Longer Looks: The Immigration Effect; Illegal Abortions; And Replacing The Health Law
Each week, KHN's Shefali Luthra finds interesting reads from around the Web.
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Each week, KHN's Shefali Luthra finds interesting reads from around the Web.
Outlets report on news from Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, California, Arizona, Texas, New Hampshire, Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Colorado and Georgia.
Today's other public health news reports on cervical cancer, bad dietary advice on drinking hydrogen peroxide, food allergies, brain injuries, dementia, genes' role in determining height and more.
But the Republican governor says he's giving local communities the tools, they just need to use them. Meanwhile, there's been an outbreak of overdoses in the state. Media outlets report on the epidemic out of New Jersey, Minnesota, Missouri and Georgia as well.
A study reveals that a possible lack of resources and funding to rural hospitals and underserved areas could be fatal to patients.
John Holland, 60, pleaded not guilty Wednesday in a Miami federal court to four counts of fraud. He is charged with allegedly having a role in a $400 million kickback scheme.
Disability advocates say that the savings vehicle is overdue and badly needed by people who could previously only hold $2,000 in savings. The Associated Press reports on how the ABLE accounts will work.
The initiative unveiled by Gov. John Kasich would bring that last group of enrollees into managed care plans, which already cover nearly 90 percent of the state's Medicaid population. In other news, Medicaid developments in Ohio, Arizona, Indiana, Tennessee and New Mexico.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services suggested an increase of 0.25 percent in pay to the private insurance plans that are an alternative to traditional Medicare. That is less than last year's increase but generally in line with what analysts expected.
In his book “The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia," Neil Gorsuch, the president's Supreme Court nominee, refers to physician-assisted suicide as “essentially a right to consensual homicide.” In other news, an Associated Press review of Gorsuch's decisions reveal few clues on how he'll vote on abortion, and Rhode Island moves to protect access at a state-level.
March 17 is the day when students find out if and where they’ve “matched” for a residency program, but for those from countries targeted by President Donald Trump's immigration ban, the future is uncertain. Meanwhile, the scientific community is protesting the executive order through boycotts of conferences and journals.
As Republicans work on dismantling former President Barack Obama's health law, the question becomes what standards of coverage will be set in their replacement plan. Meanwhile, women who gained protection under the ACA stand to lose a lot if the regulations are rolled back, and entrepreneurs are forced to consider a job change, fearing the high costs of insurance that may come in the future.
There's a chance some states will not have any insurers selling health plans to individuals buying coverage on their own for 2018 if Congress and the president don't give companies guidance on what the future of health care coverage is going to look like.
Using the word "repair" to describe the effort “captures exactly what the large majority of the American people want,” said Frank Luntz, a prominent Republican consultant and pollster who addressed GOP lawmakers at their Philadelphia retreat. Meanwhile, members of the Freedom Caucus talk with senators about their replacement plans, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, is calling for all health law taxes to be stripped away and Rep. Michael Burgess, R-Texas, leads hearings this week on dismantling the legislation.
The Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee were boycotting the vote on Rep. Tom Price because of ethics concerns.
David J. Shulkin, the sole holdover from the Obama administration, faced the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee on Wednesday and is expected to be approved by the full Senate.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
In the face of a boycott by Democrats on the panel, Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee temporarily suspended a rule that would have required at least one Democrat to be present for a vote to go forward on Tom Price's nomination to lead the Department of Health and Human Services.
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
Read recent commentaries about drug-cost issues.
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