- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Federal Officials Say No-Go To Lifetime Limits On Medicaid
- How The Farm Bill Could Erode Part Of The ACA
- Medicare Beneficiaries Feel The Pinch When They Can’t Use Drug Coupons
- Use Of Psychiatric Drugs Soars In California Jails
- Political Cartoon: 'Fear And Oathing?'
- Opioid Crisis 2
- Will Opioid Distributor Hearings Turn Into Modern Equivalent Of Tobacco Company Reckoning In The '90s?
- Heroin And Homeless Crises Collide In Northern California Creating Epidemic Of Despair
- Women’s Health 1
- Abortion Clinics Experience Significant Increase In Disruptive Activity By Activists Outside Facilities
- Public Health 3
- States Desperate For Alternative To Lethal Injections Turn To Nitrogen Gas For Executions
- Even Small Injuries To Head Can Significantly Increase Chances Of Dementia
- No Student Should Have To 'Dodge Bullets To Survive,' Parkland Survivor Tells Lawmakers
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Federal Officials Say No-Go To Lifetime Limits On Medicaid
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services rejects a plan by Kansas to cap benefits at three years. (Phil Galewitz, 5/7)
How The Farm Bill Could Erode Part Of The ACA
A provision of this massive legislation would provide funding to help agricultural groups set up association health plans — a longtime GOP-favored mechanism to reduce health insurance costs for small groups. (Julie Appleby, 5/8)
Medicare Beneficiaries Feel The Pinch When They Can’t Use Drug Coupons
Federal law prohibits them from using the coupons drugmakers offer to help patients cover their share of a medicine’s cost. (Michelle Andrews, 5/8)
Use Of Psychiatric Drugs Soars In California Jails
A combination of factors has led to an “astronomical” increase in mentally ill inmates, followed by increased efforts to identify those who need prescriptions. Some say the meds are underprescribed; others, that they are given inappropriately, without the benefit of comprehensive treatment. (Anna Gorman, 5/8)
Political Cartoon: 'Fear And Oathing?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Fear And Oathing?'" by Bob and Tom Thaves.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
THE HIGH-PROFILE INVESTORS WHO LOST BIG WITH THERANOS
The billionaires' club:
Unaware biotech can
Still employ leeches.
- Mark A. Jensen
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Eye-Popping Premium Increases Give First Glimpse Of Next Year's Marketplace
One insurer wants to nearly double the amount it charges on average for one coverage option in Maryland, and raise the cost of another in Virginia by 64 percent. The two states are the first to announce the rates filed by insurance companies for 2019 plans.
Bloomberg:
Obamacare Premiums To Surge Next Year, Early Requests Show
The first glimpse of what health-insurance companies plan to charge for Obamacare plans next year suggests there’s no relief ahead for consumers saddled with high premiums. Several insurers in Maryland and Virginia are seeking double-digit percentage increases in monthly costs for individual medical plans in 2019. The largest increases are being sought by CareFirst, which wants to nearly double the amount it charges on average for one coverage option in Maryland, and raise the cost of another in Virginia by 64 percent. (Tozzi, 5/7)
Modern Healthcare:
Health Insurers Seek Big Rate Hikes For 2019
Maryland and Virginia are the first states to announce the rates filed by insurance companies for 2019 plans. The requests, though not final, offer an early look at what other insurers may be planning across the country. In Maryland, the two insurers selling individual insurance plans on the ACA marketplace are asking for an average rate increase of about 30% for 2019 coverage. That would amount to an average monthly premium of about $592 per member, compared with $449 per month in 2018. Nearly 212,000 people are insured in individual plans on and off the exchange in Maryland this year. (Livingston, 5/7)
The Washington Post:
CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield And Other Maryland Insurers Seek 30 Percent Premium Hikes For 2019
Insurers are proposing double-digit premium increases in Maryland's individual-health-plan market, a consequence of what the state’s health insurance commissioner called a “death spiral. ”CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield requested an 18.5 percent increase on the HMO plans used by the vast majority of its individual-plan members — and a whopping, 91.4 percent increase on its PPO plans. Kaiser Permanente requested a 37.4 percent increase on its HMO plans. The average rate increase requested, across insurers and plans, was 30 percent. (Johnson, 5/7)
The Baltimore Sun:
CareFirst And Kaiser Ask Again For Large Rate Increases On Insurance Sold On State Exchange
State officials plan to ask the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services for permission to establish a reinsurance program that would create a pot of money for insurers to cover the most expensive claims. In a bipartisan effort to preserve the expansion of health insurance in Maryland and rein in rising costs, the General Assembly passed legislation this spring with support from Gov. Larry Hogan opening the door for the effort. (McDaniels, 5/7)
The Hill:
Maryland Insurers Asking For Double-Digit Premium Hikes
Insurers have said a number of policies being promoted by the Trump administration are to blame for rising premiums and the departure of healthy people from the risk pool, including the repeal of ObamaCare’s individual mandate penalty. The administration also made it easier for insurers to sell cheaper, skimpier plans. (Weixel, 5/7)
In other health law news —
Kaiser Health News:
How The Farm Bill Could Erode Part Of The ACA
Some Republican lawmakers continue to try to work around the federal health law’s requirements. That strategy can crop up in surprising places. Like the farm bill. Tucked deep in the House version of the massive bill — amid crop subsidies and food assistance programs — is a provision that supporters say could help provide farmers with cheaper, but likely less comprehensive, health insurance than plans offered through the Affordable Care Act. It calls for $65 million in loans and grants administered by the Department of Agriculture to help organizations establish agricultural-related “association” type health plans. (Appleby, 5/8)
CHIP Targeted In Trump's Proposed $15 Billion Spending Cuts
But an administration official said the proposed $7 billion in cuts would not hurt the Children's Health Insurance Program since $5 billion would come from an account from which money is not authorized to be spent.
Reuters:
Trump Proposes $15 Billion Spending Cuts, Targets Children's Health Program
President Donald Trump will request a package of $15 billion in spending cuts from Congress on Tuesday, including some $7 billion from the Children's Health Insurance Program championed by Democrats, senior administration officials said on Monday. One official said the targeted cuts would cover "unobligated balances" or money that is not being spent. He said the cuts would not have an effect on the CHIP program itself. (Mason, 5/7)
The Associated Press:
Trump Proposing Billions In Spending Cuts To Congress
The White House said it is sending the so-called rescissions package to lawmakers Tuesday. Administration officials, who required anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly on the matter, said the package proposes killing $15 billion in unused funds. A senior official said about $7 billion would come from the Children's Health Insurance Program, or CHIP, which provides health care to kids from low-income families, though that official stressed the cuts won't have a practical impact on the popular program. (Taylor, 5/7)
The Wall Street Journal:
Trump Seeks To Cut $15 Billion From Federal Spending By Rescinding Approved Funds
The plan is a shift from earlier discussions about rescinding funds that had been approved as part of a sweeping, $1.3 trillion spending bill enacted in March. This proposal would instead seek to rescind funds that had been authorized in previous fiscal years, but not spent. The official said Mr. Trump plans to propose rescinding money from the March deal in a future proposal, the official said. Mr. Trump had threatened to veto the March spending measure but decided to sign it and avoid shutting down the government. The senior administration official said Monday the rescissions proposal headed for Capitol Hill Tuesday would be the first in a series of proposals to cut funding. (Peterson, 5/7)
Drug distributors are being hauled in front of Congress to answer questions about their role in the opioid crisis. Advocates want the hearings to mark a tidal change in public opinion on the companies.
Politico:
'People Are Dying Every Day': Drug Distributors To Face Lawmakers
The nation's largest drug distributors spent millions on Washington lobbying last year. Now they're about to find out how much goodwill it has bought them in Congress. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is hauling in the executives of five drug distribution companies Tuesday after spending the last year investigating their role as middlemen between drugmakers and the hospitals and pharmacies that dispensed millions of pills in towns that are now ravaged by the opioid epidemic. (Meyer, 5/8)
The Associated Press:
Hill Panel Probing Opioids Abuse Targets Distributor Firms
Congressional investigators say wholesale pharmaceutical distributors shipped hundreds of millions of prescription opioid pills to West Virginia, a state disproportionately ravaged by deaths caused by the addictive drugs. Now, lawmakers want executives of those companies to explain how that happened. Current and former officials from five distributor companies are set to give sworn testimony on the subject Tuesday to a House subcommittee. Their appearances come during an election-year push by Congress to pass largely modest legislation aimed at curbing a growing epidemic that saw nearly 64,000 people die last year from drug overdoses, with two-thirds of those deaths involving opioids. (Fram, 5/8)
CQ:
House Holds Opioid Hearing Marathon
The House Energy and Commerce Committee will begin marking up dozens of bills related to the opioid crisis on Wednesday, a day after four different hearings on the opioid crisis will be held. Energy and Commerce announced Monday that 33 bills will be considered this week with 26 related to the epidemic. The bills include legislation to safely dispose of opioids (HR 5041), a bill that would help physicians find out more easily if a patient has a drug abuse history (HR 5009), and legislation that would increase awareness of synthetic drugs (HR 449). Other bills that the Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee approved are scheduled to be addressed at a May 17 markup. (Raman, 5/8)
In other news on the crisis —
Politico:
5 Unintended Consequences Of Addressing The Opioid Crisis
The crackdown on opioids is having unintended consequences. The push for fewer opioid prescriptions at lower doses and for shorter periods has increased suffering for some pain patients including those near the end of life. The emphasis on opioids has also overshadowed other forms of substance abuse that require attention. (Karlin-Smith and Ehley, 5/8)
The Hill:
Walmart To Restrict Opioid Prescriptions At Its Pharmacies
Walmart pharmacies will soon limit the supply of first-time opioid prescriptions for acute pain to seven days, an effort aimed at clamping down on an epidemic killing more people per year than car crashes. The initiative will start within 60 days, the company announced Monday, and comes as an increasing number of states and entities in the health-care industry have placed limits on opioid prescriptions. (Roubein, 5/7)
Bloomberg:
Opioid Judge Demands Review Of Litigation-Funding Deals
The judge overseeing more than 600 lawsuits targeting opioid makers is demanding local governments’ lawyers turn over information about any litigation-funding agreements and provide assurance that lenders won’t gain control over legal strategy or settlements. U.S. District Judge Dan Polster in Cleveland issued the order Monday saying he wants to ensure the agreements don’t create conflicts of interest by affecting plaintiffs lawyers’ judgments in pursuing cases against opioid makers, such as Purdue Pharma LLP and Johnson & Johnson, and distributors such as McKesson Corp. and Cardinal Health Inc. (Feeley and Harris, 5/7)
Heroin And Homeless Crises Collide In Northern California Creating Epidemic Of Despair
Although the state on the whole isn't as hard hit by the opioid epidemic, a rural slice in the north is struggling under the weight of dual crises. Media outlets report on news of the national drug epidemic out of Colorado, Arizona and Ohio, as well.
The New York Times:
Needle By Needle, A Heroin Crisis Grips California’s Rural North
The dirty needles can be found scattered among the pine and brush, littering the forest floor around Eureka, a town long celebrated as a gateway to the scenic Redwood Empire. They are the debris of a growing heroin scourge that is gripping the remote community in Northern California. While the state as a whole has one of the lowest overall opioid-related death rates in the country, a sharp rise in heroin use across the rural north in recent years has raised alarms. In Humboldt County, the opioid death rate is five times higher than the state average, rivaling the rates of states like Maine and Vermont that have received far more national attention. (Del Real, 5/8)
Denver Post:
Colorado Lawmakers Act On Opioid Crisis, But Advocates Say It's Not Enough
Earlier this year, in a speech to leading members of Colorado’s medical community, Dr. Donald Stader confronted a blunt truth about the nation’s opioid crisis. The majority of the blame, he said, “rightfully rests with people like me – physicians.” ...But behind the scenes, in conversations with state legislators, Stader and the Colorado Medical Society lobbied against stricter regulations on a doctor’s ability to prescribe opioids – making the case that medical professionals can police themselves. (Frank, 5/7)
Arizona Republic:
Arizona Needle-Exchange Bill Dies In State Legislature
A bill that could have brought needle exchanges out of Arizona's shadows quietly died last week in the state Legislature. House Bill 2389 — which sailed through the House with bipartisan support before being watered down in the Senate — stalled out last month and was never scheduled to be heard by a conference committee. (Pohl, 5/7)
Columbus Dispatch:
Apology To Be Part Of Cardinal Health Chairman's Opioid-Focused Testimony Tuesday
With Dublin-based Cardinal and other major drug distributors poised to testify before the House Energy and Commerce Committee in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, prepared remarks show Cardinal Chairman and former CEO George Barrett expressing regret and offering an apology for Cardinal’s role in supplying a large amount of painkillers to two West Virginia pharmacies that the committee questioned Cardinal about. (Matzer Rose, 5/7)
Critical Of Athenahealth's Performance, Hedge Fund Offers To Buy It For $6.5B
If successful, the campaign by Paul Singer and his Elliott Management Corp. would be a dramatic turn for a successful startup that had bridged two of Massachusetts' core industries — software and health care.
Bloomberg:
Athenahealth Surges After Elliott Seeks $6.46 Billion Takeover
Athenahealth Inc. surged after activist investor Elliott Management Corp. bid to acquire the medical company for $160 a share, saying executives had “failed to correct a host of operational issues.” Elliott, the New York hedge fund led by billionaire Paul Singer, said Monday that it made an all-cash takeover offer, which would value Athenahealth at $6.46 billion. Athenahealth, which makes an online platform doctors use to manage their practices, said in a statement that its board will “carefully review the proposal.” (Deveau and Ockerman, 5/7)
Boston Globe:
Hedge Fund Elliott Management Offers To Buy Athenahealth For $6.5 Billion
[Paul] Singer had already owned a large position in athenahealth and pressured the company into cost cuts that resulted in about 500 layoffs last year. But on Monday, Elliott said the company has not done enough, and it criticized in particular the recent decision to appoint former General Electric Co. chief executive Jeff Immelt as its new chairman. “We believe the unfortunate but inescapable reality is that performance at athenahealth is not going to get better,” Elliott said in a letter to athenahealth’s board. (Rosen, 5/7)
“The protesters are feeling emboldened by the political environment and seeing what they could get away with,” said National Abortion Federation President, Vicki Saporta.
The Associated Press:
US Abortion Clinics Face Surge Of Trespassing And Blockades
America’s abortion clinics experienced a major upsurge in trespassing, obstruction and blockades by anti-abortion activists in 2017, according to an annual survey by an industry group. The National Abortion Federation report chronicled a litany of actions that ranged from coordinated trespassing efforts by abortion opponents, repeated brick-throwing at windows of a Cleveland clinic and an attempted bombing in Illinois. (Crary, 5/7)
In other news —
WBUR:
Self-Induced Abortions Shouldn't Be A Crime, Mass. Medical Society Says
At its latest meeting, the Massachusetts Medical Society took a new stand: Women who attempt to end a pregnancy on their own should not be considered criminals. Self-induced abortion is explicitly banned in seven states, and more have laws on the books that could be used to prosecute women for self-induction, according to a recent report. (Conaboy and Goldberg, 5/7)
States Desperate For Alternative To Lethal Injections Turn To Nitrogen Gas For Executions
Drug shortages and botched execution attempts have caused states to look to new methods of execution. But there's little scientific evidence that nitrogen gas is effective. In other public health news: the first lady's initiative, anxiety, vaping, post-partum depression, and more.
The New York Times:
States Turn To An Unproven Method Of Execution: Nitrogen Gas
Hamstrung by troubles with lethal injection — gruesomely botched attempts, legal battles and growing difficulty obtaining the drugs — states are looking for alternative ways to carry out the death penalty. High on the list for some is a method that has never been used before: inhaling nitrogen gas. Oklahoma, Alabama and Mississippi have authorized nitrogen for executions and are developing protocols to use it, which represents a leap into the unknown. There is no scientific data on executing people with nitrogen, leading some experts to question whether states, in trying to solve old problems, may create new ones. (Grady and Hoffman, 5/7)
The New York Times:
Melania Trump Rolls Out ‘Be Best,’ A Children’s Agenda With A Focus On Social Media
Hours after President Trump took to Twitter on Monday to denigrate the special counsel’s investigation as a “Phony Witch Hunt” and the Iran deal as a “MESS,” Melania Trump stepped into the Rose Garden and said she would focus her official effort as first lady on teaching children to put kindness first in their lives, particularly on social media. In a speech delivered in front of her husband, Vice President Mike Pence, at least five cabinet secretaries and other senior officials, Mrs. Trump unveiled a program called “Be Best,” which she said would tackle opioid abuse, social media pressures and mental health issues among young people. (Rogers, 5/7)
Los Angeles Times:
It's Not Just You, We're All Living In The United States Of Anxiety
Feeling more anxious these days? You've got plenty of company. A new survey from the American Psychiatric Assn. reveals that 39% of Americans feel more anxious now than they did a year ago. That's more than double the 19% of Americans who feel less anxious now than at this time last year. (Another 39% of survey respondents said their anxiety level is about the same, and 3% weren't sure.) (Kaplan, 5/8)
WBUR:
FDA To Take Action Against Companies That Sell Vape Pens To Teens
Rachel Martin talks to FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb about the agency's new action to crack down on sales of vape pens, also known as e-cigarettes, to children and teens. (Martin, 5/7)
The New York Times:
When A New Mother’s Joy Is Entwined With Grief
Every Mother’s Day, Maggie Nelson, her husband Mike, and their three young children head to the cemetery to take a family photo at the grave of their daughter, Emily. She was stillborn in 2010, but her twin, Mikey, now 7, survived. “People say, ‘That’s kind of sad,’ but I can say, ‘I’m a proud mom of four. Here I am with all of them,’” Ms. Nelson, 39, said of the photos of her and the kids gathered on the grass by Emily’s stone plaque. A Bloomington, Ill., kindergarten teacher, she is a member of an unofficial sorority of women who experienced acute grief while postpartum. (Zulkey, 5/8)
Modern Healthcare:
Geisinger CEO: Routine DNA Sequencing Will Save Money
Geisinger patients won't have to foot any upfront costs as the health system rolls out DNA sequencing as part of routine care, and the program will ultimately reap cost savings by catching diseases earlier, the system's CEO said Monday. Donors and Geisinger's insurance company will take on the financial burden, and the health system will spend "under $5 million" to sequence a "huge number" of patients' DNA in a new program, Geisinger President and CEO Dr. David Feinberg said. That money will go to the cost of the actual tests, which he estimates will range from $300 to $500 per patient. Under the new program, all Geisinger patients will have the chance to have their DNA sequenced. (Arndt, 5/7)
Stat:
Stubborn Genes: New Research Looks At How Our Bodies Respond (Or Don’t) To Night Shift Work
In nursing, there is a rite of passage that nearly everyone goes through — night shifts. Sometimes, the shifts are clumped together, and sometimes, they are spaced apart, said Daniel Schweitzer, a nurse in Pittsburgh. But they always seem to have the same effect on his body clock. “When you do a few nights, you get this permanent jet lag, where you’re never quite truly awake,” he said. “Your sleep schedule gets truly messed up.” (Satyanarayana, 5/7)
The Hill:
How Ebola Entered The American Consciousness: A Trump Tweet
Little did Trump know that his initial tweets came at the moment when the White House was most worried that the Ebola virus would, in fact, spread to the United States. The occasion was the African Leaders Summit, which brought heads of state from fifty African nations to the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, the State Department and the White House itself. The Obama administration worried that the summit, which included dozens of staff, hangers-on and members of the African media attached to each delegation, would inadvertently serve as the opportunity for Ebola to spread between delegations, or to civilians in the Washington area. (Wilson, 5/8)
Even Small Injuries To Head Can Significantly Increase Chances Of Dementia
The link between mild and severe head trauma and later problems is becoming well-known. But a new study finds an increased risk even for people who don't lose consciousness from their injury.
San Jose Mercury News:
Concussions Boost Risk Of Dementia
In the first study of its kind, Bay Area researchers have found that mild brain injury – a head bang that creates a dazed feeling, but not unconsciousness – more than doubles the risk of dementia. ... This study confirmed that link, finding risk of dementia was 3.77 times higher for those with moderate to severe trauma at any time in life, compared to those who never had a brain injury, according to researchers from UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System. (Krieger, 5/7)
San Francisco Chronicle:
Even Milder Concussions Double Dementia Risk, UCSF Study Finds
Dizzying knocks to the head trigger dementia later in life in proportion to the severity of the resulting concussion, according to the study by UCSF’s Weill Institute for Neurosciences and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System. The risk is there, though, whether it was a knockout blow or a staggering shot that only left the victim woozy, said the study of military veterans published Monday in the medical journal JAMA Neurology. (Fimrite, 5/7)
Los Angeles Times:
In Veterans, Even A Mild Case Of Traumatic Brain Injury Is Linked To An Increased Risk Of Dementia
Mild traumatic brain injury may sound like an oxymoron, along the lines of "jumbo shrimp" or "random order." But a new study shows that mild TBIs can have serious consequences for military veterans by raising their risk of dementia. Researchers who examined the medical records of more than 350,000 Americans who served during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan found that men and women who experienced at least one mild TBI were more than twice as likely as their uninjured peers to develop dementia after they retired from the military. (Kaplan, 5/7)
No Student Should Have To 'Dodge Bullets To Survive,' Parkland Survivor Tells Lawmakers
Aalayah Eastmond was among the survivors of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting who rallied Monday at the Capitol to call for a change in gun laws.
The Associated Press:
Parkland Survivor Urges Congress To Act To Curb Gun Violence
Seventeen-year-old Aalayah Eastmond hid beneath the lifeless body of a classmate as a gunman opened fire at her Parkland, Florida high school in February. "No student should have to literally dodge bullets to survive," Eastmond recalled Monday, "but I was that student. No student should have to have body matter of her classmate picked out of her hair, but I was that student." (Daly, 5/7)
And in Oklahoma —
The Associated Press:
Several GOP Governor Candidates Urge Fallin To Sign Gun Law
Several Republican candidates for governor of Oklahoma urged GOP Gov. Mary Fallin Monday to sign legislation allowing adults to carry handguns without a permit amid growing opposition from some of the state's top law enforcement officials. Oklahoma currently requires a license to carry a handgun openly or concealed and charges handgun license applicants a fee of up to $200. But gun rights supporters, including GOP gubernatorial candidates Gary Richardson and Dan Fisher, a former state representative, said they believe the Second Amendment gives citizens the right to carry firearms without government interference. (Talley, 5/7)
More than 20,000 members of the University of California's largest employee union are joined by the California Nurses Association, whose members work at UC's medical centers and student health clinics, and the University Professional & Technical Employees, which includes pharmacists, clinical social workers, physical therapists, physician assistants and researchers.
The Associated Press:
University Of California Workers Start 3-Day Strike Over Pay
Thousands of custodians, security guards, gardeners and other service workers at University of California campuses started a three-day strike Monday to address pay inequalities and demand higher wages. Strikers gathered at sunrise on the 10 campuses throughout the state, wearing green T-shirts and carrying signs that call for “equality, fairness, respect.” The strike was called last week by American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3299, which represents 25,000 service workers, after the union and the university could not agree on a new contract and mediation efforts failed. Another 29,000 nurses, pharmacists, radiologists and other medical workers heeded the service workers’ call for a sympathy strike and will join the walkouts Tuesday and Wednesday, which is expected to disrupt thousands of surgeries and other appointments. (Rodriguez, 5/7)
Los Angeles Times:
Massive UC Workers' Strike Disrupts Dining, Classes And Medical Services
UC's five medical centers hired contract workers to fill in during the strike and scrambled to reschedule exams and treatments. UC San Francisco rescheduled more than 12,000 appointments for surgeries and treatments, including chemotherapy and radiation. UC Davis rescheduled several hundred appointments, including more than 100 cancer surgeries and 150 radiology exams. But campus spokeswoman Kimberly Hale said 78% of UC Davis health workers showed up for work. UC San Diego directed emergency room patients to other hospitals. (Watanabe and Resmovits, 5/7)
Sacramento Bee:
Three-Day Strike Kicks Off Across University Of California System
More than 300 hospital workers and members of AFSCME 3299, which represents workers at UC Davis and its medical center, formed a picket line as a three-day strike began at the medical center in Sacramento on Monday, protesting the stagnating contract negotiations with the University of California. They joined the more than 53,000 health care, service, technical and research workers who are striking across all 10 UC campuses. (Sullivan, 5/7)
Media outlets report on news from Massachusetts, California, Connecticut, Minnesota, Maryland, Illinois, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kansas and Texas.
The New York Times:
M.I.T. Is Not Responsible For Student’s Suicide, Court Rules
In a legal case closely watched for its potential implications for universities nationwide, Massachusetts’s highest court ruled Monday that M.I.T. could not be held responsible for the 2009 suicide of one of its students. Broadly, the Supreme Judicial Court said in its 44-page ruling, “there is no duty to prevent another from committing suicide.” (Seelye, 5/7)
Sacramento Bee:
CA Lawmakers Push Health Care For Undocumented Immigrants
More than 100,000 undocumented adult immigrants in California would be eligible for state-subsidized health coverage, under a major budget push announced by Assembly Democrats Monday. Lawmakers are asking Gov. Jerry Brown for $1 billion, a large portion of which would fund a major expansion of Medi-Cal, the state's low-income health care program. (Hart, 5/7)
The Associated Press:
California Judge Affirms Ruling For Coffee Cancer Warnings
A court ruling that gave coffee drinkers a jolt earlier this year was finalized Monday when a Los Angeles judge said coffee sold in California must carry cancer warnings. Superior Court Judge Elihu Berle said Starbucks Corp. and other roasters and retailers failed to show that benefits from drinking coffee outweighed any risks from a carcinogen that is a byproduct of the roasting process. He had tentatively made the same written decision in March. (Melley, 5/7)
California Healthline:
Gubernatorial Hopefuls Look To Health Care For Election Edge
California’s leading gubernatorial candidates agree that health care should work better for Golden State residents: Insurance should be more affordable, costs are unreasonably high, and robust competition among hospitals, doctors and other providers could help lower prices, they told California Healthline. What they don’t agree on is how to achieve those goals — not even the Democrats who represent the state’s dominant party. (Bartolone, 5/7)
The Associated Press:
Court To Weigh Fallout Of Massachusetts Drug Lab Misconduct
Massachusetts’ highest court is set to consider whether to toss more convictions linked to a former chemist who authorities say was high almost every day she worked at a state drug lab for eight years. The Supreme Judicial Court will hear arguments on Tuesday in the case brought by the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts and the state’s public defender agency. Prosecutors already have agreed to dismiss thousands of cases tainted by Sonja Farak, who pleaded guilty in 2014 to stealing cocaine from the lab. (5/8)
The CT Mirror:
Aiming For Bipartisan Deal, Dems Add Funds For Seniors, Towns
Trying to avoid a repeat of last year when conservative Democrats defected to support a Republican state budget, Democratic legislative leaders unveiled several proposals Monday aimed at striking a bipartisan compromise. (Phaneuf, 5/7)
The Star Tribune:
Employer Health Costs Rising Faster In Minnesota Than Nationwide
Employer-health-plan costs increased at a faster rate in Minnesota last year than across the country, according to a new survey, with employers saying they hope new programs and competition will help put a lid on future cost jumps. The survey from the Bloomington-based Minnesota Health Action Group found that employer-health-plan costs in Minnesota increased by 5.7 percent, a faster rate of increase than the national average of 4.3 percent in 2017. (Snowbeck, 5/7)
The Baltimore Sun:
Protest Planned At MedStar Franklin Square Hospital Over Closing Of Pediatric Services
Critics of a recent decision by MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center to close its inpatient pediatrics division and its separate children’s emergency room plan to protest at the hospital Tuesday afternoon. The hospital announced April 3 it was eliminating inpatient services for children. Pediatric emergency services will now be provided in the adult emergency room. (McDaniels, 5/7)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Illinois AG Files Suit Against EPA On Ozone Rules, Cites Foxconn
The Illinois attorney general said she intends to file a lawsuit against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for sharply limiting areas that will come under stricter ozone regulations in Wisconsin. (Bergquist, 5/7)
The Washington Post:
Cleveland Clinic Doctor Treats Woman Having Allergic Reaction Midflight
Minutes into her flight, Ashley Spencer popped open a bag of chips and started to munch. For years, Spencer has been suffering from a rare autoimmune disorder, and she hoped new medication might be able to help. So the 28-year-old was traveling from Philadelphia to the renowned Cleveland Clinic on Saturday to see whether she might be a candidate. The aircraft was barely in the air when Spencer started to feel sick, she said. She told her mother she was going to the airplane bathroom to vomit. (Bever, 5/7)
Kansas City Star:
Midwives And Moms Protest At Shawnee Mission Medical Center
A group of midwives and moms-to-be protested Sunday outside Shawnee Mission Medical Center after the hospital found itself without a doctor willing to enter into the formal partnership the midwives need to practice under Kansas law. An obstretrician/gynecologist in the hospital's network worked with midwives until recently. (Marso, 5/7)
Minnesota Public Radio:
Minnesota's Landmark Tobacco Settlement Is 20 Years Old
Twenty years ago Tuesday, Minnesota reached a landmark settlement with tobacco companies. Under the deal, the tobacco industry agreed to pay the state and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota more than $6.5 billion, among other provisions. (Wurzer and Franz, 5/8)
KQED:
California Kids' Football Ban Sacked Early, Despite Grim Brain Research
A bill that would have made California the first state to ban youth tackle football was shelved at the end of April, following major pushback from parents, coaches and football fans. Organizers collected more than 45,000 signatures opposing the ban, according to the Los Angeles Times. (Ahmed, 5/7)
Houston Chronicle:
The Jung Center Opens The Mind, Body, Spirit Institute
The Jung Center has launched The Mind, Body, Spirit Institute, a place that provides educational programs and experiences toward the goal of reducing stress.Under development since last year, the institute’s programming was created as a response to the toll many individuals feel being taken on their health and happiness due to stress in the workplace, constant interruptions by technology, and the ever-increasingly hectic pace of modern life. ...Dr. Chaoul, originally from Argentina, holds a doctoral degree in religious studies from Rice University. He is currently a faculty member in the Integrative Medicine Program of MD Anderson Cancer Center where he has been teaching mind, body and spirit practices since 1999. (Hazen, 5/9)
Kaiser Health News:
Use Of Psychiatric Drugs Soars In California Jails
The number of jail inmates in California taking psychotropic drugs has jumped about 25 percent in five years, and they now account for about a fifth of the county jail population across the state, according to a new analysis of state data. The increase could reflect the growing number of inmates with mental illness, though it also might stem from better identification of people in need of treatment, say researchers from California Health Policy Strategies (CHPS), a Sacramento-based consulting firm. (Gorman, 5/8)
Opinion writers look at topics surrounding health care.
The New York Times:
Gnawing Away At Health Care
At the beginning of 2017, Republicans promised to release the kraken on Obamacare — to destroy the program with one devastating blow. But a funny thing happened: Voters realized that repealing the Affordable Care Act would mean taking health insurance away from tens of millions of Americans. They didn’t like that prospect — and enough Republicans balked at the backlash that Obamacare repeal fizzled. (Paul Krugman, 5/7)
The Hill:
As Election Looms, Policymakers Work Overtime To Finish Killing ObamaCare
As the battle over the Affordable Care Act (ACA), commonly called ObamaCare, shifts to the states, there are movements afoot at both the federal and state levels that skeptical conservatives are keeping their eyes on. The first is the growing belief that in the absence of the individual mandate penalty, which was eliminated as part of federal tax reform legislation that passed in December 2017, the entire law is now unconstitutional, because without the mandate’s fine — or “tax,” as Chief Justice John Roberts declared in the 2012 case upholding the ACA — Roberts’ entire justification for defending the legislation has disappeared. President Trump could simply issue an executive order saying as much, and so long ObamaCare. (Sarah Lee and Justin Haskins, 5/8)
USA Today:
Medical Bills: Why Are Health Care Providers Keeping You In The Dark?
When you go to the hospital for a scheduled procedure, you ought to be able to find out the price in advance. Today, the chances of anything that consumer-friendly happening are slim to none, but times could be changing. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar recently told a group of hospital executives that the Trump administration was committed to transparency in health care pricing. And a number of states have already enacted laws requiring providers to post prices of the goods and services they are selling. Price transparency has never been more important. In recent decades, as the cost of American health care has skyrocketed, patients have been paying an increasing share of the burden, often through health plans that have higher out-of-pocket expenses. (5/7)
USA Today:
Health Care Costs Transparency Shouldn't Be Mandated
In contrast, Surgery Center of Oklahoma offers hundreds of procedures and lists the price of each on its website. Patients across the country can compare SCO’s clear prices with guesstimates from elsewhere. That saves patients money and puts pressure on prices, even in other states. Why not require every facility to be as transparent as SCO? (Robert Graboyes, 5/7)
The Washington Post:
What’s Really Obstructing Left-Wing Dreams
Almost always, when I point out the difficulties of enacting some social program much desired by the left, I am met with some version of the following rejoinder: “Other countries have managed to do this. We passed Medicare and Medicaid and Social Security and most recently, Obamacare. It is obviously possible to do these sorts of things, even in America. The obstructionism of people like you is the only reason we can’t have nice things.” (Megan McArdle, 5/7)
The Federalist:
How President Trump Could End Obamacare With A Single Tweet
After more than eight years of promising to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the Republican-led Congress has yet to pass legislation that would replace Obamacare, which has forced millions of Americans to lose their doctors, caused dramatic increases in health insurance premiums and deductibles, and pushed millions more into Medicaid. However, a relatively small provision included in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, passed in December 2017, gives President Trump the ability to achieve what his party has failed to accomplish — ending the disastrous Obamacare program — and without the approval of Congress. (Justin Haskins and Sarah Lee, 5/7)
Lexington Herald Leader:
Farm Bill’s Food-Aid Cuts, Work Requirements Shortsighted
One in seven Kentuckians has food on their table in part thanks to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. The program lifts 164,000 Kentuckians, including 73,000 children, out of poverty. It sends nearly $1 billion a year to grocery stores and our state economy, and injects even more into our local communities during hard times when they most need it. For decades, SNAP has been a program with broad-based, bipartisan support because all of us value making sure everyone has enough to eat.But this vital assistance is in jeopardy if Congress agrees to the $17 billion in cuts to SNAP in the proposed Farm Bill. (5/7)
The Hill:
Medically Tailored Food Is The Future Of Health Care
Imagine you’re living with type 2 diabetes. You’ve been trying to manage the condition for years with a typical medication. What if instead of metformin — a drug that works to lower sugar in the blood, — our doctor could simply prescribe meals tailored to your unique diagnosis that help control your blood sugar? A growing body of research indicates that such a shift in treatment, away from Big Pharma and towards common-sense treatment measures, is the future of U.S. health care. (Karen Pearl, 5/7)
Editorial pages focus on these and other health topics.
The Wall Street Journal:
Can A Judge Solve The Opioid Crisis?
What began as a single opioid lawsuit in Ohio is now the only such case that matters. Every significant opioid lawsuit in the U.S. has been lumped together into a giant case before one federal judge in Cleveland who has declared his extraordinary ambition to “solve” the crisis in 2018. Judge Dan Polster is bringing before him all the major companies involved, including drug manufacturers like Purdue Pharma, distributors like McKesson and retailers like CVS. Other parties swept into Cleveland—some of which haven’t even sued yet—include the Justice Department, several Native American tribes, more than 40 states, and hundreds of counties, cities and people. New cases will continue to be added. (Abbe R. Gluck, 5/7)
The Washington Post:
The FDA Should Let E-Cigarettes Help Adults — But Not Hook Kids
About a decade ago, the e-cigarette industry began to boom in the United States, largely unregulated. Vaping was much safer than conventional smoking, and the devices helped some longtime smokers to moderate their highly deadly habit, but e-cigarettes also addicted a generation of new nicotine users. Now, finally, the Food and Drug Administration is stepping in more forcefully to encourage the positive effects of e-cigarettes and discourage the drawbacks. (5/7)
Chicago Tribune:
Mosquitoes And Ticks Are Coming To Kill Us — Unless We Strike First
I have some unfortunate news: Now that spring is here and we’re forced to do unpleasant things like “go outside,” there’s a good chance we’re all going to be killed by mosquitoes.Well, not just mosquitoes. Ticks and fleas will also take part in the swift consumption of humanity. (Rex Huppke, 5/7)
The Hill:
Future Of Medicine Could Tailored To Your Individual Genetics If Data Gathered Is Meaningful
In the future, medicine will be tailored to your individual “genome” or genetic code, lifestyle and community. Rather than a one-size-fits-most treatment, doctors will use data to determine what therapies you should receive based on genetic traits you’ve inherited from family, your daily habits, and where you live. But how do we get there? (Arielle Kane, 5/8)
Stat:
Cultural Confusion: The Shifting Line Between Sane And 'Unsane'
Where does sanity end and mental illness begin? It’s a shifting boundary, one based as much on culture as it is on our understanding of the brain and mental health. The American public harbors deep collective anxieties about mental health that are continually being stirred up. Take Steven Soderbergh’s most recent film, “Unsane,” which tells the story of a woman who is committed against her will to a mental institution and becomes trapped, unable to convince anyone that she doesn’t belong there. Released in March, the trailer has garnered nearly 17 million views. Or look at the public response to recent revelations by NBA star Kevin Love about his panic attacks, Mariah Carey about her bipolar disorder, and Chrissy Teigen about her struggle with postpartum depression. Along with a spate of new documentary and fictional films about mental illness, including “Unsane,” these reflect the cultural significance of mental illnesses. (Rebecca A. Seligman, 5/8)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Let's Talk Openly About Mental Illness
Thankfully, several organizations and the people who work for them are making strides to change the mental health stigma. The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) -- a nonprofit organization dedicated to saving lives and bringing hope to those affected by suicide -- launched an ad campaign in January called Seize The Awkward. The goal is to empower teens and young adults to start a conversation with or offer help to a friend who is struggling with mental illness. LifeAct is a Cleveland-based organization committed to informing teens about depression and suicide prevention. Last year, its instructors educated more than 25,000 middle and high school students in Northeast Ohio at no cost to schools. As a result, 2,130 teens sought additional help. (Katie Khoury, 5/6)
Los Angeles Times:
Target 'Gay Conversion Therapy,' Not Religion
In 2012 California enacted a law that bars licensed mental health providers from engaging in therapy designed to change the sexual orientation of patients under the age of 18. Now the state Senate is considering a sequel of sorts. But this new legislation is broader in its application — so broad that some critics are claiming that it could be used to interfere with the sale of religious books, even the Bible. Such fears may be farfetched. But AB 2943, which was passed by the Assembly last month, contains ambiguities that need to be cleared up if the legislation is to become law. (5/7)
The Baltimore Sun:
Child's Behavior May Be Result Of Trauma, Not ADHD
After a stressed-out mother called me several times recently to help deal with her 11-year-old son, who had been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and accused of acting out at school, I set up a wrestling-as-therapy session.In mentoring school-age boys, it helps to channel emotion and let it dissipate so clear thinking can take over. This particular 20-minute session at the Baltimore Police Academy seemed like forever. This boy had a lot of pent up rage, and as I pinned him down during our session, it broke my heart to see him hold back tears and refuse with every twitching muscle to allow himself to be vulnerable.And yet, I whispered in his ear that it was OK to feel. I refused to let him go.As founder of Project Pneuma — where we teach young men the art of forgiveness, self-control and discipline — I see what our kids are going through on daily basis. What’s being diagnosed as an attention deficit disorder is very likely to be a symptom of trauma, especially in the homes and communities of black children. (Damion J. Cooper,5/3)
Boston Globe:
In The Worst Human Traumas, Psychologists Found The Roots Of Happiness
All around us are reminders of how important happiness is in people’s lives: in TED talks, in the practice of meditation, in the annual World Happiness Report, and in advice on how to embrace positivity. Though the concept has been addressed at least since Aristotle explored the meaning of “eudaimonia” (commonly translated as human happiness or welfare), the study of the nature of happiness — known as positive psychology — did not emerge as an academic field until the 1990s. Today, positive psychology informs everything from marketing to sports management to the most popular class at Yale, a course nicknamed “Happiness 101.”Ironically, positive psychology was born in misery and war — long before the current version, with its emphasis on scientific study of positive human functioning and resilience, emerged with self-consciousness and institutional heft in the 1990s. (Daniel Horowitz, 5/6)
Tallahassee Democrat:
Florida Gives Fake Women's Health Centers Permanent Funding
A perfect example of the important role of the courts in our daily lives is playing out right now in the U.S. Supreme Court with National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Becerra. This case will determine if the First Amendment’s free speech clause allows anti-abortion counseling centers in Florida, and across the nation, to deceive women. (Amy Weintraub, 5/5)
The New York Times:
Fighting Street Gun Violence As If It Were A Contagion
Gary Slutkin, an epidemiologist, has spent his life treating contagious diseases: cholera, tuberculosis, H.I.V. — and for the last 23 years, violence. Yes, violence. A disease is a condition with identifiable symptoms that causes sickness or death. That describes violence. And we know it spreads itself. There is overwhelming evidence that hurt people hurt other people. Children who grow up in poverty and misery do not commit violence — unless they experienced it. If they were chronically exposed to violence as a child, they are more than 31 times more likely than other people to behave violently themselves. (Tina Rosenberg, 5/8)