Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Minn. Lets The Sun Shine On Health Data; Despite Difficulties Southeast Mich. Health Systems Post Profits
A treasure trove of information on health conditions, medical services and costs in Minnesota is now available to researchers, providers and insurers. The Minnesota Department of Health is publishing the first batch of data from its Minnesota All Payer Claims Database this week, and lawmakers hope researchers will mine the information to learn more about variations in health care services and patient outcomes. (Benson, 4/25)
Southeast Michigan health systems last year battled double-digit increases in drug prices and historically low rate increases from commercial and government payers to post the highest profit margins in several years, according to top system executives. (Greene, 4/25)
Oregon Health & Science University is looking for people with autism for a national registry that aims to accelerate research. The registry is open to anyone diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and their families. The idea is to gather genetic information from 50,000 people to give researchers a big pool of data to help them better understand the condition and find treatments. (Terry, 4/25)
Paula Hart and Dave Toeniskoetter sat outside the Cannon House Office Building last week after a day of back-to-back meetings with Minnesota’s congressional delegation had ended. ... Hart, the CEO of Volunteers of America Minnesota, and Toeniskoetter, CEO of the Mendota Heights-based independent living business Dungarvin, are trying to balance fair pay for workers with the cost of serving their intellectually and developmentally disabled clients. The pair ... want Minnesota’s federal politicians to press the U.S. Labor Department to extend the time they get to apply rules that will more than double the base salary of workers who can be declared exempt from overtime. (Spencer, 4/24)
For years, Medicare Advantage plans have been big business for private insurers offering one-stop shopping, low premiums and extra benefits to an aging Western Pennsylvania population. But there are signs lately that the plans are losing some luster, as more retirees choose traditional plans with a Medigap supplement that sidestep concerns about access to providers and may represent better value in the long run. (Twedt, 4/26)
Former banker Sanford Weill transformed the Weill Cornell Medical College in New York with more than half-a-billion in donations in recent years. Now he is pivoting to the West Coast, pledging $185 million to create a neuroscience institute at the University of California, San Francisco. (Piller, 4/26)
Officials say a Tacoma School District manager has been put on paid administrative leave after it was discovered Friday that tests done nearly a year ago showed high lead levels in drinking water at two public elementary schools. District spokesman Dan Voelpel said Monday that the district's safety and environmental health manager was placed on leave. (4/25)
This February, the email accounts of two Wyoming Medical Center employees were compromised in a phishing scam. A phishing scam is an email that looks like it came from a credible source, and tricks the recipient into providing passwords and usernames in an attempt to access sensitive information. The scam won't work if the recipient ignores the email, and doesn't open any links. (Sanders, 4/25)
When Shannon Lindsey moved from Missouri to Kansas two years ago, she decided she wanted to go to Johnson County Community College to get a nursing degree that would make her more employable. Lindsey, now 49, has several disabilities, so she contacted Kansas’ vocational rehabilitation office for assistance. In Missouri she had the same vocational rehabilitation counselor for years — a state worker who understood her needs, what was available to help her and how to get it to her quickly. (Marso, 4/25)
Leukemia patients out of options and given just months to live have achieved sustained remissions thanks to a new twist on cancer immunotherapy, according to a highly anticipated study from scientists at Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. (Aleccia, 4/25)
A federal advisory board designed to help workers sickened while working at former nuclear weapons facilities in the United States, including Rocky Flats west of Denver, get compensation and medical benefits will meet for the first time this week. (Aguilar, 4/25)
To wrap up [a] series on public health in Baltimore, Audie Cornish met up with Baltimore City Health Commissioner Leana Wen in Freddie Gray's neighborhood of Sandtown-Winchester. The health department recently opened a new outpost of its violence prevention program Safe Streets there, employing ex-offenders to mediate conflicts before they erupt in violence. Wen spoke about pushing a public health agenda in a city that has long struggled with poverty, violence and addiction. She also talked about what she, as an emergency physician, has learned in her first stint in government. (4/25)
Harley Ezelle gently rocked back and forth on a yoga ball in a meeting room at Tutwiler Prison as the woman next to her helped set her legs for maximum balance. It was the second meeting of the Alabama Prison Birth Project, which is bringing certified doulas to the women's prison to support pregnant inmates. (Yurkanin, 4/25)