Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: States Mull Letting Pharmacists Prescribe Birth Control; Flint Health Centers Get $500K In Federal Aid
Since January, Charley McGrady has been doling out hormonal contraceptive pills and patches to women who come to her Eugene, Oregon, pharmacy without a doctor鈥檚 prescription for birth control. A new state law allows McGrady to consult women about pregnancy prevention and write prescriptions for contraceptives that previously required a doctor鈥檚 signature. (Breitenbach, 2/19)
State and federal officials acted to send more help to Flint to deal with its lead-contamination crisis, as the Michigan House approved $30 million on Thursday to help pay residents' water bills and Gov. Rick Snyder announced a $2 million grant to help the city replace some of its pipes. The federal government is giving $500,000 to two health centers that are treating and testing Flint residents exposed to the lead-tainted water. (2/18)
The Wyoming Senate is working on a bill that is intended to reform how people can be involuntarily detained in a mental health crisis. (Beck, 2/18)
In a few months, 24 workers will fan out across the city in hopes of tackling the high rates of infant mortality that plague their neighborhoods. The group will be the first of 72 workers trained at Ohio State University's College of Nursing to help connect new mothers, pregnant women and women of childbearing age to health and community services. (Kurtzman, 2/18)
A hearing is scheduled for a measure to allow terminally ill Maryland residents to legally end their lives with drugs prescribed by a doctor. The hearing is set for Friday in the House Health and Government Operations Committee. The bill would allow mentally capable, terminally ill patients with less than six months to live to obtain prescription drugs they could ingest themselves, if their suffering becomes unbearable. (2/19)
Legislators apparently won鈥檛 pass a bill to require nursing-home employees to show they understand how to serve people with dementia, a key lawmaker said Wednesday. House Study Bill 566 was supported by the Alzheimer鈥檚 Association but opposed by the nursing-home industry. It would require training about dementia for new employees and would require them to demonstrate they understand the lessons. (Leys, 2/18)
Proponents of a bill to give businesses tax credits if an employee receives less public assistance after being hired couldn鈥檛 estimate the proposal鈥檚 financial impact, and the complicated nature of public assistance doesn鈥檛 help the task. (Hart, 2/18)
Florida legislators are looking to end what one lawmaker calls a 鈥渕onopoly鈥 written into state law that benefits a for-profit company with a history of abuse at group homes for the disabled. AdvoServ鈥檚 sprawling Carlton Palms Educational Center in central Florida houses nearly 30 percent of all state residents who are in group homes because of developmental and intellectual disabilities and challenging behavior. Roughly 200 adults and children live there. (Vogell, 2/18)
Teenagers are leading the way toward a healthier Colorado. In their 10th annual health report card, the Colorado Health Institute and Colorado Health Foundation laud teens in five of 10 good-news categories. Twenty-three percent of Colorado teens are sexually active, the lowest rate in the nation. The teen birth rate has dropped by nearly half since 2007, to 23 per thousand girls. More children are getting dental care, fewer are binge drinking and two-thirds now participate "in vigorous physical activity." (Olinger, 2/18)
Iowa's Board of Law Examiners is officially giving breast-feeding mothers a break. The board has clarified its policies to allow new moms time to breast-feed during the Iowa Bar Exam, which they must pass before practicing law in Iowa, said Dave Ewert, assistant director for admissions for the Iowa Bar Exam. "We want to make sure they feel comfortable there," Ewert said. (Haley, 2/18)
It's well known that Americans are not getting enough sleep. But some parts of the United States do it better than others. If you bed down in Minnesota, South Dakota or Colorado, you're likely getting seven or more hours a night. But you're less in luck if you live in Hawaii, where only 56 percent of adults get enough rest. Not that the rest of the country is doing much better. Of the roughly 444,000 Americans polled, about 65 percent got more than seven hours a night according to the study, which was published Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Chen, 2/18)
The city of Prairie Village is looking to add its name to the list of Kansas City-area communities that have raised the age to buy tobacco from 18 to 21. At its regular meeting Tuesday, the City Council asked the city鈥檚 legal staff to develop an ordinance similar to a model proposed by Tobacco 21, a campaign seeking to get the age limit for tobacco products and electronic cigarettes raised in cities across the country to 21. Already Kansas City, Independence, Olathe, Gladstone and Kansas City, Kan., have raised the tobacco purchase age within their borders. (Twiddy, 2/18)