Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Minn. Lawmakers Face Deadline To Stabilize Individual Insurance Market; Calif. To Revisit Whether Docs On Probation Should Notify Their Patients
Minnesota lawmakers are facing a fast-approaching deadline to try to stabilize the state鈥檚 2018 individual health insurance market. Any such package, which will likely cost hundreds of millions of dollars but could lower premiums by more than 20 percent, has to be passed by April 1 鈥 and lawmakers are still trying to figure out the best approach...Less than 5 percent of Minnesotans get their health insurance through the state鈥檚 individual insurance market, but those roughly 190,000 people have been through a lot in recent years. Premiums have skyrocketed even as options have narrowed, and there鈥檚 a very real chance that the market could go away altogether. (Montgomery, 3/12)
Dr. Wanda Heffernon, a former UCSF anesthesiologist, made headlines in 2001 when she pleaded guilty to stealing credit cards from her fellow physicians and forging prescriptions to feed her drug addiction. While facing those charges, she worked as a physical therapist at a nursing home in San Mateo County, where she was accused 鈥 and later convicted 鈥 of elder abuse after prying a diamond wedding ring off a 94-year-old patient, bruising the woman鈥檚 finger in the process. The judge who sentenced Heffernon to two years in prison noted the extreme vulnerability of the victim and remarked that there was 鈥渁 dark side to Ms. Heffernon that is difficult to fathom.鈥 (Gutierrez, 3/10)
The chairman of a legislative oversight panel chided Gov.聽Greg Abbott鈥檚 top health care appointee this week for allegedly failing to identify all of his agency鈥檚 high-dollar government contracts and gave him less less than a week to come into compliance. The health commission later fired back, saying the fault lay not with them but with the independent government body that operates the website where contract information is published. (Root and Walters, 3/10)
An ultrasound technician had just told Rachel Tittle that she was carrying a baby girl when things went terribly wrong. She was 20 weeks pregnant at the time and couldn't wait to become a mother. That's when a doctor walked into her examination room and delivered the news that still haunts her six years later. 鈥淭hey told me my baby's abdomen was full of fluid 鈥 and if nothing changed very soon, it was going to stop her heart,鈥 Tittle told The Washington Post, recalling the 2011 incident. 鈥淚t was a horrible, horrible experience.鈥 (Holley, 3/11)
Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener has proposed Senate Bill 239 to repeal the laws, saying they do not reflect current HIV medical practices, and have not helped stop the spread of HIV and AIDS... California law says it鈥檚 a felony for an HIV-positive person to have unprotected sex without informing their partner that they are infected. It is also a felony for HIV-positive people to donate blood, body organs or other tissue. Those convicted can spend up to seven years in prison if found guilty. Another law upgrades a misdemeanor for prostitution to a felony if the person charged has HIV or AIDS. (Ohsahl, 3/12)
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, today 67 percent of all diagnoses involve gay or bisexual men, meaning about a third come from other populations 鈥 many of them heterosexual women like Dennis, she noted. Dr. Randy Gelow聽II,聽a family-medicine physician who focuses on the treatment of HIV in the gay, lesbian, bisexual聽and transgender community, is working to help raise awareness of the issue along with Banner Health in Phoenix. (Newman, 3/10)
They are students at Medical Day Treatment, a school inside Children鈥檚 Hospital Colorado for kids who are too sick, or too 鈥渕edically fragile,鈥 to attend regular school.聽They enrolled here because they missed too much school for doctors鈥 appointments, physical therapy, chemotherapy or dialysis, or couldn鈥檛 last a seven-hour school day without needing a nap, or needed a nurse nearby to check the g-tubes or intravenous lines inserted into their stomachs and arms. Some are waiting for transplants. Many of them 鈥 including J.J., whose condition makes so much skin grow on his hands and face that it falls off around him but so little elsewhere聽that聽parts of him are聽nearly down to flesh 鈥 were bullied. (Brown, 3/12)
Almost a year after the University of Washington mapped out a financial recovery plan for the deficit-ridden School of Dentistry, the school鈥檚 red ink has grown by another $6 million, and now totals $35 million. To try to erase the shortfall, the school is freezing reserves and most staff hiring, as well as travel and expenditures for conferences, food and beverages. It has audited its books, and hired a comptroller to oversee expenses. (Long, 3/12)
Patients who receive mental health counseling at the new Simon Life and Wellness Center in Baltimore lie on white leather sofas with faux suede and fur pillows. Abstract art in warm hues adorns the walls and colorful flowers pop against the modern white interior design. It's not the typical decor for an urban mental health center, but the staff at Simon Life and Wellness in the Charles North neighborhood wants clients, many of them low-income, to see it as a cool and welcoming place. (McDaniels, 3/12)
School-based health centers 鈥 which provide medical and mental health care and sometimes dental services and health education, often in schools with many low-income or high-risk students 鈥 have historically received widespread backing from policymakers in Connecticut.聽Research聽has linked them with improved academic performance and graduation rates, as well as better health measures, such as higher vaccination rates, reduced asthma complications and lower emergency department use. The聽report of the Sandy Hook Advisory Commission聽鈥 established after the 2012 shootings 鈥 noted the clinics鈥 potential to make it easier for students to get behavioral health care without the stigma sometimes associated with mental health facilities. (Levin Becker, 3/10)
The Affordable Care Act was supposed to help by insuring more people, but Georgia and 18 other states did not expand Medicaid, which would have covered more low-income residents. At the same time, rural hospitals were also having to meet requirements imposed by the ACA, like digitizing medical records, said George Pink, director of the NC Rural Health Research Program at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill...聽Nationwide, 80 hospitals have closed, and almost half of all rural hospitals are currently losing money, Pink said. (Yu, 3/10)
Health professionals of all stripes 鈥 not just the ones in mental health fields 鈥 need to be screening pregnant women and new moms for the illness, which impacts one in five new mothers, [Adrienne] Griffen said.聽Women who have recently given birth rarely care for themselves, but they desperately need to sleep, eat, exercise and take time off, Griffen said. (Kleiner, 3/13)
When it comes to issues related to health, state Rep. Jessica Farrar says that men should have to undergo the same 鈥渦nnecessary鈥 and 鈥渋nvasive鈥 procedures that she says Texas women are subjected to under recently passed state laws. That鈥檚 why the the Houston Democrat on Friday filed House Bill 4260, which would fine men $100 for masturbating and create a required booklet for men with medical information related to the benefits and concerns of a man seeking a vasectomy, a Viagra prescription or a colonoscopy. The bill would also let doctors invoke their "personal, moralistic, or religious beliefs" in refusing to perform an elective vasectomy or prescribe Viagra, among other proposed requirements in the bill. (Samuels, 3/12)
A Democratic lawmaker has filed a bill that would, among many provisions, create a $100 fine for men who masturbate and ejaculate outside of a woman鈥檚 vagina. The bill, called 鈥淎 Man鈥檚 Right to Know,鈥 was filed Friday, the filing deadline for the legislative session, and appears to satirize current and proposed laws and regulations that have been criticized for restricting women鈥檚 access to abortions and health care choices. (Chang, 3/11)
Growing national concern about lead poisoning in children has prompted a California lawmaker to introduce legislation to ensure that all of the state鈥檚 kids are tested for the toxic metal. The bill, introduced by Assemblyman Bill Quirk (D-Hayward), would change the state鈥檚 Health and Safety Code to require testing for all children aged six months to 6 years. (Ibarra, 3/13)
Offering alcoholic beverages to patients as they wait to undergo procedures or while they are learning about a serious health care need is a practice that is both "appalling" and "irresponsible," Texas legislators said Thursday. The comments were made before the Senate Committee on Business and Commerce as state representatives reviewed SB 404, a proposed bill introduced by Sen. Lois Kolkhorst (R-Brenham). It would prohibit health care providers from offering alcoholic beverages and penalize them for doing so. (Rice, 3/10)
Last week the Georgia House Natural Resources and Environment committee did not pass legislation that would notify residents when toxic pollutants are being dumped into nearby rivers, lakes and landfills. One of the biggest concerns with this ruling is the dumping of coal ash, according to the Georgia Water Coalition. Coal ash is the waste left over from burning coal. (Bell, 3/10)