- KFF Health News Original Stories 2
- Dropped From Health Insurance Without Warning: Was It Legal?
- ‘An Arm And A Leg’: Expecting A Baby And Unexpectedly Dropped By Insurer
- Political Cartoon: 'Pill Popping?'
- Women’s Health 2
- In Fiery House Hearing Over Abortion, Dems Invoke 'Handmaid's Tale' Imagery As GOP Rails Against Loose Laws In Blue States
- Doctors From Missouri's Last-Remaining Abortion Clinic Won't Have To Testify At Trial, Judge Rules
- Capitol Watch 3
- House's 'Medicare For All' Plan Picks Up Its Highest-Ranking Democrat Yet
- Capitol Hill Watch: Hospitals Weigh In On Payment Cuts; Pandemic Prep Bill Sent To Trump; House Defeats Tobacco Amendment
- There Are 'Too Many Unintended Consequences': Congress Re-Ups Ban On Genetically Modifying Human Embryos
- Marketplace 2
- CVS Announces Expansion Of Hubs That Offer Health Services Such As Nutrition Counseling, Blood Pressure Screenings
- How A Group Of Small-Town Locals In Colorado Banded Together To Successfully Fight High Premiums
- Pharmaceuticals 1
- Pfizer's Previously Secret Deliberations Offer Rare Glimpse Into Frustrating World Of Alzheimer's Research
- Veterans' Health Care 1
- Veterans Are Warned That 'A Few Hiccups' Are Expected As VA Implements Expanded Privatized Care
- Government Policy 1
- Immigration Officials Tour Potential Locations To Hold Detained Migrant Youth As Number Continues To Swell
- Medicaid 1
- Virginia Republicans Who Voted To Expand Medicaid Emerge Mostly Unscathed Politically Despite Threats
- Health IT 1
- While Digital Coaching Continues To Help Diabetes Patients Overall, Dropout Rate Increases In Year Two
- Public Health 1
- The Fates Of Native American Children In Foster Care Could Have Wide-Ranging Implications On The Country
- State Watch 2
- From The State Capitols: Conn.'s Revised Public Option Bill Makes Progress; Maine's Aid-In-Dying Bill Goes To Governor; Background Checks For Gun Purchases Eyed In Va.
- State Highlights: 'There's Evil': Alaska Town Starts To Confront High Sexual Assault Rate; Beverly Hills Council Votes To End Most Cigarette Sales In 2021
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Dropped From Health Insurance Without Warning: Was It Legal?
People who buy insurance on their own may have little notice when something goes amiss. It’s a quirk in health policy at the heart of the next episode of ‘An Arm and a Leg’ podcast. (Julie Appleby, )
‘An Arm And A Leg’: Expecting A Baby And Unexpectedly Dropped By Insurer
Health care — and how much it costs — is scary. But you're not alone with this stuff, and knowledge is power. "An Arm and a Leg" is a podcast about these issues, and its second season is co-produced by KHN. (Dan Weissmann, )
Political Cartoon: 'Pill Popping?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Pill Popping?'" by Dave Coverly, Speed Bump.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
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.
Note to readers: Today, we welcome “An Arm and a Leg: A Podcast About Health Costs”’ to the Kaiser Health News family. We’d been mulling a podcast to grow out of our “Bill of the Month” partnership with NPR – and then we heard the first season of “An Arm and a Leg.” Host Dan Weissmann was already up to what we wanted to do, so we decided to collaborate. Enjoy! – Diane Webber, National Editor, Broadcast
Summaries Of The News:
There was little action expected out of a House Judiciary subcommittee hearing, but lawmakers debated recent abortion laws in both red and blue states.
The Hill:
Democrats, Republicans In Congress Spar Over State Abortion Laws
The fight over state abortion bans moved to Congress on Tuesday with Democrats holding a hearing to declare an ongoing “crisis” in states across the country. “This country has reached a crisis point for women’s constitutional rights to control their own bodies and their own reproductive choices,” House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) said at a hearing Tuesday. (Hellmann, 6/4)
CQ:
National Abortion Debate Intensifies In Congress, Campaigns
The debate over abortion continues to heat up as a House panel sparred Tuesday over the slew of new state restrictions that conservatives hope could lead to a court challenge that would undermine the nationwide guarantee of a right to abortion. The congressional dispute came soon after the nation’s top anti-abortion group outlined on Monday night its main goals for the 2020 elections, and Missouri state officials and Planned Parenthood went to court Tuesday over the future of the state’s last abortion clinic. (Raman, 6/4)
The Hill:
Louisiana State Democrat: Abortion Is 'Modern-Day Genocide'
Democratic Louisiana State Rep. Katrina Jackson appeared in a series of interviews over the last few days defending her state's new anti-abortion law, saying she thinks of the procedure as "modern-day genocide." Louisiana last month became the sixth state to recently pass a ban on abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, which is usually at about six weeks of pregnancy. (Rodrigo, 6/4)
Meanwhile, in related news —
The Washington Post:
As States Try To Restrict Abortion, Access Is Expanding In Some Parts Of The South
For nearly three years, Jill Dinwiddie worked quietly. She talked to potential donors about how desperately Planned Parenthood needed a new health center, one large enough to add abortion to the clinic’s services for the first time in three decades. She needed to raise $10 million, find a building in the city’s competitive real estate market and renovate it — all without media outlets or protesters finding out. Dinwiddie and her co-chairs of the capital campaign committee, Crandall Bowles and Linda Hudson, conducted an under-the-radar search for a real estate agent, purchased a building with a limited-liability company set up to mask the buyer and built a password-protected donation website. (Valade, 6/4)
The Washington Post:
Stacey Abrams Urges Hollywood To ‘#StayAndFight’ In Georgia Instead Of Boycotting Over Abortion Law
Stacey Abrams, the Democrat from Georgia who earned national attention after narrowly losing her bid for governor last year, is urging Hollywood not to abandon the state over its new and more restrictive abortion law. Some of the biggest names in film and television — including Walt Disney and WarnerMedia — have suggested they might boycott Georgia if the legislation survives court challenges. But Abrams, political allies and business leaders contend an economic boycott would serve to only deprive working-class people of jobs with no guarantee it would reverse a law that is being teed up to challenge Roe v. Wade. (Shaban, 6/4)
Doctors From Missouri's Last-Remaining Abortion Clinic Won't Have To Testify At Trial, Judge Rules
On Saturday, the state served subpoenas to four doctors and physician trainees who worked at the Planned Parenthood clinic, compelling their testimony in court. In his ruling, Judge Michael Stelzer said because of the limited scope of the hearing the testimony of the four doctors would not be relevant to the issues before the court. The hearing starts this morning.
The Associated Press:
Hearing To Consider Fate Of Lone Missouri Abortion Clinic
The fate of Missouri's only abortion clinic is at stake in a hearing scheduled for Wednesday in St. Louis. Circuit Judge Michael Stelzer will hear testimony in a hearing on Planned Parenthood's request for a preliminary injunction that would keep open its abortion clinic in St. Louis. Missouri's health department last week declined to renew the clinic's license to perform abortion procedures, citing concerns about patient safety, including allegations of "failed abortions" and legal violations. Clinic leaders say the allegations are part of an effort by an anti-abortion administration to eliminate the procedure in the state. (Salter, 6/5)
The Hill:
Missouri Judge Throws Out State Subpoenas In Planned Parenthood Case
A judge in St. Louis ruled Tuesday that four doctors who trained at Missouri's only abortion clinic will not have to testify in an ongoing case that will determine if the facility can continue providing abortions. Circuit Court Judge Michael Stelzer ruled Tuesday that complying with the subpoenas to testify filed by the state would cause an undue burden for the doctors. (Hellmann, 6/4)
CNN:
Missouri Abortion Case: A Judge Could Soon Decide If State Will Have No Abortion Clinics
Outside the St. Louis courthouse, a group of anti-abortion activists silently protested Tuesday, with "LIFE" written on tape covering their mouths.
If the Planned Parenthood clinic is forced to stop providing abortions, Missouri would be the first state in the nation to block the procedure in more than 45 years. (Yan, 6/4)
St. Louis Public Radio:
Court Rules Doctors Don't Have To Testify In Planned Parenthood License Case
Colleen McNicholas, an attending physician and OB-GYN at the clinic, called keeping the clinic open a “day-to-day” fight. She called the subpoenas to doctors unnecessary abuse from anti-abortion state regulators. “Planned Parenthood is also relieved that doctors in training will not have to come to court and face the unwarranted harassment we’ve long said is inappropriate,” McNicholas said. “We look forward to another day in this fight.” (Fentem, Davis and Hundsdorfer, 6/4)
House's 'Medicare For All' Plan Picks Up Its Highest-Ranking Democrat Yet
Assistant House Speaker Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) is the No. 4 House Democrat and a close ally of Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). "Despite the incredible progress we’ve made because of the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid expansion, we continue to see Americans crushed by the health insurance industry, and health care remains a right that far too many New Mexicans and far too many Americans struggle to gain," Luján said in support of the "Medicare for All" plan. Meanwhile, the House Ways and Means Committee will hold a hearing on the proposal next week.
The Hill:
'Medicare For All' Gets New Boost From High-Ranking House Dem
Assistant House Speaker Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) on Tuesday announced his support for "Medicare for All" legislation, becoming the highest-ranking Democrat to co-sponsor the bill. The bill from Reps. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) now has 112 co-sponsors in the House. (Weixel, 6/4)
The Hill:
House Panel Sets Medicare For All Hearing For Next Week
The House Ways & Means Committee will hold a hearing next week on "Medicare for all," the proposal that would shift the U.S. to a single-payer health care system. The June 12 hearing will mark the first time the proposal is considered by a committee that has jurisdiction over health care issues.A spokeswoman for committee Democrats said the hearing would cover Medicare for all and "other potential pathways to universal coverage." (Hellmann, 6/4)
Media outlets report on congressional moves on issues as wide-ranging as community health centers and doctor training programs and pandemics.
Modern Healthcare:
With High Stakes For Employer-Based Insurance, Senate Seeks Hospital Contract Reform
Some healthcare experts view the Senate health committee's proposed reforms to hospital and insurer contracts as essential to try to sustain the employer-based insurance system in the face of bloating costs. Yet even as the healthcare industry seems bent on defending the commercial market against calls for a single-payer system, hospitals are poised to fight at least some of these policies. (Luthi, 6/4)
CQ:
Hospital Payment Cuts Could Complicate Other Health Bills
A bipartisan effort to renew popular community health programs could become stalled by a debate over how to handle pending payment cuts to hospitals that serve poorer populations. Those tensions surfaced Tuesday as the Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee considered 11 bills that would renew funding for things like community health centers and doctor training programs, which have funding authorizations that expire at the end of September. (Siddons, 6/4)
Politico Pro:
House Sends Trump Pandemic Preparedness Bill
The House today sent to President Donald Trump a bill to reauthorize HHS efforts to respond to disasters and threats from emerging infectious diseases and chemical or biological agents. The Senate passed the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness and Advancing Innovation Act, S. 1379 (116), in May. Today's voice vote in the House capped repeated efforts to renew the health agency's pandemic response unit dating to the last session. (Owermohle, 6/4)
CQ:
Long-Stalled Health Emergency Bill Poised To Become Law
The bill, approved by voice vote, would continue the authorizations for billions in funding for programs that help prepare for disease outbreaks and the public health fallout from disasters. Lawmakers have been debating the measure since February 2018, and the House originally passed a version in September. The bill directs “federal agencies to respond to new and emerging threats,” and “naturally occurring and man-made disasters,” citing the recent measles outbreak, wildfires, hurricanes, Ebola and “the constant looming threat of a biological attack,” said House sponsor Anna G. Eshoo, D-Calif. The measure would renew the funding through 2023 and increase the authorized funding levels for programs like the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, which invests in early-stage research for vaccines and disease treatments. That program’s authorized funding level will increase from $415 million to $612 million per year. (Siddons, 6/4)
Politico Pro:
House Appropriators Defeat 'Tobacco 21' Amendment To FDA Spending Bill
House appropriators on Tuesday defeated a bid to raise the tobacco purchasing age to 21 nationwide and strengthen age requirements for online e-cigarettes sales. The House Appropriations Committee rejected, 23-27, an amendment from Robert Aderholt (R-Ala.) and Juan Vargas (D-Calif.) after Chairwoman Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.) criticized the way it wouldn't take effect for two years. The language was offered during debate on a fiscal 2020 Agriculture-FDA spending bill. (Owermohle, 6/4)
The ethical question received attention in recent months following the announcement that a Chinese scientist had gene-edited human embryos. A study this week found that the work he did would have a chance of shortening the twins' life-span.
NPR:
Ban On Genetically Modified Babies Upheld By Congressional Committee
A congressional committee voted Tuesday to continue a federal ban on creating genetically modified babies in the United States. The House Appropriations Committee voted to retain the ban after the prohibition had been lifted last month by a subcommittee. The vote was part of debate over routine funding legislation for the Food and Drug Administration. "This is a prohibition that is accepted by nearly every nation in the world due to the unknown risks," said Rep. Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb., during a hearing where the ban was restored. "The risks of harm are real." (Stein, 6/4)
Stat:
Congress Revives Ban On Altering DNA Of Embryos Used For Pregnancies
Lifting the prohibition could have opened the door to clinical trials of babies being made with genetic material from three people or with genomes that had been changed in ways that would be passed on to future generations. The ban has been attached to bills that fund the Food and Drug Administration in the form of an amendment, or rider, since December 2015. But last month, a subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee dropped the ban from the legislation. (Joseph, 6/4)
Politico Pro:
Coons Says Draft Bill Wouldn’t Allow Gene Patenting
A draft bill aiming to broadly reform how patents are granted wouldn’t allow for the patenting of individual, isolated genes, Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) said today. Critics have warned that the bill would overturn legal precedent preventing gene patents. The draft would eliminate a restriction on patenting broad categories of intellectual property such as “abstract ideas,” “laws of nature” or “natural phenomena.” It would establish a new benchmark involving “specific and practical utility in any field of technology through human intervention.” (Ravindranath, 6/4)
In case you missed it: People With Gene Mutation That Chinese Scientist Tried To Mimic In Human Embryos Have Higher Risk Of Premature Death
The health hub format includes an employee with the title of "care concierge" who directs customers to health services such as a nutritionist or nurse practitioner. Other services include screenings for sleep apnea and opthalmology issues related to diabetes. In other news, CVS is facing the skeptical U.S. District Judge Richard Leon for a hearing over its deal with Aetna.
Reuters:
CVS To Expand Health Hubs To 1,500 Stores By End Of 2021
CVS Health Corp said it would offer expanded health services such as nutrition counseling and blood pressure screenings in 1,500 stores by the end of 2021, following through on plans announced during the pharmacy chain's 2018 acquisition of health insurer Aetna. The company plans to convert a total of 50 stores this year in Houston, Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Tampa, representing about 15% of the stores in each of the markets, it said ahead of a meeting on Tuesday with Wall Street analysts and investors in New York. The bulk of the expansion will be split between 2020 and 2021. (6/4)
Modern Healthcare:
CVS Opening 1,500 New Retail Clinics In Its Stores
CVS' roughly 1,100 MinuteClinic sites currently focus on low-acuity services like colds and immunizations, and the company realized half of the patients who visit them don't have primary-care providers. The HealthHUB model will cater more to everyday needs, with a special focus on chronic disease management, offering services like blood draws and sleep apnea assessments. Some of CVS' MinuteClinic sites will be converted into HealthHUBs, although the company isn't saying exactly how many, CVS spokesman Joe Goode wrote in an email. A MinuteClinic typically has one to two exam rooms, while HealthHUBs will have three to four. The company plans to convert about 15% of its existing clinics into HealthHUBs, Goode said. HealthHUBs will be more staff-intensive to offer customers a more personalized experience and medical advice specific to their needs, Hourican said. (Bannow, 6/4)
The Wall Street Journal:
CVS, Under Pressure After Aetna Deal, Sets Long-Term Profit Goals
CVS Health Corp., under pressure to reassure skeptical investors after its merger with Aetna Inc., said it would return to profit growth next year and detailed a vision for a health-care behemoth that drives down medical costs. After warning earlier this year that 2019 profits would decline, CVS gave longer-term projections for the first time since the Aetna merger. The company said Tuesday it expects adjusted earnings per share of at least $7 in 2020, growing by a mid-single-digit percentage in 2021 and larger increases the years following. (Terlep, 6/4)
Modern Healthcare:
Broad CVS-Aetna Antitrust Concerns Expressed By Judge Over Merger
A federal judge who has refused for months to sign off on the $69 billion CVS-Aetna merger reiterated on Tuesday that he wants to look at any potential harm that the deal might cause for the public. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon in Washington, D.C., kicked off a three-day hearing as he considers whether to sign off on the U.S. Justice Department's approval of the merger. The judge must finally authorize the government's decision under the Tunney Act, but it isn't clear whether he can actually stop the CVS-Aetna deal as the two companies are largely operating as one. (Luthi, 6/4)
Columbus Dispatch:
PBMs Become Potent Symbol In Federal Court Hearing Over CVS-Aetna Merger
U.S. District Court Judge Richard Leon was near the end of his first day in what is scheduled to be a three-day hearing on the proposed merger of CVS and Aetna when he began marveling over the power that CVS’ pharmacy benefit manager has. (Wehrman, 6/4)
How A Group Of Small-Town Locals In Colorado Banded Together To Successfully Fight High Premiums
Residents of Summit County, Colorado, were fed-up with high health care costs, so they formed an alliance that might actually lower their premiums 20 percent for next year. The Colorado Sun has their story. Other news from the health industry focuses on who will take a hit from automation in the industry.
Colorado Sun:
How Summit County Residents, Fed Up With High Health Care Prices, Banded Together And Negotiated A Better Deal
Monthly health insurance premiums in Summit County were higher than mortgage payments. Residents were toughing out illnesses and injuries at home rather than going to the doctor. Families were packing up and moving to find more affordable coverage. But now, [Tamara Drangstveit] and other Summit County leaders have led a first-of-its-kind effort in Colorado that is poised to lower health insurance prices for many in the county — and could become a model for communities across the state to gain leverage over a health care system that often feels suffocating. (Ingold, 6/4)
Modern Healthcare:
Automation To Disproportionately Affect Women In Healthcare
An emergency department in 2030 is poised to look much different as automation takes hold, and those changes are likely to disproportionately affect women in healthcare, according to a new report. Automation will displace as many as 1 in 4 female workers across all sectors, or 160 million women, but that will be offset by an increase in demand and productivity, according to a new report from the McKinsey Global Institute. That does not account for "frontier" jobs that one could not even imagine today, said Kweilin Ellingrud, a senior partner at McKinsey and co-author of the report. (Kacik, 6/4)
And Kaiser Health News has formed a new partnership with a podcast that looks at the people affected by the country's high health care costs —
Kaiser Health News:
Dropped From Health Insurance Without Warning: Was It Legal?
Caitlin and Corey Gaffer know they made a mistake. Anyone could have done the same thing, the Minneapolis couple says. Still, they can’t believe it cost them their health insurance coverage just as Caitlin was in the middle of pregnancy with their first child. “I was like ‘What?’ There’s no way that’s possible,” said Caitlin, 31, of her reaction to the letter she opened in early October telling them the coverage they had for nearly two years had been canceled. It cited nonpayment of their premium as the reason. (Appleby, 6/5)
Kaiser Health News:
‘An Arm And A Leg’: They Thought They Had ‘Adulted’ Properly
Find out what happened to the Minneapolis couple in the first episode of “An Arm and a Leg” Season 2, a co-production of Kaiser Health News and Public Road Productions. (Weissmann, 6/4)
Despite billions spent on research, Alzheimer’s remains a stubbornly prevalent disease with no effective prevention or treatment. But documents obtained by The Washington Post reveal a discovery by Pfizer researchers that its blockbuster arthritis drug may have potential against dementia. The company never shared the data, nor did it launch a trial to test the results.
The Washington Post:
Why Pfizer Didn’t Report That Its Rheumatoid Arthritis Medication Might Prevent Alzheimer’s
A team of researchers inside Pfizer made a startling find in 2015: The company’s blockbuster rheumatoid arthritis therapy Enbrel, a powerful anti-inflammatory drug, appeared to reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease by 64 percent. The results were from an analysis of hundreds of thousands of insurance claims. Verifying that the drug would actually have that effect in people would require a costly clinical trial — and after several years of internal discussion, Pfizer opted against further investigation and chose not to make the data public, the company confirmed. (Rowland, 6/4)
In other pharmaceutical news —
Bloomberg:
Gene Therapy Appears To Be Beating Once-Incurable Diseases
This is the tantalizing promise of gene therapies, the potential cures for dozens of once-incurable illnesses. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued its first approval of a systemic gene therapy, a Novartis AG treatment for spinal muscular atrophy, on May 24 and says it expects to approve 10 to 20 therapies a year starting in 2025. There are more than 800 trials under way, targeting diseases including rare metabolic disorders, sickle cell anemia, hemophilia, and Parkinson’s. As the list grows, such treatments have the potential to fundamentally remake the health-care system at every level. (Cortez, 6/5)
Stat:
What You Missed At ASCO? A Lot, As Cancer Research Hastens On
It was, by all accounts, a pretty slow year at the annual meeting of the American Society of Oncology. But the pace of cancer research is so fast that even during a slow year a lot happens. Here’s our review of some of the most important developments revealed at the largest annual meeting of cancer doctors. For a few years, most big cancer meetings have been all about immunotherapy, with the spotlight on big, practice-changing clinical trials showing how the immune system can be directed to kill cancer cells. (Feuerstein and Herper, 6/4)
Prescription Drug Watch: For news on rising drug costs, check out our weekly roundup of news coverage and perspectives of the issue.
Veterans Are Warned That 'A Few Hiccups' Are Expected As VA Implements Expanded Privatized Care
The VA rolls out changes this week from the MISSION Act, which expands the number of veterans who qualify for private care that is eligible for reimbursement. Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie promises that, while there might be some glitches, his team is ready for the challenges of implementing the expansion.
Military.Com:
VA Secretary Confident June 6 Rollout Of Private-Care Options Will Be Smooth
Veterans can expect some glitches in the June 6 rollout of the new community care system but, for most who are eligible, getting an appointment with a private doctor should come down to "punching a button," according to Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie. There will be "a few hiccups," but "I'm confident our team is ready across the country" for the long-awaited implementation of the VA Mission Act, said Wilkie, who has billed the new system as the most transformative veterans care initiative in a generation. (Sisk, 6/3)
CQ:
VA Finalizes Standards For Private Care
The Department of Veterans Affairs on Tuesday finalized rules governing how veterans can access non-VA doctors, sticking with parameters the department originally proposed in January over objections from some advocates. Under one of the two rules, which both take effect Thursday, veterans can access non-VA providers if their drive time to a VA facility exceeds 30 minutes for primary care, mental health or home health services, and 60 minutes for specialty care. The standards also allow VA patients to see private providers if appointment wait times exceed 20 days for primary care, mental health or home health, and 28 days for specialty care. (Clason, 6/4)
NPR:
VA Secretary Robert Wilkie On Allowing More Veterans To Seek Private Health Care
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks to Robert Wilkie, secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, about a new program that launches June 6 that would allow more veterans to seek private health care. (6/4)
Former CDC Chief Pleads Guilty To Disorderly Conduct Violation
The charge against Dr. Thomas Frieden stems from accusations that he grabbed an acquaintance's buttocks in his Brooklyn home. The violation to which he pleaded guilty is not considered a crime. He did not admit guilt in the groping allegation.
The Associated Press:
Former Head Of The CDC Pleads Guilty To Violation
The former head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct violation related to his arrest last year for alleged sexual misconduct. Dr. Thomas Frieden appeared Tuesday in Brooklyn Criminal Court. Frieden is also a former New York City health commissioner. Frieden was arrested in August. (6/4)
The Wall Street Journal:
Ex-CDC Chief Pleads Guilty To Lesser Charge In Groping Case
After turning himself in to the New York Police Department in August last year, Dr. Frieden was charged with forcible touching, third-degree sexual abuse and second-degree harassment. The alleged victim told a detective that on Oct. 20, 2017, in the Brooklyn Heights neighborhood, Dr. Frieden touched and squeezed her buttocks without her consent, according to a criminal complaint. The complaint, which didn’t name the victim, said she told the detective she was “alarmed and annoyed.” A lawyer for Dr. Frieden declined to comment on Tuesday. (Gravely and Ramey, 6/4)
Stat:
Ex-CDC Chief Frieden Settles Sexual Harassment Charges
Dr. Thomas Frieden, the former head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, settled charges of sexual harassment Tuesday with a guilty plea to a lesser violation. Frieden, who led the CDC from 2009 to 2017, pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, striking a deal that will leave him with no criminal record if he stays out of trouble for a year, according to press reports. (Garde, 6/4)
The Hill:
Former Head Of CDC Pleads Guilty To Reduced Charge In Groping Case
Frieden is currently president and CEO of the global health nonprofit Resolve to Save Lives. The organization did not respond to a request for comment. (Weixel, 6/4)
Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan told reporters Friday that illegal crossings along the southwest border are overwhelming his department’s resources and that federal immigration authorities now have more than 80,000 people in custody, “a record level that is beyond sustainable capacity with current resources.” Meanwhile, Mark Morgan, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, say the agency will step up deportation efforts.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Government Eyeing Fort Benning To Shelter Immigrant Children
The Trump administration is considering sheltering unaccompanied immigrant children apprehended along the southwest border at Fort Benning, the sprawling Columbus-area military installation, according to the Pentagon and U.S. Health and Human Services Department.It is unknown how many children could be housed there and for how long. But Acting Defense Secretary Pat Shanahan approved a request from the Department of Health and Human Services in April for the Pentagon to find space for up to 5,000 at military bases. (Redmon, 6/4)
The Associated Press:
Immigration Official Looks To Step Up Family Deportations
The new top immigration official signaled Tuesday his agency is looking to step up deportations of families who are in the United States illegally, actions that would likely run into logistical hurdles and face strong public opposition. Mark Morgan, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said the agency would continue to prioritize deportations of people who have criminal histories, but that no one should be exempt from enforcement. (6/4)
And in other news —
Bloomberg:
Immigrants Help To Alleviate U.S. Health Care Staffing Shortage
The health care skills gap would be even larger without American immigrants. In 2017, immigrants accounted for 18.2 percent of health care workers, according to a study published in Health Affairs. As the U.S. faces a shortage of health care workers, immigrants have helped fill some of the gaps. Migrants, in particular, are covering key shortage positions such as rural physicians, wrote Leah Zallman, an assistant professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and lead author of the study. A growing elderly population and strict licensing requirements required of many health care workers has contributed to the shortage. (Hagan, 6/3)
Only three Republican delegates who supported Medicaid expansion will face challengers in upcoming primaries, despite a fierce campaign by a conservative group to oust them. Other Medicaid news comes out of Iowa and Wisconsin, as well.
The Washington Post:
Medicaid Expanders In Virginia Mostly Escape Primary Challenges
When nearly two dozen Republican legislators voted last year to expand Medicaid in Virginia — a stunning flip on a marquee pledge to resist “Obamacare” — outraged conservatives vowed to oust them in party primaries. The conservative powerhouse Americans for Prosperity targeted them with radio and Facebook ads, organized “Stop Obamacare” meetings across the state and warned through a spokesman, “Politicians usually pay a price when they ignore their constituents.” (Vozzella, 6/4)
Iowa Public Radio:
Amid Political Tensions, Transgender Iowans Wait For Care
This year has been a political roller coaster for the state’s transgender population. A March state Supreme Court decision overturned a ban on using state Medicaid dollars for transition-related surgery. Then lawmakers enacted a provision that would alter the Civil Rights Act so Medicaid could once again opt out of paying.This has left many transgender Iowans -- who make up just 0.3 percent of the state's population -- suddenly in limbo. (Krebs, 6/4)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Republicans Pass $588M Increase For Health Care Programs Without Tony Evers' Medicaid Expansion
Republican lawmakers voted Tuesday to add $588 million in new state funding for health care programs in Wisconsin under a spending plan that won't include Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ plan to expand Medicaid by tapping into $1 billion of federal funds. Lawmakers who write the state budget approved an overall $1.6 billion spending increase for the state Department of Health Services that includes a mix of state and federal funding. (Beck and Marley, 6/4)
The question of how long digital devices can help patients is one many digital startups want to answer. Results weren't as strong as Year One's of Virta's five-year study, but don't rush to judgement said Dr. Ethan Weiss, a cardiologist at the University of California, San Francisco. “They’re still doing really well,” he said. Other news on digital medicine looks at the creation of DiMe .
Stat:
Diabetes Patients See Gains With Digital Coaching, And Some Dropoff
Plenty of health-tech startups have been buoyed by early data suggesting that their coaching and monitoring tools are generating improvements in patients with chronic diseases. But a big question remains: Just how durable are those gains? New data from one such company, Virta Health, underscore a tricky challenge for the burgeoning field: Even when an intervention looks promising, the apparent benefits often erode over time. (Robbins, 6/5)
Stat:
DiMe: Calling All Who Serve In Digital Medicine
From smart pacemakers to diagnostic algorithms and digital therapeutics, medicine is becoming more digitized every year. Digital medicine tools offer the possibility of improved health outcomes, lower costs, and better access to care. But the evidence base for the safety and effectiveness of these new products has not kept pace with their development. Given the great divide between the promised benefits of digital medicine and its potential risks, we need to know — not just believe — that the tools we use are trustworthy. (Jen Goldsack, Beau Woods and Eric Perakslis, 6/5)
A law created in the 1970s to protect Native American children from being taken from their homes and given to white families is raising ethical and legal questions on its likely path to the Supreme Court. In other public health news: deadly falls in seniors, walking, climate change, food and sleep, and more.
The New York Times:
Who Can Adopt These Navajo Children? A Tale Of Two Mothers And A Bitter Constitutional Fight
The 3-year-old boy who could upend a 40-year-old law aimed at protecting Native American children barreled into the suburban living room, merrily defying his parents’ prediction that he might be shy. He had a thatch of night-black hair and dark eyes that glowed with mischievous curiosity. As he pumped a stranger’s hand and scampered off to bounce on an indoor trampoline, his Superman cape floated behind him, as if trying to catch up. Zachary, or A.L.M. as he is called in legal papers, has a Navajo birth mother, a Cherokee birth father and adoptive parents, Jennifer and Chad Brackeen, neither of whom is Native American. (Hoffman, 6/5)
Stateline:
Foster Care Crisis Opens Door To Second-Chance Parents
With rising numbers of children under state supervision and a worsening shortage of foster families, more states have made it easier for parents whose rights to their children were terminated to renew those relationships, sometimes years after a court terminated legal ties. Severing parental rights is the nuclear option of child protective services: The adult can no longer visit or contact their children, and the kids are known as “legal orphans,” because in the court’s eye, they have no parents. Still, the situation is becoming more common: In 2017 nearly 70,000 such orphans across the country were awaiting adoption, nearly a fifth more than in 2013. (Wiltz, 6/5)
The New York Times:
Deadly Falls In Older Americans Are Rising. Here’s How To Prevent Them.
As the population ages, the number of older Americans who die following a fall is rising. A study published Tuesday in the medical journal JAMA found that for people over 75, the rate of mortality from falls more than doubled from 2000 to 2016. Researchers analyzed information obtained from death certificates maintained by the federal government’s National Center for Health Statistics. In 2016, the rate of death from falls for people 75 and older was 111 per 100,000 people, they found. In 2000, that rate was 52 per 100,000 people. (Hafner, 6/4)
The New York Times:
Even One Extra Walk A Day May Make A Big Difference
How many steps should people take every day for good health? A new study of activity and mortality in older women finds that the total could be lower than many of us expect and that even small increases in steps can be meaningful. The study also side-eyes the validity, utility and origin of the common 10,000-step-a-day exercise goals built into so many of our phones and activity monitors and suggests, instead, that any moving, whether or not it counts as exercise, may help to extend people’s lives. (Reynolds, 6/5)
The New York Times:
Becoming A Digital Grandparent
Emerging from a theater on a recent Sunday, I turned on my phone and found a flurry of texts from my daughter. My 2-year-old granddaughter had just smashed her thumb in a closing restaurant door. Wincing, I read on: They were headed for an urgent care clinic. They were waiting for X-rays.The thumb was broken and needed a splint. (Span, 6/5)
San Francisco Chronicle:
Young People Suing Government Over Climate Change Try To Move Suit Forward
A federal appeals court appeared torn Tuesday over a lawsuit by 21 young people demanding government action against climate change — unmoved by Trump administration arguments that the case was a fabrication, but uncertain about judicial authority to chart a new course. The issue before a panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, meeting in Portland, was whether to allow the youths and their environmental supporters to go to trial on claims that their constitutional rights to life and liberty are being violated by government-sanctioned oil, coal and gas development. (Egelko, 6/4)
The Wall Street Journal:
What Foods Can Disturb Your Sleep?
Most people know that caffeine close to bedtime can interfere with sleep and that tossing back cocktails in the evening can cause a person to wake up a few hours later when the alcohol is metabolized. But less research has been done to understand the effects of food on sleep. One expert, Marie-Pierre St-Onge, an associate professor of nutritional medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York—and director of the university’s Sleep Center of Excellence—explains the sleep-diet relationship and what foods may disturb your slumber. (Mitchell, 6/4)
NPR:
Kids With Obesity Need Support, Not Judgment, From Doctors
Kids with obesity face a host of health problems related to their weight, like high blood pressure, diabetes, and joint problems. Research points to another way heavier children and teens are at risk: their own doctors' bias. This prejudice has real health consequences for kids, making families less likely to show up for appointments or get recommended vaccines. (Gordon, 6/5)
The New York Times:
‘Love Island’ Returns Amid Debate About Contestants’ Mental Health
It seemed like business as usual when a new season of “Love Island” aired here Monday night. All the familiar elements of the cult reality show were there, with the luxury villa in Spain and the skimpy swimsuits. But as the credits rolled, the sunny atmosphere darkened and a black screen appeared with a photograph of Michael Thalassitis, a former contestant who killed himself in March. The episode had been dedicated to his memory. (Codrea-Rado, 6/4)
News from state legislatures comes from Connecticut, Maine, Virginia, New Hampshire, Texas, Massachusetts and Florida.
The CT Mirror:
Watered-Down Public Option Bill Heads To Senate After House Approval
A deeply diluted version of an ambitious public option health care bill moved through the House Tuesday, drawing bipartisan support but abandoning once-hopeful plans to impose a state mandate and arrange discounted coverage for small businesses and individuals. The final measure included a requirement that health care providers submit annual reports on the prices they impose, the costs they incur and the payments they receive. (Carlesso, 6/4)
The Associated Press:
Bill To Legalize Assisted Suicide In Maine Goes To Governor
The Maine Legislature voted Tuesday to legalize assisted suicide, with supporters declaring it in line with the state's tradition of individualism and opponents insisting the practice tempts fate. The bill now goes to Democratic Gov. Janet Mills, who has 10 days to act on the bill and has not indicated whether she will let it become law. Her office said she has not yet taken a position. (6/4)
The New York Times:
After Another Mass Shooting, Another Virginia Governor Tries To Change Gun Laws
After a gunman killed 32 people at Virginia Tech in 2007, a bill to require mandatory background checks for arms purchases at gun shows failed to make it out of committee in the Virginia State Senate. It was blocked by all of the Republicans on the committee and two Democrats, who controlled the chamber at the time. Now, more than a decade later, and after a gunman killed 12 people in Virginia Beach last week, a similar background check bill is being proposed as part of a package of legislation to be considered in a special session, which Gov. Ralph Northam called for on Tuesday. (Robertson, 6/4)
New Hampshire Public Radio:
N.H. Senate Adds $6M For PFAS Contamination Response To State Budget Proposal
The proposed state budget up for a vote this week in the N.H. Senate includes money to address PFAS chemical contamination issues. The increasing awareness of PFAS contamination has already been costly for the state, towns and water utilities. (Ropeik, 6/4)
New Hampshire Public Radio:
State, EPA Say Drinking Water In Nashua Is Safe After PFAS Found At 2 Superfund Sites
State and federal officials say Nashua’s drinking water supplies are safe from contamination by a long-dormant Superfund site.That's despite recent tests showing elevated levels of toxic PFAS chemicals in the groundwater at what's called the Sylvester site. (Ropeik, 6/4)
Texas Tribune:
Texas Governor Signs Bills To Combat Human Trafficking, Aid Sexual Assault Survivors
In his first public bill signing following the end of this year's legislative session, Gov. Greg Abbott signed five bills Tuesday, measures that aim to combat human trafficking, eliminate the state's rape kit backlog, and expand resources for survivors of sexual assault. (Byrne, 6/4)
WBUR:
Senate To Press Opioid Measures In Budget Talks
Senate negotiators on a six-member conference committee will try to convince their House colleagues to agree to a $5 million program aimed at reducing the death toll from the opioid epidemic. The proposals, including greater access to overdose-reversing drugs and ways to test for the presence of deadly opioid fentanyl, stem from recommendations made this year by a high-level commission that explored possible new steps state government could take. (Lisinski, 6/4)
Concord (N.H.) Monitor:
Sununu Signs Bills To Increase Funding To DCYF
It’s been an unenviable position for years: Workers at the Division for Children, Youth and Families have some of the highest average workloads in the country. This week, a bill hoped by lawmakers to address that became law. On Monday, Gov. Chris Sununu and Senate President Donna Soucy signed off on Senate Bill 6, a measure to dramatically increase the staffing at the agency, adding funding for 77 new positions over two years. The governor also signed a second bill, Senate Bill 14, seeking to fund preventative programs to better divert children from dangerous situations. (DeWitt, 6/4)
Health News Florida:
House Seeks To Defend Medical Marijuana Law
As court battles continue about whether the state is properly carrying out a 2016 constitutional amendment that broadly legalized medical marijuana, the Florida House is again trying to weigh in. House attorneys Friday gave notice that they will appeal a Leon County circuit judge’s ruling that blocked the House from intervening in a lawsuit to help defend a controversial 2017 law that was designed to carry out the constitutional amendment. The move came as the House also is asking the 1st District Court of Appeal to allow it to intervene in another case about the 2017 law. (Saunders, 6/4)
Media outlets report on news from Alaska, California, Michigan, Minnesota, Oregon, Rhode Island, Ohio, Florida, Arizona, Louisiana, Kansas, Missouri, Georgia, North Carolina and Maryland
ProPublica/Anchorage Daily News:
“No More Silence”: Her Kidnapping, Sexual Assault And Murder Stunned A Town, And Started A Movement
Nine months and a long Arctic winter have come and gone since the abduction, sexual assault and murder of 10-year-old Ashley Johnson-Barr in the northwest Alaska hub community of Kotzebue. Signs of Ashley can be found everywhere in this town of 3,200. At the cemetery, groups of kids gather at the purple-painted wooden cross marking her grave. They leave trinkets, teddy bears, necklaces, even sports medals. People slip bouquets of artificial flowers through the chain link fence at Rainbow Park, where the fifth grader was last seen playing on a Thursday evening in September. (Theriault Boots, 6/4)
The Associated Press:
Beverly Hills Becomes The First U.S. City To End Most Tobacco Sales
Beverly Hills has become the first U.S. city to end most tobacco sales. The City Council on Tuesday unanimously voted to snuff out sales of cigarettes, cigars, e-cigarettes and other tobacco products beginning in 2021. The ban covers sales at gas stations and pharmacies as well as convenience and grocery stores. But it exempts hotels and three plush cigar lounges in the wealthy and glamorous Los Angeles suburb. (6/4)
The Associated Press:
Where Things Stand In The Flint Water Crisis Investigation
Questions abound after Michigan authorities executed search warrants in recent weeks to seize from government storage the state-owned mobile devices of former Gov. Rick Snyder, top aides and other government employees in a long-running criminal investigation of Flint's water crisis. The three-year probe of lead contamination in the city's water supply and a deadly Legionnaires' disease outbreak has led to charges against 15 people, including two members of Snyder's Cabinet along with two state-appointed emergency managers effectively ran Flint due its financial troubles. (6/4)
MPR:
5 Things To Know About Minnesota's Medical Provider Tax
Most of us will continue to pay a tax every time we visit the doctor, a clinic and other health care providers in Minnesota. A major accomplishment of the legislative session was a bipartisan agreement to extend a tax on health care providers but at a lower rate, after it had been set to disappear at the end of the year. (Zdechlik, 6/4)
The Oregonian:
Judge Holds Oregon In Contempt, Finding State Violates Mentally Ill Defendants’ Rights
A judge held Oregon’s public psychiatric hospital in contempt of court on Tuesday, ruling that hospital leaders “willfully violated” court orders to quickly admit defendants in need of mental health evaluations and treatment. The contempt ruling, issued by Judge D. Charles Bailey of the Washington County Circuit Court, is the clearest rebuke yet of the state’s lapses in handling the rise in criminal cases with mentally ill defendants. (Friedman, 6/4)
Boston Globe:
Partners Pulls Out Of Talks For Rhode Island Health System
Partners HealthCare on Tuesday halted its two-year effort to acquire Care New England Health System, Rhode Island’s second-largest hospital operator, after Governor Gina Raimondo called on local hospitals to come up with a solution for health care in the state. With Raimondo’s urging, Care New England, Lifespan, and Brown University said they would begin negotiations to create a Rhode Island-based academic health care system. (Dayal McCluskey and McGowan, 6/4)
The Associated Press:
More Patients Diagnosed Amid Legionnaires' Outbreak
Health officials in Ohio say 10 people have now been diagnosed with Legionnaires' disease amid an outbreak at a recently opened hospital near Columbus. Franklin County's health department said Tuesday that's up from seven. One of those patients died Sunday. (6/4)
WBUR:
Partners Backs Out Of Rhode Island Expansion At Governor's Request, For Now
Partners HealthCare says it is withdrawing efforts to acquire Care New England, the second-largest health care network in Rhode Island.The move comes at the request of Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, who says she wants the two top health care networks in her state and Brown University to resume efforts to create a more unified, local system. (Bebinger, 6/4)
The Associated Press:
San Francisco To Force Treatment On Mentally Ill Drug Users
San Francisco officials decided Tuesday to force some people with serious mental illness and drug addiction into treatment, even if it goes against the spirit of a city known for its fierce protection of civil rights. Several members of the Board of Supervisors voiced deep concerns Tuesday about the possibility of taking away a person’s civil liberties, but the proposal for a pilot program passed 10-1. Mayor London Breed and other supporters say the move — known as conservatorship — is necessary to help people who are often homeless, addicted to drugs and have a mental illness, making them a danger to themselves. (Har, 6/4)
The Associated Press:
Homelessness Rises 12% In Los Angeles County, Study Finds
The number of homeless people counted across Los Angeles County jumped 12% over the past year to nearly 59,000, with more young and old residents and families on the streets, officials said Tuesday. The majority of the homeless were found within the city of Los Angeles, which saw a 16% increase to 36,300, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority said in presenting January's annual count to the county Board of Supervisors. (6/4)
Tampa Bay Times:
Pasco County Is Cold To Request For Indigent Medical Aid
A nonprofit medical clinic wants to turn $350,000 from Pasco County into $900,000 worth of health services for the needy. Pasco’s response? Go ask the hospitals for help. The scene played out Tuesday morning when Premier Community HealthCare Group asked commissioners for $350,000 in the upcoming county budget. The local government dollars allow Premier to tap an additional $556,000 from the federal government in what is known as the Low-Income Pool. Money from the private sector does not qualify for the federal match. (Bowen, 6/5)
San Francisco Chronicle:
SF Supervisors Tepidly Support Tiny Expansion Of Forced Treatment For Mentally Ill
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed a controversial law Tuesday that will allow the city to force about five people who are severely mentally ill and addicted to drugs into inpatient treatment.After months of intense debate in City Hall, the board voted 10-1, with Supervisor Shamann Walton dissenting, to adopt state law SB 1045. (Thadani, 6/4)
Arizona Republic:
Arizona Prisons Have A History Of Women Giving Birth In Cells
Letters sent to a federal judge in May claimed women at an all-women state prison were not receiving adequate maternal healthcare. The letters mentioned stories of miscarriages, poor diets and a woman giving birth alone in her cell. The Arizona Department of Corrections is under scrutiny for not providing adequate health and dental care to inmates. (Castle, 6/4)
Sacramento Bee:
Sacramento County Releases 2019-20 Recommended Budget
Improvements to Sacramento County jails stemming from a lawsuit alleging “inhumane” solitary confinement conditions made up the bulk of new spending recommended to the Board of Supervisors for the county’s 2019-20 budget. Released Tuesday, the $4.4 billion spending plan is a 2.4 percent increase from last year’s budget, with county departments angling to get about $33.1 million for new or improved programs. (Yoon-Hendricks, 6/4)
The Advocate:
LCMC And East Jefferson General Hospital Negotiating On Possible 'Strategic Affiliation'
East Jefferson General Hospital is one step closer to being taken off Jefferson Parish's hands. Hospital leaders announced Tuesday that they have signed an agreement to discuss a potential takeover by LCMC Health, the New Orleans-based hospital operator that already leases West Jefferson Medical Center and runs several other local hospitals. The agreement, known as a memorandum of understanding, is nonbinding, but it commits the board of EJGH and leaders of LCMC to negotiating in secret over the next several months on the terms of a potential takeover. (Roberts, 6/4)
KCUR:
Report Names Kansas And Missouri Nursing Homes With ‘Persistent Record Of Poor Care’
Nine nursing homes in Kansas and 14 in Missouri are among nearly 400 nationwide with a “persistent record of poor care” whose names had been withheld from the public, according to a U.S. Senate report released Monday. The facilities are not included on a shorter list of homes that get increased federal scrutiny because of health, safety or sanitary problems. (Margolies, 6/4)
Georgia Health News:
Gainesville-Based System Warns Of Potential Break With Anthem
Northeast Georgia Health System has sent letters to 40,000 patients, warning them that its contract with Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield may end Sept. 30 without a new agreement. The Gainesville-based system said that Anthem is seeking “drastic cuts’’ in payments for medical services. (Miller, 6/4)
Los Angeles Times:
L.A. County To Pay $3 Million To Family Who Says Failed 911 Calls Led To Girl's Death
Ashley Flores was at home on Christmas Eve 2017, anticipating the gifts she and her siblings would soon open, when she began having difficulty breathing. The 11-year-old’s older sister dialed 911 and was put on hold by a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy, her relatives said. The next four times her sister and other family members called, the same deputy failed to properly transfer the emergency calls and eventually routed them to an empty fire station where no one picked up, the family alleged in a lawsuit. (Lau, 6/4)
North Carolina Health News:
Samples Suggest Unreported Coal Ash Spills
Coal ash found in the sediment at the bottom of Lake Sutton suggests multiple, unreported and unmonitored spills have occurred for years at Duke Energy’s former coal-fired plant near Wilmington, according to a new study conducted by researchers at Duke University. Sediment samples collected from the lake in 2015 and again last year after Hurricane Florence detected contaminants including arsenic, selenium, thalium and copper – metals found in coal. (Talton, 6/4)
The Washington Post:
Baltimore’s Nightclub For Disabled Adults Fosters Love, Friendship And Inclusion
By the time the doors open 15 minutes early this Saturday night, dozens are lined up to get inside. Women wear wedges and bodysuits that hug their curves. Men sport collared shirts and their favorite sneakers. Some have caregivers guiding them; others need wheelchairs. Many wear the signature T-shirts stamped with the logo, Club 1111. It’s the long-awaited evening when the League for People with Disabilities transforms into a glittering nightclub for disabled adults. The classrooms become dance floors, with DJs playing pounding club music. Merchandise, such as sunglasses and blinking rings, is stacked up and ready to be sold, and volunteers wait in a makeshift spa to do fingernails and apply temporary tattoos. A lounge with dim lights is set up for chilling. (Wenger, 6/4)
The Associated Press:
Oakland Becomes 2nd US City To Legalize Magic Mushrooms
Oakland on Tuesday became the second U.S. city to decriminalize magic mushrooms after a string of speakers testified that psychedelics helped them overcome depression, drug addiction and post-traumatic stress disorder. The City Council voted unanimously to decriminalize the adult use and possession of magic mushrooms and other entheogenic, or psychoactive, plants and fungi. Denver voters in May approved a similar measure for people 21 and older. (Maldonado, 6/5)
News outlets report on stories related to pharmaceutical pricing.
FierceHealthcare:
Prices For Top-Selling Drugs Appear Immune To Common Market Forces: Study
When it comes to concerns over the rising costs of prescription drugs, it's not just an isolated few that should be grabbing the headlines. A new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which examined prices for the 49 top-selling drugs between January 2012 and December 2017, found virtually all of them rose in price on a regular basis. The median price among those drugs rose 76% over the time period, and 78% of the drugs in the study saw price hikes of at least 50%. More than 4 of 5 products in the study more than doubled in price. (Kuhrt, 6/3)
MedPage:
US Drug Prices Rise In 'Highly Synchronized' Pattern
The costs for certain widely used medicines continue to rise in the United States even amid competition from similar products, according to a new study. The results run contrary to normal expectations about market forces on prices. "That was one of the more disheartening findings" of the study, lead author Nathan E. Wineinger, PhD, from Scripps Research in La Jolla, California, told Medscape Medical News. (Young, 5/31)
NBC News:
No End In Sight To Rising Drug Prices, Study Finds
The cost of many popular prescription drugs has increased substantially in the U.S. in the past six years, and the trend may continue if bold bipartisan action isn’t taken, according to a study published Friday. The study, in the journal JAMA Network Open, found a substantial industry-wide rise in insurer and out-of-pocket costs for top-selling, brand-name prescription drugs, highlighting one of the foremost problems in health care today: unimpeded price increases in the pharmaceutical market. (Charles, 5/31)
CNBC:
The Drugs With Biggest Price Surge Are For Erectile Dysfunction: Study
The prescription drugs that have seen the most rapid growth in cost in the U.S. don’t treat depression, cholesterol or even autoimmune diseases. Blockbuster male libido treatments Viagra and Cialis saw the biggest price hikes among the 17 top-selling brand-name drugs that have seen costs surges from 2012 through 2017, according to a new study published Friday in the peer-reviewed Journal of the American Medical Association. (Lovelace, 5/31)
Stat:
Nevada Makes Pharma Disclose Asthma Med Costs. To What End?
In the latest state effort to peel back the curtain on drug pricing, Nevada has adopted a law that requires pharmaceutical companies to disclose prices and costs associated with their asthma medicines, a step that mirrors action taken two years ago on diabetes treatments. Specifically, drug makers must submit reports to the state detailing costs for producing or acquiring medicines used to treat asthma, as well as profit margins, any financial assistance provided to patients, and the factors contributing to recent, significant price increases. (Silverman, 6/4)
NPR:
AIDS Activists Take Aim At Gilead To Lower Price Of HIV Drug PrEP
When the first HIV drug, AZT, came to market in 1987, it cost $10,000 a year.That price makes Peter Staley laugh today. "It sounds quaint and cheap now, but $10,000 a year at that time was the highest price ever set for any drug in history," he says. At the time, the price Burroughs Wellcome set for the drug sparked outrage. The AIDS epidemic was an urgent national crisis. For many, the diagnosis was a death sentence. The TV-viewing public was horrified by endless images of young men, suddenly sick and dying. A lost generation. (Simmons-Duffin, 5/30)
FiercePharma:
Is CEO Pay Linked To Drug Prices? Curious Investors Failed Their Campaign To Find Out
Some Big Pharma investors wanted to know whether drug prices are rising because executives personally benefit from the hikes. But when they put that question up for a vote, their fellow shareholders turned them away. In a series of annual meetings at top drugmakers, shareholders rejected calls for more information on executive compensation—namely, whether price hikes directly fueled increases in C-suite pay. (Sagonowsky, 5/30)
Stat:
Could We Nationalize Insulin To Make It A 'Public Good'?
If you’re an avid follower of #healthpolicytwitter, you may have seen a pretty head-turning statement from former CMS Administrator Andy Slavitt: “Yes, I went full socialist.” The eyebrow-raiser came after Slavitt endorsed a plan to nationalize insulin and make it a “public good” — and when I caught up with Slavitt for a brief interview, he didn’t back down. He made the argument that insulin is an essential part of life for people with type 1 diabetes, much like water. “We wouldn’t sell bottled water at $80 a bottle,” he told me. He also isn’t buying the argument that tweaks around the edges can solve the insulin affordability issue. (Florko, 6/4)
The Wall Street Journal:
These Drug Companies Are Too Frail To Cure
The calamity engulfing generic-drug stocks has many causes, but they are all made worse by one simple malady: too much debt. Solving the problem is much tougher than identifying it. Years of weak performance for these companies has lately broken into a share-price crisis. In the past month alone, shares of Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and Mylan have plunged by about 40%. Smaller rivals, such as Mallinckrodt and Lannett haven’t fared any better. (Grant, 6/2)
Stat:
U.K. Patients Form A Buyer’s Club To Get A Cheaper Version Of A Vertex Cystic Fibrosis Drug
As a long-running battle over access to a pricey cystic fibrosis drug grinds on in the U.K., an advocacy group and several families have formed a buyer’s club in order to make a lower-cost version of a Vertex Pharmaceuticals treatment available to patients in the next few weeks. The new buyer’s club is working with Gador, a drug maker based in Argentina, which will ship a generic version of the Orkambi medication to the U.K., where cystic fibrosis patients and their families can expect to pay roughly $25,000 a year, depending on how many people sign up. This would be 80 percent less than the approximately $132,000 that Vertex reportedly wants to charge the National Health Service in England. (Silverman, 6/4)
KTSA:
Coalition Of Pharmacists, Doctors And Nurses Fights Skyrocketing Drug Prices
Prescription drug prices continue to soar, and the Campaign for Sustainable Rx Pricing is calling for transparency and accountability. Former State Senator Leticia Van de Putte says some people are reducing the dosage of medications or doing without them because of the skyrocketing prices. “Blood pressure medicine, diabetes, cholesterol, seizure medication–these are medications that people absolutely need to stay alive, and that’s where we’re seeing these huge increases,” said Van de Putte, a longtime pharmacist in San Antonio. (Ruiz, 6/3)
The Philadelphia Inquirer:
New Jersey Drug Maker To Pay $7 Million To Settle Claims Of Inflating Drug Prices
New Jersey-based Heritage Pharmaceuticals, Inc., has agreed to pay over $7 million to settle allegations that it schemed to fix prices for several of its drugs. Federal prosecutors say the generics drug maker conspired with competitors between 2012 and 2015 to artificially inflate the price of pharmaceuticals, rig bids, and allocate customers. The drugs, including those to treat high blood pressure, asthma, and diabetes — were supplied to Medicare, Medicaid, and the Department of Defense. (Wood, 5/31)
Perspectives: Novartis Fell Victim To Human Nature When Putting A $2.1M Price Tag On New Treatment
Read recent commentaries about drug-cost issues.
Stat:
‘Anchoring’ Was At Work In Setting The Price Of Novartis’ New Gene Therapy
If the Empire State Building happened to be hollow, could you fill it with 1 billion ping pong balls? Would that number fall short, or would you have leftovers? How many ping pong balls do you think it would take exactly? I know, it’s a hard question. It’s hard to know even where to start. A half a century ago, Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman and his lifelong colleague Amos Tversky described what they called anchoring. When offered a number about an intuitively unknowable quantity, like how many ping pong balls could fill the Empire State Building, the guesser is pulled toward that number. (Peter B. Bach, 6/4)
Stat:
I Have Spinal Muscular Atrophy. Critics Of The $2 Million New Gene Therapy Are Missing The Point
As someone who has lived with spinal muscular atrophy for all 30 years of my life, I was perplexed and disappointed that the recent approval of Novartis’ gene therapy Zolgensma was immediately overshadowed by outrage over the drug’s price: $2.125 million.The Food and Drug Administration’s decision was a pivotal day for those of us in the SMA community. Zolgensma, approved for children under 2, is the only one-dose treatment option for any category of SMA patients and has been highly effective in clinical testing so far. (Nathan Yates, 5/31)
Sacramento Bee:
How President Trump Is Delivering Results On Drug Prices
Americans have heard politicians talk about high drug prices for years. It’s one of the main problems in health care that both President Donald Trump and I, as his health secretary, have talked about a great deal too. But the Trump administration isn’t offering up just talk — we’re delivering results. In December for the first time in 46 years, the official government measure of inflation in drug prices actually dropped for all of 2018. More than a dozen companies last year cut their prices, froze prices or rolled back price increases. (HHS Secretary Alex Azar, 5/30)
The Hill:
Consumers Agree: Greater Transparency Among Pharmacy Benefit Managers Is Needed
Recently, the Trump administration finalized a rule to require drug companies to disclose the list prices of their drugs in direct-to-consumer advertisements. It appears to be a step toward greater transparency in the pharmaceutical market, but its impact is likely to be overshadowed by a much deeper problem: the billions of dollars in drug rebates captured by pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) that should be used to lower consumer prices at the pharmaceutical counter. A recent survey of 1,000 heads-of-household finds the vast majority of consumers agree. (Liam Siguad, 6/1)
Bangor Daily News:
Transparency A Good Place To Start To Reduce Prescription Drug Costs
Prescription drug costs, which have risen substantially in recent years, now account for a fifth of all health care spending. As a result, a quarter of Americans say they have a difficult time paying for their prescription medications and nearly one in 10 say they do not take their medication as prescribed to save money. This is not sustainable. There are efforts in Congress and the Maine Legislature to slow the cost increases to ensure that people don’t go without needed medication. (6/4)
The Hill:
Are Generic Drugs Safe?
Almost every conversation we have at the kitchen table or in our public discourse in the context of our prescription medicines is regarding price, and for good reason. Profiteering among some within in the pharmaceutical industry compels many of us into situations where we are forced to make a decision between putting food on the table versus cutting our prescription pills in half. This is clearly unacceptable. A significant outcome of this dilemma is addressed by generic drugs that are on the other end of the pricing spectrum. (Dinesh Thakur, 5/30)
The Star Tribune:
Lawmakers And Advocates: Work On Emergency Insulin Program Not Over
So why did the bill, which had bipartisan support, fail to pass this year? Some legislators said they had concerns about the program's logistics, while others were worried about the funding source. But the proposal's fate was ultimately decided in complex end-of-session negotiations that happened outside the public eye. Rep. Tina Liebling, the House DFL chairwoman for the health and human services committee, said that during one of the final negotiating sessions she asked her Senate counterpart, Republican Sen. Michelle Benson, whether the insulin provision was going to end up in the final version of the massive health and human services bill. (Van Berkel, 5/29)
Editorial pages focus on these health care topics and others.
Bloomberg:
Roundup Cancer Risk Is Only One Danger To Humans, Animals
Chemicals giant Bayer AG is reeling after a jury awarded $2 billion in damages to people who say they contracted cancer after years of using Roundup, a popular weed killer manufactured by Bayer subsidiary Monsanto Co. Bayer probably won't pay out the full $2 billion. But more than 10,000 further cases are pending, worrying Bayer investors as well as farmers who rely on the product as a cheap, effective herbicide. Cancer may only be part of the story. Studies over the past decade suggest that glyphosate — the active ingredient in Roundup — pollutes water sources, hangs around in soil far longer than previously suspected, and routinely taints human food supplies. (Mark Buchanan, 6/4)
Los Angeles Times:
Gov. Newsom Stepped Into A Vaccine Debate We Shouldn’t Be Having. Big Mistake
Over the weekend, a reporter asked Gov. Newsom his opinion of a Senate bill to tighten the regulations concerning medical exemptions for child vaccinations. His answer was a huge blunder. Newsom’s response fed into the anti-vaccination fever swamp. He undermined a necessary effort to place oversight on the distribution of medical exemptions, which have soared sharply enough in the last two years to raise suspicions about whether some are not legitimate. (Michael Hiltzik, 6/4)
Bloomberg:
CVS Makes Its Pitch For The Future Of Health Care
Shares of CVS Health Inc. have been battered in recent months along with other health-care companies amid stepped-up scrutiny of the industry’s pricing practices and calls from lawmakers and the Trump administration to overhaul the current complicated and costly U.S. health system. CVS also has had the added task of integrating Aetna Inc., the insurer it bought for $69 billion in November as part of an ambitious plan to transform itself from a pharmacy giant into a more complete provider of health-care services. It was against this backdrop, and with CVS’s shares down 31% since completing the Aetna deal, that the company held its much-anticipated investor day Tuesday. It marked the first comprehensive update of CVS post-merger, and was a chance for management to convince shareholders that the combined company was up to the challenges ahead and moving in the right direction. Based on the stock’s initial positive reaction, investors seem to have liked what they heard. That upbeat vibe isn’t misplaced. (Max Nisen, 6/4)
The Wall Street Journal:
Debating Abortion In 2019
If the pro-choice and pro-life camps share anything in common, it’s an inability to see any merit in the other’s case. Pro-choice advocates, however, have benefited from a trend toward gender equality around the world. Pro-lifers believe feminism changes nothing about the issue—for them, a life is at stake—but they’ve had to respond to charges that women have been underrepresented in the public debate. The right to terminate a pregnancy, after all, is one that only women are in position to claim. On both sides, rising female empowerment is newly centering women in the abortion debate. (6/5)
Stat:
Creating Egg And Sperm Cells From Stem Cells Raises Ethical Issues
Until recently, the only way to make eggs or sperm was the old-fashioned way: in the ovaries and testes. In the not-too-distant future, it may be possible to use cells from almost any part of the body to create these germ cells, also known as gametes.This process, called in vitro gametogenesis (IVG), raises the possibility that babies could be made using muscle or liver or blood cells. While not yet ready for prospective human parents — so far it has only been accomplished successfully in mice — it raises major ethical and legal questions that we should start thinking and talking about now. (I. Glenn Cohen and Alex Pearlman, 6/5)
Austin American-Statesman:
Why We Need Housing-Focused Shelter For City's Homeless
It is time to act effectively and quickly to confront homelessness and provide shelter for people who are living outside. This Thursday, the Austin City Council can take concrete steps to make this a reality by approving a Housing-Focused Shelter project. (Ann Kitchen, 6/4)
Los Angeles Times:
Homelessness In L.A. Is A Catastrophe In Motion, And Our Leaders Are Largely To Blame
Some of them are flat broke, some are sick, some work, some have given up hope. They are homeless in Los Angeles, where mega-mansions and shantytowns share the same ZIP code, and where the dark underbelly of a colossal social breakdown is on full display. In L.A. city and county, you taxed yourselves to do something about it, and last year alone $619 million was poured into housing and services. (Steve Lopez, 6/4)
Los Angeles Times:
Housing The Homeless Hits NIMBY Wall In ‘Progressive’ Venice
The blue couch appeared one evening at the dumpster across the alley behind my house. Over the course of the next two days, the couch was moved around a bit. By the third day, someone had dragged the couch to the side of my house, a not particularly private space. (Robin Abcarian, 6/4)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Build More Nutrition Funding For Older Ohioans Into State Budget As Hunger Rises Sharply
While we recognize the many contributions of seniors in our community, we are also faced with the fact that, nationally, hunger among those 60 and older has been steadily increasing, growing by 45 percent between 2001 and 2017. Of the more than 300,000 individuals served by the Greater Cleveland Food Bank and our nearly 1,000 partners each year, 24 percent are seniors. Despite the economic recovery, food insecurity remains prevalent on our front lines, especially among children, working poor families and an increasing number of older adults. (Kristin S. Warzocha, 6/4)
Sacramento Bee:
Many Californians Don’t Have Clean, Safe Water. That’s Not OK
Water is a basic necessity of life, but over one million Californians lack access to clean, safe and affordable drinking water, says Gov. Gavin Newsom. Six million Californians receive their water from operators who have been fined for violating the state’s clean water laws in recent years, according to a 2018 investigation by McClatchy. (6/4)