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Monday, Dec 12 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Ohio Autism Mandate; Few Convictions In Colo. Probe Of Center For Disabled

Outlets report on health news from Ohio, Colorado, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Arizona, Minnesota and California.

Private聽insurers must cover Ohioans聽with autism spectrum disorders under a bill passed late聽Thursday by the Ohio General Assembly. The bill mandates any health insurance plan must provide coverage for the screening, diagnosis and treatment of autism spectrum disorder. It sets minimum coverage standards such as covering at least 20 speech or occupational therapy sessions a year. (Borchardt, 12/9)

Residents at a state-run center in Pueblo for the severely intellectually disabled were subjected to sexual assaults and ongoing聽physical abuse and neglect from 2012 to early 2016.聽Incidents ranging from patient discomfort to more severe allegations of abuse were reported at a rate of about 150 each month to the center鈥檚 staff during that time, according to federal records. In the end, just two staff members were charged criminally and only one was convicted. That was for the petty offense of making too much noise. At least 12 cases were investigated by the Pueblo County Sheriff鈥檚 Office. Eight employees were fired. (Osher, 12/9)

Partners HealthCare posted the biggest annual operating loss in its 22-year history, driven by red ink at Neighborhood Health Plan, a Medicaid insurer whose finances have deteriorated since Partners acquired it in 2012. The state鈥檚 largest health network said Friday that it lost $108 million on operations in the year that ended Sept. 30, reversing a profit of $106 million a year earlier. Revenue at the parent company of Massachusetts General and Brigham and Women鈥檚 hospitals rose 7 percent to $12.5 billion, but expenses grew at a faster clip. (Dayal McCluskey, 12/9)

A Derry couple won a $5 million verdict Friday after a jury found a Londonderry opthalmologist was found liable of committing medical malpractice for failed procedures that left a 67-year-old woman legally blind. Nancy Knox had been treated for the so-called wet form of age-related, macular degeneration, which can worsen someone鈥檚 vision, but often does not lead to blindness and can be treated. Dr. Adam Beck at New England Eye & Facial Specialists in Londonderry had Knox as a patient for eight years. First, Knox lost much of her vision in her left eye. She then not only lost the vision in her right eye, it had to be removed surgically because it had shrunk so badly following treatments that did not work. (Landrigan, 12/9)

At the Maplewood Center in Amesbury, administrators in May acknowledged to inspectors that they were so short of certified nursing assistants, they had to use an activities director and an admissions executive to help feed patients. (Lazar, 12/11)

In his second year at the event, [Dr. Kevin] Ortale focused on providing dentures for some of the thousands of patients who waited in聽line for hours Friday and Saturday in the hopes of relieving pain and infection they've suffered. (Mitchell, 12/10)

A second class-action lawsuit has been filed against Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics here in New Hampshire 鈥 this time on behalf of several Merrimack residents who say they have been exposed to high levels of perfluorinated chemicals (PFC). The complaint filed on Monday includes about 15 adults and seven children, including a couple whose child has developed leukemia, and on behalf of other local residents dealing with contaminants in their water. All of the plaintiffs argue that they have a legitimate fear of developing cancer or other diseases as a result of the PFC contamination allegedly caused when Saint-Gobain released perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) into the environment. The chemical was ultimately detected in local water sources earlier this year. (Houghton, 12/9)

Right when it seems like 鈥淭he Great Pot Moment鈥 is upon us, it turns out there are a lot of really tough regulatory issues to resolve first, according to government and industry experts who sketched out all the thorny challenges at the two-day conference, competition and harvest celebration at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds. (Krieger, 12/11)

Silas鈥 story, chronicled last spring in a Sacramento Bee series, The Silas Project, involved a controversial alternative medical experiment that began in mid-2014. Nevada County cannabis growers grew special strains for the child and crafted tinctures rich in a marijuana ingredient, CBD, or cannabidiol, a nonpsychoactive ingredient that, according to limited studies, may have medicinal benefits. (Hecht, 12/10)

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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