Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Nunez Says Democrats’ Cooperation on State Budget Will Depend on Changes To State Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rules

Democrats will block the next state budget unless Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) reverses some state rules to implement the workers’ compensation reform law (SB 899) passed last year, including provisions related to medical care, Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez (D-Los Angeles) said Tuesday, the Riverside Press-Enterprise reports.

Assembly Committee Approves Legislation Extending Age Limit for Children To Receive Health Coverage Under Parents

The Assembly Health Committee on Tuesday “voted overwhelmingly in favor” of a bill (AB 1698) by Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez (D-Los Angeles) that would ban health insurers from removing dependents under age 26 from a parent’s health plan, the Sacramento Bee reports.

Orange County Required To Increase Budget Allocation for Retiree Health Benefits

Officials on Tuesday said that Orange County may have to budget at least $110 million annually beginning in July to cover retiree health care benefits — nearly five times the current plan — because it soon must identify funding for covering the benefits for the next 30 years, the Los Angeles Times reports.

Columnist Promotes Nationalized Health Care Spending System

General Motors’ recent problems with health costs, the new Medicare law, the “state and local health care time bomb” and “Congress’ recent refusal to trim soaring state Medicaid subsidies” all indicate a “path toward the nationalization of health care spending — an idea that’s so easy to slam politically yet so sensible for business that only Republicans can sell it,” columnist Matt Miller writes in a Fortune opinion piece.

Former FDA Commissioner David Kessler Endorses Prescription Drug Reimportation Bill

Former FDA Commissioner David Kessler on Tuesday at a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing recommended that Congress pass a bill (S 334) that would allow U.S. residents to reimport lower-cost prescription drugs from other nations, the Los Angeles Times reports.