Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Difference Between CBO, CMS Medicare Legislation Cost Estimates Examined

The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday examines how different cost estimates from the Congressional Budget Office and CMS on a provision to introduce private competition into Medicare could affect negotiations on a final Medicare bill.

Many Imported Prescription Drugs Unapproved, FDA Spot Tests Show

In a spot check of imported prescription drugs conducted this summer, FDA and customs officials found that 88% of the drugs were not approved for U.S. use, agency officials said Monday, the New York Times reports.

Davis, Gubernatorial Recall Candidates Answer Health Care Policy Questions

The Los Angeles Times on Sunday published responses from Gov. Gray Davis (D) and gubernatorial candidates Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante (D), Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) and Sen. Tom McClintock (R-Thousand Oaks) to questions about various policy issues, including health care.

House, Senate Negotiators To Consider ‘Means Testing’ Provision in Final Medicare Bill

Members of the conference committee charged with reconciling the House and Senate Medicare bills (HR 1 and S 1) this week plan to consider a provision that would require higher-income beneficiaries to pay higher premiums for physician and other out-of-hospital services as part of a larger effort to “slow growth in the government’s costs for Medicare,” the AP/Las Vegas Sun reports.

California Appeals Court Reduces Punitive Damage Award in Smoker Lawsuit to $10.5 Million

Citing recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions regarding high punitive damage awards, a California appellate court on Thursday reduced a $26.5 million damage award to a former California smoker to $10.5 million, the San Francisco Chronicle reports.

Democratic Presidential Candidates Criticize Record of Rival Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean on Medicare

Presidential candidate and former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean (D) on Sunday “found himself on the defensive” about his former position on Medicare after rival candidate Rep. Dick Gephardt (D-Mo.) criticized Dean’s record, the New York Times reports.

Employer Health Care Costs To Increase by an Estimated 12% Next Year, Survey Finds

Employers next year will pay an estimated 12% more for employee health care benefits, marking the fifth consecutive year of double-digit increases and a doubling of employer health care costs since 1999, according to a survey to be released today by Towers Perrin, the Wall Street Journal reports.