Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
State Highlights: Why States' Tobacco Taxes Were Rejected This Year; Conn. Governor Names State's Health Care Advocate
Between 1980 and 2015, voters approved nearly 70 percent of the 32 tobacco tax hikes that appeared on statewide ballots, according to Ballotpedia, a nonpartisan research group that has tracked them. But in November, voters in North Dakota, Missouri and Colorado defeated measures that would have increased taxes by 23 cents to $1.76 on a pack of cigarettes. ... Tobacco taxes generally are among the least controversial taxes to raise because they affect a small number of voters and the dangers of tobacco use are widely known. State legislatures, in particular, are fond of raising so-called 鈥渟in鈥 taxes, as opposed to approving increases in broad-based taxes such as those on income or property. But November鈥檚 electorate may have been especially tax averse. (Povich, 1/9)
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has appointed Ted Doolittle to serve as the state鈥檚 healthcare advocate, tapping an attorney with a wide range of experience to lead an office that helps consumers with health care issues and works on policy matters. (Levin Becker, 1/9)
Emergency departments are often the doorstep to New Hampshire Hospital, the state鈥檚 psychiatric hospital in Concord. Andrew Dixon was eventually admitted there, but on any given day there鈥檚 an average of 28 people with acute mental health symptoms waiting to get in. And that number has been climbing, says Suellen Griffin, the president of West Central Behavioral Health. (Rodolico, 1/9)
An unvaccinated adult may have聽exposed people to measles in the past month at several locations in Denver, Aurora, Englewood, Centennial and Boulder County, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment announced Monday.聽The adult, whose name was not released, contracted measles while traveling abroad and was hospitalized for three days at Parker Adventist Hospital starting on Dec. 29. The state Health Department has pieced together the patient鈥檚 errands in the days prior and is now warning people who were at those places at roughly the same time to be on the lookout for symptoms of measles. (Ingold, 1/9)
A Zanesville nursing home operator has been ordered to repay tens of thousands of fraudulently obtained Medicare and Medicaid dollars, after an investigation by the Ohio Attorney General鈥檚 Office found that the owner and other employees habitually altered documents to make it appear patients were being properly cared for in order to receive government aid. Autumn Health Care of Zanesville must pay back $53,390 to the Ohio Department of Medicaid and $75,250 to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid, as well as $40,000 in investigative costs, Attorney General Mike DeWine鈥檚 office announced Monday. (Smola, 1/10)
A mother and son are on trial in federal court this week on charges that they were part of a scheme to fraudulently bill government medical programs to the tune of more than $7 million through their home health-care company. Delores Knight, 71, of Cleveland Heights, and Isaac Knight, 29, of Macedonia are charged with conspiracy to commit health-care fraud and health-care fraud. Delores Knight also faces nine money laundering counts, and Isaac Knight is charged with making a false statement relating to health-care matters. (Heisig, 1/9)