Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Davis Proposes Change to Referral Law to Allow HIV/AIDS Patients Easier Access to Specialists Through HMOs

Gov. Gray Davis (D) on Sunday announced that he will propose changes to the state’s patient rights law to ensure that people with HIV/AIDS are referred to qualified HIV specialists through their HMOs, the San Jose Mercury News reports.

Model Public Health Legislation Raises Privacy Concerns

With as many as a dozen state legislatures this year likely to debate model legislation recently released by the CDC designed to strengthen states’ authority to cope with a bioterrorist attack, a “new battleground” has been created between public health activists and civil libertarians, Wall Street Journal reports.

Contra Costa County Begins Effort to Enforce State Workplace Smoking Ban

An undercover officer yesterday began to inspect Contra Costa County bars, restaurants and night clubs as part of a state program developed to enforce the 1995 California Workplace Act, the state’s workplace smoking ban, the San Francisco Chronicle reports.

Awaiting Audit, HIV Prevention Groups Soften Message

As federal officials prepare to conduct a “comprehensive review” of all AIDS prevention programs funded with federal money, some people involved with AIDS prevention say that the threat of an audit has already produced a “chilling effect” on the sexual tone of program materials, the Los Angeles Times reports.

Hospital Officials Welcome Davis’ Plan to Restore Trauma Center Funding, But Warn More Money is Needed

Although state hospital officials “welcomed” Gov. Gray Davis’ (D) announcement yesterday that he would not cut $25 million from the state’s 44 trauma care centers, they said “it is not enough to qualify as a real remedy for an ailing system,” the Los Angeles Times reports.

MedicaLogic/Medscape Sells Online Health Information Division to WebMD

MedicaLogic/Medscape last week sold its Medscape online health information unit, including Medscape’s Medical Professional and Health for Consumers Web sites, to competitor WebMD, the Portland Oregonian reports.