Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Texas Activists Advocate Shoring Up Ailing Rural Maternal Health System
Twenty five years ago, the Texas Legislature passed a sweeping set of reforms to resuscitate the state鈥檚 collapsing rural health care system. Now, health care providers, advocates and local leaders are proposing similarly aggressive action to pull the rural maternity care system back from the brink. The Rural Texas Maternal Health Rescue Plan is a package of proposals they鈥檙e hoping lawmakers will champion in this upcoming session. (Klibanoff, 12/3)
The Texas judge overseeing the case of Robert Roberson, convicted of killing his 2-year-old daughter, has voluntarily recused herself from further proceedings, adding a new complication to a death penalty case that has drawn national scrutiny for its reliance on questionable evidence of 鈥渟haken baby鈥 syndrome. (Goodman, 12/2)
The pattern goes like this: Barbara Vassis鈥 daughter, who has schizoaffective disorder, doesn鈥檛 take her medicine or is denied medication, goes into psychosis, gets arrested and goes to jail, is released to the streets, is admitted to a mental health facility, is released on day 13 or 14 because her Medicaid insurance runs out on day 15, does OK for a few days or weeks and then stops taking her medication again. Repeat.聽(Brown, 12/2)
麻豆女优 Health News: With Trump On The Way, Advocates Look To States To Pick Up Medical Debt Fight
Worried that President-elect Donald Trump will curtail federal efforts to take on the nation鈥檚 medical debt problem, patient and consumer advocates are looking to states to help people who can鈥檛 afford their medical bills or pay down their debts. 鈥淭he election simply shifts our focus,鈥 said Eva Stahl, who oversees public policy at Undue Medical Debt, a nonprofit that has worked closely with the Biden administration and state leaders on medical debt. 鈥淪tates are going to be the epicenter of policy change to mitigate the harms of medical debt.鈥 (Levey, 12/3)
Updates from California 鈥
On a fall morning in East L.A. in 1974, Dolores Madrigal and her husband, Orencio, ate breakfast while listening to ranchera radio station KWKW when a news segment aired that would change her life. The couple heard about how 100 people had protested in front of Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center to decry the hospital鈥檚 years-long practice of sterilizing low-income women without their consent. The rally came in the wake of a lawsuit filed against the Boyle Heights hospital by three Mexican American women who alleged they were victims. (Arellano, 12/2)
When San Francisco voters earlier this year mandated that welfare recipients struggling with addiction take part in treatment, they may have envisioned a residential program or structured outpatient counseling sessions.聽But the nonprofit tapped to run the new city program says that treatment could also include more unorthodox approaches such as going to church or practicing ballet .Cedric Akbar, executive director of Positive Directions Equals Changes聽鈥 the nonprofit that will run the new city program聽鈥 told the Chronicle that treatment isn鈥檛 a one-size-fits-all approach. (Angst, 12/2)
麻豆女优 Health News: California Falling Short Of Enrollment Goal As Mental Health Courts Roll Out Statewide
California鈥檚 new initiative to compel treatment for some of the state鈥檚 most severely mentally ill residents 鈥 many of whom are living on the streets 鈥 is falling short of its initial objectives. But with the program expanding from 11 counties to all 58 on Dec. 1, state officials are projecting confidence that they can reach their goal to help 2,000 adults by the end of the year. In the first nine months of CARE Court, 557 petitions were filed by first responders, families, or local health officials, all of whom can now request help for individuals who are ill. (Mai-Duc, 12/3)