Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Women More Likely to Visit a Doctor for Preventive Care

A report released Wednesday by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics confirms the “long-held belief” that women are more likely than men to visit a doctor and are twice as likely to go for preventive care.

Raising Medi-Cal Eligibility for People With Disabilities is ‘Fiscally Smart,’ Times Says

A bill (AB 925) that would allow “severely disabled adults” earning up to $75,000 annually to be eligible for Medi-Cal is “fiscally smart” and should be a “clear cut, fast-track priority” for state legislators, a Los Angeles Times editorial states.

UCSF 1978 Study Didn’t Report Outcomes in Research Similar to Johns Hopkins Asthma Study

Researchers who conducted a 1978 University of California-San Francisco study involving the drug hexamethonium — the same substance that caused the June death of a participant in a Johns Hopkins University asthma study — did not report that two volunteers in the study became ill, one “seriously,” after inhaling the substance, UCSF officials announced yesterday.

Large Employers Could See HMO Premium Hikes of 50%

Large employers that use HMOs to insure their workers could be “hit” next year with premium increases of “as much as 20% to 50%,” according to a recent survey of employer-sponsored health plans, Gannett News/Arizona Republic reports.

New Drug Labels for Oxycontin Carry FDA’s Strongest Warning

The prescription painkiller OxyContin will now bear the FDA’s “strongest type of warning” — a black box that says the drug is potentially as addictive as morphine and explains that chewing, snorting or injecting it can kill, the AP/New York Times reports.