernization Act and the Coal Ash Management Act 鈥 usurp Gov. Pat McCrory鈥檚 power to execute state laws, thereby violating the state鈥檚 constitution. (Rivin, 2/31)