Calif. Staff Members Quarantined At Republican Convention Due To Norovirus
In other news from the Republican National Convention, PolitiFact checks Donald Trump Jr.'s claims that Clinton is going to destroy Medicare, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady says he won't back Donald Trump's proposal to allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices and a look a the health issues in the GOP platform.
The New York Times:
California Staff Workers Are Sidelined By Illness
The first signs of illness, thought to be norovirus, the highly contagious intestinal illness, appeared on Thursday night, just after the staff members arrived in the Cleveland area. By early Monday, symptoms had sufficiently spread among the group to notify the Erie County Health Department. (Purdy, 7/19)
The Washington Post:
Norovirus Strikes The Republican National Convention
A terrifying word circulated Tuesday at the Republican National Convention: norovirus. A dozen staffers in the California delegation who had arrived in Cleveland early have fallen ill with the extremely contagious virus, California GOP chairman Jim Brulte said. (Achenbach, Izadi and O'Keefe, 7/19)
The Desert Sun:
California GOP Delegation Sick With Norovirus
California delegates to the Republican National Convention who are staying at the safari-themed Kalihari Resort indoor water park were given a bit of bad news to chew on as they finished breakfast Tuesday. Cynthia Bryant, executive director of the California Republican Party, told the delegation that at least six party staffers are incapacitated with norovirus, a highly contagious digestive illness. (Sullivan, 7/19)
Sacramento Bee:
Norovirus Strikes California Republicans At National Convention
A dozen California Republican staff members and volunteers staying at the delegation’s hotel an hour outside Cleveland for the national convention have come down with norovirus, the highly contagious bug that inflames the stomach and intestines and causes diarrhea and vomiting. Cynthia Bryant, executive director of the state GOP, wrote in an email early Tuesday that officials are taking the necessary steps to care for the health of their staff and the more than 550 members of the delegation and their guests. Party support staff arrived last week ahead of the guests, so there’s concern about the virus spreading quickly in the closed environment. (Cadelago, 7/19)
PolitiFact:
Donald Trump Jr. Wrong That Hillary Clinton Is Proposing To Destroy Medicare
Speaking at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Donald Trump Jr. touted his father, the newly anointed GOP presidential nominee, as someone who would be able to do a better job on health care than his rival, Hillary Clinton. He said his father would be "a president who will repeal and replace Obamacare without leaving our most vulnerable citizens without health care, and who will do it without destroying Medicare for seniors, as Hillary Clinton has proposed." ... Clinton is certainly not proposing that in a literal sense, and experts we contacted agreed that her actual policy proposals -- especially making Medicare an option for those between 55 and 65 -- were ambitious but were hardly a dagger at the heart of the program. We rate the claim False. (Jacobson, 7/19)
The Hill:
GOP Chair Won't Back Trump On Negotiating Medicare Drug Prices
A top GOP chairman on Tuesday shot down one of Donald Trump’s most high-profile healthcare pitches: allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices. When asked at a healthcare panel at the Republican National Convention if he would back Trump's proposal, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady (R-Texas) flatly said, "No," prompting laugher in the room. (Ferris, 7/19)
Modern Healthcare:
GOP Platform Holds Back On Health Policies Except In Social Issues
The Republican Party platform released Monday at the 2016 convention is strongly conservative on social issues related to healthcare and contains little in the way of new ideas. The platform calls for a halt to the Affordable Care Act, shifting Medicare to a premium support model and turning Medicaid into a capped state block grant program. (Muchmore, 7/19)