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Wednesday, Jan 27 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Montana Averts Financial Headache Over State Employee Health Plan; Chronic Disease In Minnesota

News outlets report on health care developments in Montana, Minnesota, Maryland, Kansas, Ohio, Louisiana, Florida, Georgia, California, South Carolina, Washington and Wisconsin.

Montana officials said they have averted a massive financial shortfall that could have possibly erupted into a political and budgetary headache over the state's health care system. Gov. Steve Bullock said Tuesday his budget officers originally projected a $12 million deficit last year for the Montana State Employee Health Plan. Instead, state officials squeezed out $2 million in savings 鈥 partly because of wider use of Montana's six state-run health clinics. (Calvan, 1/26)

New research from the state Health Department finds that chronic diseases are surprisingly expensive in Minnesota. Few would be surprised to hear that chronic conditions account for a large share of health spending. But for the first time, the state has been able to place a dollar figure on the cost of long-running health problems: nearly $23 billion. (Benson, 1/27)

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) on Tuesday proposed ... legislation to help the state crack down on a growing epidemic of opiod addiction by changing the state鈥檚 gang laws to be more like federal racketeering statutes and by eventually requiring doctors and 颅pharmacists to use the state鈥檚 颅prescription-monitoring database to ensure they are not over-prescribing narcotics. (Wiggins and Hicks, 1/26)

Parents of Kansas children who committed suicide urged the Senate Education Committee to support a bill that would require suicide prevention training for Kansas teachers and school staff. The bill 鈥 also known as the Jason Flatt Act 鈥 would require all licensed teachers and principals to complete two hours of suicide prevention training each year. Supporters of the bill note that suicide is the second-leading cause of death among young people, and one that鈥檚 often not talked about. (Kite, 1/26)

Women seeking abortions after diagnoses of fatal fetal anomalies can no longer have the procedure at a Cincinnati hospital. The last hospital in Greater Cincinnati to allow these abortions, The Christ Hospital in Mount Auburn, two months ago stopped permitting physicians to perform them, as part of a policy obtained by The Enquirer. (Balmert and Thompson, 1/26)

A state mandate that doctors who provide abortions must have admitting privileges at hospitals within 30 miles is unconstitutional, a federal judge ruled Tuesday. In issuing the ruling, District Judge John deGravelles in Baton Rouge decided to keep in place his previous order blocking Louisiana officials from enforcing the mandate. DeGravelles has not yet ruled on the state's abortion law itself, though he heard arguments about it in June while first considering the injunction in connection with a lawsuit still pending in court. (1/26)

A measure to help Florida get rid of its backlog of thousands of untested rape kits passed its first Senate panel Monday. Sen. Lizbeth Benacquisto (R-Fort Myers), the bill鈥檚 sponsor, calls the amount of untested rape kits nationwide and statewide, 鈥渁n epidemic.鈥 That final survey done by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement states there are about 13,000 untested rape kits across the state鈥9,400 of which should be tested. (Cordner, 1/26)

Georgia has failed to ensure that developmentally disabled people discharged from state hospitals receive adequate services to remain safe and avoid harm, federal attorneys say in a recent court filing. The attorneys said that of the approximately 503 people with developmental disabilities discharged from state-run hospitals since 2010, 79 have died. (Miller, 1/26)

An Ohio initiative seeks to boost access to mental health consultants in an effort to curb the number of children expelled or suspended from kindergarten, preschool and other early childhood education settings. Officials set aside $9.1 million for the initiative in the state's two-year budget, which will benefit 75 counties, according to the state Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services. The funds allow for up to 64 mental health consultants who will work with teachers and at-risk students in programs such as Head Start, preschool and child care settings. Some consultants already are in classrooms. (Sanner, 1/26)

After two decades of dissatisfaction with low provider reimbursement rates, insufficient state oversight and a gap in treatment for low-income children, Sacramento County is seeking to change a historically underused state dental program. (Caoila, 1/26)

A Navy veteran scammed federal agencies out of more than $1.5 million by exaggerating his multiple sclerosis, claiming he needed a wheelchair to get around when he was actually playing golf, baseball and taking part in a grueling foot race, prosecutors said. (Kinnard, 1/26)

A deadly outbreak of salmonella food poisoning tied to Mexican-grown cucumbers has been linked to six deaths and nearly 900 illnesses since last summer, including 26 in Washington state, health officials reported Tuesday. Two additional deaths and 50 more illnesses tied to the Salmonella Poona outbreak have been reported since the last update in November, the Centers for Disease and Prevention (CDC) said. That includes illnesses that began in January, raising new questions about an ongoing source of contamination. (Aleccia, 1/26)

The story of Maria Huaman has set off a score of comments online, criticizing everything from Jackson Memorial Hospital to the organ transplant process. Huaman died on Jan. 13 at West Kendall Baptist Hospital. According to Huaman's family, Maria was denied a transfer to Jackson for a lung transplant. Why she was denied comes from the family because the hospital has not spoken. (Hernandez, 1/26)

More than a dozen years ago, George Halvorson, the chief executive of Kaiser Permanente, pressed Judy Faulkner on her "number" 鈥 the sum that would entice her to either sell Epic Systems Corp. or take the company public. ... "She did not blink," [KP's Andrew] Wiesenthal said. "She said, 'There is no number. We are not going to have an IPO.'" It was one of the early signs that money is not what drives Faulkner, Epic's founder and chief executive. Another came last May when Faulkner 鈥 now a multibillionaire 鈥 pledged to give 99% of her family's wealth to a nonprofit foundation. (Boulton, 1/26)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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