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Tuesday, Nov 1 2016

Full Issue

State Highlights: Texas Budget Cuts Reduce Services For Kids With Disabilities; Georgia Task Force Finds Dire Health Literacy Gaps

Outlets report on health news from Texas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Illinois, California, Florida and Colorado.

Fewer babies and toddlers born with disabilities are receiving critical services after the state slashed $18 million in funding for such programs since 2011, according to a new report by child advocacy group Texans Care for Children. Over four years, the number of disabled children under 3 years old who receive early childhood intervention services dropped by 14 percent to 50,634 children in 2015, the Austin-based group said in the report released Tuesday. The drop has occurred even though the state鈥檚 population of children under the age of 3 has grown by 2 percent during the same period. (Chang, 11/1)

According to Georgia鈥檚 Task Force on Adult Literacy, one out of three adult Georgians is functionally illiterate. 聽In the Augusta area alone, there are more than 65,000 adults whose basic educational levels may be less than those of the average eighth-grader, according to Augusta University鈥檚 Literacy Center. Without a clear understanding of their health condition, these adults are more likely to skip necessary medical tests and have a harder time with diabetes management or high blood pressure numbers. (Kanne 10/31)

Southcoast Health System is planning to cut its ties with Tufts Medical Center鈥檚 physician network and launch its own independent doctors group. The New Bedford-based health system filed plans with the state to leave the Tufts network at the end of the year. The change, which applies to about 425 doctors, comes after Southcoast abandoned merger talks with Care New England Health System of Providence. (Dayal McCluskey, 10/31)

Chicago would be overtaken by a zombie invasion in 60 days.聽That鈥檚 according to a team of scientists at Argonne National Laboratory, who came to the conclusion using a high-powered computer model that鈥檚 normally used for much more serious work on infectious diseases. 鈥淭he people of Chicago could suffer dire consequences at the hands of a zombie invasion,鈥 said Chick Macal, a senior systems engineer in Argonne鈥檚 Global Security Sciences Division. 鈥淣o part of the city would be spared.鈥 While the scenario is obviously fictional, Macal and his colleagues on the Argonne Infectious Disease Modeling Team calculated the timeline by running the numbers through an intricately designed system that was originally created to analyze the spread of real diseases. (Meyerson, 10/31)

Could a trip to the grocery store help you lose weight? A unique partnership between five Bay Area Safeway stores and a longtime Southern California medical weight loss firm is giving it a try. The Pleasanton-based supermarket chain is doing what some weight-challenged consumers might call the unthinkable: leasing space to Lean for Life by Lindora Clinic adjacent to in-store pharmacies at Safeways in San Jose, Menlo Park, Danville, Dublin and Livermore. (Seipel, 10/31)

State officials are demanding that Sanford Burnham Prebys return $77.6 million in state taxpayer money it received as part of a 2006 deal, the latest development in the downward spiral of a project meant to bring high-paying biotech jobs to Orlando. Sanford Burnham is in breach of its contract with the state and must return the funds within two weeks or face legal action, state officials wrote in a letter sent Friday. (Rohrer, Miller and Shanklin, 10/31)

Additional testing is underway after 4 out of 5 DeKalb County schools tested positive for the presence of lead in its drinking water... The schools are taking action to keep kids safe by shutting off the water to the fountains where the water tested positive for lead. (Washington, 10/31)

The Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, which already has a campus in suburban Atlanta, is moving to develop another med school location in Georgia. PCOM has signed an agreement with Colquitt Regional Medical Center in Moultrie, in southwest Georgia, to produce a feasibility plan and present it to an accreditation committee for osteopathic colleges. The agreement was announced Monday. (Miller, 10/31)

Staff from the center say the stigma still exists and patients often arrive at the center after being turned away from other dental offices.聽Some patients travel up to four hours to聽reach聽Howard Dental Center on Cherry Creek Drive. Others haven鈥檛 had dental care in two years. One side effect of HIV/AIDS medication is dry mouth,聽which can lead to cavities and periodontal disease. Dental ailments can exacerbate pre-existing medical problems聽or create new ones, so the center aims to address health issues by聽working with other clinics. (Siegelbaum, 10/31)

More than 100 demonstrators gathered Monday afternoon in front of a controversial school to demand that it stop administering skin shock treatments to special needs students. The protesters converged on the Judge Rotenberg Educational Center shortly after 3:30 p.m., organizers said. (Anderson, 10/31)

A wheelchair-bound man who blew himself up with a pipe bomb two weeks ago at an East Oakland health clinic was identified by authorities Monday as Ralph Mark Harris, 60, of Hayward. The Alameda County Coroner鈥檚 Office said they had no occupation listed for Harris. The case is being investigated as a suicide but has not yet been officially classified, officials said. (Harris, 10/31)

Being 10 minutes late to work saved Kent Karosen鈥檚 life 16 years ago [on Sept. 11, 2001]. Since then, [he] has dedicated a good part of his life to helping the families of his co-workers and other groups, including an Alzheimer鈥檚 research center. Karosen, 51, who now lives in Miami Beach, co-wrote a children鈥檚 book, 鈥淲hy Can鈥檛 Grandma Remember My Name?鈥 that explores the heartbreak that can happen to a family when confronted with Alzheimer鈥檚, a neurological condition that affects 5.4 million Americans, a number that is expected to nearly triple by 2050, according to the Alzheimer鈥檚 Association. He co-wrote the book with children鈥檚 book writer Chana Stiefel. (Figueroa, 10/31)

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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