Viewpoints: Price’s Mission On Medicare; Judge Offers View Of Aetna’s Move Out Of Exchanges
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
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A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
Outlets report on news from Kansas, California, Iowa, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Washington, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Texas.
Owners are injuring their pets, and then taking them to different veterinarians to get opioids. Meanwhile, researchers are trying to understand why rural communities have been hit so hard by the crisis.
Other public health stories today cover developments related to Alzheimer's, autism, sleep apnea, superbugs, aging and carbs in the diet.
The industry is going hard on offense in an attempt to combat its negative image over pricing. The ad campaign will focus on research and development, but lawmakers, policy officials and health leaders have already criticized it as avoiding the real issues.
Although President Donald Trump agrees with congressional Republicans about giving states much more control of Medicaid, he has also said he wants to continue coverage for the millions who became eligible under the Medicaid expansion sponsored by the federal health law. GOP members of Congress instead want changes to cut spending. News outlets also look at Medicaid changes Iowa put in place and controversies over the Kansas program.
The deal, along with a separate merger between Anthem and Cigna, would have consolidated the nation's five largest insurers into three.
The ban, known as the "Mexico City policy," has been lifted and reinstated since it was first implemented by Ronald Reagan each time there's a party turnover of the White House. Meanwhile, a rule permanently banning federal funding for abortions is moving through the House.
There are four areas the president can take action on: the insurance mandate, the subsidy lawsuit, birth control coverage and state funding. Meanwhile, officials say the executive order on the health law has thrown a "curveball" into the open enrollment period, and fund managers are betting that there won't be much change in the marketplace despite congressional promises of repeal.
Gov. Matt Bevin swept into office on promises that he would kill Obamacare in Kentucky. But one in three residents were on Medicaid through the Affordable Care Act. So he simply tweaked it instead. Meanwhile, CNN goes to the county that leads the nation in health law enrollees, and finds a population that wants it gone without a trace.
Sens. Susan Collins and Bill Cassidy — two lawmakers who have been adamant that there must be a replacement plan soon after the law is repealed — introduced their version on Monday. It was quickly dismissed as an "empty facade" by the Senate's top Democrat, Chuck Schumer.
The event was intended to bring together health officials to discuss the risks humans face due to the changing climate. The agency says it is exploring whether the conference can be rescheduled. In other developments from the new Trump administration, biotech billionaire Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong is being considered for a role like “health care czar.”
Questions are expected to focus on the future of the health law as well as the congressman's past industry dealings. Ethics experts have said that HHS nominee Tom Price has shown "an extraordinary lack of good judgment" when it comes to his campaign and legislative actions.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
Outlets report on news from New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, D.C., Virginia, Ohio, Minnesota, California, New Hampshire and Washington.
“If you compare this time last year we’re seeing twice as many flu cases,” says Dr. Michael Neely, interim chief of infectious diseases at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.
The CDC will next consider the panel's recommendation to lower by 30 percent the threshold at which a child is considered to have elevated lead. And local newspapers focus on tainted water in Ohio.
The research also shows a growing racial disparity with death rates for black women 77 percent higher than previously thought, while the rate for white women is 47 percent higher. Other public health stories report on longevity studies, the growing use of kangaroo care for newborns, a program that provides images of the brains of adolescent inmates and hospital “super-utilizers.”
Medical personnel at hospitals around the country are now being retrained to resist prescribing strong narcotics. In other news on the drug epidemic, The Washington Post reports on the hunt for a painkiller that is not addictive.
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