- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Hospitals Find Asthma Hot Spots More Profitable To Neglect Than Fix
- Attack On Asthma: Scrubbing Homes Of Allergens May Tame Disease And Its Costs
- Your Plumber Offers A Money-Back Guarantee. Should Your Doctor?
- Facebook Live: A Status Check On Obamacare Enrollment
- Political Cartoon: 'Stop Me If You've Heard This One?'
- Health Law 2
- Future Of Bipartisan ACA Fix Wobbly Despite Key Role It Played In Securing Tax Bill Votes
- Ways And Means Chairman Expects Strong Support For Mandate Repeal From House Republicans
- Capitol Watch 2
- For Many It's 'Beyond Belief' That Funding For Wildly Popular CHIP Program Is In Limbo
- Democrats Want To See Funding To Fight Opioid Epidemic In Spending Bill
- Women’s Health 1
- D.C. Latest To Try To Preemptively Protect Women's Health Benefits In Case ACA Is Rolled Back
- Public Health 1
- Ban Over Discussing Public Figures' Mental Health 'Scientifically Indefensible,' Experts Argue
- State Watch 2
- Official Struggles To Defend NYC's Lapses On Lead Inspections, Concedes More Could Have Been Done
- State Highlights: Health Policies Move Into Focus In Md., Iowa Gubernatorial Races; Fla. Cancer Center Uses Math To Pursue Treatments, Cure
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Hospitals Find Asthma Hot Spots More Profitable To Neglect Than Fix
Months of reporting and rich hospital data portray life in the worst asthma hot spot in one of the worst asthma cities: Baltimore. The medical system knows how to help. But there’s no money in it. (Jay Hancock and Rachel Bluth and Daniel Trielli, 12/6)
Attack On Asthma: Scrubbing Homes Of Allergens May Tame Disease And Its Costs
A pilot program to asthma-proof homes in Baltimore shows that even without intensive professional cleaning services, families can learn to substantially reduce home allergens on their own. (Douglas Birch, 12/6)
Your Plumber Offers A Money-Back Guarantee. Should Your Doctor?
Even though consumers don’t expect to pay for faulty service or goods, they are often forced to pay for bad health care. But a small number of hospitals and doctors are seeking to change that practice. (Michelle Andrews, 12/6)
Facebook Live: A Status Check On Obamacare Enrollment
In this chat, KHN’s Julie Appleby offers a progress report on the 2018 sign up season. (12/5)
Political Cartoon: 'Stop Me If You've Heard This One?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Stop Me If You've Heard This One?'" by Brian Crane.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
A HEALTH SYSTEM NOT BUILT AROUND DOCS? CVS-AETNA ARE GOING TO TRY
CVS-Aetna
To diminish doctors' role
"No-P-O" network.
- Ernest R. Smith
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:
Future Of Bipartisan ACA Fix Wobbly Despite Key Role It Played In Securing Tax Bill Votes
Some centrist Republicans only threw support behind the tax bill after they were assured that legislation shoring up the health law marketplace would pass. But the future of the bills don't look certain. Meanwhile, House Speaker Paul Ryan's office said that he made no such promise to help get the fixes through before the end of the year.
The Wall Street Journal:
Support Wavers For Senate Bill To Shore Up Health-Insurance Markets
Republicans appear to be on the brink of striking down the Affordable Care Act’s health-insurance requirement, an ardently sought goal of the law’s opponents. But the fate of a bipartisan bill that centrist Republicans hoped would offset some of the fallout remains uncertain. Some key GOP centrists supported a Senate tax overhaul that repeals the requirement that most people have health insurance, a move experts say will likely drive up premiums, on the condition that it be swiftly accompanied by a bipartisan measure that aims to lower premiums. (Armour and Peterson, 12/5)
The Hill:
Ryan's Office Warning He Wasn't Part Of Deal On ObamaCare: Source
Speaker Paul Ryan's (R-Wis.) office told a meeting of congressional leadership offices on Monday that the Speaker is not part of a deal to get ObamaCare fixes passed before the end of the year, according to a source familiar with the meeting. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) made a commitment to Sen Susan Collins (R-Maine) that he would support passage of two bipartisan ObamaCare bills before the end of the year, a promise that helped win her vote for tax reform. (Sullivan, 12/5)
In other news —
Kaiser Health News:
Facebook Live: A Status Check On Obamacare Enrollment
As of today, Dec. 5, only 10 more shopping days remain for consumers who buy their own Affordable Care Act health insurance on the federal exchange and in most state marketplaces. So how is it going? What are the numbers so far? What are the market trends? And how has the enrollment experience been for consumers? This live chat features KHN senior correspondent Julie Appleby answering these and other questions. (12/5)
CQ:
States Upbeat on Health Exchange Enrollment Outlook
Enrollment in the state health insurance exchanges is looking healthier than on the federal platform as local officials deploy targeted advertisements and allow for later deadlines. Many states embraced the flexibility that comes with running their own exchange by maintaining a longer enrollment period than the six-week window established this year by the Trump administration. State exchanges have significantly more control over enrollment than states that rely on HealthCare.gov, including the ability to set deadlines. Open enrollment on the federal HealthCare.gov website ends Dec. 15, but states have deadlines as late as Jan. 31. (Clason, 12/6)
Ways And Means Chairman Expects Strong Support For Mandate Repeal From House Republicans
The House and Senate will have to smooth out the differences between their tax bills, including what to do about the health law's individual mandate. Meanwhile, advocates are sounding the alarm over the ways the tax bill will threaten health care for Americans.
The Hill:
Chairman Expects 'Strong Support' Among House GOP For Mandate Repeal In Tax Bill
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady (R-Texas) told reporters Tuesday that he expects most House Republicans will support repealing ObamaCare's individual mandate in tax legislation, as GOP senators did. "We'll be asking our members where do they want us to be on that position. I suspect there will be strong support," he said. (Jagoda, 12/5)
CQ HealthBeat:
House Republicans Grapple With Health Law Decisions in Tax Bill
Moderate House Republicans who voted against an overhaul of the health care law earlier this year are keeping quiet on the issue so far. Senate Republicans voted last week to roll back the individual mandate of the 2010 health care law as part of a major tax bill. The provision wasn’t in a House-passed measure, but it was in an overhaul of the health law that House Republicans passed earlier this year. (McIntire, 12/5)
The Hill:
House Conservatives Push For Repeal Of ObamaCare Mandate In Final Tax Bill
The Republican Study Committee (RSC), a group of conservative Republicans in the House, is pushing for tax reform to include a repeal of the individual insurance mandate. "Including language to repeal this harmful policy will return personal decisions about health care choices to patients, fulfilling a key promise we have made to the American people," the RSC wrote in a letter being circulated among members. (Hellmann, 12/5)
The Philadelphia Inquirer/Philly.com:
GOP Tax Bills Threaten Health Care For Many In Pa., N.J., Advocates Say
Just months after Congress failed to repeal Obamacare, local advocates are now scrambling to decipher what the GOP tax overhaul plans could mean for the health care of seniors, children and the disabled. The verdict of the (overwhelmingly Democratic) advocates is grim. The Senate tax bill, which dumps the penalty for those who don’t buy health insurance, will swell the ranks of the uninsured. So much so that more than 1,000 Pennsylvania residents a year could die unnecessarily, they declared Tuesday. Nearly 387,000 tax filers in New Jersey could be in dire straits under the House version, which eliminates the itemized deduction for medical expenses. (Sapatkin, 12/5)
For Many It's 'Beyond Belief' That Funding For Wildly Popular CHIP Program Is In Limbo
“It crushes me to think we’re in an environment where kids’ health is up for debate," said Dr. Todd Wolynn, a pediatrician in Pittsburgh. Although the program has enjoyed strong bipartisan support in the past, Congress has been dawdling on renewing funding for the program.
The New York Times:
The CHIP Program Is Beloved. Why Is Its Funding In Danger?
Laquita Gardner, a sales manager at a furniture rental store here, was happy to get a raise recently except for one problem. It lifted her income just enough to disqualify her and her two young sons from Medicaid, the free health insurance program for the poor. She was relieved to find another option was available for the boys: the Children’s Health Insurance Program, known as CHIP, that covers nearly nine million children whose parents earn too much for Medicaid, but not enough to afford other coverage. (Goodnough and Pear, 12/5)
CQ:
Long-Term Children's Health Funding Remains Unclear
A stopgap funding bill revealed last week could further stretch the timeline for renewing funds for the Children’s Health Insurance Program, but questions remain about how a longer-term renewal will come together. The continuing resolution to extend funding for the government and prevent a shutdown that was released last week would make it easier for states to use additional redistributed funding without being subject to a cap. Essentially, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could distribute leftover federal dollars through the end of the year even to states that already received their maximum share of the redistribution funding under current rules. (Raman, 12/5)
Denver Post:
Hickenlooper Says He’s Frustrated, Baffled That Congress Hasn’t Renewed Children’s Health Insurance Program
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper on Tuesday renewed his call for Congress to reauthorize the Children’s Health Insurance Program, expressing exasperation and bewilderment that funding for the bipartisan children’s health care program had been allowed to expire in the first place. “How did we get to this point?” Hickenlooper said on a Tuesday afternoon conference call with reporters. “To be honest, no one has explained to me why (it hasn’t been renewed). We know there’s the votes in the Senate, and we know there’s the votes in the House. But it is not coming out of committee.” (Eason, 12/5)
Democrats Want To See Funding To Fight Opioid Epidemic In Spending Bill
But Republicans haven't been as vocal about allocating more money for the crisis, so it's unclear how much will make it into the final legislation.
The Hill:
Dems Push For More Money For Opioid Fight
Top Democrats are pushing for additional federal dollars to combat the opioid epidemic, saying more money is needed to curb the crisis killing thousands of Americans each year. Democrats have indicated that additional opioid funding will be one of several top priorities the party is pushing for in a larger spending deal. But Republicans haven’t matched their rhetoric, making it unclear if additional dollars will come in a spending package. (Roubein, 12/5)
In other news on the crisis —
New Hampshire Public Radio:
N.H. Medical Examiner Seeking More Workers To Handle Heavy Caseload
The state medical examiner’s office is dealing with a heavy workload amid the opioid crisis and staffing shortages. Its case load has nearly doubled in the last two decades due to population growth and the drug crisis. Former chief medical examiner Dr. Andrew Thomas retired this year, and Dr. Jennie Duval took his place. (Ganley and McIntyre, 12/5)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Ohio Woman Accused Of Overdosing With Child In Car
A 28-year-old woman was arrested after she was found in a car unconscious from an overdose with her 19-month-old child inside. (Pinckard, 12/6)
Experts Predict FTC Will Be More Lenient Of CVS-Aetna Deal Than Justice Department
But they also say CVS's plan to buy Aetna is "eminently approvable" by either agency because critics would be unable to come up with a convincing theory to show the deal will harm consumers. Meanwhile, a House Democrat is already calling for a probe of the merger.
Reuters:
CVS Likely Wants FTC Antitrust Review, Not Justice Department, Of Aetna Deal
It is uncertain who in the U.S. government will carry out an antitrust review of CVS Health Corp's deal to buy health insurer Aetna Inc, but the drugstore company is likely hoping the potentially more lenient Federal Trade Commission gets the nod, antitrust experts say. The Justice Department's Antitrust Division and Federal Trade Commission share the job of reviewing mergers to make sure they don't hurt consumers, but sometimes it comes down to a coin toss as to who reviews a deal that involves both agencies' areas of expertise. (Bartz, 12/5)
The Hill:
Top House Dem Calls For Probe Into CVS-Aetna Merger
A top House Democrat is calling for a hearing to examine the merger between CVS and Aetna. In a letter to House Energy and Commerce Committee chairman Greg Walden (R-Ore.), the committee’s ranking member Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.) asked for a hearing on the merger as soon as possible. (Weixel, 12/5)
And in more news on the $69 billion deal —
Bloomberg:
Wall Street Is Wary Of An Untested Strategy In CVS-Aetna Megamerger
The success of CVS Health Corp.’s $67.5 billion acquisition of health insurer Aetna Inc. rides on a bet on a complex and untested strategy, and some in Wall Street are questioning whether the companies can pull it off. CVS plans to build mini health centers in some of its 9,700 stores, turning them into key locations where Aetna members -- and customers of rival insurers -- get low-level care for ailments and chronic diseases. Already, CVS has 1,100 MinuteClinics in its pharmacies, and is testing out hearing and vision offerings in a handful of locations. (Tracer, 12/5)
The Wall Street Journal:
CVS Boss Larry Merlo’s Path From Corner Pharmacy To C-Suite
The architect of the year’s biggest and arguably most surprising health-care deal is a former pharmacist from rural Pennsylvania who won over Wall Street with a reboot of CVS Health Corp. Larry Merlo, CVS’s chief executive since 2011, impressed skeptics with his turnaround of Caremark, the pharmacy-benefits manager that CVS bought four years before he took over. (Terlep, 12/5)
The Wall Street Journal:
Aetna’s Outgoing CEO Set to Reap About $500 Million If CVS Deal Closes
Aetna Inc. Chief Executive Mark T. Bertolini is set to pocket roughly half a billion dollars when he leaves his company if it successfully merges with CVS Health Corp. If the $69 billion deal between the pharmacy chain and health insurer goes through, Mr. Bertolini stands to reap a generous exit payment and benefit from a sizable increase in the value of the stock and rights he owns because of the premium CVS is paying for Aetna. His combined payout is expected to be about $500 million, according to people familiar with the matter, a review of Aetna filings, and analysis from compensation-research firm Equilar Inc. (Mattioli, Mathews and Becker, 12/5)
Bloomberg:
CVS’s Aetna Takeover Comes With A $2.1 Billion Termination Fee
CVS Health Corp. could owe Aetna Inc. $2.1 billion if the drugstore chain’s acquisition of the health insurer fails, according to a merger agreement filed Tuesday. CVS would owe Aetna the funds if the deal announced Sunday fails for a variety of reasons, including if it can’t gain approval from antitrust authorities. (Tracer, 12/5)
D.C. Latest To Try To Preemptively Protect Women's Health Benefits In Case ACA Is Rolled Back
The legislation will ultimately be subject to congressional review, but council members say that any lawmaker who opposes it can expect a strong fight. In other women's health news: the ACLU pushes back against claims that it acted improperly during a case over a pregnant teenage immigrant, and a new study questions the benefits of mammograms.
The Washington Post:
D.C. Moves To Protect Women’s Health Coverage If Affordable Care Act Repealed
In anticipation of regulatory rollbacks and the possible repeal of the Affordable Care Act, the D.C. Council voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to block insurance providers in the District from charging additional fees for preventive women’s health services. The legislation requires insurance providers to offer contraception, breast cancer screening and counseling for sexually transmitted infections without raising co-pays or deductibles. These benefits are required by guidelines released with the Affordable Care Act but are not written into the text of the law and could be erased by federal action. (Chason, 12/5)
The Associated Press:
ACLU Disputes Suggestion Of Wrongdoing In Abortion Case
The American Civil Liberties Union is pushing back against a claim by the Trump administration that ACLU attorneys acted improperly while helping an immigrant teenager held in federal custody obtain an abortion. The government last month accused the ACLU of misleading the Justice Department during the high-profile case. In papers filed with the Supreme Court, the Justice Department said ACLU attorneys did not alert government lawyers that the teen’s abortion would take place sooner than they expected. That, the administration says, deprived its lawyers of the chance to ask the Supreme Court to block the procedure, at least temporarily. The government suggested disciplinary action against ACLU attorneys might be appropriate. (Gresko, 12/5)
Los Angeles Times:
Widespread Screening For Breast Cancer Didn't Do Much To Save Women's Lives, Study Finds
Breast cancer deaths have declined markedly in the Netherlands since a nationwide screening program began in 1989, but mammograms deserve little — if any — of the credit, a new study suggests. In fact, the main impact of inviting Dutch women between the ages of 50 and 74 to get a mammogram every other year has been a steady increase in cases of early-stage breast cancers. More than half of these cancers were harmless and would have gone totally unnoticed if women hadn't had mammograms in the first place, the study authors report. (Kaplan, 12/5)
Ban Over Discussing Public Figures' Mental Health 'Scientifically Indefensible,' Experts Argue
The Goldwater Rule has long-banned mental health professionals from weighing in on public figures. But experts say the evidence they can gather through public speeches, behavior and tweets is actually more reliable than in-person evaluations. In other news: asthma hot spots, temporary doctors, the ethics of uterine transplants, germs in the International Space Station, and more.
Stat:
Experts Challenge Ban On Psychiatrists Discussing Politicians' Mental Health
A prohibition against psychiatrists discussing the mental health of public figures — a rule that has become especially controversial, and sometimes flouted, since the inauguration of President Trump — is “premised on dubious scientific assumptions,” researchers concluded in an analysis scheduled for publication in a psychology journal. The American Psychiatric Association (APA) defends its “Goldwater rule” by arguing that an in-person psychiatric examination is the gold standard for diagnosing mental illness and psychological traits — given that there are no blood tests or brain scans for psychiatric disorders. (Begley, 12/6)
Kaiser Health News:
Hospitals Find Asthma Hot Spots More Profitable To Neglect Than Fix
Keyonta Parnell has had asthma most of his young life, but it wasn’t until his family moved to the 140-year-old house here on Lemmon Street two years ago that he became one of the health care system’s frequent customers. “I call 911 so much since I’ve been living here, they know my name,” said the 9-year-old’s mother, Darlene Summerville, who calls the emergency medical system her “best friend.” (Hancock, Bluth and Trielli, 12/6)
Kaiser Health News:
Attack On Asthma: Scrubbing Homes Of Allergens May Tame Disease And Its Costs
After years of studying the causes of asthma, a pediatrician-turned-public health sleuth thinks there’s a way to substantially reduce its impact. But the approach faces a big hurdle: getting someone to pay for it, said Dr. Elizabeth Matsui, a professor at Johns Hopkins medical school in Baltimore. Matsui, who suffered from asthma as a child, has spent much of her career studying the link between poor housing and asthma in low-income neighborhoods. (Birch, 12/6)
The New York Times:
Air Pollution May Harm Babies Even Before They Are Born
Air pollution may be harmful to babies even before they are born, a new study has found. Researchers in London calculated mothers’ exposure to air pollution and traffic noise in various parts of the city from 2006 to 2010. Then they amassed data on birth weights of 540,365 babies born during those years to women who lived in those areas. (Bakalar, 12/5)
Stat:
Temporary Doctors Are No Worse For Patients' Health, Study Finds
Doctors who are employed under short-term contracts — called locum tenens (Latin for “to hold a place”) — provided a similar level of care as staff doctors, a study published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association found. Researchers came to that conclusion after analyzing 1.8 million Medicare patients hospitalized between 2009 and 2014 who were treated by general internists. No significant difference in 30-day mortality rates was seen between patients treated by temp physicians compared to those treated by staff physicians. That finding could help dispel the stigma that temp doctors have long faced, researchers said. (Blau, 12/5)
WBUR:
First Baby Born To U.S. Uterus Transplant Patient Raises Ethics Questions
Beautiful. Pure. Natural. Medicine at its pinnacle. Those were the words of Dr. Giuliano Testa this week — the principal investigator of a clinical trial with ten women underway at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas. He was talking about the birth of a baby boy to a mother who underwent a uterus transplant last year. It's a first in the U.S., but in Sweden, eight babies have been born to mothers with uterus transplants. (Jochem, 12/5)
The Washington Post:
The International Space Station Is Super Germy
Thousands of species have colonized the International Space Station — and only one of them is Homo sapiens. According to a new study in the journal PeerJ, the interior surfaces of the 17-year-old, 250-mile-high, airtight space station harbor at least 1,000 and perhaps more than 4,000 microbe species — a finding that is actually “reassuring,” according to co-author David Coil. (Kaplan, 12/5)
Miami Herald:
Clinical Trial For Zika Vaccine Shows Promise. But Will It Prevent Infection?
An experimental Zika vaccine developed by scientists at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is safe and induces an immune response in healthy adults, according to findings from an early stage clinical trial published Monday in The Lancet, a medical journal. The DNA-based experimental vaccine is now in the second phase of clinical trials to determine its safety and effectiveness at preventing infection with Zika virus. (Chang, 12/4)
Orange County Register:
Here’s A Look At The Stats Around Flu Season, Plus Tips To Avoid Getting Sick
Influenza activity is rising across the U.S. with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reporting recent widespread activity in several states. Serious outcomes of flu infection can result in hospitalization or death. The CDC and the California Department of Public Health are recommending everyone over six months old get vaccinated. (Snibbe and Goertzen, 12/4)
Health News Florida:
Experts And Activists Coincide: Conversations About HIV/AIDS Should Go Beyond World AIDS Day
World AIDS Day has been celebrated every Dec. 1 since 1988 as a day of remembrance for those whot have died of and those who are living with the disease. There were many events to mark the day in South Florida, from open-air concerts to free testing. But experts and activists agree that the discussions about treatment and prevention of HIV should be part of an ongoing conversation in the community and not a once-a-year affair. (Garcia, 12/4)
Official Struggles To Defend NYC's Lapses On Lead Inspections, Concedes More Could Have Been Done
The City Council grilled New York City Housing Authority Chairwoman Shola Olatoye over the lead inspection problems, focusing on the long delay between when officials learned of the lapses and when City Hall and the agency acknowledged them publicly for the first time
The New York Times:
At Hearing On Lead-Paint Test Lapses, Questions Go Unanswered
The embattled chairwoman of the New York City Housing Authority faced withering questioning at the City Council on Tuesday about lapses in lead-paint inspections, and she struggled to explain communication failures that left the public uninformed about the risks they posed. Even as she defended the city’s response, the chairwoman, Shola Olatoye, conceded that more could have been done over the past year to tell residents what top officials learned in mid-2016: Lead-paint inspections ceased in 2012 and were not restarted for nearly four years. (Goodman, 12/5)
The Wall Street Journal:
New York City Council Grills Housing Chief On Lead-Paint Issue
New York City Housing Authority Chairwoman Shola Olatoye told the City Council that she regretted submitting documentation to federal officials showing the agency was in compliance for lead paint when it hadn’t conducted the required inspections in four years. “Signing the forms at that time was a mistake,” she said during nearly four hours of testimony. She said she thought at the time that an informal notice to federal officials was sufficient. (Gay, 12/5)
Media outlets report on news from Maryland, Iowa, Florida, Illinois, New York, California, Oklahoma and Ohio.
The Baltimore Sun:
Ben Jealous Releases Plan For Statewide 'Medicare For All'
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ben Jealous released a plan Wednesday calling on Maryland to take the plunge and create a universal health care system without waiting for the the federal government to take the lead. The release of Jealous’ outline of a statewide “Medicare for all” plan comes as he is planning a Wednesday night rally at the College of Notre Dame with 2016 presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, a supporter of single-payer health care who has endorsed Jealous’ candidacy. (Dresser, 12/6)
Des Moines Register:
Iowa Governor Candidates Lay Out Plans For Mental Health
A dozen candidates for governor gathered Tuesday night to lay out their plans for improved access, funding and treatment for mental health services across the state. At a public panel hosted by The Des Moines Register, the candidates voiced near-universal criticism of Iowa's privatized Medicaid system, which has faced a tumultuous couple of months following the departure of one of the private companies hired to provide services. (Pfannenstiel, 12/5)
Tampa Bay Times:
Could Math Help Defeat Cancer? Moffitt Is Betting It Will
On any given day, the lobby at Moffitt Cancer Center is buzzing with patients and their families. A few are waiting to check in for another round of chemotherapy. Others are hopeful for more good news about their remission. Some look more tired than others. Above them, on an upper floor, a group of staffers is working to find new ways to fight or even cure cancer, but they aren’t doctors or nurses, and their office looks nothing like the rest of the hospital. (Griffin, 12/5)
The Washington Post:
An Illinois Doctor Traded Drugs For Sex And Cash. He Just Pleaded Guilty.
The first scheme that Constantino Perales ran involved some simple math. He'd provide a drug dealer with hundreds of oxycodone and Xanax pills and the man would pay the doctor $15 to $20 for every tablet he sold, according to federal prosecutors. The second scheme was even simpler, if baser. Perales would write prescriptions for the drugs; in return, his drug-addicted patients would have sex with him, the prosecutors say. (Wootson, 12/5)
Health News Florida:
Florida Supreme Court Refuses To Take Up Tobacco Case
In a victory for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, the Florida Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up a case that initially involved a more than $23 billion verdict against the cigarette maker. The estate of Michael Johnson Sr., a longtime smoker who died at age 36, asked the Supreme Court to take up the case after the 1st District Court of Appeal in February ordered a new trial. (12/4)
The Wall Street Journal:
Brooklyn Prosecutors Charge 20 In $146 Million Health-Care Fraud
Brooklyn prosecutors said Tuesday that they charged 20 people and 14 corporations in a $146 million fraud scheme, calling it the biggest health-care case in their office’s history. The defendants paid patients to come to clinics, where they received unnecessary tests that were subsequently billed to Medicare and Medicaid, prosecutors said. The defendants then spent the proceeds on real estate, luxury shopping sprees and lavish vacations, according to an indictment. (Ramey, 12/5)
The Associated Press:
Eye Doctor Awaits Sentence In $100 Million Medicare Fraud
A federal judge heard wildly conflicting stories Tuesday about a prominent Florida eye doctor convicted in a $100 million Medicare fraud scheme. Some former patients said Dr. Salomon Melgen restored their sight for free, while others described painful and unnecessary treatments that left them blind. Melgen, 63, is facing a possible life sentence after being found guilty of 67 counts, including health care fraud, submitting false claims and falsifying records in patients’ files. Evidence presented during his trial earlier this year showed he subjected patients to unnecessary procedures, including sticking needles in their eyes and burning their retinas with lasers. (Spencer, 12/5)
The Associated Press:
Famed 'Concussion' Pathologist Alleges Autopsy Interference
San Joaquin County’s chief medical examiner, known nationally as the doctor depicted in the movie “Concussion” about brain injuries among football players, resigned Tuesday over what he said was interference by the sheriff that has become so invasive that it borders on the unlicensed practice of medicine. Dr. Bennet Omalu accused Sheriff-Coroner Steve Moore of routinely interfering with death investigations to protect law enforcement officers. (Thompson, 12/5)
The Associated Press:
Oklahoma Officer Charged In Fatal Shooting Of Suicidal Man
An Oklahoma City police officer was charged Tuesday with second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of a suicidal man who had doused himself in lighter fluid and was trying to set himself on fire. District Attorney David Prater filed the charge against Sgt. Keith Sweeney and listed an alternative charge of first-degree manslaughter in the Nov. 15 killing of 29-year-old Dustin Pigeon. An affidavit by a police investigator concluded that Pigeon was unarmed and didn’t pose a threat to responding officers when Sweeney shot him. (Miller and Juozapavicius, 12/5)
Health News Florida:
Hospital District Files Countersuit Against Ex-CEO
One of the state's largest hospital systems is suing its former chief executive alleging, among other things, that she violated federal anti-kickback laws. The North Broward Hospital District on Monday filed a countersuit against its former CEO, Pauline Grant, in Broward County circuit court alleging that she violated the hospital's code of conduct by serving as secretary of the board of directors of John Knox Village, a long-term care provider that had contracts with the hospital system. (12/5)
Sacramento Bee:
Who’s Taking Care Of California’s Seniors? Probably A Millennial, Survey Says
Shay Jackson starts her day at 4 a.m, seeking the early morning “me time” with prayer and Bible study before chaos ensues. Before heading to her state job, there’s breakfast to be made for her children, ages 7 and 3. Her grandmother, 79-year-old Audrey Strong, is undergoing treatment for lung cancer and needs assistance getting dressed. Jackson, 32, tag-teams the responsibilities with her husband, Chris Jackson, who gets the children to school in the morning and works afternoons. (Sullivan, 12/3)
Columbus Dispatch:
Report: Look To Solutions Beyond Health Care To Keep So Many Ohio Babies From Dying
As state and local officials continue searching for ways to reduce Ohio’s stubbornly high infant-mortality rate, a new report released Wednesday urges them to look beyond medical care. Improving social and economic conditions such as housing, transportation, education and employment opportunities could help Ohio make faster progress in reducing the number of babies dying before their first birthday. (Candisky, 12/5)
Los Angeles Times:
Fire Badly Damages Ventura Hospital: 'I Burst Into Tears'
At least two buildings on the campus of Vista Del Mar Hospital burned down as the Thomas fire ravaged the canyons above Ventura. The hospital treats adolescents and adults with mental health issues, and among its specialties is treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder. (Hamilton, 12/5)
The Associated Press:
Former California Lawmaker Charged With Aiding Wife In Suicide
A former California state lawmaker was charged with providing a gun to his wife so she could kill herself last year. Former Assemblyman Steve Clute was charged Thursday in Riverside County Superior Court with a felony count of aiding the suicide of his wife of about 40 years. Pamela Clute, 66, a well-liked math professor and administrator at the University of California, Riverside, was found dead in the couple’s Palm Desert home in August 2016. About 500 people attended a campus memorial service for her. (12/5)
Los Angeles Times:
L.A. Adds More Public Toilets As Homeless Crisis Grows
Los Angeles officials have debated for decades how best to provide for one of the most basic needs of homeless people. For those camped in the 50-block skid row district, the streets have been an open-air restroom — with only nine toilets available overnight in recent months to as many as 1,800 people camped on sidewalks. (Holland, 12/5)
Miami Herald:
She Ended Her Abusive Relationship But Needs Help For Her Autistic Son
The Elliott who recently greeted visitors with a big grin and a T-shirt declaring him a “Perfect Gentleman,” and proudly showed off a paper airplane that came close to flying, is far different from the Elliott who would have come to the door less than a year ago. That Elliott — the one still reeling from the years of abuse against himself, his siblings and his mother, the one who had yet to get behavioral therapy for his autism — would have violently rejected new people, said his mother, Hasina Brinson. (Mazzei, 12/5)
Tampa Bay Times:
Florida Hospital Chain To Buy Bayfront Health Dade City
Adventist Health System, the parent company of Florida Hospital, announced Tuesday that it plans to buy Bayfront Health Dade City hospital and its related outpatient services. The deal is expected to close in the first quarter of 2018, which will make it the 11th hospital in the chain to join the West Florida Division of Adventist Health System, according to a press release. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The transaction is subject to customary regulatory approvals. (Griffin, 12/5)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Ohio Hired Convicted Felon To Score Medical Marijuana Grow License Applications
The Ohio Department of Commerce came under fire from state officials Tuesday for hiring a medical marijuana program consultant who had a felony drug conviction on his criminal record. The felony conviction would have disqualified the consultant from being awarded the medical marijuana cultivation licenses he was helping to score. (Borchardt, 12/5)
CVS-Aetna Is Talk Of Town, But UnitedHealth Has Already Been There, Done That. (Sort Of)
News outlets report on stories related to pharmaceutical pricing.
Bloomberg:
Forget Amazon. Health Companies Really Want To Be UnitedHealth
As the specter of Amazon.com Inc. looms over the health-care industry, it’s easy to see the tech giant’s threat as a major factor behind the megadeal between CVS Health Corp. and Aetna Inc. Yet the $67.5 billion deal will build a company to match up against a rival that already has businesses spread deep across the sector: UnitedHealth Group Inc. (Tracer, 12/4)
The Wall Street Journal:
Pharma’s Helping Hand May Pinch Investors
Scrutiny of a key profit source for the drug industry is increasing. That means it is getting harder for investors to forecast industry growth. The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General last week revoked a key favorable advisory opinion for Caring Voice Coalition, one of the largest U.S. charities that helps patients afford insurance copayments for their medicine. The OIG said in a letter, first reported by Bloomberg News, that the charity had provided undue influence to its donors over how the charity was run. The charity said that the loss of the OIG stamp of approval would likely cause it to cease operating. (Grant, 12/6)
Stat:
Just When Can NIH Override A Patent For A High-Priced Drug?
Over the past two years, the National Institutes of Health has been pressed by various lawmakers and advocacy groups to help alleviate the high cost of medicines. Citing federal law, they have urged the agency to take action when a prescription drug — one that was discovered with taxpayer dollars and later licensed to a drug maker — was not considered affordable. So far, though, the NIH has demurred. On Thursday, NIH Director Francis Collins explained why. In testimony before a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee, he maintained federal law does not provide any “levers to pull.” (Silverman, 12/1)
Modern Healthcare:
FDA To Pave Clearer Path For Generic Drugs
U.S. FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb relayed a new guidance Tuesday that may shed some light on the path generic-drug manufacturers can take to get their products to market. The Food and Drug Administration aims to make it easier for generic-pharmaceutical developers to plan how they can copy complex drugs, which should ultimately lower pharmaceutical prices when more of the cheaper drugs enter the market. Certain drugs have been difficult to replicate and gain regulatory approval for, particularly drug-device combinations like EpiPen, because there has been minimal guidance from the FDA on how to adequately do so. (Kacik, 11/29)
Bloomberg:
This Company Is About To Flood The U.S. With Cheap HIV Drugs
U.S. patents on key components for some important HIV therapies are poised to expire starting in December and Laurus Labs Ltd. -- the Hyderabad, India-based company which owns the facility -- is gearing up to cash in. Laurus is one of the world’s biggest suppliers of ingredients used in anti-retrovirals, thanks to novel chemistry that delivers cheaper production costs than anyone else. Now, its chief executive officer, Satyanarayana Chava, wants to use the same strategy selling his own finished drugs in the U.S. and Europe. He predicts some generics that Laurus produces will eventually sell for 90 percent less than branded HIV drugs in the U.S., slashing expenditures for a disease that’s among the costliest for many insurers. (Altstedter, 12/4)
Stat:
Avanir Lays Off Dozens Of Sales Rep Amid Probe Into Its Key Drug
Avanir Pharmaceuticals is cutting 73 employees in “sales-related positions,” or roughly 11 percent of its workforce, according to a recent filing with California state officials. A spokesman confirmed the move and described it as an effort to “streamline our current approach to sales and better position Avanir to pursue its long-term mission.” The layoffs occur as that mission is coming under scrutiny. (Silverman, 12/5)
ProPublica:
More States Hatch Plans to Recycle Drugs Being Wasted in Nursing Homes
Inspired by a ProPublica story in April that described how nursing homes and their pharmacies nationwide throw away hundreds of tons of valuable medicines — and how one Iowa nonprofit successfully recycles them — two states are working to create similar programs. (Allen, 12/1)
Stat:
Alnylam Chief Turns To An Old Remedy To Rein In Drug Prices
In a bid to blunt criticism of drug pricing, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (ALNY) is going back to the future. The drug maker plans to limit any future price hikes on a widely anticipated rare-disease drug to the inflation rate, a step that no drug maker has voluntarily embraced in more than two decades. “As we transition from being an innovative R&D-stage company to a commercial-stage company, we are launching a set of patient access principles,” Alnylam chief executive John Maraganore said. “We plan to grow through innovation, not through price increases. We’ll raise prices to match the Consumer Price Index, and that’s it. And otherwise, we’ll grow, as a company, through innovations.” (Silverman, 11/30)
The Wall Street Journal:
Biogen Seeks To Drive Neuroscience Innovation With CIO Hire
Biogen Inc. has named a pharmaceuticals industry information-technology veteran as its new chief information officer, as the biotech firm seeks innovative IT tools to help develop treatments for Alzheimer’s, dementia and other neurological diseases, the company said. Mark Hernon joins the Cambridge, Mass., firm from Takeda Pharmaceuticals Co., Japan’s largest drugmaker by sales, where he served as a regional CIO for the Americas, as well as global head of R&D and a vice president of operations. He was previously CIO and vice president of operations at Millennial Pharmaceuticals. (Loten, 12/5)
Stat:
The Opioid Crisis Suggests A Painful Financial Future For Some Drug Makers
For some opioid makers, the financial outlook is painful. Between falling prices for many of the medicines and fast-growing litigation, a few of these companies have only modest flexibility to cope with these mounting risks, according to a new analysis by Moody’s Investor Service. And the drug maker most likely to be impacted is Endo International (ENDP). (Silverman, 12/1)
San Francisco Business Times:
Less Than A Year After Hedge Fund Coup, East Bay Drug Maker Cuts Jobs, Looks To Move HQ
A New York hedge fund that earlier this year flipped the board of Depomed Inc. and installed a new CEO to boost the company's value said Monday that it will cut 40 percent of its staff and move the drug company's headquarters out of California. The move is necessary, Depomed said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, because it is turning over sales of its best-selling pain drug, Nucynta, to Collegium Pharmaceutical Inc. and won't need as large of a workforce or as much space at its Newark headquarters. (Leuty, 12/4)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
CareSource Patients Having A Difficult Time Getting Prescriptions Filled After Policy Change
Medicaid patients with rheumatic diseases are not only battling their chronic conditions, but also their insurance providers in a fight for medications. (Christ, 12/4)
Perspectives: It's Past Time For The Government To Intervene Over High Drug Prices
Read recent commentaries about drug-cost issues.
The News & Observer:
Crusade Needed On Drug Prices
The tales of woe, some seemingly catastrophic, are too many and too common. A patient is diagnosed with a rare illness for which there is a miracle or near-miracle drug, but the cost of that drug is either prohibitive, period, or will in a very short time break the patient and his family. It is a state in which patients in other countries, where drug prices are notably cheaper than they are in the United States, do not find themselves. But drug-makers offer a weary excuse: They have to pay for research and development and should be allowed to recoup their costs and make a profit. (12/5)
Stat:
Drug-Price Reforms That Limit Incentives For Innovation Could Harm, Not Help
The ongoing furor over the price of prescription pharmaceuticals has become so intense that even an august, establishment group like the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NAS) cannot help but weigh in. Its report, “Making Medicines Affordable: A National Imperative,” released Thursday, is encouraging, as it is from an eminent group long on scientists and short on politicos, hinting at a rare, nonpartisan objectivity befitting the Academies. (John Osborn and David Beier, 11/30)
Stat:
If Biden Runs For President, He'll Need To Reboot His Record On Drug Prices
Joe Biden wants to be president, the champion of working families. But there is another side to the former vice president: protector of big pharmaceutical companies, indifferent to the harsh consequences of high drug prices. If Biden wants to pursue a future in politics, he ought to consider a reboot on drug pricing issues. (James Love, 11/30)
JAMA:
Encouraging New Uses For Old Drugs
US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of a new drug typically coincides with a period of patent protection, during which the manufacturer will often apply for additional indications to expand the market for the product. ... This pattern of additional testing and approvals is common for more expensive on-patent drugs, but new indications are rarely sought for less-expensive generic drugs, for which it is more difficult to profit from the research. This creates a policy conundrum: follow-on innovation for low-cost generic products offers a rare opportunity to simultaneously improve health outcomes and likely reduce health care expenditures, but how could such research be encouraged? (Rachel E. Sachs, Paul B. Ginsburg and Dana P. Goldman, 12/4)
Bloomberg:
Botox Suddenly Looks Less Invincible
Allergan PLC's golden goose might be getting tired.Botox is Allergan's best-selling product and an essential growth driver for the company. It is notoriously tough to replicate. But at least one competitor is giving it a real go: Revance Therapeutics Inc., a Newark, California-based biotech, released promising trial data Tuesday on an injection that may last longer than Botox. (Max Nisen, 12/5)
Viewpoints: Argument For Individual Mandate Repeal; CHIP Stalemate Highlights Senate Dysfunction
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
Bloomberg:
Repealing The Obamacare Mandate Now Makes Sense
They may not have succeeded in repealing and replacing Obamacare, but Republicans are close to undoing the law’s least popular feature. The Senate has passed a tax bill to abolish Obamacare’s fines on people who go without health insurance -- the so-called individual mandate. House Republicans are very likely to agree on that provision. (Ramesh Ponnuru, 12/6)
The Columbus Dispatch/The Canton Repository:
Senate Stalls CHIP Reauthorization
Two decades ago, lawmakers created a joint state-federal health insurance program designed to assist low- to moderate-income children and pregnant women who are not eligible for Medicaid. Within three years, every state opted into the program. Today, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, commonly known as CHIP, provides access to comprehensive, affordable coverage to more than 8 million children nationwide. ... For reasons known only to a fractured U.S. Senate more interested in ramming through an ill-conceived and widely denounced major overhaul of the federal tax code, CHIP has languished for months. It now sits at risk of running out of money. (12/6)
The Washington Post:
No Reason Kellyanne Conway Won’t Make A Fine Opioid Czar. Except For Trump.
Far be it from me to suggest that Kellyanne Conway could not possibly be the opioid czar. When I was named Ebola response coordinator in October 2014, the outrage over a “political operative” taking on such an assignment was widespread. I like to think I had more qualifications than Conway: three stints in two White Houses, chief of staff at a Cabinet agency and leadership of the team implementing a $787 billion federal program — but crucially, like her, I lacked domain expertise in epidemic response. Thus, just as I hoped at that time to be judged by my performance on the job and not my résumé, I take a similar view of Conway’s appointment. (Ronald A. Klain, 12/5)
Bloomberg:
What A Technophobe Doctor Shows About Future Of Work
What if your profession has never required much computer literacy -- and then all of a sudden it does. Should you be fired? Should your license be yanked? That’s the question raised by the bizarre case of Anna Konopka, a physician who claims that New Hampshire has barred her from the practice of medicine because she does not know how to use the Internet. Konopka, 84, received the bulk of her medical training overseas. She voluntarily surrendered her license this fall after allegations that she was not participating in New Hampshire’s new mandatory system for reporting opioid prescriptions. Why not? Because to do so she would have to go online -- something for which she lacks the requisite skill. (Stephen L. Carter, 12/5)
The New York Times:
I Use A Wheelchair. And Yes, I’m Your Doctor.
I have been a wheelchair user since early childhood, when I sustained a spinal cord injury in a farming accident. I am now a practicing physician in the field of rehabilitation and sports medicine. In my busy outpatient clinical practice, I witness the spectrum of patients’ reactions when they find out that their doctor is, herself, disabled. Typically those first few seconds after entering an exam room — before the patient’s guard goes up — are the most informative. (Cheri A. Blauwet, 12/6)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Missouri’s Attack On Women’s Reproductive Rights
This summer, the Missouri Legislature decided that landlords and employers should have a louder voice in women’s reproductive health choices than the women themselves. On July 25, lawmakers passed Senate Bill 5, an anti-abortion bill that enforces highly restrictive and time-consuming regulations on abortion providers that would prevent women from receiving the services they need in a timely manner. (Namita Kansal, 12/5)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Big Tobacco Finally Comes Clean — Under Court Order
Big tobacco is spending millions of dollars to inform Americans of the truth about their products — truth that those same companies spent decades denying and trying to litigate to death. News media companies spent millions defending themselves against Big Tobacco in court simply for having reported the very truths that Big Tobacco now must spend millions to advertise themselves. (12/5)
RealClear Health:
When Will Legislators Learn That Sin Taxes Don’t Work?
In October, Philadelphia won the distinction of being the first major city in the United States to introduce a tax on sugary carbonated drinks. Proponents of the tax contend that it’s a wonderful way to bridle Philadelphians’ sugar cravings while simultaneously bolstering the city’s revenues. Across the Atlantic in Lithuania, legislators took the same approach with regard to alcohol and adopted legislation substantially increasing taxes on beer and wine. The intentions held by legislators who champion these sorts of taxes, often termed “sin taxes,” are generally admirable. However, the technical merits of taxes like these are lacking and, worse, they’re often liable for inadvertent harm. (Michael Shindler, 12/6)
Stat:
Xi Jinping Thought Doesn't Mention China's Health Care Crisis. It Should
There is a crisis brewing in China. I’m not talking about anything military or political. The newly constitutionalized Xi Jinping Thought, a set of principles meant to guide Chinese economic, political, and military expansion in the next two decades, has been silent on the issue of national health care, which may threaten the long-term stability of China. The first highly public sign of trouble came in a 2013 report published in the Journal of the American Medical Association by Chinese scientists from Peking University and the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Their survey of more than 170,000 Chinese adults showed that 10.9 percent have diabetes, higher than the U.S. rate of 9.4 percent. (Justin Fendos, 12/5)
Stat:
'Smart Pill' For Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder Raises Tricky Ethical Questions
Sticking to a medication regimen is as important for people with mental illness as it is for those with physical illness. But what makes Abilify MyCite, a high-tech version of aripiprazole, problematic is that it could easily be incorporated into forced treatment, which ignores the values and preferences of people with mental illness. Involuntary treatment has a long and painful history in mental health. Without their consent, people with mental illness can be committed to inpatient or outpatient treatment, and sometimes forced to take medications. Only in the 1970s did the U.S. Supreme Court first address the lack of rights for people hospitalized against their will. (Tia P. Powell, 12/5)