Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Democrats Ignore Bioterrorism Veto Threat, Push for Funds

Senate Democrats today will attempt to add $7.5 billion for bioterrorism prevention and other homeland protection measures to the annual defense spending bill, even though President Bush has threatened to veto any additional spending on homeland security, the Washington Post reports.

More Health Plans Look into Reimbursing Physicians for E-Mail Consultations

An increasing number of health plans are exploring the possibility of reimbursing physicians for e-mail consultations with patients, although several obstacles, including legal concerns, patient confidentiality issues and time requirements, remain, according to a feature in the current issue of HealthPlan, a magazine published by the American Association of Health Plans.

House OKs One-Year Transactions Compliance Delay for HIPAA

The House Tuesday approved a bill that would delay the compliance deadline for the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act’s transactions and code set regulations by one year, until October 2003, Health Privacy News reports.

U.S.-Mexico Border Health Symposia to Begin This Week

The first Bi-National U.S.-Mexico Symposium on Border Health Research, one of four scheduled meetings that aim to “develop and increase health research capacity” along the U.S.-Mexico border, begins Dec. 7.

Compromise on Mental Health Parity Remains Elusive

Negotiations over the Senate-passed mental health parity measure continued yesterday, but senior House Republicans and business groups remain “staunchly” opposed to a compromise that would expand the 1996 parity law but allow some businesses an exemption, the New York Times reports.

Under New Insurance Plan, Sickest Workers Pay More

Several of the nation’s largest health insurers are planning to introduce a new type of health plan featuring fixed accounts that are expected to result in lower costs for individuals and families with low medical bills but could lead to substantially increased costs for people with higher medical expenses, the New York Times reports.

HHS Calls on Drugmakers to Use Bar Codes

HHS Assistant Secretary Bobby Jindal yesterday announced a proposal calling for all “hospital-administered” medications to carry “supermarket-style” bar codes to reduce drug errors, the AP/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports.

Davis Seeks $5M for Local Health Departments to Prepare for Bioterrorism

To strengthen California’s preparedness for a bioterrorist attack, Gov. Gray Davis (D) yesterday announced plans to provide county health departments with $5 million for disease surveillance, the Sacramento Bee reports.