Viewpoints: Indictment Vindicates Planned Parenthood; State Lawmakers And The Medicaid Expansion Debate
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.
News outlets report on health care developments in Montana, Minnesota, Maryland, Kansas, Ohio, Louisiana, Florida, Georgia, California, South Carolina, Washington and Wisconsin.
Gov. Rick Snyder will petition the Obama administration to allow Medicaid and other health services to be expanded to the children in Flint, Mich., exposed to lead and other pollutants by tainted water. And the NAACP and Flint residents draw up a 15-point plan to help address the public health emergency.
The governor's plan to turn Medicaid services over to private insurers is raising concerns in the state, and Hillary Clinton is drawn into the debate. Meanwhile, state Medicaid programs are in the news in Kansas, Kentucky and North Carolina.
New medical technology will allow companies to develop products that help patients keep track of their dosages and let doctors access that information instantly, but security experts warn that medical information is worth more than credit cards on the black market. In other pharmaceutical news, "biosimilars" get a boost across the pond.
A working group of employers, including IBM, PepsiCo and Johnson & Johnson, has been weighing options on how best to collect, interpret and report data about their employees' health in annual reports and other financial statements.
The Fidelity Health Marketplace, a site also known as a private health exchange, will be targeted at businesses with as many as 2,500 workers. Also in the news, the Department of Health and Human Services is slated to begin audits this year of about 350 health care providers to examine their compliance with patient privacy regulations.
However, doctors warn finding a vaccine for the virus that is linked to birth defects won't happen overnight. Other health experts are optimistic on the U.S.'s ability to contain the virus when it does come to the states, saying an outbreak is unlikely.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is urging hospitals to team up with social workers and non-medical personnel in an effort to cut back on readmission rates for many minority and low-income patients.
"Dr. [Robert] Califf’s extensive ties to the pharmaceutical industry give me no reason to believe that he would make the FDA work for ordinary Americans, rather than just the CEOs of pharmaceutical companies,” Democratic presidential primary candidate Bernie Sanders says.
In a move that stunned Republican health care experts, Donald Trump called for Medicare to negotiate drug prices, an idea championed by Democrats. But he faces the same limits as they do with the proposal: Without leverage to say "no" to certain drugs because of the cost, the negotiation proposals that are left don't net big savings for Medicare.
On Tuesday, a group of 10 anti-abortion leaders wrote an open letter to Iowa voters imploring them to vote for "anyone but Donald Trump," saying they worry about his commitment to the cause.
The state has expanded its Medicaid program, but that will end next year without a legislative extension. A similar plan has been introduced in Kansas. Outlets also look at Medicaid expansion efforts in North Carolina, Louisiana and Tennessee.
In House v. Burwell, Republican lawmakers are challenging the health law's “cost sharing reduction” payments to insurers to help reimburse the coverage of lower-income enrollees. Meanwhile, as the enrollment period draws to a close, news outlets report on potential fines for millennials who remain uninsured and the cost savings potential of switching plans.
In Texas, authorities filed criminal charges against two filmmakers who took undercover videos targeting Planned Parenthood. The indictment is viewed as the latest sign that the GOP campaign against the group over the film has run into trouble.
The new guidance calls for specific attention to pregnant women and new mothers.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
News outlets report on health care developments in Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Washington, Kansas, New York, Hawaii, Arizona, Maryland and Minnesota.
In other news, Hawaii lawmakers introduce a bill to allow pharmacists to prescribe birth control; a Senate committee in Ohio is slated to take up a Planned Parenthood defunding bill; Massachusetts ends its practice of sending addicted women to prison instead of offering them treatment; and a new study finds large disparities in women who have access to minimally invasive hysterectomies.
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