Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Massachusetts Bill Would Give Consumers More Control Over Personal Health Information; N.Y. City Council OKs Measure To Quash Future Illness Outbreaks
Massachusetts is considering a bill that would give consumers more control over who sees the insurance forms that list their personal health information. If the bill passes, Massachusetts would join four states 鈥 California, Colorado, Maryland, and Oregon 鈥 that have passed laws addressing the privacy of insurance forms. (Freyer, 8/14)
With New York City鈥檚 largest ever outbreak of Legionnaires鈥 disease apparently waning, the City Council passed a bill on Thursday intended to thwart future spread of the illness. The legislation, which was developed by Mayor Bill de Blasio; the Council speaker, Melissa Mark-Viverito; and Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, requires building owners to conduct quarterly inspections of cooling towers, which have been pinpointed as the source of the outbreak. Owners must provide annual certification that their towers have been inspected, tested, cleaned and disinfected. The legislation also requires building owners to carry out a maintenance plan and to register any cooling towers, or face fines and potential prison time, depending on the severity of the transgression. (Remnick, 8/13)
Children鈥檚 advocates are asking the state Department of Health Care Services to report on more of the quality measures in the hopes that better data can spotlight areas where children aren鈥檛 getting adequate health care. (Guzik, 8/13)
Health insurance plans sold in Connecticut will no longer be allowed to limit coverage of medically necessary infertility treatment to people under 40, according to new guidance issued by the Connecticut Insurance Department Thursday. (Levin Becker, 8/13)
A top state official says Iowa is providing better mental health care after an overhaul of the system, though critics question the recent closure of two state-run mental health institutes. Department of Human Services Director Chuck Palmer told an advisory board Wednesday that Iowa鈥檚 mental health system was serving more people and providing more modern care. The effort to remake the system began in 2011 and was implemented last year. (8/13)
In a press conference at the General Assembly Wednesday, Belhaven Mayor Paul O鈥橬eal thumped the podium in frustration that Pungo Hospital, located in his town, remains closed after a year. O鈥橬eal was in Raleigh speaking in support of lawmakers who would like to eliminate the state鈥檚 certificate of need laws, a complex suite of rules that help state regulators determine the distribution of hospital beds around North Carolina. For months, Republican lawmakers in both chambers of the legislature have been calling for changes to the laws: Senate leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) has indicated his support for doing away with CON altogether. (Hoban, 8/13)
Parents in Illinois citing religious objections in refusing to have their children immunized will have to get a doctor's signature confirming they've been informed of the risks. A bill signed into law this month requires parents of children entering kindergarten and grades six and nine to provide a Certificates of Religious Exemption with a health care provider's signature if they opt out of vaccine requirements. (8/13)
Rowan University has received a federal grant to better prepare New Jersey鈥檚 health care workforce to take care of the growing elderly population. The $2.55 million grant will seek new ways to address what has been a persistent problem in the country鈥檚 health care system: too few doctors who specialize in taking care of older people. (Diskin, 8/13)
A Synergy Health Centers nursing home in Sunderland, already ranked among the worst in Massachusetts, is being investigated by the state following repeated complaints about patient care. Inspectors from the state Department of Public Health, which oversees nursing homes, spent 12 hours last Thursday at New England Health Center in Western Massachusetts probing a suspected medication error involving two patients, according to a staffer who asked to remain anonymous because the worker was not authorized to speak publicly. (Lazar, 8/14)
The mother of a severely autistic and disabled man was dealt a setback this week when she learned a Lancaster County District Court judge dismissed a lawsuit she hoped would restore her position as his private-duty nurse. Dee Shaffer has filed appeals with the state Department of Health and Human Services and lawsuits in district court after the state reneged on a contract allowing her to be paid to take care of her son's medical needs, rather than have him go to a nursing home. Brian Shaffer, 36, needs a special diet, air filters and care to prevent life-threatening allergic reactions. (Young, 8/13)
A judge on Thursday ordered an inmate whose medical treatment has cost Cook County taxpayers more than $1 million released to a secure residential treatment facility to receive much-needed mental health care. Unable to post a $5,000 cash bond, he has languished for months in Cook County Jail on a relatively low-level burglary charge as legal wrangling over his case dragged on. Once a promising basketball prospect, the teen from Chicago's West Englewood neighborhood cracked while in custody, swallowing anything he could get his hands on in his cell: screws, needles, a thumbtack, a 4-inch piece of metal, even strips of leather from restraints, according to jail officials. (Schmadeke, 8/13)
Nearly a third of Wyoming's involuntary psychiatric hospitalizations originated in Natrona County in the 2015 fiscal year, new data shows. Wyoming judges issued 357 involuntary hospital orders during the 2014-15 fiscal year, which ended June 30. Of those, 112 came from Natrona County. A government committee is studying the issue due to rising costs, increased numbers of involuntary commitments and the process鈥檚 variation by county. (Hancock, 8/13)
A Republican political operative is launching political broadsides against former Rep. Allyson Schwartz. But he鈥檚 not focused on scaring off voters; she鈥檚 not running for anything. He鈥檚 aiming at her role heading a Medicare Advantage group. Bradley Vasoli, a GOP campaign operative who worked for Schwartz鈥檚 unsuccessful opponent back in 2006, Thursday launched a 鈥淏eware BMA鈥 campaign to criticize Schwartz and the Better Medicare Alliance, which appointed her president in April. (Mershon, 8/13)
Salt Lake City International Airport already has five smoking rooms between its three terminals, but the airport plans to replace them over time with one master terminal that would include two smoking rooms. Anti-smoking groups say the rooms are a public health risk to travelers, but airport officials contend they allow the airport to contain secondhand smoke. (8/13)