Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Urban Hospitals Engage Beyond Medicine In Effort To Address Community Problems
As a child, Bishop Douglas Miles heard the warnings about vans trolling East Baltimore streets, snatching up young African-Americans for medical experiments at nearby Johns Hopkins Hospital. Whether there was any truth behind those stories鈥擧opkins has always denied them鈥攈ardly mattered. The mythology lived on and, combined with the hospital鈥檚 very real development decisions, contributed to a persistent view of Hopkins as an imperious, menacing presence amid the largely poor and African-American neighborhoods surrounding it. (Ollove, 10/13)
The University of Central Florida announced a five-year deal with the country鈥檚 largest for-profit hospital chain to train doctors after graduation, with the hope that those slots will mean as many as 550 doctors will stick around Florida to practice medicine. Initial residency programs will be in internal medicine, family medicine and OBGYN. Doctors who graduate medical school can鈥檛 immediately see patients; rather, they must then do residency and fellowship programs after graduation. (Aboraya, 10/14)
With Florida facing another cut next year in a key hospital-funding program, Senate President Andy Gardiner, R-Orlando, said Wednesday it "remains to be seen" whether lawmakers will use state tax dollars to help deal with the reduction. Gardiner addressed the issue, involving a program known as the Low Income Pool, while speaking to reporters and editors from across the state who gathered at the Capitol for an annual Associated Press event. (10/14)