Justice Department, SEC Launch Probes Into Theranos’ Practices And Technology
The investigations, revealed in a letter from the company to its outside partners, are just the latest setback for the blood-testing startup.
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The investigations, revealed in a letter from the company to its outside partners, are just the latest setback for the blood-testing startup.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
A selection of opinions from around the country.
News outlets report on health issues in Kansas, Wisconsin, Florida, New Hampshire, Vermont and Ohio.
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has proposed trimming payments by 10 percent to dentists for children on Medicaid as part of his efforts to balance the budget. Meanwhile, in Alaska, the legislature also moved to cut Medicaid costs.
Perinatal hospice care is a birth plan for a woman whose fetus will not survive long outside the womb. And anti-abortion groups see it as an alternative to those patients terminating the pregnancy after they are told of their baby's diagnosis. Meanwhile, advocates are stepping up efforts to spread the word about misoprostol, a drug that allows women to self-induce an abortion, but it is raising concerns on both sides of the debate.
Although skeptics worried that greedy patients would abuse the system, officials at a Pennsylvania hospital have found that giving out refunds when someone is unsatisfied with the care they have received has improved the quality of their care, and has let them receive feedback in real time.
Melinda Kavanaugh's family battled with HIPPA, state budget cuts and laws that never seemed to work in their favor, as Melinda shut down their efforts to help.
As the opioid epidemic explodes across the country, officials are more and more turning to programs such as St. Ann’s Corner of Harm Reduction, which distributes clean syringes, paraphernalia, condoms and naloxone. And those within the medical field are starting to imbue students and doctors with a better understanding of how to treat pain.
Meanwhile, news outlets report on prescription medication losses, thefts in Ohio.
If Epidiolex is approved by the FDA, doctors would be able to prescribe the cannabis-based drug and insurance would cover it. But activists say that is when the pharmaceutical industry would take over, and patients would lose the ability to use marijuana to treat their symptoms as they see fit. In other news, Pennsylvania has legalized a medical marijuana program, becoming the 24th state to do so.
Opdivo is a checkpoint inhibitor, which releases the break on the immune system allowing a patient's body to fight the cancer. Research released on Sunday shows that patients who received the drug had a 34 percent survival rate 5 years out. A similar immunotherapy drug, Keytruda, was part of Jimmy Carter's successful treatment for advanced melanoma.
The Associated Press examines the group of doctors, lawyers, health policy experts and career federal employees charged with coming up with ways to save money and improve care in Medicare. Meanwhile, news outlets report on other Medicare developments including bundled payments, hospice use and fraud.
As the state Senate balks at funding the expanded program, Gov. Asa Hutchinson is betting that he can use the line item veto to keep it running. Also, news outlets examine Medicaid expansion news in Ohio and New Hampshire.
The New York Times offers analysis of coverage gains under the Affordable Care Act. In other news, UnitedHealth has announced it will be pulling out of the Michigan exchange, an announcement that comes on the heels of its decision to withdraw from Georgia and Arkansas.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
A selection of opinions from around the country.
Editorial writers take in-depth looks at the current state of knowledge about the Zika virus as well as the congressional reaction to it.
Each week, KHN compiles a selection of recently released health policy studies and briefs.
News outlets report on health issues in Florida, Ohio, Georgia, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, California, North Carolina and Colorado.
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