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Friday, Jun 3 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: N.Y. Bill Gives Longer Legal Life To Medical Malpractice Suits; Consumer Group Pushes Conn. Regulator To Recuse Herself On Anthem-Cigna Merger

Outlets report on health news from New York, Connecticut, Arizona, Hawaii, Tennessee, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Alabama, Minnesota and Massachusetts.

Legislation before state lawmakers in New York would significantly change medical malpractice law by allowing patients to sue years after an alleged misdiagnosis or mistreatment. (Klepper, 6/2)

A consumer group says Gov. Dannel P. Malloy should avoid 鈥済oing back to the days of Corrupticut鈥 and replace Insurance Commissioner Kathleen Wade as the key state regulator on a proposed mega-merger between Anthem and Cigna insurance companies. (Radelat, 6/2)

In this rural town, the forces of poverty and addiction drove a needle-sharing drug problem that caused the first-known HIV outbreak related to the current opioid crisis in America. Now, as Austin struggles to recover from its outbreak last year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified 220 counties across the U.S. where similar conditions create vulnerability to eruptions of HIV and hepatitis C. (Campo-Flores and McKay, 6/2)

Public-health officials reported that two more detainees at an Eloy immigration-detention center have confirmed cases of measles, bringing the total to 13 cases tied to the facility in Pinal County. (Alltucker, 6/2)

Within months of starting the process of adopting her son, Susan Callahan knew something was wrong. Aron, who was 7, had trouble communicating and started getting violent at home and school, trying to hit his mother and teachers. Callahan took him to a psychiatrist, where he was diagnosed with a range of conditions, including post-traumatic stress disorder and developmental disabilities. Desperate, his parents sought help from the state. But when Aron finally found adequate care nearly a decade later, it was not in Hawaii but more than 3,000 miles away, at a specialized facility in Kansas. (Starleaf Riker, 6/2)

A family medicine physician in Franklin declared Tuesday in a blog post that his practice will no longer administer vaccines because of what he calls questionable safety. An eight-point blog post on the website of Cool Springs Family Medicine lays out Dr. Daniel Kalb's concerns about vaccinations and autism, the safety of Gardisil, a vaccine against human papilloma virus, and ingredients in vaccines. ... The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that vaccinations do not cause autism. (Fletcher, 6/2)

In 2010, there were nearly 219,000 adults age 65 and over in the nine-county Kansas City metropolitan area. That was 11.4 percent of the population. By 2030, the area鈥檚 65-plus population is projected to grow to more than 416,000 people, or nearly 18 percent of the population. (Margolies 6/2)

A Shakespearean actress from West Philadelphia, represented by a major national law firm, has filed a class-action suit claiming the city put her family - and tens of thousands of other Philadelphians - at a "significantly greater risk" for lead poisoning. Eleni Delopoulos, 37, who lives with her 2-year-old son and husband, filed suit Thursday in Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas. The suit contends the city has been aware of high levels of lead in the tap water for years and failed to warn residents of contamination. (Wood, 6/3)

Sixteen months after her arrest, Katie Darovitz 鈥 one of at least 500 women prosecuted under Alabama鈥檚 toughest-in-the-nation chemical endangerment law 鈥 has had her case dismissed. ... Though Darovitz鈥檚 case is unusual in some of its details, in other ways it is typical of the cases ProPublica and AL.com examined. Like Darovitz, 20 percent of mothers charged with chemical endangerment used marijuana only; like Darovitz, about a quarter had no prior criminal record. And like Darovitz, many of the mothers were turned over by hospitals, which sometimes conducted drug tests without mothers鈥 knowledge or consent. (Martin, 6/2)

Aaron Dimler was on his way. The captain of his football team at Roseville High School, he had a job, a long-term girlfriend and a scholarship worth $240,000 to study and play football at Macalester. Then he started taking Xanax. (Shipley 6/2)

Nearly 5,800 Massachusetts patients certified to use medical marijuana are in limbo after state officials suspended the professional license of the doctor who authorized their use of the drug. (Lazar and Freyer, 6/3)

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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