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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jun 22 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Striking Nurses Union Asks Minn. A.G. To Examine Allina's Finances; In Texas, High Rates Of Uninsured Kids, Teen Pregnancies

Outlets report on health news from Minnesota, Texas, Kansas, Wyoming, Texas, North Carolina, Maryland, Virginia, California, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Missouri and Illinois.

Allina Health and union leaders for some 4,800 striking nurses are trading increasingly pointed barbs as the strike continues. The union said it figures Allina will spend some $25 million on replacements for striking nurses. Union attorney Mathew Keller questioned whether it's reasonable for Allina to spend that much money on a strike when it's demanding much smaller savings on union health benefits. (Moylan, 6/21)

Texas has some of the highest rates of uninsured kids and teen births in the country despite progress in recent years, according to a report released Tuesday. (Martin, 6/21)

Funding limitations and a sometimes-narrow focus have kept Kansas mental health, substance abuse and suicide prevention groups from fully coordinating their efforts, according to a program director with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services. (Hart, 6/21)

Due to declining revenues the Wyoming Department of Health has been told to cut $90 million from its budget, that鈥檚 a nine percent reduction, the largest cut faced by any state agency. It will impact the two year budget that begins July first. Director Tom Forslund said the loss of state funds also means the Department will lose an additional $43 million in federal matching money. (Beck, 6/21)

Texas Health Resources is buying a 62,500-square-foot hospital in Corinth with plans to spend more than $13 million to convert it to a behavioral healthcare facility. (Baker, 6/21)

Juveniles under the age of 18 who are incarcerated in North Carolina prisons will no longer be subjected to solitary confinement starting this fall, prison commissioner David Guice announced last week. (Hoban, 6/21)

Two private medical practices with offices around Maryland will receive grants from the Maryland Health Care Commission totaling more than $115,000 to demonstrate the value of telehealth technology. (Cohn, 6/22)

A Harris County man is battling a flesh-eating bacteria after visiting a Galveston beach, his family says. The bacteria prompted doctors to amputate 50-year-old Brian Parrott鈥檚 right leg, KHOU-TV reports. (Farmer, 6/21)

A settlement between former Richmond-based Health Diagnostic Laboratory and Connecticut-based insurance giant Cigna has put a $59 million lawsuit to rest. ... Cigna filed its lawsuit against HDL in October 2014. In its suit, the insurer alleged that in responding to insurance claims that HDL filed with Cigna, the insurer overpaid HDL. In May of the following year, HDL filed a counterclaim alleging that Cigna withheld reimbursement claims from HDL. (Demeria, 6/21)

In another sign of growing frustration with rising health costs, aerospace giant Boeing Co. has agreed to contract directly for employee benefits with a major health system in Southern California, bypassing the conventional insurance model. The move, announced Tuesday, marks the expansion of Boeing鈥檚 direct-contracting approach, which it has already implemented in recent years in Seattle, St. Louis and Charleston, S.C. (Terhune, 6/21)

Last year, HHS's Office of Minority Health launched its National Workforce Diversity Pipeline Program in hopes of attracting more young people like [Amir] Showell, who is African American, into health and health-related tech professions. Of the 14 grants handed out, one, for $474,500, came to Philadelphia, to the District 1199C Training and Upgrading Fund and its partnership with Roxborough High (Von Bergen, 6/22)

The rates of the most common sexually transmitted diseases 鈥 chlamydia and gonorrhea 鈥 have risen over the last five years in California, particularly among men and in the case of gonorrhea, and even in counties that have made a concerted effort to reduce the number of infections. (Stolz, 6/21)

It was a circuitous route, but a ballot measure was submitted to the San Francisco Department of Elections Tuesday afternoon, and voters in November will decide whether to levy a penny-per-ounce tax on sugar-sweetened beverages. The soda tax was supposed to be placed on the ballot last month, following a signature gathering campaign. Proponents were thrilled that they had collected twice the number of signatures needed. Just one problem: they turned those signatures in a day late. (Aliferis, 6/21)

Ohio's new medical marijuana law prohibits disciplining professionals for working with marijuana businesses or patients, but it's not clear whether that applies to attorneys. Only the Ohio Supreme Court can discipline licensed attorneys. Lawyers have submitted at least two requests for formal opinions on the matter to the Ohio Supreme Court's Board of Professional Conduct. (Borchardt, 6/21)

[John] Rush, of Manchester, is one of seven people who have experienced a stroke and are participating in a six-week long 鈥淎phasia Boot Camp鈥 at Fontbonne University in St. Louis. The group meets four times a week for one hour, and then breaks into individual therapy sessions with graduate students. (Bouscaren, 6/21)

At Quinlan Terrace, while some activities are similar to those offered at other senior facilities 鈥 playing bingo, flipping through scrapbooks and doing memory exercises 鈥 staff members keep in mind nuances that are especially important for people with disabilities. (Healy, 6/22)

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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