Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Recent CIRM Grantees Hope To Unearth Stem Cell Basics

The California Institute of Regenerative Medicine awarded $28 million in Basic Biology II awards to nine not-for-profit groups and one for-profit group. The awards are for research that will find answers about basic stem cell biology, a necessary step in developing effective treatments, CIRM President Alan Thomas said. San Francisco Business Times.

California, Other States Take Aim at Discount Health Plans

California and a few other states have increased regulation of discount health plans, for which consumers pay a fee to obtain reduced prices for health services, after advocates and consumers have raised concern that the plans do not make good on their promises. In February, Department of Managed Health Care Director Cindy Ehnes charged one such plan, Easy Life, and its parent company, HealthCare One, with illegally operating in the state and ordered it to stop doing business in California. Kaiser Health News.

Santa Clara Votes No on Toys in Unhealthy Children’s Meals

Santa Clara County restaurants will be prohibited from giving away toys with children’s meals if those meals exceed certain dietary guidelines, under a move by the county Board of Supervisors that aims to curb unhealthy food. To include a toy with a meal, the meal must not have more than 485 calories — more than 35% of calories cannot come from fat and more than 10% of calories cannot come from added sweeteners — and more than 600 milligrams of sodium. San Francisco Chronicle et al.

Blue Shield Launches Social Media-Based Q&A Forum

Blue Shield of California has launched a new online social media forum called “Ask & Answer” that allows members to ask questions and share information on allergies, dental care, nutrition, women’s health, first aid and other health issues. Blue Shield officials said they would provide customer service referrals to members who pose questions about specific health insurance plans. San Francisco Business Times.

Study: Physicians Burdened by E-mails, Unpaid Tasks

Primary care physicians spend a significant amount of time answering e-mails and performing other tasks that provide them with limited reimbursement, according to a new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Researchers said the results show the need for a new payment method that accurately reimburses primary care physicians for the amount of care they provide. Washington Post et al.