Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Republican Conferees Report Progress on Reconciliation of Medicare Bills, But Agreement Still Far Off

After a two-hour meeting yesterday, the 10 Republican members of the conference committee charged with reconciling the House and Senate Medicare bills (HR 1 and S 1) said they had made progress but “still appeared to be far from agreement” on several major issues, the New York Times reports.

Ventura-Based Community Memorial Hospital Relaxes Sections of Code of Conduct Policy

The board of Community Memorial Hospital in Ventura last week voted to change some the “most controversial elements” of its code of conduct and conflict of interest policy, but a lawsuit filed by the medical staff about the code of conduct and other hospital actions will continue, the Ventura County Star reports.

Flexible Spending Account Funds May Be Used for Over-the-Counter Medication, IRS Says

Employees can use the pretax funds they set aside in flexible spending accounts to pay for some over-the-counter medications, the Internal Revenue Service and Treasury Department said yesterday, the AP/Las Vegas Sun reports.

Republicans Might Rework Medicare Conference Committee Schedule

Senate Finance Committee Chair Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) yesterday said that Republican members of the conference committee charged with reconciling the House and Senate Medicare bills (HR 1 and S 1) will likely rework the committee’s schedule, after his recent disagreement with House Ways and Means Committee Chair Bill Thomas (R-Calif.) stalled negotiations, CongressDaily/AM reports.

UCLA Medical Center Director Leaving Position

UCLA Medical Center Director Dr. Michael Karpf on Tuesday announced that he is resigning his position to become executive vice president of health affairs at the University of Kentucky Medical Center, the Los Angeles Times reports.

Number of Medical School Applicants Decreasing, Study Says

The number of medical school applicants decreased last year for the sixth consecutive year and has fallen from 42,806 in 1993 to 33,625 in 2002, according to a study published yesterday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which this week focuses on medical education, USA Today reports.