Calif. Attorney General Delays Hospital Deal Decision
News outlets also report on other hospital industry developments in Maryland, Iowa, Florida and Minnesota.
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News outlets also report on other hospital industry developments in Maryland, Iowa, Florida and Minnesota.
The doctors' group says the marketing could be driving up demand for expensive treatment that may be unnecessary.
The 50 chimps that remain in National Institutes of Health research facilities will be sent to sanctuaries, ending a controversial, long-time practice of testing vaccines and drugs on the animals.
Narcan is a reformulated drug delivered through a nasal spray that can reverse heroin and opioid overdoses. As the national drug abuse epidemic grows, local officials across the country have begun handing out the drug to police, drug users and families of addicts.
Deputy Secretary Sloan Gibson told the House Committee on Veterans Affairs that the agency was working to improve the network of private doctors available to veterans. In other VA news, a former Phoenix VA hospital director will keep her bonus despite being fired for misconduct. And Rep. John Mica introduces a bill that would transfer federal control of a VA nursing home to Florida.
The legislation required clinics where abortions are performed to have emergency-transfer protocol with nearby hospitals, among other measures. Elsewhere, a conservative group questions Carly Fiorina's credentials, the Democratic presidential frontrunners spar on health care taxes and divisions appear within the Clinton Health Access Initiative.
The group called for an "Alabama-driven solution" to closing the coverage gap.
Also in Illinois, a report finds that 175,000 Chicago residents are eligible for insurance but remain uninsured. Elsewhere, media outlets report on enrollment developments from Florida, Maryland, Texas and Minnesota.
Also, some businesses are factoring in the cost of health coverage to their growth calculations.
This early morning disclosure by the nation's largest insurer highlights the difficulties insurers are having with the marketplaces created by the Affordable Care Act and will fuel concerns regarding the long-term sustainability of the exchanges.
The Nebraska Republican says he will block Robert Califf's confirmation until the administration gives him information about the shuttering of a dozen health insurance co-ops set up by the health law. Also in the news, an SEC investigation of insider trading is now focusing on the workings of a House committee and a Capitol Hill hearing examines the power of pharmacy benefit managers.
News outlets report on health issues in California, South Dakota, Tennessee, North Carolina, New Jersey, Colorado and Florida.
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
News outlets report on health issues in California, Missouri, Illinois, North Carolina, Florida and Connecticut.
Meanwhile, in Texas, a new report advances mental health policy recommendations for law enforcement agencies. News outlets also report on the challenges of maneuvering the mental health care system in North Carolina and Ohio.
Democratic candidate John Bel Edwards is polling well in the race against Republican U.S. Sen. David Vitter. Edwards is on record as supportive of the health law's Medicaid expansion.
Three Democratic state senators are travelling to Washington, D.C., to meet with federal officials in an effort to stop Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad's privatization plan. In other state Medicaid news, adult care facilities in Kansas are wary of KanCare reimbursement changes; a Michigan regulatory board denies contract appeals by five Medicaid HMOs; and Virginia's Medicaid costs are forecast to rise.
The number of cancer cases, too, has dropped sharply, but questions remain if the death rate from the disease will also slow.
The Washington Post reports that Veterans Affairs officials will present details to Congress today. Also, the Miami Herald finds that Florida hospitals are having trouble getting paid for care to veterans.
The Department of Justice says 117 companies sold supplements that were mislabeled or had potentially tainted ingredients.
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