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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, May 11 2016

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Defining 'Affordable'; Louisiana's Innovative Medicaid Expansion Approach

A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.

News stories that insurers are seeking double digit increases in premiums next year under the Affordable Care Act are a reminder of how imperfect a solution the legislation is to what ails America鈥檚 health care system. The health care reform law does not do enough to address rising health costs, which dropped during the Great Recession but have started to rise again. (5/11)

Louisiana is behind on expanding Medicaid because the state refused to accept the extra federal money until Gov. John Bel Edwards took office in January. But an innovative approach by the Department of Health and Hospitals could allow tens of thousands of eligible residents to be approved almost immediately. ... DHH officials are "highly confident" that federal Medicaid officials will approve their request to use food stamp records to add uninsured residents to the health care program for low-income residents. A half-dozen other states have been allowed to fast track their enrollment process, but Louisiana would be the first one to use food stamps. (5/10)

The most common response when a corporate database gets hacked is for the business to offer a year of free credit monitoring -- a better-than-nothing measure that will alert people to suspicious activity involving their credit files but will do nothing to prevent fraud, identity theft or other mischief. (David Lazarus, 5/10)

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton unexpectedly floated the idea Monday of letting people in their 50s buy into Medicare as an alternative to her previous proposal to let states establish public health insurance plans to compete with private insurers. (Harris Meyer, 5/10)

Rep. Vern Buchanan, a Florida Republican, has called himself 鈥減ro-life鈥 since he came to Congress a decade ago. This month, he鈥檚 proving it. Buchanan last week announced his support for President Obama鈥檚 request for $1.9 billion to fight the Zika virus 鈥 a decision he based in part on 鈥渘ew research revealing that Zika eats away at the fetal brain and destroys the ability to think.鈥 He鈥檚 right about that. The mosquito-borne virus is going to cause thousands of babies in this hemisphere to be born with severe birth defects, and Zika is on the cusp of devastating the U.S. citizens of Puerto Rico and of spreading to the southern United States. Untold numbers of the unborn are being irreversibly harmed. (Dana Milbank, 5/10)

It is a virus that can spell disaster for a pregnant woman. It causes miscarriages or a fate many people view as far worse: congenital malformations of the newborn. It swept the globe. No, I am not referring to Zika; I am referring to rubella. (Amesh A. Adalja, 5/10)

Over the past several years, the e-cigarette business has boomed, tying public-health experts in knots. On one hand, the devices are far less dangerous than conventional cigarettes. It would be a public-health victory if every smoker stopped lighting up and chose to vape instead. On the other hand, e-cigarettes seem designed to appeal to children and teenagers. E-cigarette liquids come in a variety of candylike flavors that, according to federal health officials, have driven interest among young users. Some young people 鈥 it is unclear how many 鈥 would not have gotten hooked on nicotine without e-cigarettes. (5/10)

Each May, private charities in Boston organize a 鈥淲alk for Hunger鈥 to help the Massachusetts households鈥攐ne out of every 10, we鈥檙e told鈥攖hat require 鈥渉unger relief.鈥 A national organization of food banks named Feeding America promotes its own work by asserting that 鈥1 in 7 Americans struggle to get enough to eat.鈥 A 2015 ad campaign sponsored by Great Nations Eat warned that 鈥淎merica Can鈥檛 Be Great on an Empty Stomach.鈥 (Robert Paarlberg, 5/10)

Veteran doctors don't need a blood test to tell when someone is on the verge of a drug overdose. They can even narrow down the culprit by observation alone. Dilated pupils mean cocaine, amphetamines, maybe LSD. Constricted pupils mean an opiate. (Sanjay Gupta, 5/11)

Hotel rooms have occupancy limits, as do elevators, and even taxi cabs in New York City, but few laws in the United States regulate or even monitor the number of patients that any one hospital nurse can be responsible for at a given time. This hit home for me after the publication of my book The Shift: One Nurse, Twelve Hours, Four Patients鈥 Lives. Many nurses reacted by reminding me that four patients is a cakewalk, not worth writing a book about鈥攖heir usual load is eight patients or more. (Theresa Brown, 5/10)

Mental illness impacts millions of Americans and hundreds of thousands of Kentuckians, but is largely undiagnosed and untreated. As citizens of the commonwealth, we must hold our federal and state leaders accountable so they can fix gaps in the mental healthcare system. With a basic knowledge of mental illness, who it impacts and the current inadequacies of treatment, Congress and the Kentucky General Assembly can enact legislation to correct these problems. (Michael Gray, 5/10)

Telehealth usually costs much less than traditional treatment and could help bend the cost curve. But if Parkland Health & Hospital System goes all in on the emerging service, it figures to lose even more money. (Michael Schnurman, 5/10)

The facts of Tyson Horton's case are simple. In 2009, doctors at OHSU Hospital mistakenly sliced through blood vessels to his liver as they removed a cancerous mass from the then 8-month old. The error 鈥 OHSU admitted its negligence 鈥 nearly killed him. (5/10)

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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