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Thursday, Jul 7 2016

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories 6

  • Gingrich, Kennedy Take On Opioid Addiction 鈥 The KHN Conversation
  • Despite Federal Directive, Texas Denies Medicaid Coverage For An Autism Therapy
  • Advance Planning For Your End-Of-Life Care
  • Study: Brand-Name Drugs鈥 High Copays Soak Medicare Part D Patients
  • Consumers鈥 Sunscreen Picks Don鈥檛 Always Track With Doctors鈥 Advice, Study Says
  • Medical Marijuana Linked To Modest Budget Benefits For Medicare Part D, Study Finds

Health Law 1

  • House GOP Report Finds Administration Spent Billions On Health Law Without Authority

Capitol Watch 3

  • Opioid Bill's Fate In Peril As Republicans Rebuff Dems' $920M Funding Proposal
  • House Overwhelmingly Passes Bill To Revamp Mental Health System
  • House Republicans Release Their 2017 Health Spending Bill

Administration News 2

  • Both Parties Seize Upon Administration's Slow Pace In Redirecting Ebola Funding To Combat Zika
  • White House Announces New Precision Medicine Measures

Women鈥檚 Health 1

  • Texas Anti-Abortion Activists Draw Up New Blueprints After Supreme Court Decision

Veterans' Health Care 1

  • VA Adjusts Veteran Suicide Estimate To 20 Per Day Using More Precise Data

Public Health 3

  • Men With Advanced Prostate Cancer Should Be Tested For Genetic Mutations, Study Finds
  • When It Comes To Sunscreen, Don't Just Buy Based On Other Shoppers' Reviews
  • Though Predicting Alzheimer's Remains A Daunting Task, Researchers Take Another Small Step

State Watch 1

  • State Highlights: In Colo., Confusion About Freestanding ERs Can Lead To Big Medical Bills; N.J. Insurer Saved $43M By Rooting Out Fraud

Editorials And Opinions 1

  • Viewpoints: President Obama On Personalized Medicine; Medicare Advantage's Growing Pains

From 麻豆女优 Health News - Latest Stories:

麻豆女优 Health News Original Stories

Gingrich, Kennedy Take On Opioid Addiction 鈥 The KHN Conversation

Patrick Kennedy, a former congressman from Rhode Island, and Newt Gingrich, who was once the House speaker, are advancing policies to combat this national crisis. ( Shefali Luthra , 7/7 )

Despite Federal Directive, Texas Denies Medicaid Coverage For An Autism Therapy

The state鈥檚 Medicaid program quit covering the expensive therapy, called applied behavioral analysis, leaving some families scrambling to afford the treatment. ( Kate Harrington , 7/7 )

Advance Planning For Your End-Of-Life Care

A new health benefit available to millions of Californians encourages people to discuss end-of-life care options with their doctors. ( Emily Bazar , 7/7 )

Study: Brand-Name Drugs鈥 High Copays Soak Medicare Part D Patients

A study in Health Affairs finds Medicare Part D beneficiaries were charged copays averaging 10.5 times more for Crestor and Nexium than generic drugs would have cost them. ( Rachel Bluth , 7/6 )

Consumers鈥 Sunscreen Picks Don鈥檛 Always Track With Doctors鈥 Advice, Study Says

Researchers examined shoppers鈥 reviews of sunscreen products on Amazon.com and found that their the ratings often were based on scent, texture and performance, but didn鈥檛 necessarily take into account whether the products were consistent with dermatologists鈥 recommendations. ( Carmen Heredia Rodriguez , 7/6 )

Medical Marijuana Linked To Modest Budget Benefits For Medicare Part D, Study Finds

A Health Affairs study determines that Part D spending went down slightly on prescription drugs for which medical marijuana is viewed as a possible alternative. ( Shefali Luthra , 7/6 )

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Summaries Of The News:

Health Law

House GOP Report Finds Administration Spent Billions On Health Law Without Authority

The report by two House committees is expected to be released Thursday. Also in the news, a study finds that the health law's insurance surcharges for tobacco users were not effective, more concerns are raised about co-ops set up under Obamacare and a new plan comes into the marketplace in Wisconsin.

The Obama administration knowingly spent billions in health care dollars without proper congressional authority and went to 鈥済reat lengths鈥 to impede congressional scrutiny of the money, Republicans on two major House committees said in a report that will be made public on Thursday. An extensive investigation by the Ways and Means and the Energy and Commerce Committees concluded that the administration plowed ahead with funding for a consumer cost-reduction program that was central to the new health insurance law even though Congress did not provide money for it. (Huse, 7/7)

The Affordable Care Act was meant to have a particular impact on smokers when it was enacted: It would shift the burden of high health-care costs from smoking ailments to the smokers themselves鈥17 percent of American adults in 2014. At the same time, the ACA would keep making progress toward the goal of universal health care, even for smokers. It fell short on both goals in its first year, a study released Wednesday by the Yale School of Public Health found. (Ramkumar, 7/6)

A tobacco surcharge levied by some insurers has led to lower enrollment in health coverage 鈥 but not to lower smoking rates. That鈥檚 according to a new study by researchers at the Yale School of Public Health, which examined the tobacco surcharge allowed under the Affordable Care Act. ...The legislation, among other things, allowed insurance plans to to levy a surcharge of up to 50 percent on tobacco users鈥 premiums. (Cuba, 7/6)

An organization representing state health insurance co-ops criticized the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 risk adjustment formula as a failure causing difficulties for the nonprofit insurers created under the law. The announcement from the National Alliance of State Health Co-Ops came a day after HealthyCT, the Connecticut co-op, was put under an order of suspension, signaling the co-op would start taking steps to shut down. Kelly Crowe, the group鈥檚 CEO, said the case was not a 鈥渙ne-off example.鈥 (McIntire, 7/6)

Evergreen Health Cooperative must pay $24.2 million to its biggest competitor because of an Affordable Care Act program that aims to level the playing field for insurers taking on riskier customers from state health insurance exchanges. (Gantz, 7/6)

Children's Community Health Plan, which is owned by Children's Hospital and Health System, plans to sell insurance on the federal marketplace set up through the Affordable Care Act. The plan oversees the care of 135,000 people covered by BadgerCare Plus, the state's largest Medicaid program, and had operating revenue of $237.8 million last year. The move to sell insurance on the federal exchange will give people in six counties in southeastern Wisconsin another option on the marketplace next year, and it comes as some health insurers are abandoning the marketplaces after incurring large losses. (Boulton, 7/6)

Capitol Watch

Opioid Bill's Fate In Peril As Republicans Rebuff Dems' $920M Funding Proposal

What started out as bipartisan legislation has devolved into party politics as Democrats try to add funding to the bill. Without the money, the measure's future in getting through the full Senate is uncertain.

A partisan feud over money to treat drug addicts split a House and Senate conference committee on Wednesday as it considered legislation to address the nation鈥檚 deadly opioid epidemic, imperiling a bill many had hoped would be one of this Congress鈥檚 most significant accomplishments. Democrats on the conference committee lost in their effort to insist that the bill include at least $920 million to help pay for additional treatment of addicts, most of whom cannot find or afford the treatment they need. (Harris, 7/6)

Republican lawmakers in U.S. Congress on Wednesday rejected two Democratic amendments to provide nearly $1 billion in funding for bipartisan legislation intended to combat America's opioid epidemic, aides said. The rejection, which came during a meeting of U.S. House of Representatives and Senate negotiators on the measure, could undermine Democratic support for final legislation that could come up for a vote in the House of Representatives as early as Friday. (Morgan, 7/6)

The bill is popular with members in both parties and several lawmakers in tough re-election contests are eager to promote it back home as evidence they are getting things done in Washington. But Democrats have long pushed for the additional funding arguing that without it the bill will not deliver on its promise to help stem the growing abuse of opioids across the country. 鈥淲e are debating a bill to address the opioid epidemic. It should include the funding necessary to actually fight that epidemic,鈥 said Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), a member of the conference committee that drafted the bill. (Demirjian, 7/6)

While the conference committee can proceed without Democratic support, the staunch opposition will become problematic when the bill reaches the Senate floor, where Democrats can block the bill from going forward. (Ferris, 7/6)

This sets up a familiar scenario. In the past two weeks, a House-Senate conference report to fund the Zika virus passed along partisan lines in the House and then failed along partisan lines in the Senate. (Owens, 7/6)

Unlike the conference committee on Zika funding, Democrats have been heavily engaged in drafting the details of the conference report on the opioid legislation. And more than 100 advocacy groups support passing the drug abuse bill with or without funding, even though they have lobbied hard for more money. (Norman, 7/6)

The White House on Wednesday slammed congressional Republicans for voting down new funding for bipartisan opioid legislation but stopped just short of saying President Obama would veto the legislation...[Press Secretary Josh] Earnest accused Republicans of being 鈥渄eaf鈥 to calls from Democrats and public health experts who say that more funding is necessary to combat the opioid epidemic. (Fabian, 7/6)

In other news聽about the opioid epidemic聽鈥

Many doctors in Massachusetts sharply curtailed prescriptions for opioids over the past 18 months, according to new data that suggest the pipeline for drugs that fueled the state鈥檚 deadly opioid-abuse crisis may be shrinking. Athenahealth, a Watertown company that provides electronic medical records, released an analysis Wednesday showing that opioid prescriptions in the physician practices that use its software fell 25 percent since the beginning of 2015. That was a steeper drop than for medical practices nationwide, which recorded a 13 percent decline. (Freyer, 7/7)

Sometime soon, the NFL may have to explain in court how its team鈥檚 medical staffs responsibly dispensed painkillers to players in the league. According to Calvin Johnson, powerful and addictive opioids were, until recently, handed out 鈥渓ike candy.鈥 ... 鈥淚f you were hurting, then you could get them. It was nothing,鈥 Johnson added. 鈥淚 mean, if you needed Vicodin, call out, 鈥楳y ankle hurt,鈥 you know. 鈥業 need, I need it. I can鈥檛, I can鈥檛 play without it,鈥 or something like that. It was simple. That鈥檚 how easy it was to get them. So if you were dependent on them, they were readily available.鈥 (Bieler, 7/6)

Physicians licensed to prescribe a medication that reduces cravings and eases withdrawal for people addicted to heroin and other opioids will now be allowed to treat more patients. Under new rules announced Wednesday by the Obama administration, physicians who prescribe Suboxone can treat 275 patients at a time, up from 100. (Wallstin, 7/6)

Politics are more polarized and acrimonious than ever. But one public health concern 鈥 the nation鈥檚 epidemic of prescription painkiller abuse 鈥 is uniting some unexpected bedfellows. There is Patrick Kennedy, former Democratic congressman from Rhode Island, who has since made a career of advocating for mental health treatment since leaving the House in 2011. And there is Newt Gingrich, the former Republican speaker of the House of Representatives and 2012 presidential candidate, who recently has been mentioned as a possible vice presidential pick for Donald Trump. (Luthra, 7/7)

House Overwhelmingly Passes Bill To Revamp Mental Health System

The bill, introduced by Rep. Tim Murphy, R-Pa., has been stalled for years. But House leaders scaled back some of the more controversial elements to get the legislation through. Plans for Senate action are unclear.

The House passed legislation Wednesday to overhaul the nation鈥檚 mental health system, the first effort by lawmakers to specifically tackle federal policies on serious mental illness. The bill passed 422-2, overwhelming support that reflected a decision by sponsors to defer debates on some of its most controversial aspects. The bill would reorganize the federal agency overseeing mental health policy, direct funding to combat serious mental illness as opposed to general mental health programs, and change Medicaid reimbursements for treating patients with illnesses like schizophrenia. (Radnofsky, 7/6)

The measure from Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.), which passed 422-2, had been stalled and mired in controversy for years, but lawmakers in recent months dropped or scaled back many of the most contentious, sweeping measures. That process has led to a bill that is much more modest than the original plan but that advocates are still praising as a good first step. Democrats stressed that more funding is still needed. (Sullivan, 7/6)

The measure was originally intended as a massive overhaul of the mental health care system. However, it was watered down in committee and stripped of costly and controversial provisions, including some that would have expanded access to psychiatric hospital beds and made it easier for doctors to share information about mentally ill patients. The pared-down, budget-neutral bill authorizes new prevention and treatment programs, reauthorizes existing ones, restructures leadership at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, and requires insurers to provide more robust coverage for eating disorders. (Ehley, 7/6)

While House Speaker Paul Ryan has pointed to the bill as a way to address gun violence across the country, Tuesday鈥檚 vote came as House Democrats have sought to get more votes on gun restrictions on the House floor. Murphy has said that gun violence and mental health should be addressed separately, and the two aren鈥檛 linked in the measure. (McIntire, 7/6)

The House of Representatives put aside gun control politics Wednesday and overwhelmingly approved a scaled-back mental health reform bill. Attention now turns to a similar bill in the Senate, where gun issues have continued to stall movement. Although some stronger and more controversial provisions originally in the bill were removed to improve its chances of passage, mental health advocates still hailed the bill's approval as a 鈥減owerful moment鈥 and 鈥渕ajor step forward鈥 in mental healthcare. (Muchmore, 7/6)

As the U.S. House of Representatives passed an overhaul of federal mental health policy on Wednesday, Sen. Chris Murphy pressed for a Senate vote on a similar bipartisan bill he has sponsored with Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana. ...His bill would require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to modify regulations concerning medical record secrecy in cases of serious mental illness to provide family members with information to help the sick. The bill also would reauthorize mental health grants for states and drop some restrictions on patient advocacy groups. (Radelat, 7/6)

House Republicans Release Their 2017 Health Spending Bill

The measure includes increases to help combat opioid abuse and the Zika virus as well as a funding boost for the National Institutes of Health, which is lower than what the Senate OK'd last month. In addition, it also targets Obamacare by rescinding some of its existing funding.

House Republicans on Wednesday released their healthcare spending bill for fiscal 2017, boosting funding to fight opioid abuse and the Zika virus while taking aim at ObamaCare and abortion. The measure from the House Appropriations Committee includes extra funding in hot-button areas where Democrats have demanded immediate funding outside of the regular appropriations process. (Peter Sullivan, 7/6)

House appropriators released a new funding bill Wednesday that would provide another boost to the National Institutes of Health 鈥 though a smaller one than their Senate colleagues passed last month. The legislation, which would fund federal health programs for the fiscal year starting in October, would give the NIH $33.3 billion, a $1.3 billion increase over this year. By contrast, the Senate version would boost the agency鈥檚 funding by $2 billion. The new bill would build on the $2 billion increase the NIH got at the end of last year. (Scott, 7/6)

Administration News

Both Parties Seize Upon Administration's Slow Pace In Redirecting Ebola Funding To Combat Zika

The Obama administration has only distributed about one-sixth of the Ebola funding that it's using to fight the virus. Republicans say that proves their point that Congress has some breathing room before it becomes absolutely necessary to pass legislation for it. Democrats, however, say moving money out the door takes time, which is all the more reason to act quickly on Zika. Outlets also report on developments out of Florida, Puerto Rico and Kansas.

The Obama administration has so far distributed only about one-sixth of the unspent Ebola funding that it diverted to combat the Zika virus, according to administration officials. The White House in April diverted $589 million to the Zika virus amid congressional squabbling over approving new emergency funding. Since then, the administration has distributed $112 million, according to HHS figures shared with POLITICO. Another $100 million is expected to be distributed to states soon and 鈥渕uch鈥 of the remaining funding will be sent out this month and next, according to HHS. (Haberkorn and Everett, 7/6)

The prospect of Congress approving any new Zika virus funding before a seven-week recess is bleak, with both parties ready to blame the other for the stalemate. Public health experts have warned that the mosquitoes that carry the virus, which is known to cause birth defects, will increase in the hot summer months, worsening the virus' spread. (Sullivan, 7/6)

Though congress is still battling over Zika funding, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is handing out $25 million to states to fight the mosquito-borne illness. Florida will get $1.4 million of that money. The state鈥檚 share is among the country's largest because the threat of Zika is so high here. (Ochoa, 7/6)

As many as 50 pregnant women in Puerto Rico are becoming infected with Zika every day, top U.S. health officials said Wednesday as they urged the U.S. territory to strongly consider aerial spraying to prevent further spread of the mosquito-borne virus. The warning came as Puerto Rico debates whether to fumigate with the insecticide Naled, a proposal that has sparked protests in the U.S. territory over concerns about its impact on human health and wildlife. (7/6)

Five cases of Zika virus have been reported in Kansas, all of which originated outside the United States. State agencies and university laboratories are looking for ways to keep that number at a minimum. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has started a statewide surveillance program to monitor mosquitoes, which it does every year. (Wilson, 7/6)

White House Announces New Precision Medicine Measures

The Precision Medicine Initiative's goal is to modernize and accelerate biomedical discoveries, bringing new treatments to patients faster. Some of the new steps include plans to speed the development of tests used to identify genetic mutations and the development of tools to make data collection easier for researchers.

The White House announced on Wednesday measures aimed at advancing President Barack Obama's precision medicine initiative, including plans to speed the development of tests used to identify genetic mutations and guide medical treatment. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it planned to issue a proposal on Wednesday to create performance standards to guide development of next generation sequencing (NGS) tests. These tests scan a person's DNA and identify genetic differences that could be responsible for a patient's symptoms. (Clarke, 7/6)

The Obama administration on Wednesday announced new steps in implementing its Precision Medicine Initiative, a research effort aiming to tailor disease prevention and treatment to a specific person鈥檚 characteristics. These steps include awarding $55 million in grants from the National Institutes of Health to develop the initiative鈥檚 experimental cohort program, a Food and Drug Administration proposal to make its oversight of genomic tests more efficient, and the development of tools to make the data that is collected accessible to researchers. (Owens, 7/6)

Women鈥檚 Health

Texas Anti-Abortion Activists Draw Up New Blueprints After Supreme Court Decision

Two major anti-abortion groups in Texas are taking different paths after the Supreme Court overturned the state's law regulating abortion. Meanwhile, officials in the Lone Star state have proposed new rules on fetal remains.

The state's two largest anti-abortion groups 鈥 which had already been squabbling over strategy 鈥 find themselves looking for new legal avenues to press their cause, and appear to disagree on the best path forward. Republican lawmakers were quick to promise an 鈥渙nslaught of pro-life legislation鈥 when they reconvene in January. But so far, anti-abortion activists appear to be at a loss for a clear, new strategy to push abortion restrictions. (Ura and Pattani, 7/7)

In a new effort to regulate abortion providers, Texas health officials are proposing rules that would require abortion providers to cremate or bury fetal remains. The new rules, proposed by the Health and Human Services Commission, would no longer allow abortion providers to dispose of fetal remains in sanitary landfills, instead allowing only cremation or interment of all remains 鈥 regardless of the period of gestation. (Ura, 7/6)

Texas health officials are proposing new rules that would mandate that abortion providers cremate or bury fetal remains. The rules proposed by the Health and Human Services Commission would require that fetal remains be cremated or buried, regardless of the period of gestation. Abortion providers often use third-party special waste services that dispose of remains in sanitary landfills. (Wise, 7/6)

In other news, an abortion rights group has its eye on the 2016 elections聽鈥

With the Republican National Convention fast approaching, a pro-abortion rights group is working to tie GOP members of Congress who have said they鈥檒l skip the event in Cleveland to their party鈥檚 presumptive presidential nominee. NARAL Pro-Choice America kicked off its online advertising blitz Thursday with the slogan #TrumpSquadGoals, linking vulnerable Republican senators and congressmen with anti-abortion views to Donald Trump and GOP party leadership. (Nelson, 7/7)

Veterans' Health Care

VA Adjusts Veteran Suicide Estimate To 20 Per Day Using More Precise Data

But even with the slight decrease from 22 per day, officials say the number is still far too high. "Twenty a day is not that different from 22," says Dr. David Shulkin, the undersecretary for health at the Department of Veterans Affairs.

On average, 20 veterans a day committed suicide in 2014, a slight decrease from the previous government estimate, but federal health officials are cautious about concluding the suicide problem is getting better. Rather, they say the Department of Veterans Affairs is relying on a more comprehensive database than ever before, making comparisons to prior studies difficult and possibly offering a truer snapshot than what was captured in the past. (Freking, 7/7)

An average of 20 veterans a day committed suicide in 2014, a trend that reflects record high rates among young men fresh out of the military and growing numbers of women taking their lives, the first actual count of suicides among former service members shows. The Department of Veterans Affairs previously had only estimated suicides, saying in 2010 there was an average of 22 a day. The 2014 data released Thursday is based on a precise tabulation of the 7,403 deaths. (Zoroya, 7/7)

Public Health

Men With Advanced Prostate Cancer Should Be Tested For Genetic Mutations, Study Finds

The recommendation is a major shift from previous thinking in which only men with a family history of prostate cancer were urged to consider testing. Currently insurers are unlikely to cover it in any other case. Meanwhile, a new test could help those men with advanced prostate cancer decide what treatment is best for them, and a high-priced drug for the disease is at the center of a takeover battle.

Leading American and British cancer researchers are urging that all men with advanced prostate cancer strongly consider being tested for inherited gene mutations -- both to help steer their treatment and to alert family members who themselves might be at increased risk for a range of cancers. This new recommendation, which represents a major change in approach, was prompted by a study published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine. The researchers found that almost 12 percent of men with advanced cancer had defects in genes that are designed to fix damage to DNA, compared to 4.6 percent of patients with disease that hadn't spread. (McGinley, 7/6)

Genomic Health Inc. has struck a deal to commercialize a new blood test that can help advanced prostate cancer patients decide whether to try costly new-generation drugs or rely on much cheaper traditional chemotherapy to improve their chances for survival. The test, developed by closely held Epic Sciences Inc., San Diego, detects a mutation associated with a poor response to two new drugs, Xtandi from Medivation Inc. and Astellas Pharma Inc. of Japan, and Zytiga from Johnson & Johnson. (Winslow, 7/7)

A high-priced prostate cancer drug discovered at UCLA is at the center of a multibillion-dollar takeover battle that has several giant pharmaceutical firms eyeing the purchase of San Francisco biotech firm Medivation. Medivation sells the drug Xtandi for about $129,000 a year. Earlier this year, two nonprofit groups asked the federal government to allow other companies to sell the drug at lower prices. The groups argued that the federal government had a right under the law to allow lower-priced competition because UCLA scientists had used taxpayer-funded grants to discover Xtandi. (Petersen, 7/6)

When It Comes To Sunscreen, Don't Just Buy Based On Other Shoppers' Reviews

Scientists researched the top-rated sunblocks on Amazon.com and found that 40 percent of them came up short in terms of doctor-recommended standards. Often the reviews focused on superficial qualities such as texture or smell instead of whether it was actually effective.

Amazon.com reviews have become the indispensable buying guide for all sorts of products for busy Americans who either don鈥檛 have time to trek to a retail store or just can鈥檛 be bothered. We scrutinize them to figure out which movies to watch, which toaster does the bagel setting right and which toddler booties hold up best. Given that that the marketplace has led you in the right direction with so many other consumer products, you might be wondering whether it鈥檚 a good place to read up on the sunscreen you鈥檝e been meaning to buy as summer kicks into high gear. The answer, according to a study published Wednesday by Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine鈥檚 Shuai Xu, is yes and no. (Cha, 7/6)

When it comes to consumers choosing sunscreen, they are often drawn to a product鈥檚 scent, texture and, of course, performance, according to a study published Wednesday in JAMA Dermatology. It also found that, in many instances, these sunblocks don鈥檛 measure up to the standards recommended by the American Academy of Dermatology. The AAD recommends sun protection products contain broad spectrum coverage, an SPF of 30 or higher, and water or sweat resistance. But four out of every 10 products fell short of the recommendations." (Heredia Rodriguez, 7/6)

Though Predicting Alzheimer's Remains A Daunting Task, Researchers Take Another Small Step

Scientists have developed a genetic test that can help identify people who are at unusually high risk of developing symptoms of dementia as they age. The test only underlies how complex truly predicting someone's risk for Alzheimer's is, but it's 鈥渁n important first attempt," experts say. In other news, biotech executives are bringing back the practice of self-experimentation, researchers find that adults cannot regrow cartilage and patients are taking calculated risks with medical marijuana.

New research into the genetic underpinnings of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease offers fresh evidence that the devastating brain disorder may gain a foothold years before dementia sets in, and takes a key step toward earlier detection of the disease. In a study that scoured the genes of healthy young people for the presence of variants linked to Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, researchers have found that those who carried many of the telltale gene variations had a smaller hippocampus -- a brain structure that is crucial to memory-formation 鈥 than did their peers with few of the genetic variations. (Healy, 7/6)

Such experiments are one of medicine鈥檚 oldest traditions. Many a vaccine or poison was first tested on its developer; most of the earliest work on psychedelic drugs was conducted by intrepid scientists tripping in the name of research. As medicine has progressed, however, self-experimentation has become less popular in academic labs, to be taken up instead by a growing biotech industry. Those changes have given rise to a new breed of self-tester: the guinea pig CEO. (Preston, 7/7)

The fallout from nuclear bomb testing decades ago is now helping researchers better understand knee joints. By tracking radioactive carbon absorbed in knees, a team of Danish researchers has found that the structure of cartilage is determined by early adolescence and doesn鈥檛 change later in life. They published their findings Wednesday in Science Translational Medicine. (Wessel, 7/6)

Lenny and Amy鈥檚 5-year-old son has epilepsy. When conventional medications caused terrible side effects, they started giving him a daily drop of cannabis oil, with dramatic results. But it鈥檚 a calculated risk: While there is anecdotal evidence of cannabis鈥 effectiveness, scientists face research roadblocks because it鈥檚 a schedule 1 controlled substance. (O'Brien, 7/6)

State Watch

State Highlights: In Colo., Confusion About Freestanding ERs Can Lead To Big Medical Bills; N.J. Insurer Saved $43M By Rooting Out Fraud

Outlets report on health news from Colorado, New Jersey, New Hampshire, Florida, Connecticut, Ohio, New York and Georgia.

Colorado patients who visit freestanding emergency departments for non-life threatening concerns may mistakenly end up paying vastly higher bills for care that could be provided by less-expensive urgent care centers, according to an analysis by the Center for Improving Value in Health Care. For instance, the cost of treatment for bronchitis at an ER facility was nearly 10 times what it was at urgent care centers. (7/6)

The special investigations unit of Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey generated $43.2 million in savings last year by rooting out fraud, the Newark, N.J., health insurer said Wednesday. Horizon said one of the latest trends in fraud is the "phantom doctor's office," which are shell offices that submit bogus claims using stolen insurance identification numbers and then vanish. (Brubaker, 7/6)

An agency being sued by Exeter Hospital over the 2012 hepatitis C outbreak insists it shouldn鈥檛 have to help foot the bill for the settlements the hospital reached with 188 patients who tested negative, suggesting the hospital only settled to avoid more bad publicity and the costs of fighting potential lawsuits. In recently filed court documents, the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists (ARRT) continued to claim that it鈥檚 not responsible for contributing to the settlements the hospital made with uninfected patients who never filed lawsuits. (Schreiber, 7/6)

A Palm Beach County doctor was sentenced to nearly four years in federal prison on Wednesday for fraudulently billing more than $2.1 million from Medicare by issuing false diagnoses. Dr. Isaac Kojo Anakwah Thompson, 56, who ran medical businesses in Delray Beach and Boynton Beach, pleaded guilty earlier this year to a health care fraud charge. (McMahon, 7/6)

Connecticut鈥檚 cities and towns and the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner appear to have reached a temporary resolution of their disagreement over responsibility for unclaimed human remains. The Farmington-based medical examiner鈥檚 office will handle storage and disposition of the bodies, but communities will take on responsibility for transporting them. The compromise was reached at the urging of Attorney General George Jepsen鈥檚 office, which hinted this week that a legal opinion could leave both parties unsatisfied, and ultimately won鈥檛 resolve the budgetary strain each side is facing. (Phaneuf, 7/7)

The deaf and hearing impaired have a new career option, as a truck driver. The Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Office of Criminal Justice Services and Opportunities for Ohioans with Disabilities have joined to develop procedures that allow the deaf and hearing impaired to qualify for a waiver so that they can train and test for a commercial driver鈥檚 license. Before now, the deaf and hearing impaired could not do so. (Williams, 7/7)

The state Assembly is planning to hold public hearings on water quality in early September. Speaker Carl Heastie, Environmental Conservation Committee Chair Steve Englebright and Health Committee Chair Richard Gottfried announced the hearings Wednesday afternoon. They said the hearings in Albany and Suffolk County will take testimony related to the causes and responses to drinking water contamination in various communities across the state. (7/6)

Through its Eyes of Hope programs, VSP said it has spent $175 million on eye care and eyewear for 1 million people and has committed to serving a million more by 2020. According to the company, more than 46 million U.S. households aren't covered by vision plans and don't have access to vision insurance through work. That matters more than you might imagine. Eye exams can be critical to detecting serious health problems including diabetes and high blood pressure early. (Kurtzman, 7/6)

The Cleveland Clinic, with its increasingly international clientele, has long provided specialty care to patients from around the globe. ... But recently the system found itself in an awkward position after a patient from the UAE was arrested while trying to check into an Avon hotel. Police have since apologized to the man, whose brief detention was based on the unfounded suspicions of a hotel clerk, and declared it an unfortunate episode. (Ross, 7/6)

Nine students enrolled in the medical specialty programs at Beach High and Woodville Tompkins are spending their summer preparing for careers in medicine. ...The Medical College of Georgia has been offering SEEP in various forms since 1970 to interest more underrepresented, nontraditional and economically disadvantaged students in health care professions. The program was expanded to Savannah鈥檚 medical specialty programs in 2011. (Few, 7/5)

Editorials And Opinions

Viewpoints: President Obama On Personalized Medicine; Medicare Advantage's Growing Pains

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

Health care is always personal. As science and technology have advanced, it鈥檚 become possible to make it personalized as well, giving us the tools to better understand, prevent, and treat everyone鈥檚 individual health needs. ... Our health care should be customized for us. The powerful and exciting field of precision medicine goes a step further and asks: What if we could just as easily match a cancer cure to a patient鈥檚 unique genetic code? Instead of trying a one-size-fits-all treatment, what if medical experts could tailor one specifically for everyone鈥檚 body? (President Barack Obama, 7/7)

Medicare enrollees are moving in greater numbers than ever to the program鈥檚 managed care option as a way to save money. But the tradeoff is much less ability to use their preferred doctors and hospitals. (Mark Miller, 7/7)

When the Summer Olympics open in Brazil in less than a month, athletes and visitors will have plenty to contend with, from economic and political turmoil to polluted waters and a violent crime wave. The Zika virus 鈥 which has garnered the world鈥檚 attention, prompted several star athletes to skip the Olympics and stirred bitter debate over whether the Rio Games should go on 鈥 is far down on any realistic list of concerns. And if public health decisions are to be driven by facts, not fear, the decision to begin the Games on Aug. 5, as scheduled, is reasonable. (7/6)

Most of the discussion about the risk of the Zika virus around the Rio Olympic Games is missing the point. By focusing so much on mathematical models of infectious disease and theoretical models of human behavior, too little attention is given to factoring for time and place. (Lee H. Igel, 6/6)

Two years after a scandal engulfed the nation鈥檚 veterans hospitals, with reports of long waiting lists, cooked appointment books and patients dying while they waited for care, a commission created by Congress has delivered a plan to transform the Veterans Affairs Department over the next 20 years. Its 300 pages, released on Wednesday, are a chronicle of failings at the Veterans Health Administration, the part of the V.A. that handles medical care. The debate over the report鈥檚 many judgments and prescriptions is just beginning. But the commission鈥檚 ambitious work brings two immediate thoughts to mind. (7/7)

Now poor and disenfranchised Kentuckians are caught in the middle of a dangerous game of chicken [Kentucky Gov. Matt] Bevin is playing with the federal government. He has made it clear that if the Obama administration does not want to approve his plan, then Medicaid expansion in Kentucky will be rolled back in its entirety, leaving more than 400,000 Kentuckians right back where they started 鈥 blocked from access to regular and preventative health care with nowhere to turn but the emergency room. The Bevin administration鈥檚 plan is a sideshow. It uses political misdirection to provide the illusion of effort to ensure the long-term health security so many Kentuckians need, but with the ultimate goal of rolling back Medicaid expansion with the smallest amount of political damage. (Matt Erwin, 6/6)

Gov. Sam Brownback鈥檚 disdain for the health of low-income women is on full display these days for Kansans to view with disgust. In yet another reminder of why he鈥檚 the most unpopular governor in America, Brownback has continued his assault in recent months against Planned Parenthood in the Sunflower State. (6/6)

A person released from a county jail or state prison faces no shortage of challenges readjusting to life in society. Accessing health care shouldn鈥檛 be one of them. The Legislature has recognized as much by passing a change to the state Human Services Code that would suspend, rather than terminate, Medicaid benefits while a person is incarcerated for up to two years. The change would make it easier to restart benefits when an offender is released. That translates into quicker access to psychiatric medications and other health care services that can help lower recidivism. (7/7)

The push for 鈥渄einstitutionalization鈥 sounded like a noble and practical cause: basic human dignity for patients, savings for the state. But as a new Boston Globe Spotlight Team investigative series shows, the phasing out of inpatient beds was not accompanied by an outpatient support system to replace state hospitals. Public officials, year after year, refused to commit to the resources needed to create a robust network of integrated community-based behavioral health care that would minimize the need for long-term hospitalization. As the hospitals went offline 鈥 starting in the 1970s 鈥 more and more patients were discharged, largely left to fend for themselves. The results have been disastrous. (7/7)

Many young neuroscientists enter PhD programs with aspirations to run a university laboratory or work in industry. A growing number want to pursue alternative careers in science. A recent paper published in Neuron recognizes that what once was 鈥淧lan B鈥 for neuroscience trainees 鈥 job opportunities outside the lab or clinic鈥 is growing in popularity. ... Although schools are rethinking their neuroscience graduate programs, the central dogma of scientific education 鈥 PhD program leads to postdoctoral training leads to faculty position 鈥 must shift first. (Catherine Kopil, 7/6)

Whether or not one supports President Obama, it is worth noting that a central premise of his public service is making real the nation鈥檚 guarantee of equal opportunity for all in a nation scarred by long-standing divisions and distrust of government. Public service in any form is an awesome responsibility. Filling open seats on the nation鈥檚 highest court, fixing our federal immigration laws, ensuring women鈥檚 access to reproductive health care, performing all functions of government on equal terms for LGBT people 鈥 these are ground rules for responsible public service. (Luis L贸pez, 7/6)

An interim joint hearing of the Licensing and Occupations Committee will be held at 10 a.m. Friday in Room 129 of the Capitol Annex to focus on the legalization of medical marijuana in Kentucky. The committee has held many hearings on the issue over the last four years, and we were told in 2012 that we would have interim hearings in the summer and do something in 2013. (Thomas Vance, 6/6)

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