Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Minn. Gov. Demands Answers Over 'Reinsurance'; Md. Bill Would Protect Workers After Hospital Closures
The state鈥檚 major health insurance companies tried to calm concerns about a proposal to stabilize the state鈥檚 insurance market Wednesday with a letter promising that a 鈥渞einsurance鈥 bill would lower rates. But Gov. Mark Dayton isn鈥檛 buying the promises.聽In a series of letters back to the insurers, Dayton on Thursday asked for firmer commitments...Reinsurance would spend as much as $300 million per year to cover the cost of the most expensive patients in the state鈥檚 individual health insurance market. That鈥檚 the market that covers people who don鈥檛 get health coverage through an employer or a government plan, and affects less than 5 percent of the state. (Montgomery, 3/16)
Statewide legislation is being considered in the Maryland General Assembly that would provide some relief for displaced employees of hospitals that close, such as University of Maryland Harford Memorial Hospital in Havre de Grace which is slated to close in the next several years. Del. Mary Ann Lisanti, whose district includes Havre de Grace, is sponsoring House Bill 932, requiring hospital operators to pay a fee to cover the cost of assisting any employees who lose their jobs because of the closing or merger. (Anderson, 3/17)
In a test of shifting attitudes about HIV, a group of state lawmakers has proposed that it no longer be a felony for someone to knowingly expose others to the disease by engaging in unprotected sex and not telling the partner about the infection. The measure by state Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) and others would make such acts a misdemeanor, a proposal that has sparked opposition from Republican lawmakers. (McGreevy, 3/17)
Since November of last year, Dallas officials and cellphone provider T-Mobile聽have known that a mysterious technology glitch was wreaking havoc on the efficiency of the city鈥檚 911 call center, tripping 鈥済host calls鈥 to dispatchers and placing legitimate callers on hold for unsafe spurts of time. In January, they thought it was fixed. But by聽March, operators were once again slammed with an unprecedented backlog spike that prompted the city manager to write in a memo that at one point on March 6, there were 360 emergency calls on hold. (Mettler, 3/16)
Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder said Thursday his administration will enact the country's toughest lead limit for water in the wake of the lead contamination in Flint, following up on a proposal he first unveiled nearly a year ago. (3/16)
"The Commonwealth Fund" report gave Florida a rank of 45 out of 50 states, plus Washington D.C., when it came to the "Avoiding hospital use and cost" indicator. That's a drop of 13 points between 2012 and 2015.聽The report's authors attribute this largely to Florida's refusal to expand Medicaid. (Miller, 3/16)
Colorado鈥檚 health care system ranks sixth-best in the country, according to a new report in which researchers argue that states that fully embraced the Affordable Care Act saw the biggest improvements to their health systems. The report, released Thursday by The Commonwealth Fund, found that Colorado鈥檚 health care system jumped five spots in the organization鈥檚 Scorecard on State Health System Performance from before the Affordable Care Act to the present. That was the fifth-largest jump among all states. All of top five most-improved states 鈥 which also included California, Kentucky, New York and Washington 鈥 each expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act and set up state-based insurance exchanges. (Ingold, 3/16)
As state regulators weigh the immediate question about whether the Aliso Canyon gas field is safe to reopen, a longer-term debate is also emerging: Is the storage field even necessary to power the grid and keep the lights on? Engineers plugged the largest gas leak and methane release in U.S. history about a year ago, after evacuations forced thousands of people from their homes in nearby Porter Ranch in north Los Angeles County. Citing health concerns, some of those residents say the field remains too risky to reopen. (Peterson, 3/16)
Among other things, the foundation raises money to provide hospitals with a聽CuddleCot, a $3,000 crib-cooling device聽that preserves the bodies of deceased newborns so their families can take a few days 鈥 sometimes longer 鈥 to have close contact. Redeemer and three other hospitals have been beneficiaries so far. Although the notion of the CuddleCot may sound macabre to some people, it reflects a profound change in the attitudes of hospitals, bereavement experts, and patients. No longer are babies whisked away to the morgue right after death. No longer are grief-stricken parents denied the chance to bond with their offspring. (McCullough, 3/17)
As Pennsylvania State University copes with an ongoing outbreak of mumps, infectious-disease experts are investigating why vaccinated young people are getting sick and whether a booster shot would help. 聽"We didn't see outbreaks like this 10 years ago," said Kelly L. Moore, director of the Tennessee Immunization Project and chair of the mumps work group for the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).聽 Its vaccination recommendations become official policy 聽for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention when approved by the CDC director. The government already recommends two shots, given at 12 to 15 months and just before entering school.聽 The second shot was added in 1989. (Burling, 3/16)
Cook could have practiced anywhere after she graduated last year from Ohio State University's College of Dentistry. But the daughter of Appalachian Ohio was intent on returning to her home region to practice. ...The emerging, interwoven plans all are part of a strong push to increase access to health care in Perry County, while also educating and training the local workforce for jobs in the health field. (Lane, 3/17)
The Minnesota Department of Human Services on Thursday called a Mayo Clinic plan to give preference to privately insured patients 鈥渧ery concerning鈥 and said it will examine it for possible violations of civil and human rights laws. In response to a video transcript obtained by the Star Tribune in which Mayo CEO Dr. John Noseworthy explained the policy to employees, DHS Commissioner Emily Piper said in a statement early Thursday afternoon that her department has a lot of questions about 鈥渉ow it will implement the directive.鈥 (Zamora, 3/17)
A state Senate health committee Thursday approved a bill to offer optional testing of Georgia newborns for Krabbe disease, a rare genetic disorder. The form of Krabbe that strikes newborns is caused by a change, or mutation, in the gene that carries the blueprints for an enzyme called galactosylceramidase, which is crucial to wrapping protective insulation called myelin around nerves... The disease is rare, striking between 1 in 100,000 and 1 in 350,000 babies. Infants with Krabbe typically die before their second birthday. (Miller, 3/16)
Work has begun on a 60,000-square-foot medical building at Deborah Heart & Lung Center in Burlington County. The $21.5 million building, which is being developed and will be owned by Landmark Medical Facilities of Milwaukee, will replace an existing building on Deborah's campus in Browns Mills.聽Deborah and independent community doctors have leased 86 percent of the space, the tax-exempt hospital said. Tenants will include Central Jersey Urgent Care, Garden State Diagnostic Imaging, and Epione Family Medicine, Deborah said. The building is expected to be completed in spring 2018. (Brubaker, 3/16)
John Corrigan, director of the Ohio Brian Injury Program, said 100,000 Ohioans suffer traumatic brain injuries each year and that 1.8 million adults in the state have had at least one traumatic brain injury causing unconsciousness. As many as 750,000, he said, are at risk of disability. At the summit, Corrigan detailed the Ohio Brian Injury Program's 14-month-old strategic plan, which runs through 2020. Goals are to increase reliable data about concussions; better train people studying to become health care and social service providers in concussion protocol; implement new procedures to recognize concussions in certain areas, such as education and behavioral health; and increase awareness among the public and policymakers. (Viviano, 3/16)
Lawmakers appear to have reached a compromise Thursday that聽would expand Georgia鈥檚 medical marijuana law. The agreement over聽Senate Bill 16 would add six illnesses and conditions eligible for treatment with medical marijuana in Georgia to include Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, AIDS, autism, epidermolysis bullosa, peripheral neuropathy and Tourette鈥檚 syndrome. It would additionally allow use for patients in hospice care, according to both聽state Sen. Ben Watson, R-Savannah, and聽state Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon. (Torres, 3/16)
Massachusetts officials are warning the online marijuana directory Leafly that it may be violating state law by publishing ads for pot-delivery services they say are operating without state oversight. The website is one of the most popular in the cannabis industry, widely used by consumers to find nearby dispensaries and other licensed suppliers in states such as Massachusetts that have legalized the drug. (Adams, 3/17)