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Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Jul 5 2016

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Thumbs Down On GOP Health Care Replacement Plan; Independence Day For The FDA?

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

About seven years after the Republicans promised to 鈥淩epeal and Replace鈥 the Affordable Care Act, we have their "replacement" plan. It is not a coherent policy alternative but a mishmash of recycled ideas. It increases costs for Americans with pre-existing conditions, increases costs for the middle-class, and guts the Medicaid and Medicare program. Consider core elements of the plan. The Republican plan strips away important consumer protections and standards for health insurance. (Ezekiel J. Emanuel and Topher Spiro, 7/4)

In a moment remarkable for its symbolism, six former Food and Drug Administration commissioners last month sat together on a stage and argued that their former agency needs more autonomy from Washington bureaucracy. The solution: make the FDA independent and maybe give it a cabinet seat at the White House, too. ... Yet the panel discussion at the Aspen Ideas Festival has refocused attention on the notion that the FDA 鈥 and by extension, the American public 鈥 would be better off if the agency鈥檚 status was elevated. And the suggestion carried still more weight since the former commissioners worked for both Republican and Democratic administrations. (Ed Silverman, 7/5)

Friday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit released two opinions in Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) cases. In one case, the federal government prevailed. In the other, it did not. Both opinions were unanimous and (in my opinion) likely correct. The two cases are also further confirmation that Obamacare litigation is far from over. To the contrary, for reasons I explained here, the PPACA created a perfect storm for ongoing litigation. (Jonathan H. Adler, 7/1)

Needless patient suffering, fatal delays in medical treatment and retaliation against whistleblowers. These are among the well-publicized failures investigators found at hospitals run by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Yet they are also the shameful hallmarks of another federal health-care system: the Indian Health Service. Part of the Department of Health and Human Services, the Indian Health Service is required by treaty to deliver health care to Native Americans around the country, with more than two million depending on this federal agency. (Sen. John Barrasso and Sen. John Thune, 7/1)

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one part of the American people to affirm the political bands which connect them to the other parts, and to assume within the nation, the connected and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature鈥檚 God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of their fellow citizens requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to affirm their connection. (Danielle Allen, 7/3)

The Supreme Court ensured that millions of working people would get fairer treatment when it decided last week not to consider Home Care Association of America v. Weil. That case was the last attempt by home care employers (mostly for-profit agencies) to avoid paying home care workers (mainly women of color) the minimum wage and overtime pay. By declining to hear the case, the court has confirmed that there is no legal rationale for denying basic labor protections to home care workers, who care for the elderly and disabled in the clients鈥 homes. The court鈥檚 action also marks the end of a long and shameful era in labor law. (7/2)

When it comes to providing care for individuals living with serious mental illnesses, we are caught in a vicious cycle. Extreme events bring about calls for change, but enthusiasm and accountability quickly wane. Initiatives begin, but rarely succeed. As a report from the National Alliance on Mental Illness noted, funding for mental illness increased after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings, but funding decreased in many states the following year. We can and should do better. (Andrew Sperling, 7/1)

The Zika virus may be deadly serious, but is it really a potent enough reason to explain the withdrawal of Jason Day, Rory McIlroy and many other star golfers from the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro? There's a more likely explanation: The Olympics simply are not a priority for them. Which is why golfers, along with stars from other already enriched sports, have no place in the Olympics. (David Kahn, 7/4)

The state of mental health services in Iowa, especially as it relates to jails and prisons, has been in the news recently. There is no question the current mental health system needs improvement. We want Iowans to know there are many of us working hard, collectively and independently, to make that happen. (Craig Matzke, Teresa Bomhoff and Jessica Peckover 7/3)

The HPV vaccine should be called a miracle drug. It can prevent half a dozen of the most common cancers caused by the human papillomavirus, including cervical, vaginal, anal, vulvar, throat and penile cancers. If administered before children become sexually active, preferably when a child is 11 or 12, it could prevent tens of thousands of cases of cancer decades later, averting untold suffering. (7/5)

What if there were a vaccine for young people that could help avert thousands of cancer cases, saving untold American lives? Wouldn't you expect to hear a strong recommendation from your pediatrician that your son or daughter take that shot? Of course you would. And of course, there is such a vaccine. (7/4)

The residents of West Baltimore currently spend nearly twice as much on health care as the state average. One reason for the high cost in this area is that there aren't enough local skilled nursing and rehab beds to care for these residents after they are discharged from area hospitals. (Stephen N. Davis, 7/3)

The time has come. The Pentagon and Department of Veterans Affairs must stop dragging their feet. They must own up to the serious chemical and radioactive hazards that U.S. service members were exposed to in the line of duty. It鈥檚 not as if the health damage from such exposure expires once the mission is over. As Arla Harrell can attest, a lifetime of suffering can follow an irresponsible sergeant鈥檚 or young lieutenant鈥檚 order to step forward and serve as a test dummy for a chemical munition. (7/2)

Last year my primary care doctor felt a mass in my belly. 鈥淚t鈥檚 probably nothing, but I鈥檓 going to send you for a CT scan right now,鈥 she said. I had lymphoma. Part of my workup involved a PET scan, and my thyroid lit up. Lighting up is bad in PET-scan speak, and can indicate a cancer. I was told we would have to revisit this once I was done with the lymphoma treatment. (Debora Ruth Hoffman, 7/1)

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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