- KFF Health News Original Stories 3
- Heated And Deep-Pocketed Battle Erupts Over 340B Drug Discount Program
- Parents Are Not Liable For Medical Debts Of Adult Children On Shared Insurance
- Putting Money Where Its Mouthpiece Is: Calif. Outspends U.S. To Market Obamacare
- Political Cartoon: 'Gotta Start Somewhere?'
- Capitol Watch 2
- After Kicking Health Issues Down The Road, Congress Faces Day Of Reckoning
- Federal Tax Plan Could Cause Problems For Puerto Rico's Medical Manufacturers And Hurricane Recovery Efforts
- Health Law 1
- Insurers: Allowing States To Define Essential Benefits Would Confuse Customers, Disrupt Marketplace
- Administration News 1
- HHS Nominee Likely To Be Grilled Over Drug Prices, Pharma Connections At Hearing
- Marketplace 1
- As Walmart Scoops Up Online Retailers, Workers See Noticeable Change In Health Benefits
- Women’s Health 1
- Following Court Ruling, Arkansas Terminates Planned Parenthood's Medicaid Funding Again
- Public Health 2
- One Stepfather's Quest: The Search For An Opioid That Won't Lead To Addiction
- Gene Treatment Touted As Miraculous, Revolutionary Faces One Big Obstacle
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Heated And Deep-Pocketed Battle Erupts Over 340B Drug Discount Program
Drugmakers, hospitals and lawmakers are taking sides in a showdown over a discount program that covers drug purchases at some hospitals. (Sarah Jane Tribble, 11/28)
Parents Are Not Liable For Medical Debts Of Adult Children On Shared Insurance
Even though the federal health law allows young adults to stay on their parents’ plan, those children are generally responsible for their own debts. (Michelle Andrews, 11/28)
Putting Money Where Its Mouthpiece Is: Calif. Outspends U.S. To Market Obamacare
The state insurance exchange is committing nearly five times more money than the federal government on ads urging people to sign up for health insurance, reflecting conflicting attitudes toward the Affordable Care Act. (Ana B. Ibarra and Carmen Heredia Rodriguez, 11/27)
Political Cartoon: 'Gotta Start Somewhere?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Gotta Start Somewhere?'" by J.C. Duffy.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
BIG MONEY, FIERCE DEBATE: THE 340B STORY
What’s the next battle?
A drug discount program. Can
You guess the players?
- Anonymous
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:
After Kicking Health Issues Down The Road, Congress Faces Day Of Reckoning
Among the issues Congress has on its docket in the last few legislative days of the year: an individual mandate repeal, CHIP funding and allocating money to fight the opioid epidemic.
The Hill:
Five Health-Care Fights Facing Congress In December
Health-care issues are at the top of Congress’s hefty December to-do list. Republicans spent much of the year on a failed bid to repeal and replace ObamaCare. That’s left several programs and taxes hanging in the balance as the year draws to a close, in addition to the latest health-care drama thrust into the GOP tax-reform debate. Here are five of the biggest health-care issues Congress will face next month. (Roubein, 11/26)
Politico Pro:
Congress Faces Year-End Crunch On Health Care
Lawmakers returning to Washington are confronting a full slate of health care issues that threaten to complicate a year-end sprint already fraught with debates over a major tax overhaul and immigration. The pileup is in part a consequence of Republicans’ single-minded push to repeal and replace Obamacare, which dominated health care debates for months and repeatedly collapsed in failure. (Cancryn and Pradhan, 11/27)
The Wall Street Journal:
Senators Seek Changes To Tax Bill As Busy Week Kicks Off
Senate Republicans began a frenzied week of negotiations to pass a landmark tax overhaul, grappling with several blocs of wavering GOP senators and trying to cobble together enough votes. ... A third group, including Susan Collins (R., Maine) and John McCain (R., Ariz.), helped kill the Republican health-care bill earlier this year and could pose resistance over a variety of provisions, including plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act’s health-insurance mandate as part of the tax bill. Mr. McCain said Monday that he is still undecided and had “a lot of things” he is concerned about. (Rubin and Hughes, 11/27)
The Hill:
Lawmakers Making Progress In Talks On Children's Health Care
Congressional negotiators are making progress towards a bipartisan deal to reauthorize children’s health insurance and several other important health-care programs, sources say. Staff from the relevant committees in both parties and chambers met over the Thanksgiving break and are getting closer to an agreement, according to lobbyists and aides. (Sullivan and Roubein, 11/27)
Denver Post:
Congress Has Two Months To Act Or 75,000 Kids And Pregnant Women In Colorado Will Lose Health Insurance
Colorado’s version of the program is called the Child Health Plan Plus, or CHP+. The state spends about $185 million per year on CHP+, according to a report by the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing, and nearly 90 percent of that money comes from federal funds given to the state. The program also charges some enrollment fees and copays. Without renewal from Congress, Colorado has enough money to run CHP+ until the end of January, said Marc Williams, a spokesman for Health Care Policy and Financing. (Ingold, 11/27)
A news outlet offers on-the-ground reports from Puerto Rico as the island continues its struggle to come back from the storm, and another looks at the struggle after Florida's hurricane for a family with a disabled child.
NPR:
Puerto Rico's Medical Manufacturers Worry Federal Tax Plan Could Kill Storm Recovery
In Caguas, south of San Juan, Puerto Rico, Jared Haley is fighting a daily battle at C-Axis, the medical device manufacturer where he's the general manager. The power has been out at his plant for nearly three months, since Hurricane Irma. Operating on emergency generators, the plant restarted operations last month and, Haley says, is delivering all its work on schedule. But he's not happy now with the plant's condition. Walking into his factory, he laments, "This shop used to look like a doctor's office." (Allen, 11/27)
Miami Herald:
They Do Everything For Their Sick Baby, But They Can’t Fix What Hurricane Irma Broke
Javier Gonzalez leans over the crib and lifts his infant son, Joshua Jacob, into an embrace, until a tangle of power cords and a plastic tube attached to the boy’s throat get in the way. Gonzalez holds the boy, nicknamed JJ, with one arm, and uses the other to brush aside the connections to the medical devices beside the crib, including a ventilator so he can breathe through a hole in his throat, and a suction machine to keep his airway clear. Gonzalez steadies JJ’s neck with a gentle hand and coaxes the 20-month-old to greet a stranger. (Chang, 11/27)
Insurers: Allowing States To Define Essential Benefits Would Confuse Customers, Disrupt Marketplace
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services wants to give states the ability to pick the essential health benefits insurers have to cover instead of having them follow the federal guidelines set out under the Affordable Care Act. Media outlets report on news related to the health law and its marketplace out of Arizona, Iowa, Wisconsin and California.
Modern Healthcare:
Insurers Claim Their Costs Will Rise If States Pick Essential Benefits
Health insurers fear they will be on the hook for greater healthcare costs if the CMS finalizes its proposal to allow states to define their own essential health benefits starting in 2019. In comments to the CMS, insurance companies that sell plans on the individual and small groups markets also said that giving states the ability to update their benchmark plans annually would confuse consumers and undermine the markets' stability. (Livingston, 11/27)
Arizona Republic:
Did Arizonans See 116 Percent Increase In 'Obamacare' Premiums?
For plans sold on and off the exchange, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona had an average premium increase of 51 percent, while Ambetter raised rates 74.5 percent in Maricopa County for 2017, according to Arizona Department of Insurance rate filings. An expert with the Kaiser Family Foundation, a health policy organization, said these averages paint a "broad picture" of what consumers would pay for insurance purchased through the exchange. (Bice, 11/27)
Iowa Public Radio:
More Iowans Choose Faith-Based Health Plans
Members of so-called health care sharing ministries write checks every month to cover the health care bills of other members, without the guarantees and oversight of traditional insurance. Even more Iowans are expected to enroll now that some premiums under the Affordable Care Act have skyrocketed. (Russell, 11/27)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Making An Extra $10 Could Cost You $24,000 More For Health Insurance
Being eligible for the federal subsidy — whether you’re $10 or $10,000 over the cutoff — can translate into thousands of dollars in savings when buying health insurance. And for some people, talking to a tax accountant could be as important as talking to an insurance agent or broker this year. (Boulton, 11/24)
California Healthline:
Putting Money Where Its Mouthpiece Is: Calif. Outspends U.S. To Market Obamacare
The marketing blitz is on. Californians are getting barraged with online pop-up ads, radio spots and television commercials, all aimed at persuading them to sign up for Affordable Care Act health plans during this year’s open-enrollment season. (Ibarra and Heredia Rodriguez, 11/27)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Common Ground, Children's Community Health Plan Stand To Gain Thousands Of New Customers
Common Ground Healthcare Cooperative and Children’s Community Health Plan are on their way to becoming much bigger players in the health insurance marketplaces set up by the Affordable Care Act. Children’s Community Health Plan, which covered 2,900 people in November, projects that 20,000 to 30,000 people in the six southeast Wisconsin counties where it operates will sign up for its plans in the current open-enrollment period for coverage that starts Jan. 1. (Boulton, 11/27)
HHS Nominee Likely To Be Grilled Over Drug Prices, Pharma Connections At Hearing
Alex Azar, President Donald Trump's pick to take over the top spot of the Department of Health And Human Services, will face his first nomination hearing Wednesday in front of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Stat:
7 Questions For Alex Azar, Trump's Health Secretary Nominee
On Wednesday, Alex Azar, the former drug company executive nominated to take over the country’s top health care agency, will face tough questions from the senators who try to keep that department in check. Azar heads first to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, whose members share jurisdiction on health care issues with the Senate Finance Committee, which will ultimately preside over his official confirmation hearing. (Mershon and Swetlitz, 11/28)
In other news on the administration —
The Hill:
Watchdog: VA Centers Failed To Report Potentially Dangerous Doctors
Five medical centers within the Department of Veterans Affairs failed to report eight potentially dangerous doctors to a national database where such information is collected, according to the results of a government investigation released Monday. The Government Accountability Office found in its of five VA medical centers that 148 providers were reviewed from October 2013 through March 2017 after concerns were raised about their conduct. (Hellmann, 11/27)
As Walmart Scoops Up Online Retailers, Workers See Noticeable Change In Health Benefits
One example is Walmart's recent takeover of Bonobos, where to keep biweekly premiums for workers relatively close to what they pay now, their deductibles will rise from nothing to several thousand dollars per year.
The New York Times:
As Walmart Buys Online Retailers, Their Health Benefits Suffer
The steady growth of e-commerce has been a source of jobs and benefits as employment in traditional stores declines. But at online retailers taken over by Walmart, workers are finding one benefit in retreat: their company-sponsored health coverage. In little more than a year, Walmart has spent nearly $4 billion acquiring e-commerce companies with thousands of workers. Last month, many learned that their potential out-of-pocket costs for medical expenses would increase in 2018 at a rate far exceeding the overall rise in health care costs — reaching thousands of dollars in many cases. (Scheiber and Corkery, 11/27)
Following Court Ruling, Arkansas Terminates Planned Parenthood's Medicaid Funding Again
A panel in August vacated a preliminary injunction against the state's 2015 decision to cut off funds. A full court earlier this month said it would not reconsider that decision.
The Associated Press:
Arkansas Again Cuts Off Medicaid Funds To Planned Parenthood
Arkansas has again cut off Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood, the state's Department of Human Services said Monday, following a court ruling upholding the state's decision to defund the group over videos secretly recorded by an anti-abortion group. DHS spokeswoman Amy Webb said the state terminated the group's status as a Medicaid provider last week after the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' decision formally took effect. (DeMillo, 11/27)
In other women's health news —
New Hampshire Public Radio:
N.H. Lawmakers Recommend Pharmacists Prescribe Birth Control
New Hampshire could become one of just a few states that allows birth control pills to be prescribed by pharmacists. A commission appointed by the state legislature voted unanimously last week to endorse the idea. (Ganley and McIntyre, 11/27)
One Stepfather's Quest: The Search For An Opioid That Won't Lead To Addiction
Bill Crossman's interest has been captured by a drug that binds to three opioid receptors instead of one and is intended to be superior to the sorts of painkillers that have played a central role in a growing national drug epidemic. Meanwhile, a recent study confirms that prescribing practices have contributed greatly to the crisis.
Stat:
How A Stepson’s Addiction Drove A Father To Try To Develop A Safer Opioid
Bill Crossman is an unlikely candidate to run a pharmaceutical firm. The 71-year-old Connecticut businessman had spent decades growing a diverse collection of companies making everything from elevators to eco-friendly products. He had never run a drug company — and had little to no experience in the industry. But Crossman’s long-lasting struggle to help his stepson overcome an opioid use disorder drove him to search for answers. A scientist who started Phoenix Pharma Labs, a tiny private drug company, introduced Crossman to an opioid he believed could someday treat pain well without increasing risk of addiction. (Blau, 11/28)
Bloomberg:
How Opioids Started Killing Americans
More than half of all people who succumbed to an overdose between 2001 to 2007 were chronic pain sufferers who filled an opioid prescription and sometimes even saw a doctor in the month before they died. Only 4 percent were ever diagnosed as having an abuse problem, said Dr. Mark Olfson, one of five researchers who conducted a massive study of the crisis and its causes for Columbia University Medical Center. The findings of the new study, published Tuesday in the American Journal of Psychiatry, split the epidemic into two groups: those who were diagnosed with chronic pain and those who weren’t. In the year before they died, about two-thirds of those studied were diagnosed with chronic pain and prescribed an opioid. (Rausch, 11/28)
Gene Treatment Touted As Miraculous, Revolutionary Faces One Big Obstacle
Disabled viruses are a key component of the therapy that may hold the power to cure genetic diseases with a single treatment. But those viruses are costly and hard to obtain. In other public health news: work travel and health problems; the difference between listening to someone's argument versus reading it; therapy for sexual misconduct; and more.
The New York Times:
Gene Therapy Hits A Peculiar Roadblock: A Virus Shortage
Eager to speed development of revolutionary treatments, the Food and Drug Administration recently announced that it would expedite approval of experimental gene therapies. But the regulatory process may not be the biggest obstacle here. Biotech companies have exciting plans to introduce treatments that may be transformative, sometimes curing genetic diseases with a single treatment. And the firms are itching to test their products. (Kolata, 11/27)
Stat:
Researchers Work To Make Experimental Phage Therapy Less Of A Long Shot
The Phage Directory could help shorten the steps for those who are desperately looking for the right virus. [Jessica] Sacher and [Jan] Zheng designed it as a one-stop-shop where researchers could list the kinds of bacteria that might be fought with the different phages they have in their labs. Originally they were going to call it Phagebook, but the domain name was taken. ...Scientists would still have to test the phages against a particular patient’s bacteria, and then purify the virus so that it doesn’t poison the person with remaining bacterial bits. (Boodman, 11/28)
The New York Times:
It’s The Grim Reality Of Frequent Work Travel: Health Problems
Their lives may be portrayed as glamorous. In fact, they’re often the opposite. Pity frequent business travelers. Doctors at organizations including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the International Society of Travel Medicine say they are hearing of a range of health problems in frequent travelers, from insomnia and weight gain to viruses. And they said they see a need for more comprehensive research into the health compromises made by business travelers, both short haul and long haul. (La Gorce, 11/27)
The Washington Post:
Science Shows Why It’s Important To Speak — Not Write — To People Who Disagree With You
In “The Humanizing Voice: Speech Can Reveal, and Text Conceal, The Presence of a Thoughtful Mind in The Midst of Disagreement” in a recent issue of Psychological Science, Juliana Schroeder of the University of California at Berkeley and faculty at the University of Chicago conducted several experiments exposing volunteers to ideas they agreed or disagreed with. In one, about 300 people watched, listened to or read arguments about war, abortion or music (country or rap — genres people tend to have strong feelings about). Afterward, the volunteers were asked to judge the person who communicated the argument. Those who were exposed to someone they disagreed with tended to “dehumanize” the communicator. That is, they regarded the person as “having a diminished capacity to either think or feel.” However, those who listened to the argument, either in a video or audio file, were less dismissive than those who read a transcript of the opposing opinion. (Nutt, 11/27)
The New York Times:
Therapy For Sexual Misconduct? It’s Mostly Unproven
The recent surge in accusations of sexual harassment and assault has prompted some admitted offenders to seek professional help for the emotional or personality distortions that underlie their behavior. “My journey now will be to learn about myself and conquer my demons,” the producer Harvey Weinstein said in a statement in October. The actor Kevin Spacey announced that he would be “taking the time necessary to seek evaluation and treatment.” (Carey, 11/27)
Los Angeles Times:
Inspired By Origami, Scientists Build Artificial Muscle That Lifts 1,000 Times Its Own Weight
Scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University have developed a variety of origami-inspired artificial muscles that can lift up to a thousand times their own weight — and yet be dexterous enough to grip and raise a delicate flower. The devices, described in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offer a new way to give soft robots super-strength, which could be used everywhere from inside our bodies to outer space. (Khan, 11/27)
Atlanta Journal Constitution:
Silent Killer: 5 Reasons To Take A Second Look At Your Blood Pressure
According to the new guidelines, developed by the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology, nearly half of American adults now suffer from high blood pressure, an increase of 30 million people compared to the previous definition. Often called the "silent killer," high blood pressure often doesn't make people feel ill until it's too late to prevent a heart attack, stroke or significant kidney damage. (Hunt, 11/27)
WBUR:
New Generation Of Transgender Americans Wants To Change Laws, Not Just Minds
More than half of LGBTQ Americans older than 50 say the larger problem is discrimination from individuals. Younger generations say biased laws share the blame. (Bebinger, 11/28)
ProPublica:
For Some Victims, Reporting A Rape Can Bring Doubt, Abuse — And Even Prosecution
There are many reasons for women to think twice about reporting sexual assault. But one potential consequence looms especially large: They may also be prosecuted. (Armstrong and Miller, 11/24)
Media outlets report on news from California, Georgia, Colorado, Florida, Tennessee, Texas, Minnesota, Iowa and Indiana.
Los Angeles Times:
San Diego's Hepatitis A Update: Case Count Climbs, But Death Total Holds At 20
Though they continue to see fewer cases and no new deaths have been reported since Oct. 31, San Diego County supervisors on Monday chose to continue the local health emergency status for the region’s ongoing hepatitis A outbreak. Supervisor Ron Roberts noted that, while he considered the latest hepatitis A report from the county Health and Human Services Agency good news, the emergency won't be truly over until new-case rates shrink further. (Sisson, 11/27)
Georgia Health News:
Panel Backs Broader Powers For Advanced Nurses In Rural Areas
A Senate study committee Monday recommended the state allow advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs) broader medical authority if they work in rural, underserved counties. Under current state law, nurse practitioners and other advanced nurses in Georgia can prescribe medications only under a collaborative agreement with a physician. (Miller, 11/27)
Denver Post:
UCHealth Rolls Out Campaign To Motivate Men To Take Care Of Themselves
November is men’s health awareness month, and UCHealth is spreading the word. The care system launched a campaign called “MANtenance” to address the importance of physical health and stress management and to talk about topics like masculinity — subjects many believe need greater emphasis in modern life. While more men are paying attention to and talking about health issues like prostate and testicular cancer, MANtenance encourages men to focus on and maintain their everyday health, as well. UCHealth recruited C.J. Anderson of the Denver Broncos, Gabriel Landeskog of the Colorado Avalanche and University of Colorado men’s basketball head coach Tad Boyle to serve as spokesmen for the campaign. (Rios, 11/27)
Miami Herald:
UM Hospital Can’t Stop Bleeding Money As Costs Soar And Admissions Drop
A recent Securities and Exchange Commission filing for UM shows that the university lost $94.5 million operating the hospital during the year that ended May 31. That’s more than double the $45 million UM lost on the hospital during the prior year. (Chang, 11/27)
Nashville Tennessean:
Mayor Barry Announces Stakeholder Team For Contentious Nashville General Hospital Overhaul
Two weeks after Mayor Megan Barry abruptly announced plans to end inpatient care at Nashville General Hospital, a new 11-member stakeholder team has formed to guide the administration's final proposal. Barry, in a letter last week to the Metro Council, said she will lean on a committee organized by Meharry Medical College President James E. K. Hildreth to help form a final proposal for the city's safety-net hospital that serves Nashville's indigent population. (Garrison, 11/27)
Dallas Morning News:
In-Home Nurses Provide Personal Care For New Dallas-Area Mothers And Their Children
The Nurse-Family Partnership provides first-time, low-income mothers in Dallas-Fort Worth with a personal nurse from the time they're pregnant until their child's second birthday. The free initiative partners with the WiNGS Dallas center, the Parkland Health & Hospital System and Tarrant County Public Health services to assign mothers a registered nurse to check on them and their baby at their home. (Limón, 11/27)
Health News Florida:
USF Partners With HCA To Train Doctors In West Florida
The University of South Florida has formed a partnership with a network of hospitals to train more doctors in the Tampa Bay area. The consortium with HCA West Florida could help with the state's looming physician shortage and help the hospital chain keep more qualified doctors in the Tampa Bay area. (Ochoa, 11/27)
Minnesota Public Radio:
After The Bullet: HCMC Helps Young Gun Victims Find Their Footing
On a recent weekday morning, [D'Andre] Alexander glides his wheel chair into an office at HCMC to check in with counselor Farji Shaheer, one of two who staff the hospital's Next Step program. Since 2016, 170 HCMC patients have participated in the program. The majority of whom are, like Alexander, between 14 and 26 years of age, black and have been injured by gun fire. (Williams, 11/27)
The Associated Press:
Lawsuit: Iowa School For Juvenile Offenders Misusing Drugs
Officials at an Iowa school for juvenile offenders are failing to provide adequate mental health care to youth and are instead administering powerful drugs without proper oversight or consent, according to a lawsuit filed Monday by two advocacy groups. Disability Rights Iowa and Children’s Rights, a national watchdog group, accuse administrators at the state-run Boys State Training School of giving juveniles “dangerous” psychotropic medications. The groups allege the drugs are used “as a behavioral management tool” they likened to a chemical straitjacket. (Rodriguez, 11/27)
The Washington Post:
Nurse Removed From Hospital After Saying White Boys ‘Should Be Sacrificed To The Wolves’
An Indiana hospital system says a nurse is no longer an employee after she was tied to a message on Twitter claiming white women are raising sons “with the HIGHEST propensity to be a terrorist, rapist, racist, killer, and domestic violence all star.” Officials at Indiana University Health said over the weekend they were investigating “several troubling posts on social media” that appeared to be made by a recently hired employee identified in news reports as Taiyesha Baker. IU Health spokesman Jason Fechner confirmed Monday that the nurse no longer works at Indiana University Health Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis but he would not say whether she was fired, citing company policies. (Bever, 11/27)
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
USA Today:
GOP Tax Bill Is Just Another Way To Repeal Health Care. Will Coverage Ever Be Safe?
It has been just two months since the Senate gave up on trying to pass a series of health care bills that Americans had soundly rejected in poll after poll. Yet the same Republican recipe for health care now is back on the table in the form of the lopsided tax bill that the Senate plans to vote on this week. A lot of people get intimidated by the idea of trying to understand the tax bill. It’s a shame because, much like congressional budgets, tax bills reveal priorities. (Andy Slavitt, 11/28)
The Washington Post:
How The Republican Tax Cut Plan Goes After Health Care
The primary lines of attack on the Republican tax cut plan have been twofold: It redistributes incomes upward, from the middle class to the wealthy, and it significantly raises the debt. These attacks have been potent in the sense that the longer this awful plan sits out there, the less popular it becomes. Unfortunately, contemporary tax policy, Republican-style, is not a representative exercise. It’s all about pleasing the rich donor base, posting a win, any win, and shrinking the government at any cost. About that last point, consider the other reason the tax plan is so ill-advised: its potential effect on health care. (Jared Bernstein, 11/27)
The New York Times:
The Biggest Tax Scam In History
Meanwhile, the bill would partially repeal Obamacare, in a way that would sharply reduce aid to lower-income families and raise the cost of insurance for many in the middle class. (Paul Krugman, 11/27)
Los Angeles Times:
On Children's Health Coverage, Congressional Inaction Has Brought Us To The 'Nightmare Scenario'
Child healthcare advocates have been warning, and warning, and warning that Congress' delay on reauthorizing funds for the Children's Health Insurance Program places health coverage for as many as 9 million children and pregnant women at risk. But since the funding expired Sept. 30, there has been no action by Congress. (Michael Hiltzik, 11/27)
The Des Moines Register:
Grassley's Passion Is Needed On Children's Health Insurance Program
[A] dysfunctional Congress is putting insurance for these children in jeopardy. Lawmakers missed a Sept. 30 deadline to extend funding to the popular program. Now it's running out of money for the first time since its creation. ... Officials in nearly a dozen states plan to begin notifying families this week that the health insurance program may come to an end. Iowa expects to have adequate funding for a few more months, but the federal government pays nearly 90 percent of the cost. If Congress fails to act, this state will be faced with finding alternatives, which may include spending millions of additional state dollars we don’t have or shuttering our program. So where the heck is Sen. Chuck Grassley? (11/27)
Providence Journal:
Governor’s Medicaid Cuts Go Too Deep
The legislators passed a budget bill that directed Gov. Gina Raimondo to find $25 million in “undistributed savings,” requiring no legislative oversight and depriving the public the opportunity to weigh in on how the savings would be achieved. In early October, the governor responded, outlining a plan that would draw about 20 percent of those cuts from the state’s Medicaid program. Such a large cut is a burden to Rhode Islanders who rely on Medicaid for their care. Worse, the majority of the Medicaid cuts undermine two of the state’s most important “Reinventing Medicaid” initiatives — “rebalancing long-term care” and “health-care system redesign.” (Linda Katz and Karen Malcolm, 11/27)
Forbes:
Maine's Medicaid Mistake Could Cost Lives
Maine made history earlier this month by becoming the first state to adopt Obamacare's Medicaid expansion via ballot initiative. The vote could inspire progressive activists in other states to push for similar referenda. Expanding Medicaid to cover childless, able-bodied adults would blow a hole in state budgets while yielding few, if any, public health gains. That's because Medicaid provides such low-quality care that its beneficiaries often experience worse health outcomes than people with no health insurance. (Sally Pipes, 11/27)
Stat:
Hospitals Need To Earn Their Tax-Exempt Status
At a time when tax reform is at the top of legislative priorities, it is easy to forget that most of the richest and most profitable hospital systems in the United States enjoy tax-exempt status. They were given this in exchange for providing benefits to their local communities, like charity care and medical outreach. However, as Politico’s Dan Diamond recently reported about the Mayo Clinic, whether those hospitals serve inner-city neighborhoods or sparsely populated rural areas, they frequently overlook the communities they are required to serve. (Haider Warraich, 11/27)
Louisville Courier-Journal:
Tobacco Tax Increase Would Be Win For Kentucky, Business And Health
Recently, a coalition of more than 100 health care, business, education, and health advocacy groups comprising the Coalition for a Smoke-Free Tomorrow called on the Kentucky legislature to raise the state tax on cigarettes by $1 per pack, with parallel increases in taxes on other tobacco products. (Ben Chandler, 11/24)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Bill Puts UW's Ob-Gyn Program At Risk
But, as ob-gyn residents who are currently training at UW, we are deeply concerned that this stellar program will end — because of proposed legislation introduced by State Rep. Andre Jacque and State Sen. Chris Kapenga. This legislation (Assembly Bill 206 and Senate Bill 154) would eliminate the UW’s ability to offer ob-gyn residents training in abortion services as required by the national accrediting body, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. (Sierra M. Jansen and Ross Harrison, 11/27)