- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Nearly 1 In 3 Recent FDA Drug Approvals Followed By Major Safety Actions
- Grassley, Chaffetz Send Fiery Response To HHS Memo They Say Chills Whistleblowing
- Reactions To The GOP Health Bill: Voices From The States
- Parents Of Sick Children Fear Trap If States Have Say On 'Preexisting Conditions'
- Political Cartoon: 'Holler Uncle?'
- Health Law 6
- Amid Fierce Criticism, McConnell Defends All-Male Panel: 'Everybody Is At The Table'
- In Senate, GOP Is Walking A Razor-Thin Margin And These Deal-Breakers Could Nudge Them Over Edge
- Republican Health Replacement Bill's Provisions On Medicaid Are Key Concern For Senators
- Republicans Face Angry, Rowdy Crowds At Town Halls
- The Evidence Is Clear: People Do Die From Lack Of Access To Health Insurance
- Journalist Arrested After Asking HHS Secretary About Preexisting Conditions In GOP Health Law
- Administration News 3
- Despite Senators' Concerns Over Ties To Pharma Industry, Gottlieb Confirmed To Lead FDA
- As Push Grows For Ever-Faster Approvals, Report Finds One-Third Of FDA-Cleared Drugs Posed Safety Risks
- Grassley And Chaffetz Skewer HHS Memo Limiting Employees' Comments To Congress
- Public Health 2
- House Panel To Investigate Role DEA And Drug Distributors Have Played In Opioid Flood
- Harms Of Thyroid Cancer Screenings Outweigh Benefits, Task Force Says
- State Watch 2
- Maryland Governor Selects Obamacare Critic To Lead State's Health Care Commission
- State Highlights: D.C. Zika Testing Program Botched Results; Ga. Gov. Signs Optometry Bill But Also Issues Related Executive Order
- Prescription Drug Watch 2
- Money-Back Guarantees Protecting Patients From Buying A Lemon When It Comes To Pricey Drugs
- Perspectives: When Drug Prices Are High Patients Take Fewer, Leading To More Expensive Care
- Editorials And Opinions 3
- Contemplating GOP Health Plan Politics: Can The Senate's Panel Of White Men Come To The Rescue?; Who Voted How And Said What?
- Different Takes: Obamacare's Impact On Families' Financial Health; Can Washington Get Health Care Right?
- Viewpoints: The Link Between Despair And The Opioid Crisis; Big Tobacco And E-Cigarettes
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Nearly 1 In 3 Recent FDA Drug Approvals Followed By Major Safety Actions
More than 70 drugs approved from 2001 through 2010 ran into safety concerns later that resulted in withdrawals from the market, “black box” warnings or other actions. (Sydney Lupkin, 5/9)
Grassley, Chaffetz Send Fiery Response To HHS Memo They Say Chills Whistleblowing
The two Republican lawmakers sent a letter to HHS Secretary Tom Price warning him that whistleblowers in HHS could be intimidated into silence by a department memo instructing employees to get clearance before talking with members of Congress and their staffs. (Rachel Bluth, 5/9)
Reactions To The GOP Health Bill: Voices From The States
What will happen to people with preexisting conditions is one worry some Americans expressed; the high costs of insurance under Obamacare is another. (5/10)
Parents Of Sick Children Fear Trap If States Have Say On 'Preexisting Conditions'
"I'm not going to risk my son's health on the political whims of Jefferson City," says one Missouri father, whose son requires about $20,000 to $30,000 in medical care expenses a year. The new GOP health bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act lets states decide whether or not insurers must cover people with preexisting conditions, such as birth defects. (Bram Sable-Smith, Side Effects Public Media, 5/10)
Political Cartoon: 'Holler Uncle?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Holler Uncle?'" by Nick Anderson.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
VOTERS EXPRESS MIXED FEELINGS FOR THE GOP HEALTH PLAN
What’s said on the Hill
echoes across the nation.
And people react.
- Anonymous
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Amid Fierce Criticism, McConnell Defends All-Male Panel: 'Everybody Is At The Table'
Democrats are concerned that there are no women involved in the health law working group because they say the legislation is particularly harmful to women.
The New York Times:
Women Hold G.O.P. Senate Seats, But Little Influence
The Senate passed a significant milestone this year: 21 of its members are now women, the highest number in American history. But as the recent wrangling over the American health care system in Congress shows, there isn’t always power in numbers. After the House passed a health care bill that gave states the option to drop pregnancy and maternity care from required insurance coverage, Republican leaders in the Senate seemed poised to answer criticism from women. Instead they courted more, naming a 13-member, all-Republican working group on health care legislation, without a single woman on it — forcing Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader who approved the panel, on the defensive on Tuesday. (Steinhauer, 5/9)
Reuters:
Senators On Defensive Over All-Male Healthcare Panel
After a meeting of the Senate healthcare group, lawmakers were bombarded with questions as to why no women were named to the 13-man panel. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell tried to explain. "The working group that counts is all 52 of us," McConnell told reporters, referring to all 52 Republican senators in the 100-member chamber. "Nobody is being excluded based upon gender ... Everybody's at the table. Everybody." Democrats pounced. Republican men are negotiating "a secret healthcare plan, which I really hope is not happening in the men's locker room," said Senator Patty Murray, a member of the Democratic leadership from Washington state. (5/9)
The Hill:
GOP Healthcare Effort Dogged By Gender Inequity
McConnell also downplayed the working group’s importance, arguing his entire conference will be involved in the debate. “Nobody is being excluded based upon gender,” he said. (Bolton and Sullivan, 5/9)
The Wall Street Journal:
Pressed On All-Male Health Bill Group, McConnell Says All GOP Senators Have Input
The Senate working group met on Tuesday and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R., W. Va.) attended to participate in a discussion on Medicaid, but she is not joining the group on a permanent basis, a spokeswoman said. Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska said “[I] sure hope so” when asked if a woman would be added to the health-care working group. “I just want to make sure we have some women on,” she added. Sen. Susan Collins (R., Maine) spoke for about 15 minutes in the Senate GOP lunch on Tuesday on the health-care proposals and said she planned to continue to participate in the debate.“I’m going to keep speaking up regardless,” Ms. Collins said. “We know how to make our voices heard.” (Peterson, 5/9)
Politico:
Senate GOP On Defensive Over All-Male Health Care Group
Republicans can afford to lose only two of their own members on any Obamacare repeal bill, which they plan to pass using powerful budget reconciliation procedures that can circumvent Democratic filibusters. “It’s just foolish to think that we’re excluding somebody,” Cornyn said. (Schor and Everett, 5/9)
Morning Consult:
McConnell Defends Lack Of Diversity In GOP’s Health Care Group
On Tuesday, all 48 members of the Senate Democratic Caucus released a letter to McConnell asking for Republicans to include Democrats as they work on health care, and promising that they would oppose wholesale changes to the health care law. (Yokley, 5/9)
The Hill:
McConnell Downplays All-Male Healthcare Working Group
Senate Democrats pounced on the issue to paint GOP leaders as insensitive to women’s healthcare needs. "If you look at the House bill, it is so discriminatory against women," said Senate Democratic Leader Charles Schumer (N.Y.). (Bolton, 5/9)
In Senate, GOP Is Walking A Razor-Thin Margin And These Deal-Breakers Could Nudge Them Over Edge
Politico looks at four hot-button topics that could cost Republican votes needed to pass health care legislation. Other media outlets offer explanations on taxes, the Byrd Rule and what will happen if the senators can't pass a repeal-and-replace law.
Politico:
4 Deal-Breakers That Could Blow Up A Senate Obamacare Repeal Bill
The Senate’s fresh attempt to dismantle Obamacare is already running into its first roadblock — the growing list of demands from GOP lawmakers eager to leave their own mark on the legislation. Just days into the chamber’s health care debate, centrists and self-styled mavericks are testing the party’s razor-thin margin for victory and setting the stage for a series of high-profile negotiations. Those stare downs are likely to shape big parts of the legislation, since GOP leaders can only absorb two defections if Democrats and the chamber’s two independents stand unified in opposition. (Cancryn, 5/9)
The Washington Post:
Senate Republicans Face Their Own Divisions In Push For Health-Care Overhaul
Sen. Ted Cruz, a defiant loner whose feuds with Republican Party leaders have made him a conservative favorite, suddenly felt an itch to collaborate. It was late March, just after the dramatic collapse of House Republicans’ initial attempt to pass a sweeping overhaul of the nation’s health-care system. Cruz (R-Tex.) sent notice to party colleagues that he wanted to convene a working group to keep alive the GOP’s pledge to undo the law known as Obamacare. (Costa and Sullivan, 5/9)
Politico:
GOP Pins Health Care Hopes On An Unlikely Figure: Ted Cruz
After four years of taunting and torturing fellow Republicans, Ted Cruz is shedding his just-say-no persona in the Senate for a new identity: Team player. And this is no idle tryout. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell — a man Cruz once derided as a liar and an ally of Democrats — is counting on the Texan to help navigate an Obamacare repeal bill through the Senate with virtually no margin for error. As a trusted voice of the conservative wing of the GOP and conduit to the House Freedom Caucus, Cruz is fast emerging as a pivotal player in the Republican bid to do away with the landmark Democratic health care law. (Everett, 5/9)
Los Angeles Times:
GOP Senators Can Cut Obamacare Taxes Or Preserve Coverage For Millions — But Probably Not Both
As they take up the campaign to replace the Affordable Care Act, Senate Republicans face a critical choice between cutting taxes or preserving health coverage for millions of Americans, two competing demands that may yet derail the GOP push to roll back the 2010 healthcare law. House Republicans, who passed their own Obamacare repeal measure last week, skirted the dilemma by cutting both taxes and coverage. (Levey, 5/9)
Bloomberg:
Obamacare Taxes Aren't Necessarily Going Away: GOP Senators
Republican senators said it’s unclear whether their chamber will repeal all of the taxes imposed under Obamacare as they set aside the health-care bill passed by the House and prepare to write their own from scratch.“That’s hard to say right now. We just have to see,” said Senate Finance Chairman Orrin Hatch, the Utah Republican whose panel oversees health-care and tax policy. “It’s going to be negotiated.” (Kapur, 5/9)
The Associated Press:
AP Explains: How Byrd Rule Shapes GOP Push On Health Care
The success of Republican efforts to repeal and replace Democrat Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act could depend on an obscure Senate rule that few people have heard of and even fewer understand. It's called the Byrd rule, named for the late West Virginia Sen. Robert Byrd and designed decades ago to preserve Senate filibuster rights. What it means for health care is that many Republican ideas may be ruled ineligible. (5/10)
Politico Pro:
52 Ways To Do A Repeal Bill
Senate Republicans want to do their own Obamacare repeal plan — but they have about 52 different ideas about how to do it. Several working groups and coalitions have sprung up as GOP lawmakers start to figure out exactly how they’re going to repeal the Affordable Care Act. (Haberkorn, 5/9)
The Fiscal Times:
The Question Nobody’s Asking: What If The GOP Can’t Get A Health Law Passed?
Republicans in Washington are taking a massive risk when it comes to health insurance policy, and it’s separate and apart from passing a bill through the House of Representatives that restructures the US healthcare system without a score from the Congressional Budget Office. From President Trump on down, Republicans are pointing to the fact that as insurance companies are abandoning the health insurance exchanges created by the Affordable Care Act, they're slowly creating a situation in which some Americans will have no exchange-based options at all in 2018. (Garver, 5/9)
Roll Call:
Senate Leaders Spar On Republican Efforts To Repeal Obamacare
It’s only the first full work week since the Senate received the House-passed measure to reorder the nation’s health insurance system, and leaders in both parties are wasting no time hurling criticism at each other over how to approach the legislation. Using the time reserved for leadership press conferences after Tuesday’s policy lunches, Republicans criticized Democrats for refusing to come to the table and negotiate a fix to a health care system they described as in chaos. Democrats accused the GOP of crafting a bill in secret, by an all-male working group, that would drastically reduce benefits for vulnerable people. (Williams, 5/9)
The Hill:
No. 2 Republican: Senate Will Pass Healthcare Bill This Year
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) pledged Tuesday that the Senate will pass a bill repealing and replacing ObamaCare this year. Senators have been cautious not to commit themselves to an exact timeframe in the wake of last week’s House vote, but the upper chamber’s No. 2 Republican has said healthcare reform will be completed in 2017. When pressed by reporters on whether a measure would be passed before the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30, he wouldn’t commit. (Roubein, 5/9)
Kaiser Health News:
Reactions To The GOP Health Bill: Voices From The States
As the American Health Care Act moves toward the Senate, many people around the country are reacting to it. Among them, people with preexisting conditions who worry about losing their coverage.One of the biggest concerns about the House bill is its treatment of preexisting conditions. Several lawmakers were worried it would leave sicker people in the lurch, so an additional $8 billion was negotiated to help that population. (5/10)
The Hill:
Hatch: Senate’s ObamaCare Repeal Unlikely To Go Through Committees
The Senate's ObamaCare repeal bill is unlikely to go through the committee process, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) said Tuesday. "I don't think it's going to go through the committees, at least from what I know about it," the Senate Finance Committee chairman said. The Senate is devising its own healthcare plan rather than taking up the House's, which passed last week. (Hellmann, 5/9)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Georgians Sort Through Health Care Changes As Senate Takes Up Effort
The Republican bill that passed the House is almost certain to undergo a makeover in the Senate. Still, it marks an opening gambit in a new conservative political landscape, a gambit with a huge real-world impact on families, their taxes and budgets. Opinions on the plan in Georgia, so far, are mixed, and often quite strong. (Hallerman, 5/9)
Republican Health Replacement Bill's Provisions On Medicaid Are Key Concern For Senators
One of the thorniest issues for Republicans is how to handle the Affordable Care Act's expansion of Medicaid.
The Hill:
Early Splits Appear As Senate Republicans Confront Medicaid Choice
Republican senators hailing from states that took ObamaCare's Medicaid expansion are taking different tacks on defending the program as much of their party looks to end it. Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) told reporters Tuesday that he supports rolling back the Medicaid expansion by ending the extra federal money for it, as long as there is a "soft landing." But Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) told The Hill that she wants the expansion of coverage to remain, though she said it did not have to be in the same form. (Sullivan, 5/9)
CQ Roll Call:
Medicaid On The Agenda In Multiple Senate Meetings
Senators from states that expanded Medicaid met Tuesday to discuss issues such as how proposed tax credits could help consumers who enrolled in the federal-state program through the health care law's expansion, said Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio. The meeting was separate from another discussion on Medicaid held later among the senators tapped for a health care working group by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. Portman, who said he has been talking with about 20 senators, met Tuesday with at least half a dozen Republicans from states that broadened Medicaid eligibility to the working poor under the 2010 health care law. (Young and Mershon, 5/9)
The Washington Post:
Who Will Decide What The Senate’s Health Bill Looks Like? Follow The Medicaid-State Senators.
The Senate has broken into a series of “working groups” to begin writing its own version of legislation to replace the Affordable Care Act. There’s the leadership-driven group, a group of moderates and there was talk about a more conservative group before it was mostly absorbed into the leadership group. But the most powerful bloc in the Senate, based on the size and clout of its members, are the Republicans who come from states that took advantage of the 2010 health law’s federal expansion of Medicaid to provide insurance to millions of lower-income Americans. (Kane, 5/9)
Morning Consult:
Opioid Crisis At Heart Of Medicaid Debate For Some Senators
Medicaid is becoming the Senate’s first focus as lawmakers try their hand at a bill to repeal and replace major parts of the Affordable Care Act. Though the topic received less attention in the House, how the replacement to the ACA treats expansion of the federal program for low-income Americans is set to be a major component of debate in the Senate. The opioid crisis is at the center of the issue for some Republican senators who represent states that expanded Medicaid. (McIntire, 5/9)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
AHCA Changes To Medicaid Put The State's Most Vulnerable Populations At Risk, Hospitals Say
The House bill to repeal and replace parts of the Affordable Care Act makes big changes to how Medicaid operates and is funded, and those changes have healthcare providers worried. Officials at area hospitals fear the cuts will come on the backs of the most vulnerable in the state. (Christ, 5/9)
Bismark (N.D.) Tribune:
Proposed Medicaid Expansion Rollback Could Impact 20K Enrollees In North Dakota
Proposed changes to expanded Medicaid making their way through Congress would effectively eliminate a program that has about 20,000 enrollees in North Dakota, the state’s lone congressional Democrat warned this week. ... the American Health Care Act would spell the end for Medicaid expansion, said Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., who derided the bill as a tax break for the richest Americans that would leave more people uninsured. “The American Health Care Act is a horrible piece of legislation,” Heitkamp said in an interview Monday. She has pushed for fixing parts of the current law instead of repealing it. (Hageman, 5/9)
Detroit News:
Lyon: House Health Bill Threatens Medicaid Expansion
The U.S. House health care overhaul legislation approved last week could trigger the end of the state’s Healthy Michigan Medicaid expansion program or require legislators to make major changes, the state’s health director said Tuesday. It would cost the state roughly $800 million a year to continue the low-income insurance plan on its own if federal funding is reduced to the standard matching rate for other Medicaid enrollees, said Michigan Health and Human Services Director Nick Lyon. (Oosting, 5/9)
Republicans Face Angry, Rowdy Crowds At Town Halls
Voters have been turning out in force to voice their objections to their lawmakers vote on the American Health Care Act.
The New York Times:
Critics At Town Halls Confront Republicans Over Health Care
United States representatives often hold town halls with constituents in their home districts during a congressional recess. But this week, with the House on a break, few of the 217 Republicans who approved legislation to repeal and replace critical parts of the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, chose to defend their votes at public meetings. Those who did were, in several cases, greeted by shouts and criticism. (Fortin and Victor, 5/9)
NPR:
NPR Fact-Checks Republican Defense Of GOP Health Bill
Town hall meetings got loud for some Republican members of Congress this week, as they defended the passage of the American Health Care Act by the House of Representatives. Constituents have been asking a lot of questions, and we've been fact-checking the answers given by some leading GOP lawmakers. (Kodjak, 5/9)
The Associated Press:
Raucous, Angry Crowd Grills Virginia Rep. Brat At Town Hall
Critics of Republican U.S. Rep. Dave Brat and the House health care bill he voted for packed a raucous town hall meeting in his Virginia district Tuesday night, booing and shouting down the congressman from start to finish. (5/9)
Roll Call:
Dave Brat Town Hall Gets Heated
Rep. Dave Brat faced a rancorous crowd at a town here Tuesday night that took issue with his positions on health care, Russia investigations and, frankly, most other topics. Brat, meanwhile, took issue with many of the attendees’ frequent shouting over him, saying it was counterproductive to civil discourse. ... Contention defined the hour-and-a-half town hall, which was co-hosted by Brat and Virginia state Sen. Amanda Chase. Health care was the hot topic, but questions touched on a wide array of issues from the federal budget process to President Donald Trump’s tax returns to environmental and internet policies. (McPherson, 5/9)
The Washington Post:
At Raucous Town Hall, Rep. Dave Brat Struggles To Speak Above The Jeers
“Everybody asks for town halls so we can have civil discourse,” a frustrated Brat told more than 700 people at a suburban Richmond church. “That’s what I’m trying to do. If we go this route, it’s going to be very hard to have rational civil discourse. I’m trying.” Trouble began even before Pastor Stan Grant of Clover Hill Assembly of God finished his invocation. As he prayed to God that the discussion would go forth “in a way that will honor you,” a handful of Brat’s critics stood holding small signs aloft. “Nope,” “Shame” and “Stop using the Bible as a weapon,” they read. (Vozzella, 5/10)
Politico:
Rep. Peter King: Obamacare Repeal Not ‘Something To Celebrate’
House Republicans should not have celebrated the chamber’s passage of its health care bill last week, one of their own said Tuesday. Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) said the narrow vote to pass legislation to repeal and replace Obamacare was too serious an issue to commemorate the way President Donald Trump, administration aides and House Republicans did Thursday — with a public celebration at the White House. (McCaskill, 5/9)
Politico:
Frelinghuysen Hammered Over Obamacare Repeal Vote During Teletown Hall
Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen may have escaped a rowdy crowd by holding a town hall via telephone, but that didn’t stop constituents from repeatedly hammering the New Jersey Republican Tuesday evening over his recent support of the House Obamacare repeal bill. Frelinghuysen, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, was repeatedly forced during the one-hour event to justify why he voted in favor of the American Health Care Act last week after having opposed an earlier version of the bill. (Jennings, 5/9)
Los Angeles Times:
Demonstrators Protest Rep. Rohrabacher’s Support Of American Health Care Act
About 30 demonstrators, some holding signs that read “Putin’s favorite congressman,” “Dump Dana 2018” and “Just say no to Trumpcare,” gathered outside Rep. Dana Rohrabacher’s office in downtown Huntington Beach on Tuesday afternoon to protest the Republican congressman’s support for President Trump’s policies. The gathering was organized by Indivisible OC 48, a left-leaning group of constituents in Rohrabacher’s 48th Congressional District who have planned protests outside his office at 101 Main St. since Trump’s inauguration. They started at the office and marched down the street to the pier. (Fry, 5/9)
Roll Call:
Some Democrats ‘Adopt A District’ To Talk Health Care
One House Democrat was in enemy territory Monday night, and he was on a mission. “I’m Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney,” the New York lawmaker told a crowd gathered at an industrial event space in Kingston in a neighboring Empire State district. “Where the heck is your congressman?” Maloney was participating in his “Adopt a District” event, an idea he had after he found out that the 19th District’s Republican congressman, Rep. John J. Faso, was not holding town hall meetings during the weeklong House recess. So far, at least three other House Democrats are planning to do the same, though Maloney said the effort is not centrally organized. (Bowman, 5/10)
Roll Call:
Mark Pocan To Talk Health Care In Paul Ryan’s District
Wisconsin Rep. Mark Pocan has accepted an invitation to attend a town hall in Kenosha on Friday despite it being in a neighboring congressional district represented by Speaker Paul D. Ryan. Pocan became the latest Democratic member of Congress to show up in a Republican district in recent days — mostly to hear from constituents about the health care bill the House passed last week. Many Republicans, meanwhile, have largely stayed out of public view during the current recess. (Rema Rahman, 5/9)
The Washington Post Fact Checker:
Kamala D. Harris’s Claim That 129 Million People With Preexisting Conditions ‘Could Be Denied Coverage’
As part of a tweet storm condemning the House Republican bill to overhaul the Affordable Care Act, Sen. Kamala D. Harris (D-Calif.) used a talking point that a number of Democrats have used when attacking the changes that proposed legislation would make concerning the handling of preexisting medical conditions in the individual market. We have examined those changes in depth in a report and exposed the false talking point that rape or sexual assault would be considered a preexisting condition. So how does this figure of 129 million fare? (Kessler, 5/10)
The Evidence Is Clear: People Do Die From Lack Of Access To Health Insurance
Critics were quick to contradict Rep. Raul Labrador (R-Idaho) when he said, “Nobody dies because they don’t have access to health care.”
McClatchy:
People Die Without Health Care; Rep. Raúl Labrador Was Wrong
Rep. Raúl Labrador, R-Idaho, found himself in a pickle (and in a cameo in a Jimmy Kimmel monologue) when he suggested they don’t. He later elaborated that he was making the point that no one would “die in the streets” under the Republican health care plan, because hospitals are required by law to treat any patient in need of emergency care. But health care advocates say his explanation falls short of reality, pointing to a host of studies that show access to health care does prevent premature death, in the case of Americans with conditions such as cancer, diabetes, coronary heart disease, respiratory failure and asthma. (Clark, 5/9)
Los Angeles Times:
Sen. Kamala Harris On Idaho Congressman's Healthcare Claim: 'What The ... Is That?'
California Sen. Kamala Harris had some heated words this week for an Idaho congressman's assertion at a town hall that “nobody dies because they don’t have access to healthcare." "Like this guy, this congressman, you might as well say, ‘People don't starve because they don't have food.' What the ... is that? What are you saying? How can you say that?" Harris said during an interview with Pod Save America, a podcast run by former Obama administration staffers. It was recorded live in front of an audience of more than 2,000 people in San Francisco, according to her staff. (Wire, 5/9)
Journalist Arrested After Asking HHS Secretary About Preexisting Conditions In GOP Health Law
Dan Heyman, a veteran journalist with Public News Service, was jailed on the charge of willful disruption of state government processes and was released later on $5,000 bail.
The Washington Post:
West Virginia Journalist Arrested After Asking HHS Secretary Tom Price A Question
As Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price walked through a hallway Tuesday in the West Virginia State Capitol, veteran reporter Dan Heyman followed alongside him, holding up his phone to Price while attempting to ask him a question. Heyman, a journalist with Public News Service, repeatedly asked the secretary whether domestic violence would be considered a preexisting condition under the Republican bill to overhaul the nation’s health care system, he said. “He didn’t say anything,” Heyman said later in a news conference. “So I persisted.” (Schmidt, 5/10)
The Hill:
Reporter Arrested After Repeatedly Questioning Health Secretary
Dan Heyman, a reporter for Public News Service, said he was arrested at the West Virginia State Capitol after trying to ask Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price a question about the House-passed healthcare bill to repeal and replace ObamaCare...According to Heyman’s account, he waited for Price to come into the building and then reached past those accompanying Price with his phone and repeatedly asked his healthcare questions, adding that a number of other reporters wanted to bring up the issue of preexisting conditions. (Beavers, 5/9)
Despite Senators' Concerns Over Ties To Pharma Industry, Gottlieb Confirmed To Lead FDA
Dr. Scott Gottlieb was seen as a moderate choice of President Donald Trump, compared with other candidates he was reportedly considering.
The New York Times:
Senate Confirms Scott Gottlieb To Head F.D.A.
The Senate voted 57 to 42 on Tuesday to confirm Dr. Scott Gottlieb as commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, where he will be responsible for regulating drug companies to which he has had close ties in recent years. Dr. Gottlieb, 44, has promised to divest himself from several health care companies and recuse himself for one year from decisions involving those businesses, but that was not enough for many Democratic senators, including Patty Murray of Washington. (Thomas, 5/9)
The Washington Post:
Scott Gottlieb Confirmed To Lead Food And Drug Administration
Gottlieb, a physician and venture capitalist with long ties to the pharmaceutical industry, served as a deputy FDA commissioner and a high-ranking official at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services during the George W. Bush administration. He assumes the agency's helm as it faces mounting pressure from President Trump and other Republicans to further accelerate its drug-approval process and to take a more aggressive role in combating the nation's opioid epidemic. (McGinley, 5/9)
Politico:
Gottlieb Confirmed As FDA Chief
Gottlieb is a far more traditional candidate than others Trump initially considered for the job, including associates of activist financier Peter Thiel, who pledged to blow up the entire approval process by no longer mandating drugs demonstrate effectiveness before they can be sold. However, Gottlieb is still expected to push the boundaries of FDA reviews and using new authority under the 21st Century Cures Act to speed up evaluations. (Karlin-Smith and Griffiths, 5/9)
CQ Roll Call:
Senate Confirms FDA Nominee
“Dr. Gottlieb has the necessary experience to serve in this key role. Not only has he worked in hospitals, interacted directly with those affected by disease and treatment, but he also has developed and analyzed medical policies in both the public and private sectors,” said Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. (Siddons, 5/9)
Modern Healthcare:
Senate Confirms Scott Gottlieb As FDA Commissioner
Gottlieb is expected to speed up the approval of new drugs and devices, a process he has called too slow and burdensome. He has also advocated for greater physician autonomy to decide to administer experimental drugs for patients. (DIckson, 5/9)
Morning Consult:
Senate Confirms Trump’s FDA Nominee Gottlieb
At the FDA, one of Gottlieb’s top priorities will be confronting the opioid crisis. Several Democrats have raised concerns about the FDA’s role in responding to rising rates of opioid addiction across the nation. At his Senate confirmation hearing in April, Gottlieb said tackling the opioid epidemic was the “biggest crisis facing the agency.” (Reid, 5/9)
Problems with 71 of the 222 drugs approved in the first decade of this millennium were discovered after the drugs were approved, according to a new study. Those "safety events" warranted a “black box” warning on side effects or a safety announcement about the dangers.
The Washington Post:
New Safety Risks Detected In One-Third Of FDA-Approved Drugs
Almost a third of drugs cleared by the Food and Drug Administration pose safety risks that are identified only after their approval, according to a study published Tuesday. The researchers said the study, which appeared in JAMA, shows the need for ongoing monitoring of new treatments years after they hit the market. “We seem to have decided as a society that we want drugs reviewed faster,” said lead author Joseph Ross, an associate professor of medicine and public health at Yale University. That makes it critically important “that we have a strong system in place to continually evaluate drugs and to communicate new safety concerns quickly and effectively,” he said. (McGinley, 5/9)
The Wall Street Journal:
Study Finds A Third Of FDA-Approved Drugs Subject To Later Safety Issues
The rate of such new safety issues after approval by the Food and Drug Administration was about twice as high among drugs that won accelerated approvals from the agency, compared to medicines approved in standard ways. (Burton, 5/9)
Kaiser Health News:
Nearly 1 In 3 Recent FDA Drug Approvals Followed By Major Safety Actions
“While the administration pushes for less regulation and faster approvals, those decisions have consequences,” Ross said. The Yale researchers’ previous studies concluded that the FDA approves drugs faster than its counterpart agency in Europe, and that the majority of pivotal trials in drug approvals involved fewer than 1,000 patients and lasted six months or less. (Lupkin, 5/9)
Grassley And Chaffetz Skewer HHS Memo Limiting Employees' Comments To Congress
In a letter, the chairmen of key committees in the Senate and House say the guidance to workers at the Department of Health and Human Services “is potentially illegal and unconstitutional, and will likely chill protected disclosures of waste, fraud, and abuse.”
The Associated Press:
GOP Lawmakers Upset By Gag Rule Memo To Health Employees
An internal memo instructing Health and Human Services employees to consult with senior department personnel before talking to Congress has outraged two congressional Republicans, and they're demanding answers from Secretary Tom Price. In a letter released Tuesday, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah said federal employees have a constitutional right to communicate directly with Congress. (Freking, 5/9)
The Washington Post:
Grassley, Chaffetz Rebuke HHS Secretary For Muzzling Agency Employees
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) and House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) said the policy that Price’s chief of staff outlined in a memo last week “is potentially illegal and unconstitutional, and will likely chill protected disclosures of waste, fraud, and abuse.” (Eilperin, 5/9)
Roll Call:
GOP Lawmakers Blast HHS Restrictions On Contact With Congress
The chairmen acknowledge that the memo doesn’t “ultimately prohibit” direct communication, but said “it forces employees to expose their communications with Congress to agency management, necessarily subjecting them to a significantly increased risk of reprisal.”
Chaffetz and Grassley requested that HHS send written guidance to agency employees clarifying that they have a right to communicate “directly and independently with Congress.” (Siddons, 5/9)
Kaiser Health News:
Grassley, Chaffetz Send Fiery Response To HHS Memo They Say Chills Whistleblowing
The May 3 memo from HHS Secretary Tom Price’s chief of staff, Lance Leggitt, instructed employees not to have “any communications” with members of Congress or their staffs without first consulting the department’s assistant secretary for legislation. Leggitt’s memo said he was only restating a long-standing policy on congressional relations and gave eight examples of contacts needing approval, including requests for calls, briefings, hearings and oversight. (Bluth, 5/9)
BlueCross BlueShield Of Tennessee Steps In To Fill Knoxville Market Gap
In related news, early signals indicate that Affordable Care Act premiums will jump in the coming year and the Trump administration is stepping back from penalizing exchange plans that did not do risk-adjustment program audits.
Stat:
A Health Insurer Steps Up In Tennessee, Averting Possible Obamacare Crisis
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee said Tuesday it would re-enter the marketplace in a region of the state with no other option for individual health insurance, but that policies might cost more because of political uncertainty. Calling the move “an extension of our mission,” while noting the company appeared to be turning a corner in Tennessee after three tough years financially, BCBS President and CEO J.D. Hickey said the decision was an effort to lower risk as Congress and President Trump continue their efforts to repeal Obamacare. (Blau, 5/9)
The Wall Street Journal:
Insurer Steps In To Sell Plans On Health-Law Exchange In Tennessee
BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee will offer Affordable Care Act marketplace plans in the Knoxville region of Tennessee next year, filling a potential gap left when Humana Inc. announced it would pull out of all of the exchanges where it does business. The 16-county region had been at risk of having no insurer offering exchange plans in 2018, and the situation had gained attention as part of the political fight over the future of the ACA. (Wilde Mathews and Radnofsky, 5/9)
Nashville Tennessean:
BlueCross BlueShield Of Tennessee Signals Knoxville Return
BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee is negotiating with state officials about a return to the individual insurance market in 2018 in Knoxville — an area that lacks an insurer for the next year. The decision is contingent upon the state agreeing to some conditions. The insurer still has reservations about the risk on the individual market but sees expanding into Knoxville as "an extension of our mission," J.D. Hickey, president and CEO of BCBST, wrote in a letter to the insurance commissioner dated May 9. (Fletcher, 5/9)
The Washington Post:
Early Proposed Rates For ACA Health Plans Hint At A Jump In Premiums For 2018
Early clues suggest that health insurance prices in Affordable Care Act marketplaces could jump again for the coming year, defying predictions that premium rates would begin to level off. Amid the uncertainties hovering over those marketplaces as the Trump administration and a Republican Congress try to dismantle major parts of the law, many states have postponed for another few months their spring deadlines for insurers to report how much they want to charge for ACA health plans in 2018. (Goldstein, 5/9)
The Hill:
ObamaCare Uncertainty Driving Premium Hikes
Uncertainty among insurers about how the Trump administration will handle the Affordable Care Act could translate into double-digit premium increases for 2018. Insurers are beginning to file rate requests with state insurance regulators, and some states could see premium increases of 50 percent or more. (Hellmann, 5/10)
Richmond Times-Dispatch:
ACA Exchange Premium Rates Could Rise By An Average Of 20 Percent In Virginia Next Year
Health insurance plans on the Affordable Care Act’s individual and small group markets in Virginia could cost an average of 20 percent more in 2018, according to initial rate filings with the state’s Bureau of Insurance. While the rates must be further reviewed by the bureau before they become final, the filings show that almost all insurers offering plans on the exchange expect premiums to increase. (O'Connor, 5/9)
Modern Healthcare:
Trump Administration Backs Off Penalizing Exchange Plans For Not Auditing Risk-Adjustment Program
The Trump administration won't penalize insurers for failing to verify the number of severely ill patients they've enrolled through the insurance exchanges. The Affordable Care Act established a risk-adjustment program that's aimed at preventing insurers from cherry-picking the healthiest members. Instead, the goal is to spread the insurance risk. Companies that cover people with complex health conditions receive money from companies that have generally healthier members. (Dickson, 5/9)
Window For Republicans To Roll Back Obama Regulations Closing
The Congressional Review Act gives Congress about 60 days to vote by a simple majority to overturn agency rules passed late in former President Barack Obama’s administration.
The Wall Street Journal:
Deadline Looms For GOP’s Effort To Undo Obama Rules
The window for Republicans to use an obscure law to rescind regulations enacted in the last six months of former President Barack Obama’s administration is closing, although at least one lawmaker is hoping a loophole may allow for an extension. ... The Congressional Review Act gives Congress about 60 days to vote by a simple majority to overturn agency rules passed late in Mr. Obama’s administration. That is a lower-than-usual threshold to pass legislation in the Senate, where 60 votes are often needed. (Andrews, 5/9)
The Wall Street Journal:
13 And Counting: Obama Regulations Rolled Back Under Congressional Review Act
Republicans intent on rolling back Obama-era regulations have made liberal use of a once-obscure tool: the Congressional Review Act. The act has been used to undo 13 regulations since President Donald Trump took office, and another one is on the president’s desk but hasn’t been signed. Removing the regulations has affected a range of issues from the environment to the workplace to health and education. (Beilfuss, 5/9)
House Panel To Investigate Role DEA And Drug Distributors Have Played In Opioid Flood
The House Energy and Commerce Committee wants answers from the Drug Enforcement Administration about its efforts to combat the epidemic and from the nation’s three largest drug distribution companies about shipping practices. Other news stories focus on steps the Trump administration is taking to tackle the drug crisis.
The Washington Post:
House Panel Probes Drug Distributors And DEA Amid National Opioid Crisis
A congressional committee Monday opened an investigation into the Drug Enforcement Administration’s slowdown of enforcement efforts in the face of a national opioid epidemic and demanded to know why drug distributors had shipped hundreds of millions of painkillers to communities in West Virginia. The House Energy and Commerce Committee sent letters to the DEA and the nation’s three largest drug distribution companies, giving them until June 8 to answer questions about their responsibilities to combat the rising epidemic, which has claimed nearly 180,000 lives during the past decade. (Higham and Bernstein, 5/9)
Columbus Dispatch:
House Investigating Cardinal Health, Other Major Distributors
Cardinal Health and the nation’s two other dominant drug distributors are being investigated by a U.S. House subcommittee based on reports the companies did not give proper oversight to a spike in powerful painkiller orders in West Virginia between 2007 and 2012. The House Energy and Commerce Committee has given Cardinal, AmeriSourceBergen and McKesson a June 8 deadline to submit responses to its questions. (Rose, 5/9)
Detroit Free Press:
Trump Officials Price, Conway Take Aim At Opioids In Lansing Visit
When Tom Price, U.S. secretary of health and human services, and presidential adviser Kellyanne Conway came to Lansing Tuesday, there was no talk about the vote in the House of Representatives last week to repeal and replace Obamacare and what impact that might have on Michigan. Instead the two members of President Donald Trump’s administration had a more personal issue to discuss with Gov. Rick Snyder: opioid abuse. (Gray, 5/9)
Stat:
Does The White House Need Its Own Drug Policy Office?
A Trump administration proposal to cut the $388 million budget of the Office of National Drug Control Policy by 95 percent has given new urgency to that question, with some administration officials arguing the ONDCP simply duplicates work already done by other agencies. They have also said the proposal is only preliminary. But Regina LaBelle, who worked in the office from October 2009 to January 2017 for the Obama administration, says slashing the office’s budget would be “penny-wise and pound-foolish,” arguing that it makes work at agencies across the government more efficient. (Joseph, 5/10)
And from New York City —
The Wall Street Journal:
Fentanyl Hits New York City Hard
John Harte has been shooting up heroin for more than four decades, but he cut back this year because he is afraid of fentanyl, an often deadly synthetic opioid being used to spike heroin. “It’s really, really dangerous,” said the 67-year-old Staten Island resident. “It’s like you’re chasing a dream. And then when you wake up from the dream, your reality is a f—ing nightmare. Or you’re dead.” (Kanno-Youngs, 5/9)
Harms Of Thyroid Cancer Screenings Outweigh Benefits, Task Force Says
Despite an industry-backed push for more people to be screened for thyroid cancer, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has added the option to its don't-do-it category. In other public health news: pain relievers and heart risks, statins, syphilis, mental health care for children, and smoking.
NPR:
Don't Screen For Thyroid Cancer, Task Force Recommends
If you hear rock star Rod Stewart's husky voice in a radio spot imploring you to get your thyroid checked for cancer, don't be seduced. An industry-backed foundation has been putting out that message, with Stewart as a celebrity spokesman, but it's not based on sound science. No major medical organization recommends mass screening for thyroid cancer. (Harris, 5/9)
The New York Times:
Pain Relievers Tied To Immediate Heart Risks
The pain relievers known as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or Nsaids, are known to carry heart risks. A new analysis found that those risks can arise within a week of starting the drugs. Researchers did a systematic review of studies involving more than 446,000 people ages 40 to 79, of whom more than 61,000 had heart attacks. (Bakalar, 5/9)
The New York Times:
Are Statin Side Effects ‘All In Our Heads’?
Statins, the widely used cholesterol-lowering drugs, have well-known side effects, but some of the most common may be caused more by psychological factors than by the drugs themselves. Researchers looked at more than 10,000 patients who had been randomly assigned to take either atorvastatin (Lipitor) or a placebo. They tracked their reports of more than two dozen different side effects over an average of more than three years. (Bakalar, 5/9)
The Associated Press:
Descendants Of Syphilis Study Subjects Emerging From Shadows
Decades later, it's still hard to grasp what the federal government did to hundreds of black men in rural Alabama — even if you're among their descendants, lighting candles in their memory. For 40 years starting in 1932, medical workers in the segregated South withheld treatment for unsuspecting men infected with a sexually transmitted disease simply so doctors could track the ravages of the horrid illness and dissect their bodies afterward. (Reeves, 5/10)
Boston Globe:
Study: Many Parents In Need Can’t Find Mental Health Care For Their Children
Harvard researchers posing as the parent of a depressed 12-year-old called hundreds of child psychiatrists and pediatricians looking for appointments, and discovered what many actual parents know through bitter experience: Most of the time the calls were fruitless. The group phoned 913 doctors listed as network providers by Blue Cross Blue Shield organizations in Boston, Chapel Hill, N.C., Houston, Minneapolis, and Seattle. (Kowalczyk, 5/9)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Social Smokers Have Same Heart-Disease Risks As Those With Daily Habit, Study Shows
Social smokers smoke occasionally and almost always in groups. They don't consider themselves addicted to nicotine and don't have a daily habit, researchers said. But their risk for high blood pressure and high cholesterol is identical to those who light up every day, new research has found. (Farkas, 5/9)
Week Of Anti-Abortion Movement Wins Buoys Supporters, Mobilizes Opponents
The Associated Press tallies the new momentum for foes of abortion on the federal and state level. Meanwhile, news outlets report on related developments out of Kansas, Texas, Delaware and Iowa.
The Associated Press:
Abortion Foes Cheer Series Of Advances, As Opponents Protest
From the U.S. Capitol and the White House to far-flung battlegrounds in Arizona, Iowa and elsewhere, it's been a dramatic fortnight in the debate over access to abortion and birth control. Foes of abortion celebrated a series of advances and claimed new momentum, as abortion rights supporters mounted protests to try to blunt it. Planned Parenthood, the anti-abortion movement's prime target, called it "the world's worst week for women's health." (Crary and Silber, 5/9)
KCUR:
Study: Kansas And Texas Have Most Abortion Restrictions Not Based On Science
Along with Texas, Kansas leads the nation when it comes to imposing abortion restrictions not supported by scientific evidence, according to a report by a leading abortion rights organization. The Guttmacher Institute looks at 10 categories of abortion restrictions it says are not grounded in science. The analysis finds that Kansas and Texas have enacted laws in all 10 – although courts have blocked the restrictions in two of those categories: requirements that abortion clinics meet the standards for ambulatory surgical centers and that doctors have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals. (Margolies, 5/9)
The Associated Press:
Delaware Senate Votes To Protect Abortion Rights
The state Senate has narrowly passed a bill to ensure abortion remains legal in Delaware if the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade is ever overturned. The bill, approved Tuesday and sent to the House, revises Delaware’s current abortion law, which is still on the books despite being superseded by federal law. (Chase, 5/9)
Iowa Public Radio:
Injunction Extended, Further Suspending New Mandate For Three-Day Waiting Period Before Abortion
The Iowa Supreme Court has extended a temporary injunction that suspends part of a new law that mandates a three-day waiting period before an abortion. When Planned Parenthood and the ACLU first asked for the injunction last week, they argued that the Iowa Department of Public Health had not yet developed certain materials which the new law mandates women be provided before having an abortion. (Boden, 5/9)
Maryland Governor Selects Obamacare Critic To Lead State's Health Care Commission
Robert E. Moffit is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation who advocates for full repeal of the Affordable Care Act. He has been on the Maryland panel commission since 2015.
The Washington Post:
Hogan Taps Obamacare Critic To Lead Maryland Health Panel
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) on Tuesday appointed a leading critic of the Obama administration’s Affordable Care Act to chair the state’s health-care commission, drawing immediate criticism from Democrats. Robert E. Moffit has served as a member of the commission, which oversees hospitals and health care in the state, since 2015. A senior fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, he has called for a full repeal of the federal health-care law, promoted Medicare vouchers and applauded the controversial health-care bill that House Republicans passed last week. (Hicks, 5/9)
The Baltimore Sun:
Obamacare Critic To Head State Health Care Commission
Gov. Larry Hogan has appointed Robert Emmet Moffit, a critic of Obamacare who has called for the repeal of the health care law, to chair the Maryland Health Care Commission. Moffit is a senior fellow at the Center for Health Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank in Washington. In February, he wrote a paper for the foundation calling Obamacare "a proven policy failure" and urged the administration of President Donald Trump and Congress to "completely repeal" it. (McDaniels, 5/9)
Media outlets report on news from Washington, D.C., Georgia, Arizona, Colorado, New Jersey, Florida, Ohio, Massachusetts, Louisiana and Wisconsin.
The Washington Post:
D.C.’s Botched Zika Testing Leaves Dozens Of Families Monitoring For Symptoms
Three people in the District were wrongly told they did not have the Zika virus last year, and 26 others who may have been infected were mistakenly given a clean bill of health, according to the final accounting of results botched by the city’s public health lab, officials say. At least one of the three who did not know she had the virus was pregnant at the time. She has since given birth, and the baby did not have microcephaly, the severe birth defect caused by Zika and characterized by an abnormally small head size and often an underdeveloped brain. (David, 5/9)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Gov. Deal Gives A Second Glance To An Optometry Bill
Gov. Nathan Deal took an extra look at a bill that expands the abilities of optometrists in the state. He signed into law Tuesday Senate Bill 153, which intitally related to hearing aids but was transformed into a bill that allows an optometrist to diagnose and treat certain eye conditions through injection — a procedure previously only ophthalmologists performed. (Baruchman, 5/9)
Arizona Republic:
Arizona State University Students Finish $80,000 Mobile Dental Clinic For Charity
Four years, thousands of work hours, $80,000 in fundraising and a last-minute miracle later, a group of Arizona State University students has finished a large-scale charity project just in time for its last two members to graduate. Five women and one man make up Engineering Smiles, a group that designed a mobile dental clinic that will serve tens of thousands of people in Nicaragua and underserved communities in Arizona and California. (White, 5/9)
Denver Post:
Why Did Private Insurance Rates Rise After Colorado Hospitals Got $6.4B?
Eight years ago, Colorado created a program to give hospitals more money to cover uncompensated costs on the promise it would lower insurance rates for all. The state’s hospitals received $6.4 billion since then to cover charity care and unpaid bills from indigent patients — all money intended to reduce the cost-shift to people with private insurance. But private payers — which make up the majority of Colorado — never saw the benefits trickle down. (Frank, 5/9)
The Philadelphia Inquirer:
New Jersey Moves To Help Elderly And Disabled
New Jersey Attorney General Christopher S. Porrino on Tuesday announced the expansion of a hidden-camera loan program, to make it available not just in private homes, but also in nursing homes and other institutional settings. The Safe Care Cam program of the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs, started in December to help people who suspected that their loved ones were being mistreated or neglected, allows state residents to borrow free micro-surveillance equipment to keep an eye on loved ones. The state is not disclosing how many of the cameras it purchased or how many are in use. (Brubaker, 5/9)
Miami Herald:
Deaf Patients Win Right To Sue Baptist Health For Discrimination
Two deaf patients from Miami won the right to sue Baptist Health South Florida for discrimination after a federal appeals court on Monday reversed a lower court’s dismissal of their case — and published a detailed opinion that advocates say spells out the responsibility for all hospitals to ensure “effective communication” with patients who cannot hear. The patients, Cheylla Silva and John Paul Jebian, filed a lawsuit in 2014 under the Americans with Disabilities Act after they said Baptist Hospital Miami and South Miami Hospital — both owned by Baptist Health — had refused to provide in-person interpreters of American Sign Language. (Chang, 5/9)
Columbus Dispatch:
Ohio Nursing Homes Among Nation's Worst, Study Says
A new report shows that the quality of Ohio’s nursing homes is lower than the national average, though the reason is unclear. The report, by the Scripps Gerontology Center at Miami University, looked at residents who stay in a facility for 100 days or more. It showed that Ohio ranked below the national average on all 10 of the quality measures used by the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, including instances of urinary tract infections, unexplained weight loss, pain, pressure ulcers and use of antipsychotic medications. (King, 5/10)
Boston Globe:
State Launching Tax-Free Savings Plan For Disabled Residents
Disabled Massachusetts residents are about to get their own version of a college savings plan: a tax-free account that lets families set aside up to $14,000 a year for an array of expenses ranging from health care to education, without losing federal disability benefits. It’s a national program some eight years in the works, and the culmination of a tireless effort by families to make their case to Congress. (Healy, 5/10)
New Orleans Times-Picayune:
Her Doctor's Visit Co-Pay Jumped From $40 To $114. The Hospital Could Not Explain Why
Those experiences suggest that the price of an office visit - likely the simplest and most common encounter patients have with the health care industry - is far more complicated than most people anticipate. Perhaps because patients know what they paid for office visits in years past, concerns over their rising prices came up over and over. The effort required to comprehend those prices is emblematic of the snarled system of health care billing. (Lipinski, 5/10)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Georgia Medical Marijuana Expansion Bill Signed Into Law
Gov. Nathan Deal signed into law Tuesday a measure that expands the state’s medical marijuana program. Senate Bill 16 makes six more conditions eligible for treatment with a limited form of cannabis oil allowed in Georgia: AIDS, Alzheimer’s disease, autism, epidermolysis bullosa, peripheral neuropathy and Tourette’s syndrome. It also allows patients in hospice care to possess the oil. (Baruchman, 5/9)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
In Low-Key Rollout, DNR Begins Giving Water To Those With Tainted Wells
With livestock-contamination of drinking water a growing concern in Wisconsin, the Department of Natural Resources has quietly started efforts to provide temporary water supplies to people with tainted wells. The DNR posted an update on its website in April that said it would provide temporary emergency drinking water when tests show that a water supply is contaminated and is likely due to groundwater contaminated by manure, a person on the property contracts a water-borne illness or there is a sudden change in color or odor of well water. (Bergquist, 5/9)
Boston Globe:
Medical Marijuana Industry Preps For Advent Of Legal Pot
With retail pot shops set to open next year in Massachusetts, advocates are worried that medical cannabis patients could be forced to pay higher prices for the drug, lose access to specialized preparations, or simply end up marginalized among the coming flood of recreational users. To ensure medical marijuana lasts, proponents are lobbying for changes that include making it easier and cheaper to register as a patient, guaranteeing a steady supply of marijuana just for patients, and encouraging investment by allowing nonprofit medical dispensaries to convert to for-profit businesses. (Adams, 5/9)
Money-Back Guarantees Protecting Patients From Buying A Lemon When It Comes To Pricey Drugs
News outlets report on stories related to pharmaceutical pricing.
The Associated Press:
New Deals For Drugs: No Heart Attack Or Your Money Back
Warranties and money-back guarantees, long used to entice buyers of products like hand tools and kitchen gadgets, are now being used to sell something more crucial: pricey new-generation drugs for diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and cancer. Deals being negotiated between drugmakers and the insurers who buy medicines now sometimes include extra rebates — or even full refunds — if drugs don’t help patients as expected. (Johnson, 5/3)
Bloomberg:
Inside The Secret Room Where Drug Prices Are Set
[Pharmacy-benefit managers] occupy a key crossroads of the health system, acting as a nexus among insurers, employers and drug companies. Through a complex web of agreements they help decide what drugs are covered by a patient’s insurance, and how much they’ll cost at the pharmacy counter. The problem, say critics, is that opacity makes it hard for employers to know how much the PBM is paying and profiting on each transaction -- an impression reinforced by restrictions on who can audit them and how. (Weinberg and Langreth, 5/4)
California Healthline:
Bill Aims To Loosen Drugmaker-Doctor Ties By Limiting Perks For Promoting Meds
A new California bill aims to reduce the pharmaceutical industry’s influence in medical decision-making by restricting payments and gifts from drug companies to doctors and other medical providers. State Sen. Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg), who authored the bill, said that when drugmakers woo physicians with meals and other enticements they generate brand loyalty, which can raise health care costs and even compromise patient safety. (Bartolone, 5/10)
Stat:
Pharma Trade Group Revises Membership Criteria
True to its word, the pharmaceutical industry trade group has revised its membership criteria in a bid to deflect stinging criticism that too many drug makers aggressively raise prices, but issue empty promises about investing in research and development to produce needed medicines. Going forward, companies will now have to invest an average of 10 percent of global sales on R&D and spend at least $200 million annually on R&D over a three-year period, in order to be a member of the Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America. (Silverman, 5/9)
Stat:
We're Still Spending More On Drugs, But Annual Cost Increases Are Slowing
In a significant shift, total spending on medicines in the US rose by 5.8 percent, to $450 billion, in 2016, which was less than half the rate seen in the last two years. In 2015, for instance, drug spending climbed 8.9 percent and it had rocketed up by 12 percent the year before. (Silverman, 5/4)
Politico Pro:
Tweaked User Fee Bill Addresses Drug Importation, Complex Generics
The Senate HELP Committee added language addressing drug importation and complex generics to the FDA user fee reauthorization bill it is scheduled to mark up Wednesday. Both issues have been portrayed in recent months as ways to address high drug costs. (Karlin-Smith, 5/8)
Boston Globe:
Biogen Faces A Threat From Genentech’s Powerful New MS Drug
The newest multiple sclerosis drug could be a boon for patients — and a threat to the multibillion-dollar business of Biogen Inc., the leading seller of MS treatments... While it’s too early to project Ocrevus sales, there’s little doubt it could pose a tough challenge for Cambridge-based Biogen. (Weisman, 5/8)
The Philadelphia Inquirer:
5 Questions: All About Ocrevus, The Cancer Drug That Helps MS Patients
The quest to cure multiple sclerosis, or even to discover its cause, has remained elusive. But in March, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a new drug to treat the most severe form of the disabling neurologic condition, which causes the body’s immune system to malfunction, attacking the cells of the spinal cord and brain. MS affects more than 450,000 people – more often women – in the United States. The new drug, Ocrevus, has been hailed by researchers and physicians as a game-changer, with the potential to lead to new avenues of treatment for other diseases, as well. (Bauers, 5/8)
The New York Times:
Express Scripts To Offer Cheaper Drugs For Uninsured Customers
It is one of the most acute indignities of being uninsured in this country: Those with the least ability to pay are asked to spend the most for their prescription drugs. That’s because people without health insurance are forced to pay the list price for brand-name drugs, while insurers have access to a lower, negotiated rate for the same products. (Thomas, 5/8)
Stat:
Express Scripts, Drug Makers Say They're Teaming Up On Costs
n a bid to defuse sharp criticism of prescription drug pricing, the nation’s largest pharmacy benefit manager, Express Scripts, and several pharmaceutical companies are teaming up to offer discounts on more than three dozen brand medicines. The program, called InsideRx, is geared primarily to patients who lack insurance or who have high-deductible health plans, and offers average discounts of 34 percent on medicines for treating diabetes, high cholesterol, acid reflux, and respiratory problems such as asthma. (Silverman, 5/9)
Stat:
Sanofi Vows To Limit Price Hikes To Medical Inflation Rates
In the latest effort to respond to criticism over drug pricing, Sanofi says it will limit price hikes to a level at or below the medical rate of inflation in the US, which is projected to reach 5.4 percent this year. And like other companies, the drug maker released recent price increases — before and after rebates paid to middlemen —and vowed to continue doing so in the future. (Silverman, 5/9)
Stat:
PTC Prompts Skepticism With $35,000-A-Year Price Tag
After weeks of anticipation, PTC Therapeutics has decided to charge $35,000 a year —depending upon patient weight — for a newly purchased drug for treating Duchenne muscular dystrophy, although the price may be a hard sell to some insurers and families. The pricing is well below the $89,000 that Marathon Pharmaceuticals planned to charge before selling the decades-old steroid last month to PTC. But whether this lower price is enough to assuage parents or make it worth the $140 million purchase — plus royalties and other payments — is unclear. (Silverman, 5/8)
The Wall Street Journal:
PTC Expects Net Price Of $35,000 Annually Per Patient For Emflaza
PTC Therapeutics Inc. said Monday that it would receive a net price of $35,000 annually per patient for Emflaza, the muscular dystrophy drug it acquired from Marathon Pharmaceuticals LLC last month.PTC didn’t explain how it calculated the “net price,” a term drugmakers sometimes use to describe the net revenue they receive for a drug after providing discounts, copay assistance and free medicine to patients without insurance. PTC said the $35,000 “net price” reflected how much it expected to receive from a typical pediatric patient weighing 25 kilograms, or about 55 pounds. (Walker, 5/8)
Stat:
A College Application For Drugs & Other Price Ideas Brewing
There’s widespread interest, all the way up to the Oval Office, in driving down prescription drug prices. Where things tend to get stickier, policy wonks say, is in finding a way to do it that doesn’t discourage drug companies from spending big on research. To try to generate fresh ideas that strike the right balance, the Washington think tank Brookings Institution commissioned a set of three white papers from top scholars. They were released this week. (Robbins, 5/4)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Fight Over Ohio Drug Price Relief Act Ballot Issue Could Set Spending Record
The Ohio Drug Price Relief Act, a citizen-initiated statute slated for the November ballot, would require the state of Ohio to pay no more for prescription drugs than the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, which has negotiated a discount of up to 40 percent. The reason people think the campaign will be so costly is that last year, more than $128 million was spent on a similar (and ultimately unsuccessful) ballot measure in California. (Pelzer, 5/2)
Perspectives: When Drug Prices Are High Patients Take Fewer, Leading To More Expensive Care
Read recent commentaries about drug-cost issues.
The New York Times:
A Medicare Drug Incentive That Leads To Greater Hospitalizations
Many studies have demonstrated what economics theory tells us must be true: When consumers have to pay more for their prescriptions, they take fewer drugs. That can be a big problem. For some conditions — diabetes and asthma, to name a few — certain drugs are necessary to avoid more costly care, like hospitalizations. This simple principle gives rise to a little-recognized problem with Medicare’s prescription drug benefit. (Austin Frakt, 5/8)
The Hill:
The Tragic Toll Of Drug Price Controls
Colon cancer is one of the biggest killers in the developing world. The disease claims more than 600,000 lives every year. Breakthrough treatments can contain this disease and dramatically extend life. However, many colon cancer patients are currently denied access to these breakthrough treatments because of short-sighted government policies. (Andrew Spiegel, 5/5)
Bloomberg:
Biotech's IPO Window Is Opening Wider
For more than a year now, every time the biotech IPO window has seemed to open a crack it has rapidly slammed shut. But a recent surge of deals and a period of relative stability in the market suggest this time might be different. Last year saw the smallest number of biotech IPOs since 2012 -- 36 offerings that raised about a third of what 2014 or 2015's bumper crops raised. But things appear to be looking up. The second quarter is less than halfway over, and already new companies have raised nearly as much money as they did in any quarter in 2016. (Max Nisen, 5/9)
RealClearHealth:
Lives Depend On A Fair Trade Protecting US Medical Innovation
America is the undisputed leader in biopharmaceuticals and medical innovation, at least for now. In countries around the world, governments are taking steps to weaken their U.S. competitors while advancing their own domestic industries – hampering continued investment in innovative new therapies for patients. This is why it is so vital that America’s trade negotiators ensure that we enter into deals with true reciprocity and tough enforcement – something echoed by both the recently released Special 301 Report and President Trump’s April 29 executive order targeting trade abusers. We are happy to compete on a level playing field, but we have to do so with our eyes wide open – recognizing that other countries may not always share our commitment to fair play. (Stephen J. Ubl, 5/4)
Miami Herald:
Keep U.S. Supply Of Prescription Drugs Uncorrupted
There is no doubt that the increasingly globalized nature of trade within the United States and around the globe has opened the door to an expansive number of goods and services for consumers. In fact, the growth of globalization has encouraged some policymakers to suggest that importation of prescription drugs would be a worthwhile opportunity for millions of Americans. (George Karavetsos, 5/6)
Editorial writers take on the optics involved as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) taps a group of Republican senators to craft a repeal-and-replace package, and handicap the reasons behind some representatives' votes in the House, if they will be held accountable and what could happen next.
Los Angeles Times:
Senate Republicans Couldn't Bother To Find A Single Woman To Help Overhaul Health Care
I know there aren’t that many women in the U.S. Senate. Just 21 of the 100 U.S. senators are female, and probably some of them had other plans. But still, couldn’t Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) find one woman to join the 13 men on his Obamacare overhaul posse? Just one? True, most of the women in the Senate are Democrats and would probably be annoying about pap smears, mammograms and Planned Parenthood. They might also point out that the Republican’s plan to replace the Affordable Care Act will invariably affect women. Women have a higher rate of poverty than men. (Mariel Garza, 5/9)
Roll Call:
The (White) Boys’ Club That’s Taking On Health Care
Is there an Obamacare provision for self-inflicted wounds? If so, Senate Republicans should file a claim pronto before they repeal and replace the offending legislation. It’s hard to understand how the GOP leadership could run head-first into such an avoidable misstep. They appointed 13 members to the Senate health care working group last week, either not noticing or not caring that all 13 of those senators are white men. (Patricia Murphy, 5/10)
The Washington Post:
Will Republican Senators Pass The GOP Health-Care Bill? Here’s What They’re Saying So Far.
When House Republicans passed the American Health Care Act on May 4, President Trump bullishly predicted that the bill would pass the Senate and arrive at his desk to be signed into law — though the timeline for the bill's passage is unclear. “We're going to get this passed through the Senate,” he said, surrounded by beaming GOP congressmen. “I feel so confident.” (Peter W. Stevenson, 5/9)
Chicago Tribune:
I Lived A Good Life, But I Had Cancer
Coongressman Mo Brooks, R-Ala., of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, recently implied that "people who lead good lives" do not have pre-existing conditions. I lived a very good life by most standards. I never drank. I never smoked. I exercised. Yet at age 35, while pregnant with my third child, I was diagnosed with Stage 2 breast cancer. It was an aggressive cancer, and treatment could not be delayed. Chemotherapy was started while I was pregnant. After my baby was born, I had both my breasts surgically removed, followed by surgery to remove my ovaries. Genetic testing showed I carried a mutation (BRCA), which increases my risk of breast, ovarian and other cancers. Born with this mutation, I have a 50 percent chance of passing it to my children — through no fault of mine or theirs. (Sarah Nadeem, 5/9)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
U.S. Rep. Dave Joyce Takes A Stand On GOP Health Care Bill
Joyce's stated reasons were sound, grounded in concern about the well-being of Ohioans. As he wrote on Twitter, "The idea that premiums could potentially skyrocket for people with pre-existing conditions and increase three to five times for people nearing retirement is something I find unacceptable." Joyce, of Geauga County's Bainbridge Township in Geauga County, also said he was troubled by the bill's threat to funding for opioid addiction treatment. (5/10)
Miami Herald:
Miami-Dade Voters Should Punish Congressmen Curbelo & Diaz-Balart For Their Trumpcare Votes
There’s no issue before Congress more crucial than healthcare. So why would two Miami-Dade lawmakers whose constituents heavily rely on the affordability of Obamacare for their health insurance vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act? Partisan politics, ambition, and deal-making maybe. (Fabiola Santiago, 5/9)
The Wall Street Journal:
The ‘Republicans Are Doomed’ Gambit
Barack Obama emerged from his short-lived political retirement on Sunday to call on Members of Congress to show the “political courage” to preserve ObamaCare. But wait. That plea doesn’t square with the deluge of recent stories predicting that Republicans have doomed their majority in 2018 by voting last week to repeal Obamacare. (5/9)
News outlets' editorial sections highlight policy issues in play as the debate over the GOP health plan continues.
Los Angeles Times:
Another Little-Mentioned Benefit Of Obamacare: It Has Reduced Medical Bankruptcies
Here’s another benefit of the Affordable Care Act you may not have read much about, but is profoundly threatened by the Republican repeal effort: It has reduced the tide of healthcare-related personal bankruptcies. That’s the finding of a recent survey published by Consumer Reports, based on a poll of 2,000 consumers conducted this year and statistics showing that personal bankruptcy filings have fallen from more than 1.5 million in 2010 to 770,846 last year. (Michael Hiltzik, 5/9)
Bloomberg:
Obamacare Made Americans Financially Healthier
A recent article in Consumer Reports said that the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare, has helped reduce personal bankruptcies, which have fallen by about half since 2009. The article also cites a bankruptcy lawyer who reported a dramatic decline in the number of clients who turn to the courts because they’re unable to pay their medical bills. It’s important to take conclusions like this with a grain of salt. There were other factors that probably had a lot to do with the fall in personal bankruptcy. ... Still, it would be a mistake to discount the ACA. (Noah Smith, 5/9)
The New York Times:
A Health Care Bill That’s Bad For Moms And Babies
In March, when House Speaker Paul Ryan and his fellow Republicans threatened to repeal the Affordable Care Act, I pulled a pussyhat over my infant son’s bald head, fetched my 6-year-old daughter from school and raced to a pop-up protest at the Capitol. The sign I’d quickly made wasn’t artful, but it was sincere: “I am a postpartum R.N. This bill is bad for mamas and babies. Vote no!” (Kyla Nguyen, 5/9)
Louisville Courier-Journal:
GOP Health Reform: Failure Is Not An Option
If the 2016 election was a rejection of incrementalism as asserted in this space last year, then Republicans should fear what will happen to their governing trifecta should they fail to repeal and replace Obamacare. Failure is not an option in dealing with the Kobayashi Maru brought on by Obamacare. Republicans must get this right not just because of their campaign promises, but because of the underlying fiscal problems Obamacare has wrought on the budgets of working families and state governments. (Scott Jennings, 5/9)
Boston Globe:
House Health Bill Spells Trouble For The States
To see what House Republicans are really up to, start with Medicaid — and common sense. They would reduce Medicaid spending by some $880 billion over a decade. The program’s federal expenditures run about $550 billion a year. You simply can’t make a cut of that magnitude without major consequences. ... Republican governors understand the dilemma all that would present and are voicing their concerns. And unlike the House, Senate Republicans may just take those matters seriously. That’s encouraging — even if one suspects their biggest worry is for their own political health. (Scot Lehigh, 5/9)
WBUR:
A Sane Alternative To The GOP’s Mad Hatter Health Care
The American Health Care Act strips coverage from millions of struggling Americans. It would let states flee not only from Obamacare’s mandatory coverage of minimum, essential benefits but its requirement to cover preexisting conditions as well. States could herd sick people into high-risk pools, which would be underfunded, if the real-world experience that conservatives used to prize is any guide. (Rich Barlow, 5/10)
Cincinnati Enquirer:
GOP Health Care Bill Threads Needle Of Compassion, Reality
With any health care system, it is critical we thread the needle of compassion and reality. As a doctor, providing options for the most vulnerable isn’t just a talking point, it’s been my job description for over 26 years. But the reality today is one-third of U.S. counties have only one company left offering insurance on the ACA exchanges. (Brad Wenstrup, 5/9)
Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Washington Is Never Going To Get Health Care 'Right.'
Americans simply don’t want to face the harsh reality that, like any other good or service, health care is finite and must be rationed. If it is not rationed through prices set by the marketplace, it will be rationed through rules set by the bureaucracy. At some point, one or the other is going to say no. And that’s the one word nobody in politics is ever allowed to say. (A. Barton Hinkle, 5/9)
Viewpoints: The Link Between Despair And The Opioid Crisis; Big Tobacco And E-Cigarettes
A selection of public health opinions from around the country.
Stat:
Fighting Despair Offers A Key Way To Stop Opioid Abuse
Addiction thrives when people and communities don’t. That’s the essential lesson of a recently released Brookings Institution study that has deep implications for how our nation will address its opioid crisis. We assume that life expectancy will continue to improve in the United States. Yet this study found that the death rate of non-Hispanic whites between the ages of 45 and 54 who don’t have a college degree has increased by half a percent every year from 1999 to 2013. What’s going on? One key contributor that the researchers cite is a rise in the number of “deaths of despair” — deaths from drugs, alcohol, and suicide — that can be traced to waning economic opportunities and a frayed social fabric. In other words, deaths that spring from lack of hope, purpose, and opportunity. (Manal Aboelata, Larry Cohen and Sheila Savannah, 5/9)
Stat:
The Shadow Of Big Tobacco Looms Over E-Cigarettes And Harm Reduction
Harm reduction encompasses strategies aimed at reducing harmful physical or social consequences that stem from legal and illegal behaviors. It accepts that individuals will engage in potentially risky behaviors, and so aims to minimize their impact. Examples of harm reduction strategies include providing methadone to heroin users, endorsing the use of condoms to prevent pregnancy and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, opening needle exchanges to prevent the spread of HIV and hepatitis among individual who inject drugs, and promoting e-cigarettes or smokeless tobacco as alternatives to smoking combustible cigarettes. Harm reduction interventions reduce some, but not all, of the short-term and long-term risks for any given behavior. It is not necessarily inconsistent with the goal of total cessation or abstinence, but that isn’t its main priority. (Amy Fairchild and Ronald Bayer, 5/8)
The Charlotte Observer:
A Mom’s Story: Why Medical Marijuana Is Pro-Life
Jennifer Evans’ tweet shot through the Twitter clutter. “Being a cancer mom is tough, but nothing like what my son is going through. I pray we can get cannabis legalized here in NC!!” In late 2015, a month before his 14th birthday, Aaron Evans was diagnosed with a brain tumor. Imagine it was you hearing the words, “Grade-three anaplastic astrocytoma,” and the brain scan you see was your son’s or daughter’s. Your entire being would be fired with the passion to do whatever it would take to save your child’s life – which is exactly what Jennifer Evans did. (Keith Larson, 5/9)
The New York Times:
Disability And The Right To Choose
In my 20s, I was neutral about parenthood partly because, as a woman with cerebral palsy, I was spared the usual intrusive questioning and expectations about having children that most women are subject to. People never pressured me to have children; they just assumed that I could not. In fact, it became clear very fast that women like me are expected not to reproduce. Now, in my 40s, I find these attitudes ignorant and prejudicial, but as a young woman, it seemed like a bit of freedom to be excused from the usual problems women complain about. (Jennifer Bartlett, 5/10)