- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Uninsured In Coal Country: Desperate Americans Still Turn To Volunteer Clinics
- Did Gender Bias Derail A Potential Birth Control Option For Men?
- Seniors Suffer Amid Widespread Fraud By Medicaid Caretakers
- Deadly Superbug Linked To Four Deaths In The U.S.
- Political Cartoon: 'Costly Operation'
- Health Law 2
- Democrats Applaud Medicaid Expansion Success As They Seek To Deflect Health Law Criticism
- Kansas Hospitals Shift From Neutral To Support Candidates Favoring Medicaid Expansion
- Quality 2
- Proposed Rule Lifting 16-Hour Shift Limit For First-Year Doctors Sparks Fiery Outcry
- Program Offers Medical Students Fast-Track Path To Become Family Physicians
- Public Health 5
- The Missing Piece In The Antibiotic Resistance Battle: How Superbugs Become Superbugs
- Medicaid Cuts Threaten Opioid Battle: 'I Don't Think It Was Intentionally Designed To Kill, But It Might'
- Trauma From Gun Violence A Long-Lasting Threat To Survivors' Health
- Civil Trial Starts In Fatal Police Shooting Of New York Veteran With Mental Health Issues
- Community Paramedicine Programs Keep Vulnerable Older Patients Out Of ERs
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Uninsured In Coal Country: Desperate Americans Still Turn To Volunteer Clinics
Dire dental needs and other health problems keep Remote Area Medical’s pop-up free clinics busy in states like Virginia that haven’t expanded Medicaid. (Sarah Varney, 11/7)
Did Gender Bias Derail A Potential Birth Control Option For Men?
A study that showed positive results in terms of contraceptive efficacy but may have been linked to depression has sparked debate about possible bias in contraceptive research. But the issues may not be so simple. (Shefali Luthra, 11/7)
Seniors Suffer Amid Widespread Fraud By Medicaid Caretakers
A government watchdog report finds widespread fraud — in some cases involving patients’ severe neglect and death — in a Medicaid program that sends non-medical assistants to elderly and disabled peoples’ homes. (Melissa Bailey, 11/7)
Deadly Superbug Linked To Four Deaths In The U.S.
A deadly superbug has been linked to at least four deaths and nine other cases in the U.S. and has spread across the globe in just six years. (Liz Szabo, 11/4)
Political Cartoon: 'Costly Operation'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Costly Operation'" by Steve Sack, The Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
SCIENCE, MALE BIRTH CONTROL AND A STUDY STALLED
It has always been
Left to the gals. … Did gender
Stop progress again?
- Anonymous
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Republican Gubernatorial Candidates' Abortion Rights Credentials Challenged
The Democratic Governors Association is running ads questioning whether Republican candidates in New Hampshire and Vermont are sincere in their abortion rights positions and trying to tie them to the Republican fights against Planned Parenthood.
The Wall Street Journal:
Abortion Becomes Central Issue In New England Governors’ Races
Abortion isn’t normally a central issue in statewide elections in New England, home to some of the most pro-choice voters in the nation. But just days from the election, it is surfacing as an unlikely front-burner topic in gubernatorial races in New Hampshire and Vermont, where Democratic and abortion-rights groups launched an advertising blitz essentially questioning whether two candidates running as pro-choice Republicans are pro-choice enough. (Levitz, 11/6)
Boston Globe:
Two States, Two Candidates, Similar Ads
Both New Hampshire Republican candidate Chris Sununu and Vermont Republican candidate Phil Scott say they favor abortion rights. However, in both states, Planned Parenthood and abortion rights groups have argued the GOP candidate’s support isn’t sufficiently strong. (Pindell, 11/5)
In other 2016 election news —
Stat:
Alzheimer’s Is Eroding His Memory, But Not His Will To Vote
But Rob Moir can’t remember anything Trump’s been saying. And last week Rob needed his wife to remind him which down-ballot candidates he prefers, and to stand beside him at the voting booth guiding him gently while he bubbled in his early ballot. Rob is one of millions of Americans with dementia. And like many of them, he’s had to navigate the voting process alongside a caregiver this election season. For people like Rob in the earlier stages of the disease, voting can be at once empowering and challenging. And it can grow increasingly fraught as the disease advances. (Robbins, 11/7)
Politico Pro:
On The Ballot: Drug Prices, Single-Payer And Weed
Ballot measures in the states this year will test voter attitudes on many controversial issues that are playing out on a national level — whether it be drug pricing, universal health coverage or legalizing marijuana. The pharmaceutical industry faces a make-or-break fight in California over a controversial measure capping prices paid through state health programs. In Colorado, voters will decide whether they want to move beyond Obamacare to establish a single-payer system. (Pradhan and Cancryn, 11/6)
Columbus Dispatch:
Survey: Presidential Campaigns Significant Source Of Stress
Are those memes about Hillary Clinton’s emails and Donald Trump’s tax returns making you rub your temples, clench your teeth or lose sleep? If so, mental health experts say, it might be time to take a social-media break. This presidential election season is seriously stressing us out. (Viviano, 11/5)
Democrats Applaud Medicaid Expansion Success As They Seek To Deflect Health Law Criticism
Millions of low-income people have gained coverage through the expansion of Medicaid, and Democratic candidates are eager to criticize Republicans who want to do away with the law and may jeopardize that coverage. Also in news on the health law, Georgia marketplace customers are having trouble finding medical specialists on some plans and a few questions to consider before buying a plan.
The Hill:
Dems Find Way To Go On Offense With ObamaCare
ObamaCare isn’t generally a favorite topic for Democrats in tight Senate races around the country. Premium hikes announced this fall have made negative headlines, adding to criticism of President Obama’s signature legislative achievement. The Affordable Care Act has never been that popular in any event, and it was widely blamed for huge Democratic losses in the 2010 midterm elections. Yet in this fall’s pitched battle for the Senate, Democrats have found a part of ObamaCare that they want to tout: its expansion of Medicaid, the healthcare program for the poor. (Sullivan, 11/5)
Georgia Health News:
Narrow Networks May Leave Some Patients Without Care They Counted On
A group of Harvard researchers released a study last fall revealing that 14 percent of the health plans sold on federal exchanges were missing at least one key specialist. Some low-cost plans have lower upfront prices, but they often have the most limited network of doctors. (Baggett, 11/4)
The Washington Post:
5 Questions To Ask Before Choosing A Health Plan
It’s open enrollment season, the time of year when we need to sort through confusing options and try to predict how often we’ll get sick next year. Some people, especially those shopping for plans on the Obamacare insurance exchanges are facing bigger price tags. Rolling over into the same plan may not be an option for people who learned that their plans are being eliminated or that their premiums are doubling. Workers who get insurance through their jobs may also find new options for next year, such as telemedicine services, and rising drug costs. (Marte, 11/4)
Kansas Hospitals Shift From Neutral To Support Candidates Favoring Medicaid Expansion
The Kansas Hospital Association in past years has spread political contributions fairly evenly, but it is changing strategy this year and contributing to state candidates who support Medicaid expansion. Also, a look at the effect of increased state Medicaid spending and efforts to provide care to people who can't afford treatment in states that didn't expand Medicaid.
Kansas Health Institute:
Health Care PACs Backing Medicaid Expansion Supporters
Kansas health care organizations are opening their checkbooks to back legislative candidates who support Medicaid expansion. The Kansas Hospital Association is the biggest player. Its political action committee has contributed more than $112,000 to legislative candidates this year -- $38,551 in the primary and $73,692 in the general, according to reports filed this week. In past elections KHA, like many organizations, spread its contributions fairly evenly, backing incumbents of both parties regardless of their positions on issues. But it abandoned that strategy this year by giving mainly to candidates who publicly support expansion even if that meant backing challengers over longtime incumbents. (McLean, 11/4)
Politico Pro:
Spike In Medicaid Spending Could Spell Trouble For Governors In Louisiana And Iowa
Higher than anticipated Medicaid spending in Louisiana and Iowa could create trouble for governors of both political parties. (Pradhan and Ehley, 11/7)
Kaiser Health News:
Uninsured In Coal Country: Desperate Americans Still Turn To Volunteer Clinics
Sandra Cook got in line midday on a recent Friday for dental care that she wouldn’t receive until the next morning. Hundreds more like her showed up at Riverview Elementary and Middle School here, many planning to spend the night, just as buses brought kids home and volunteers arrived by the hundreds to turn the school into a makeshift dental, eye and medical clinic run by Remote Area Medical, a nonprofit charity program. ... The decision by states like Virginia not to expand Medicaid and the lack of dental and vision coverage even for those with insurance have meant that the demand for RAM’s free mobile clinics has stayed strong. (Varney, 11/7)
Emails Reveal Depth Of FDA Officials' Discontent Over Sarepta Approval
Comments in the emails posted on the Food and Drug Administration website underscore the level of concern some agency officials raised that proper procedures were not followed and key data was downplayed in the approval process for Sarepta's Duchenne muscular dystrophy drug.
Stat:
FDA Emails Show How Upset Some Officials Were Over Sarepta Approval
Newly disclosed emails underscore the extent to which high-ranking US Food and Drug Administration officials were upset with the decision-making process used to approve a controversial Sarepta Therapeutics drug for combating Duchenne muscular dystrophy. The Sept. 14 emails were written in response to a memo that Dr. Robert Califf, the FDA commissioner had drafted in which he sided with Dr. Janet Woodcock, the controversial head of the drug review division. She had pushed hard to approve the Sarepta medication over objections of key people on her staff, one of whom had filed an official scientific dispute over the approval, which occurred on Sept. 19. (Silverman, 11/4)
In other news from the Food and Drug Administration —
Roanoke Times:
Precision Fabrics Creates First Sheets To Prevent Bed Sores
Precision Fabrics partnered with Standard Textile, a global supplier of hospital linens with U.S. headquarters in Ohio, to test DermaTherapy. After 11 clinical trials at several hospitals showed incidences of pressure ulcers were reduced by 65 percent to 80 percent, the Food and Drug Administration in June certified DermaTherapy as a medical device. It's a first for a bed sheet, and it flips conventional thinking: Instead of sheets and pads protecting the mattress, they protect the patient. (Rife, 11/6)
Mass. Regulators Review Long-Term Care Insurance Rates
News outlets also report on the insurance marketplace in Arizona and Illinois.
Boston Globe:
Insurance Regulators To Hold Meetings Before Putting Long-Term Care Rules In Place
The Massachusetts Division of Insurance plans to hold a series of meetings and a public hearing in the coming weeks about long-term care insurance rate increases, which have angered consumers and left them with few options as they age. ... State legislators approved changes to the law in 2012 an effort to protect consumers from sticker shock. Policyholders have been waiting for rules governing the law to take effect since then. (Fernandes, 11/4)
Arizona Republic:
Banner, Aetna Join Forces On Health Plan
Hospitals and insurers traditionally tussle over pay for health services, but metro Phoenix's largest health provider, Banner Health, and insurer Aetna will instead join together to provide health care to employers. Banner Health and Aetna have formed a new company, Banner|Aetna, that will start by marketing health insurance to large and small employers in Maricopa and Pinal counties next year with plans to expand to Tucson and other areas of the state. Aetna will own 51 percent of Banner|Aetna and Banner Health will own 49 percent. (Alltucker, 11/4)
Chicago Tribune:
Workplace Benefits Of All Stripes Are Becoming Harder To Come By
As open enrollment periods begin in workplaces, workers are facing the annual shock of rising health care costs. You may not see a horrible rise in premiums — at least not an increase as extreme as the last few years. But you are likely to have to pay higher deductibles before your insurance kicks in, as well as copays when you go to the doctor or hospital. As health care costs climb and businesses deal with a slow-growing economy, companies are passing more health care costs onto their employees. And they've been cutting back other benefits too over the last few years, according to a survey by the Society of Human Resource Management. (MarksJarvis, 11/4)
Proposed Rule Lifting 16-Hour Shift Limit For First-Year Doctors Sparks Fiery Outcry
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education wants to relax the cap to avoid disruption of “team-based care." However, critics called it a dangerous step backward. “Study after study shows that sleep-deprived resident physicians are a danger to themselves, their patients and the public,” said Dr. Michael Carome.
The Washington Post:
First-Year Doctors Would Be Allowed To Work 24-Hour Shifts Under New Rules
The organization that oversees the training of young doctors recommended Friday that first-year physicians in hospitals be allowed to work 24-hour shifts — eight hours longer than they are permitted now. If approved in February, the proposal by a task force of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education would go into effect in July, when the members of the next class of medical school graduates begin their residencies at teaching hospitals across the United States. (Bernstein, 11/4)
NPR:
First-Year Residents Could Be Allowed To Work 28 Hours Straight
For years, medical interns have been limited to working no more than 16 hours without a break to minimize the chances they would make mistakes while fatigued. But that restriction could soon be eased. The group that sets the rules for medical residents proposed scrapping the 16-hour limit for interns, doctors in their first year of on-the-job training after finishing medical school. The new rule would let these new doctors work for as many as 28 hours at a stretch. (Stein, 11/4)
Stat:
First-Year Medical Residents Could Resume Longer Shifts Under New Rule
In a controversial move, the national body that oversees graduate medical education is looking to end the 16-hour shift limit for first-year residents. Under revised rules proposed Friday, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education would allow residency programs to assign first-year trainees to shifts as long as 28 hours, the current maximum for residents in later years. The proposed rules would not change the current maximum hours a resident can work per week at 80, averaged over four weeks. The decision comes amid fierce debate over whether longer shifts compromise patient safety and expose young residents to burnout that could shorten their careers, or even end them before they get started. (Ross, 11/4)
Program Offers Medical Students Fast-Track Path To Become Family Physicians
Primary care shortages are plaguing the country, as many students choose higher-paying specialties because of massive loans. But one program helps burgeoning doctors balance their debt and their desire to practice family medicine. Meanwhile, Congress looks to tackle OB-GYN shortages when it returns after the elections.
Modern Healthcare:
Medical Schools Tackle Primary-Care Shortages
Not long after Keeley Hobart started medical school at Texas Tech University in 2011, she joined a federally funded program that allowed her to finish school one year early and receive a scholarship equal to a full year of tuition. The caveat: the program's curriculum focused exclusively on preparing medical students to become family physicians, one of the lowest-paid specialties in medicine. ... Texas Tech's admissions officers look for students for the Family Medicine Accelerated Track who eventually want to practice in small towns, which face a shortage of qualified doctors willing to locate in their communities. (Castellucci, 11/5)
North Carolina Health News:
Federal Study: Nurse Midwives Could Fill Rural Maternity-Care Gaps
Extending this sort of care, as well as that of OB-GYNs, to more women in underserved areas nationally is the goal of legislation that won the recommendation of a U.S. House committee this fall and awaits Congress upon its post-election return. The bill, “Improving Access to Maternity Care Act of 2015 (H.R.1209/S. 628),” calls for the assessment of gaps in OB-GYN and midwifery care in rural areas. The resulting data could put the spotlight back on North Carolina’s requirement for midwives to have a contract to work under physician supervision. That requirement that has ended up limiting midwives’ ability to establish and run practices in many underserved areas. (Goldsmith, 11/7)
Meanwhile, as the economy improves and nurses are starting to retire again, demand is spiking —
The Wall Street Journal:
Nurses Are Again In Demand
After years of relative equilibrium, the job market for nurses is heating up in many markets, driving up wages and sign-on bonuses for the nation’s fifth-largest occupation. The last nursing shortage more than a decade ago ended when a surge of nursing graduates filled many positions, and the Great Recession led older nurses to delay retirement. But as the economy improves, nurses who held on to jobs through the uneven recovery are now retiring or cutting back hours, say recruiters. (Evans, 11/7)
The Missing Piece In The Antibiotic Resistance Battle: How Superbugs Become Superbugs
Scientists receive a $10 million grant for the National Institutes of Health to try to answer that question, which remains blurry despite all the research done on antibiotic resistance. They will be looking for the specific genetic changes, or mutations, that enable any given type of bacteria to become a superbug. Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirms that a new superbug has been found in America.
Stat:
Scientists Seek A Way To Predict Antibiotic Resistance
Tim van Opijnen has an unusual library. Instead of books, it holds over 10,000 mutant strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae, each with a gene disabled — though a different one than its neighbor. By knocking out a single gene, van Opijnen’s lab at Boston College is trying to understand individual genes’ importance and function in the presence of an antibiotic. His choice of bacterium is intentional: there are 1.2 million drug-resistant pneumococcal infections per year in the US, joining several other species of bacteria that are growing in immunity to antibiotic treatment. (Love, 11/7)
Stat:
New Superbug, Candida Auris, Detected In The US
Just five months after federal health officials asked hospitals and physicians to be on the lookout for an often-fatal, antibiotic-resistant fungus called Candida auris, 13 cases have been reported, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced Friday. It is the first time that the fungus, which is easily misidentified in lab tests as a more common candida yeast infection, has been found in the US, and four of the first seven patients with it have died. (Begley, 11/4)
Kaiser Health News:
Deadly Superbug Linked To Four Deaths In The U.S.
A deadly new drug-resistant fungus has been linked to the deaths of four hospital patients in the U.S., according to a report released Friday from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The fungus, called Candida auris, preys on the sickest patients and can spread in hospitals. Although doctors have been concerned about the spread of antibiotic-resistant bugs for many years, this fungus is relatively new on the world scene. (Szabo, 11/4)
A proposed plan limits federal matching funds for Medicaid drug rehab to 15 days a month. Media outlets also report on news on the opioid epidemic out of Maryland, Ohio and Minnesota.
The Philadelphia Inquirer:
As Opioid Epidemic Rages, Advocates Fear Cuts To Treatment Programs
Even as the opioid epidemic rages, that shortage could become worse next year, unless advocates can beat back a plan to limit federal matching funds for Medicaid drug rehab to 15 days a month. The limit would apply to all facilities with more than 16 beds. The situation is particularly worrisome in Pennsylvania because of how the state has been financing rehab under Medicaid. The program is run jointly by the states and the federal government, and varies somewhat among states. For instance, the regulation change will not affect New Jersey because it has never received federal Medicaid matching dollars for residential rehabs larger than 16 beds, a spokeswoman for the state's department of health services said. (Bond, 11/6)
The Associated Press:
Opiate Declines In Md. Prisons After Cut From Medicaid List
Since Suboxone film strips were removed from the Medicaid Preferred Drug List in July, the amount of the drug recovered in Maryland correctional facilities as contraband has decreased by 41 percent, according to Maryland’s Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services. Suboxone — a drug used to treat opiate addiction — has a high risk of addiction and dependence, and can even lead to death when paired with other drugs or alcohol, according to the Food and Drug Administration. (Lang, 11/4)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Naloxone, The Opioid Overdose Reversal Drug, Now In Most Ohio Pharmacies: What You Need To Know
Hundreds of Northeast Ohio pharmacies now offer the opioid overdose-reversing medication, naloxone, without a prescription, part of a statewide effort that's made the potentially lifesaving drug available in most pharmacies in 84 of Ohio's 88 counties. The drug, if used properly, can rapidly reverse an overdose of opioids, including heroin, fentanyl and other prescription painkillers in the same drug family. (Zeltner, 11/5)
The Washington Post:
He Beat His Wife’s Heroin Dealer With A Baseball Bat. Here’s Why He Wasn’t Imprisoned.
Edwin Sobony II had had enough. It was December 2015 and Sobony’s wife was on heroin, which she got from her cousin, according to the Columbus Dispatch. Sobony had asked the cousin, Larry Jewell, to stay away from their home. But that day in December, Jewell came by, and Sobony picked up an aluminum baseball bat and began to beat him. ... Now, Sobony has received his sentence for the conviction: Two years of probation. ... “I’m not supporting what Mr. Sobony did,” Judge Charles Schneider said. “Vigilante justice is not supported by the court. But the people in this community have just had it.” (Larimer, 11/5)
The Star Tribune:
Methadone Is Helping Minn. Addicts, Leaving Its Own Dangerous Trail
Methadone is one of the few proven treatments for opioid addiction, and physicians say it remains an essential tool. But it is addictive and dangerous in its own right, and in Minnesota it is provided largely at for-profit clinics with histories of lawsuits and licensing infractions. (Olson, 11/5)
Trauma From Gun Violence A Long-Lasting Threat To Survivors' Health
Children who are exposed to gun violence are more likely to smoke, drink, abuse drugs and engage in unsafe sex. In other public health news, researchers are trying to understand the effects of "culture of shaming" and how author Roald Dahl's curiosity about medicine led to a breakthrough in stroke rehabilitation.
Modern Healthcare:
Gun Violence Survivors And Witnesses Could Face Lifetime Of Trauma And Bad Health
Chicago has been pummeled with near constant gun violence this year. An estimated 3,600 shootings have taken place, on average—that's about 10 shootings a day. During the recent Halloween weekend alone, 17 people died and 41 were wounded.And while politicians and policy makers struggle to find ways to create policies to address America's violence, another related crisis is slowing growing. Most of the shootings are concentrated in impoverished communities. The virtual war zones are home to people who suffer from poor health and lower rates of insurance coverage, leaving them at a disadvantage when they are injured, either physically or tangentially, by gun violence. (Johnson, 11/5)
Stat:
Too Much Public Shaming Is Bad, But That’s Not The Real Problem In Science
A “culture of shaming” is now permeating psychology, and science in general, according to a former president of the Association for Psychological Science.In an essay in the society’s house organ, the Observer, Princeton psychologist Susan Fiske claims that the “new media” “can encourage a certain amount of uncurated, unfiltered denigration. In the most extreme examples, individuals are finding their research programs, their careers, and their personal integrity under attack.” (Oransky and Marcus, 11/4)
The Washington Post:
Roald Dahl Was Fascinated By Medicine And ‘The BFG’ Is Proof
This kind of behavior was no mere one-off for the future author of “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.” While Dahl is known around the world for his exuberant children’s books ... he also held a quieter, parallel fascination with medicine that spanned his entire adult life. That passion not only crept into Dahl’s fiction over the years, but even led to the writer’s making some legitimately groundbreaking contributions to the field. He led vaccination awareness campaigns and invented a medical device that was implanted in thousands of children. And when his first wife suffered a stroke, Dahl, who would have turned 100 in September, came up with a treatment whose legacy he couldn’t have foreseen. (Hingston, 11/6)
In other news, Janet Reno has died from complications related to Parkinson’s disease —
USA Today:
Janet Reno, First Female U.S. Attorney General, Dies At 78
Janet Reno, the first woman to serve as U.S. attorney general, has died at age 78.Her godddaugher, Gabrielle D’Alemberte, told The Associated Press that she died early Monday from complications related to Parkinson’s disease. Reno was sworn in as the first female attorney general on March 12, 1993, under the administration of Bill Clinton. She served in the role until 2001. (Onyanga-Omara, 11/7)
Civil Trial Starts In Fatal Police Shooting Of New York Veteran With Mental Health Issues
In regional news, budget cuts in Connecticut force mental health professionals to brace for more challenges to providing care. And Virginia says its pilot program to provide greater access to mental health services is too costly to continue.
The Associated Press:
Deadly Police Response To Medical Alert Focus Of Trial
When Kenneth Chamberlain Sr.’s medical alert pendant accidentally went off five years ago, the 68-year-old told police who showed up that he was fine, barred them from entering his apartment and repeatedly asked them to go away. They didn’t. That set off a tense, 90-minute standoff that ended with the mentally ill, former Marine, shot dead. (Hays, 11/6)
The CT Mirror:
‘There’s A Lot Of Anxiety:’ Mental Health System Braces For More Cuts
This fiscal year began with $55 million in cuts to the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services and big questions about how they would be felt in a system that many say is already stretched to capacity. So far, many involved in the system say the impact has been mixed: Some agencies have been able to absorb reductions, while others have reduced hours, closed programs or laid off staff. (Levin Becker, 11/7)
Richmond Times Dispatch:
Virginia Switching Gears On Mental Health Structure, But Families Say They Need Help Now
The Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services has decided to abandon a pilot program that would have significantly expanded access to services for people seeking mental health help at eight of the state’s 40 public treatment centers, known as community services boards, or CSBs. The expansion was deemed too costly and ambitious. State officials instead are working on a plan to make changes at all 40 community services boards, saving money by spreading the reforms over the next decade. (Kleiner, 11/6)
Community Paramedicine Programs Keep Vulnerable Older Patients Out Of ERs
The hospital can be a dangerous place for older patients, not to mention costly. But programs cropping up across the country are providing both emergency and non-emergency care to them in the comfort and safety of their own homes.
The New York Times:
Going To The Emergency Room Without Leaving The Living Room
When Mrs. Vitale falls or seems lethargic or short of breath, her aides no longer call 911. They dial the House Calls service at Northwell Health, the system that includes Long Island Jewish Medical Center and that dispatches what it calls community paramedics. They often arrive in an S.U.V. instead of an ambulance. And with 40 hours of training in addition to the usual paramedic curriculum, they can treat most of Mrs. Vitale’s problems on the spot instead of bustling her away. (Span, 11/4)
In other news —
St. Louis Post Dispatch:
Hospitals Help Seniors Deal With Depression, Transitions, Health Issues
For seniors, adjusting to a different stage in life can be a difficult time.Some are transitioning to a nursing home from their lifelong home. Or, they may have retired recently or they may be facing an illness that’s causing depression. There is an outpatient program where seniors can seek help. Many times, “they didn’t know what they were dealing with was treatable or had a name,” said Kathleen Edwards, a counselor for Christian Hospital’s Center for Senior Renewal. The program is designed to help seniors develop coping skills for their anxiety, depression and trouble adjusting to retirement. (Liss, 11/6)
St. Louis Post Dispatch:
Want A Better Chance To Stay Out Of A Nursing Home? Modify Your Home
Home modifications support aging in place, according to Susan Stark, an assistant professor of occupational therapy at Washington University, and colleagues who prepared a research paper that will be published soon. Things like bathtub transfer benches, lower steps, grab bars, handrails, widened doorways, ramps and toilet risers help people stay safe and independent in their daily activities. While many people would benefit from the upgrades, few actually have them. They aren’t covered as part of health care in the U.S. (Bogan, 11/6)
Federal Medicaid Officials Approve Major Revamping Of Mass. Program
The overhaul, which includes an infusion of federal funds, is designed to help focus the state's Medicaid system on changes to improve quality of care. Also, federal officials deny New Hampshire's request to add a work requirement for Medicaid enrollees, and an auditor finds abuses in a Medicaid program that gives elderly and disabled people non-medical assistance at home.
Boston Globe:
Massive Change Coming To State Health Care For Poor
The federal government on Friday approved a sweeping overhaul of the state’s health care program for poor and low-income residents, pushing medical providers to better coordinate the care of nearly 2 million people. The goals are to improve the health and quality of care for a population of patients that tends to have complex medical needs, while also attempting to control spending in the $15 billion-plus Medicaid program — the single largest expense in the state budget. (Dayal McCluskey, 11/4)
New Hampshire Union Leader:
NH Told: No Work Rules For Medicaid
The Obama administration denied New Hampshire's bid to make 50,000 low-income adults face a work requirement to receive taxpayer-paid coverage under an expansion of Medicaid. The decision, while expected in many quarters, was stunning in its timing coming on near the eve of an election in which this issue has been a hot topic for months. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services also rejected provisions of the 2015 New Hampshire Health Protection Program that would impose more rigorous standards to prove U.S. and New Hampshire citizenship to be eligible. (Landrigan, 11/6)
Modern Healthcare:
CMS Rejects N.H.'s Request For Medicaid Work Requirement, Proof Of ID
New Hampshire, a state where Republicans currently control both legislative chambers, also sought to require newly eligible adults to verify that they are U.S. citizens by providing two forms of identification, and verify that they are residents of New Hampshire by providing a state-issued driver's license or a non-driver's license picture ID card. The state also wanted to require beneficiaries who visit the emergency room for non-emergency purposes to pay a copayment of $8 for the first visit and $25 for each subsequent visit. The CMS denied this request but left the door open for the state to reapply if the program covered non-emergency services provided in the ER. (Dickson, 11/5)
Kaiser Health News:
Seniors Suffer Amid Widespread Fraud By Medicaid Caretakers
An Alaska man developed gangrenous toes. A Philadelphia woman froze to death on the street. An Illinois woman died emaciated, covered in excrement. These patients suffered as their government-paid caretakers neglected them, collecting paychecks under a Medicaid program that gives elderly and disabled people non-medical assistance at home. In some cases, the caretakers convicted of neglect were the victims’ own family members. (Bailey, 11/7)
Report Offers Fixes For Texas' Troubled Foster Care System
Improving children's health records was one area that experts targeted for improvement.
Austin American-Statesman:
Texas Urged To Limit Caseloads, Improve Health Care Of Foster Children
Court-appointed special masters Friday released dozens of recommendations on how Texas should overhaul its troubled foster care system, including better health care for foster children, limiting the workload of caseworkers, and proposing a plan to curb caseworker turnover rates. In December, U.S. District Judge Janis G. Jack found the Texas foster care system unconstitutional and suggested that foster children were better off before they entered the system. (Chang, 11/4)
Texas Tribune:
Report Says Child Protective Service Workers Are Overloaded, Urges Overhaul
Special masters hired by the state to scrutinize the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services say the embattled agency should increase its focus on improving the timeliness in seeing children under its care — one of about 56 recommendations it made in a report released Friday. (Evans, 11/4)
State Highlights: In Fla., A Detailed Plan To Combat Zika; Brain Surgery In The Twin Cities
Outlets report on health news from Florida, Minnesota, California and Missouri.
Miami Herald:
Zika Virus: Miami-Dade Details Plan For Zika To Florida Health Department
It took a dozen boxes of documents and a six-page letter for Miami-Dade officials to respond Friday to a request from State Surgeon General Celeste Philip for more information on the county’s spending, surveillance data and future plans for combating the mosquito-borne spread of Zika in South Florida. According to a table of contents attached the letter, the cardboard boxes included comprehensive spending reports, dates and locations for ground and aerial spraying, mosquito trap counts, analysis and research on mosquito-control efforts, and the county’s plan for the current season. (Chang, 11/4)
The Star Tribune:
Twin Cities Father To Undergo Cutting-Edge Brain Surgery At U
Nearly 120,000 people worldwide have undergone deep brain stimulation to treat neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s disease when traditional medications failed to provide relief. While the procedure often works, U [University of Minnesota] scientists are exploring ways to fine-tune the placement of electrodes in the regions of the brain that cause muscle spasms, stiffness and other often-painful symptoms of neurological disorders. In addition, Minnesota neurologists are researching a potentially groundbreaking technique that would make the procedure less invasive and give patients more control of the implants after surgery. (Serres, 11/5)
Pioneer Press:
Minnesota Reports Sexual Assault Treatment Data, Stresses Need For Hospital Care
The number of teenagers seeking treatment at a hospital after being sexually assaulted dropped between 2010 and 2014 in Minnesota, the state Health Department reported Friday. The overall number of hospital-treated sexual violence cases didn’t change much over the five years — from 1,442 in 2010 to 1,411 in 2014, according to data the Minnesota Department of Health released. But among 15- to 19-year-olds, the number decreased from 339 visits in 2010 to 276 in 2014. Health officials say they’re concerned that a far greater number go untreated. A 2005 Minnesota study found that only about one in five people who experience sexual assault seek medical care, the Health Department noted in a news release. (11/5)
Health News Florida:
Leon School Board Gets Lead Update: 'Tallahassee Isn't Flint' Say Researchers
Sixteen Leon County elementary schools were tested for lead. The contaminant was found in drinking fountains and cafeteria water supplies. But only two schools—Killearn Lakes and W.T. Moore, had levels above what the Federal Environmental Protection Agency deems actionable. The others were above what the American Academy of Pediatricians deems as safe. (Hatter, 11/4)
The Star Tribune:
Hundreds Of Minn. Rape Victims Seek Hospital Care Each Year, Study Finds
The number of Minnesotans seeking hospital care for sexual assaults has remained stubbornly high in recent years, despite more than a decade of public efforts to reduce sexual violence and make it easier for survivors to report incidents, according to a state analysis released Friday. (Serres, 11/4)
Health News Florida:
FL Supremes Consider Whether Abortion Waiting Period Will Take Effect
The Florida Supreme Court is preparing to rule on whether to allow a new abortion restriction to take effect. The measure requires women wait 24 hours after an initial consultation before receiving treatment. (Evans, 11/6)
San Jose Mercury News:
Silicon Valley Biotech Exec's Battle With The Federal Government
Bill Facteau made millions of dollars by selling a company that sold devices to treat sinus infections. But after the government accused him of questionable marketing practices surrounding one device, the Atherton biotech executive landed in federal court. Now his cautionary story has turned into a closely watched legal appeal that has consumer advocates, industry leaders and legal analysts debating a question that could have major consequences for Silicon Valley’s biotech and pharmaceutical companies: Should the First Amendment protect a firm’s right to market and sell its products for uses that federal regulators have not approved? (Seipel, 11/4)
St. Louis Post Dispatch:
East Alton Brass Mill Fights Hospital Germs
A big, noisy, century-old brass mill in East Alton turns the likes of old bullet casings and bent Canadian quarters into copper alloys for American industry. It might also save hospital patients from infection and keep some St. Louis Blues players off the sick list. That unlikely marriage of smokestack industry and medicine takes advantage of a long-known fact: Bacteria can’t survive long on copper. That has Olin Brass trumpeting its CuVerro alloy to manufacturers serving hospitals, schools and gyms — places where the sick and healthy can touch the same things. (Gallagher, 11/6)
Viewpoints: ACA Isn't In A Death Spiral; States, The Election And Medicaid Expansion
A selection of opinions and editorials from around the country.
The Washington Post:
The ACA Isn’t In A ‘Death Spiral’ — It’s Undergoing A Correction
On Election Day, the health care and financial security of 20 million Americans will be at stake. That’s the number of people who have gained health insurance under the Affordable Care Act. And news that premiums for plans under the law are set to increase by an average of 22 percent, just before voters head to the polls, has thrown another curveball into an unpredictable election. (Topher Spiro, 11/7)
The New York Times:
See Obamacare Rates For Every County In The Country
Our map shows the price change for the most inexpensive midlevel plan everywhere in the country, thanks to data collected by the McKinsey Center for U.S. Health System Reform. We looked at that kind of plan because it tends to be the most popular among Obamacare customers. The administration study looked at a more expensive type of plan, known as the benchmark. Prices for those plans are also going up by an average of 22 percent nationwide. (Margot Sanger-Katz, 11/4)
Los Angeles Times:
Anthem Blue Cross Offers PPO Customers Less Coverage For More Dollars
Several weeks ago, thick envelopes from Anthem Blue Cross stuffed with 21 pages of text landed in the mailboxes of thousands of the company’s California customers. The cover letter indicated right at the top that their premiums were going up, and advised that “if you’re happy with your health plan, it’s easy to keep it for 2017” — the only thing required was to pay the full premium on the bill for January. At least as noteworthy was a change that wasn’t explained until the packet’s next page: the elimination of coverage for non-emergency healthcare services provided by out-of-network doctors, hospitals, clinics or laboratories. (11/7)
Salt Lake Tribune:
Medicaid Expansion Makes More Sense Than Ever For Utah
Utah, like the rest of the country, faces a crisis in healthcare. We currently have over 13 percent uninsured in Utah. This population often has no primary care physician, has poor or absent preventative care and comes to the ER as a last resort. Often too late to diagnose a medically disastrous condition. For those with insurance, our health care premiums and co-pays are skyrocketing. A Medicaid expansion would help in a number of ways. (Brian Shiozawa, 11/5)
The Wichita Eagle:
Voters Can Pave Way For A Healthy Kansas
The series of victories by challengers over incumbents in the August primaries gave hope for a healthy Kansas to many, including 150,000 hardworking Kansans who will gain access to more affordable health care if our state leaders commit to expanding KanCare. By returning to the polls on Nov. 8, I am confident we can continue on the path to a bright and healthy future for Kansas. (Vallerie Gleason, 11/6)
San Antonio Press Express:
A Need For Texans To Enroll In ACA
The fourth enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act opened Tuesday. The imperative to enroll is undiminished in terms of personal health needs, but there is some added urgency this time around. Full tax penalties come into play next year. (11/6)
The New York Times:
Should Your Baby Really Sleep In The Same Room As You?
New parents get a lot of advice. It comes from breast-feeding “lactivists” and Ferberizers, attachment parents and anti-helicopter ones. It’s not enough to keep babies fed, rested and changed — they also need to learn grit and sign language. So when the American Academy of Pediatrics recently issued new infant sleep guidelines — highlighting a recommendation that babies sleep in their parents’ rooms for at least six months but ideally a full year — some parents despaired. (Claire Cain Miller and Aaron E. Carroll, 11/4)
Sacramento Bee:
California Is Not Ready For The Regulatory, Social And Health Consequences Of Legal Recreational Marijuana
With Election Day nearing, it seems inevitable that voters will approve a measure that makes it legal for adults 21 and over to use marijuana recreationally. Is California ready for the regulatory, social and health consequences of this? No. (Marcos Breton, 11/6)
The New York Times:
Most Expensive Thing On California’s Ballot: A One-Cent Soda Tax
In this most contentious of elections, you wouldn’t think that a soda tax would be the issue to attract the big bucks. But measures in just two California cities have drawn more money than that state’s Senate race and statewide referendums on marijuana legalization and gun control — combined. Soda taxes are on the ballots in San Francisco and Oakland, Calif., and spending to persuade citizens to vote for or against them has topped $50 million, enough to buy every person in those two cities about 40 cans of Coke. (Margot Sanger-Katz, 11/6)
Kansas City Star:
Kansans Must Vote For Leaders Who Will Make Health Care More Accessible
Expansion advocates support a unique, Kansas-based solution that is cost effective for the state. By voting Tuesday, you can help elect state leaders who want to make health care accessible for all Kansans. Strong leaders — leaders who understand the importance of investing in Kansas communities and hospitals — are important to passing legislation that strengthens our economy while protecting access to health care for all. (Ken Bacon, 11/6)
Louisville Courier-Journal:
Health Equity Challenges Conventional Thinking
This term, health equity, has broadened the agenda for health and challenges conventional ways of thinking. Health is more than health care, more than disease or illness, even more than how long we live. Health is how well we live and is determined by the spaces in which we live, learn, work, play and worship. Health is a measure of equity in our society, and equity is compassion inspired by social justice. In Louisville, we lean into the hard questions of health equity, and we are beginning to find new ways to delve into the root causes of inequities: racism, sexism, wealth distribution, homophobia and ageism. (Brandy N. Kelly Pryor, 11/6)
Louisville Courier-Journal:
Prize Launches Louisville's Health Initiative
The cumulative effects of the "isms" in general (Racism, Sexism, Classism, Ableism, Ageism, Heterosexism, etc.) are literally causing most of the poor health outcomes we have in Louisville and America where a person’s zip code has more to do with how long they live than their genetic code. If we are to have a city where people can achieve their dreams, we must work toward health equity and support efforts to ensure that all people have full and equal access to opportunities that enable them to lead healthy lives. (Theo Edmonds, 11/6)
San Antonio Press Express:
Telemedicine Means Better Care, Fewer Dollars
Telemedicine is a cost-effective way to improve health care outcomes for Texans. The convenience and lower cost of treatment through telemedicine can diminish existing barriers, improve Texans’ access to health care and lead to better health outcomes for people across this state. (Gary Gibson, 11/5)
WBUR:
Counterpoint: We Fail Our Patients If We Don't Try To Treat Obesity
I sympathize with the frustration that Dr. Elisabeth Poorman expressed in her recent post: Why I've Stopped Telling My Patients To Lose Weight. And I agree with her that for primary care physicians, there is a problem: Ineffective weight loss counseling may bring few benefits, or even backfire. But as a specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital who has spent more than a decade treating patients with obesity, I disagree that silence about weight is an acceptable solution. (W. Scott Butsch, 11/4)
The Des Moines Register:
Medical Examiners' Reports Should Be Public Records
If an individual causes a minor traffic accident in Iowa and is charged with drunken driving, that individual’s blood-alcohol level is treated as a matter of public record, just as it should be. But if that very same accident caused the death of several people — including the driver in question — the driver’s blood-alcohol level is kept confidential. That’s because the blood-alcohol level of a dead person is part of a medical examiner’s report, and under Iowa law, information in a medical examiner’s report is to be kept confidential. (11/6)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Needle Exchanges 'Make Good Public Health, Economic Sense'
While the opiate crisis continues in our communities unabated, a group of stakeholders meet this month to discuss one way to intervene that may be unexpected – providing clean needles to those who inject drugs. The clean needles will be exchanged for used needles that individuals bring to an exchange site. (Melissa Federman, 11/6)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Better Drug-Addiction Treatment Options Needed For Ohioans Of Color
Ohio has been called the "face of the nation's opiate epidemic." Although this is an awful designation, it brings to light a much-needed recognition and discussion of the magnitude of the addiction problem here in the Buckeye State. (Deborah King, 11/6)