State Highlights: Texas’ Startlingly High Maternity Death Rate Was Actually A Miscalculation; Colorado Reports Surgical Infections
Media outlets report on news from Texas, Colorado, Georgia, Arizona, Ohio, Maryland, Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois and New York.
In the wake of a study that found the state overcounted the number of Texas women who died from pregnancy complications in 2012, state legislators are cautiously moving forward. They expressed a mixture of surprise, relief, frustration and piqued curiosity after an Obstetrics & Gynecology medical journal study published Monday revealed that a new state methodology for counting and confirming maternal deaths reduced the number of Texas mothers who died in 2012 from 147 to 56. (Evans, 4/12)
The head of Colorado鈥檚 Health Department announced Wednesday that officials have confirmed surgical infections in 鈥渁 number of patients鈥 at a Denver hospital at the center of an investigation into sterilization practices. The infections occurred between July 21, 2016, and April 5 in patients who had orthopedic or spine surgery at Porter Adventist Hospital. The hospital suspended all surgeries after officials at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment found problems with how the hospital was cleaning its instruments after surgeries. CDPHE also raised concerns about residue on the tools after they were cleaned 鈥 which Porter attributed to a possible water-quality problem, according to a CDPHE statement Wednesday. (Ingold, 4/11)
Piedmont Healthcare isn鈥檛 the only entity battling Georgia鈥檚 biggest health insurer over reimbursement rates.Companies that supply medical equipment to home care patients say they have seen double-digit percentage rate reductions from the insurer, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia. MRS Homecare, based in Albany, says it faces a 17 percent to 33 percent pay reduction for home oxygen and sleep apnea equipment from Blue Cross. (Miller, 4/11)
A former nurse who was fired last month from a Texas hospital has been charged with murder in the death of a patient last year and will likely face additional charges for hurting other patients in six other cases, police announced Wednesday. William George Davis was being held on a $2 million bond after he was arrested Tuesday evening in the August death of 47-year-old Christopher Greenaway. Police say aggravated assault charges could also be filed against Davis. (4/11)
Arizona requires anyone who suspects child abuse to report it. But certain professionals, including teachers, doctors and social workers, are mandated by law to report suspected abuse or neglect. If they fail to report it, they could face criminal charges. (N谩帽ez, 4/12)
Just about every Tuesday morning around 7:30, John McCreary of Poway can be found waiting for Dr. James Novak鈥檚 office to open. Almost always, McCreary said, he鈥檚 the first one there. Novak鈥檚 practice is listed as the only one in the San Diego area offering Trina Health鈥檚 鈥淎rtificial Pancreas Treatment,鈥 a four-hour IV insulin infusion procedure for people with diabetes. Some people like McCreary, 69, who has wrestled with diabetic nerve pain for years, said they think the procedure is working for them. (Clark, 4/11)
The targeted push in the Avondale neighborhood to reduce the number of baby deaths has been so successful that Ohio will commit another $850,000 to launch similar drives in Winton Hills and North College Hill. Officials of Cradle Cincinnati will announce the new state grant at a Thursday news conference, where they also will unveil the group鈥檚 annual report on the state of infant mortality in Hamilton County. (Saker, 4/11)
MedStar Health announced the decision last week, citing declining pediatric admissions amid a statewide effort to reduce hospitalizations to save money in the health care system. But the decision has caused an uproar from the community and hospital staff, who say MedStar has abandoned its mission to serve the community in the pursuit of profits. (McDaniels, 4/12)
Two Tennessee doctors have pleaded guilty to federal charges in a $65 million military health care fraud scheme. Drs. Carl Lindblad, 53, and Susan Vergot, 31, both of Cleveland, pleaded guilty Wednesday to conspiracy to commit health care fraud, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of California. Prosecutors say the pair prescribed "thousands of exorbitantly expensive compounded medications," or those specially mixed by a pharmacist to meet a person's unique medical need, to patients they never saw or examined. (Allison, 4/11)
Chemotherapy patients often experience burning and tingling in the hands and feet, known as 鈥渃hemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain.鈥 The condition has no known treatment, but new research offers a reason to hope. In a recent study, a team of SLU researchers successfully 鈥渢urned off鈥 the pain associated with a common chemotherapy drug. (Farzan, 4/11)
Catholic hospital system Mercy Health has switched its decision about condom giveaways at a mobile needle exchange that makes a weekly stop in its Clermont County hospital parking lot. ...The turnaround came after a Catholic News Agency reporter asked the archdiocese about Mercy's decision to leave the syringe exchange to do its own thing, which includes providing condoms to clients. (DeMio, 4/11)
The Chicago-based Rush hospital system and suburban Little Company of Mary Hospital and Health Care Centers have called off their plan to merge. Representatives of the health systems on Wednesday declined to answer questions about why discussions ended or make their CEOs available. The organizations 鈥渕utually agreed鈥 to back away from the idea of Rush acquiring Little Company of Mary, according to a memo sent to Rush employees Wednesday by Rush CEO Dr. Larry Goodman and Rush President Michael Dandorph. (Schencker, 4/11)
The state medical board on Wednesday approved 37 physicians to recommend medical marijuana to Ohio patients. Most of the physicians approved as part of the first round of "certificate to recommend" applications are located in Northeast Ohio. (Borchardt, 4/11)
A week after telling two interviewers her support for legalizing recreational use of marijuana in New York was revenue-based, Democratic candidate for governor Cynthia Nixon said Wednesday that it's now foremost a racial justice issue for her. The "Sex and the City" star posted a 90-second video on YouTube in which she stated that it's time New York joined eight other states and the District of Columbia in legalizing recreational use of marijuana. (4/11)
John A. Boehner,聽the former Republican speaker of the House who聽once聽said he was 鈥渦nalterably opposed鈥 to聽decriminalizing聽marijuana laws, has joined a board of聽directors聽for a cannabis company聽with an eye on rolling back federal regulations. The former Ohio congressman聽has been appointed to聽the board of advisers of聽Acreage Holdings, invoking聽the need for veterans to access the drug legally聽to explain his change of heart,聽Boehner said in a statement Wednesday. The company grows and sells legal聽weed and operates in 11 states. (Horton and Ingraham, 4/11)
A court ruled Wednesday that Tampa strip club owner Joe Redner can grow his own marijuana for medical purposes, a decision that lawyers say could lead to a wave of similar cases. The ruling by Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers applies only to Redner, 77. The Florida Department of Health responded quickly, filing an appeal. (Griffin, 4/11)