- California Healthline Original Stories 3
- Calif. GOP Congressmen Aim To Boost Medicaid Pay For Doctors After Votes To Slash Program
- Survivors Of Childhood Diseases Struggle To Find Care As Adults
- Not Your Average Senators: Meet The GOP Men Reshaping Your Health Care
- Health IT 1
- Online Program Offers Help To People Who Have Experienced Sexual Trauma Before Entering Military
Latest From California Healthline:
California Healthline Original Stories
Calif. GOP Congressmen Aim To Boost Medicaid Pay For Doctors After Votes To Slash Program
Critics say the bill, sponsored by Reps. David Valadao and Jeff Denham, is an effort to deflect attention from their support of the House GOP’s health care bill. But some say they are addressing a serious problem: California’s Medicaid rates are among the lowest in the nation. (Ana B. Ibarra, )
Survivors Of Childhood Diseases Struggle To Find Care As Adults
Once-fatal childhood diseases, like cystic fibrosis, congenital heart disease and sickle cell anemia, now can be survived into adulthood. But when those patients become too old to see pediatricians, it can be difficult for them to find physicians familiar with their conditions. (Kerry Klein, Valley Public Radio, )
Not Your Average Senators: Meet The GOP Men Reshaping Your Health Care
The Senate’s version of the American Health Care Act was revealed Thursday. Here’s an insider’s look at the men who drafted it. ( )
More News From Across The State
Online Program Offers Help To People Who Have Experienced Sexual Trauma Before Entering Military
Research shows that people entering the military have an overall higher rate of trauma, including sexual trauma, than the rest of the population.
KPBS:
Department Of Defense Targets Sexual Trauma With New App
The Department of Defense is debuting an online program for victims who experienced sexual trauma before they joined the military. According to the Department of Defense's annual report on sexual assault in the military, approximately 10 percent of the people who filed reports in 2016 say the experience happened before they were in the service. (Walsh, 6/21)
Experimental Drug Able To Slow Macular Degeneration For Seniors With Genetic Flaw
Patients taking the drug, who had the flaw, had 44 percent less eye damage than the untreated patients.
San Francisco Chronicle:
Drug Shows Promise Against Vision-Robbing Disease In Seniors
An experimental drug from Genentech is showing promise against an untreatable eye disease that blinds older adults — and, intriguingly, it seems to work in patients who carry a particular gene flaw that fuels the damage to their vision. Age-related macular degeneration is the leading cause of vision loss among seniors, gradually eroding crucial central vision. (Neergaard, 6/21)
In other public health news —
East Bay Times:
Two People Dead In San Jose From The Heat
Two people — including a homeless person found dead in a car — have died from the heat in San Jose, Santa Clara County officials reported Wednesday. They were identified as 72-year-old Dennis Young and 87-year-old Setsu Jordan. Both died on Monday...Older adults are more prone to heat-related illnesses, such as heat stroke and heat exhaustion, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. That’s because they are more likely to have a chronic medical condition that changes the body’s normal response to heat. Also, they are more likely to take prescription medicines that affect the body’s ability to control its temperature or sweat. (Brassil, 6/21)
Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Vie For Space In Crowded City
There's going to be a host of new dispensaries, and the question becomes where to put them.
San Francisco Chronicle:
SF's ‘Green Rush’ For New Cannabis Stores — And A Growing Opposition
In a trend that is fueling land-use fights in neighborhoods across the city, working-class Visitacion Valley has become the latest focus for cannabis entrepreneurs looking to take advantage of the so-called “green rush” that gained momentum after California voters last year approved Proposition 64, which legalized the recreational use of marijuana. While the city has set a Sept. 1 deadline to determine how recreational cannabis will be regulated, many investors are betting those regulations will include a mechanism to convert medical pot shops into recreational outlets. (Dineen, 6/22)
Financially Strapped Medical Center Forced To Cancel Surgeries Because Of Mold
“It is a significant part of our revenue, but we want to do the repairs correctly and properly and we want to be sure that our patients have a safe clean environment to have the procedures done,” said John Peleuses, Sonoma West Medical Center’s interim CEO.
Santa Rosa Press Democrat:
Mold At Sonoma West Medical Center Halts Surgeries For Past Three Weeks
Mold spores, first discovered about a month ago under a hand-washing sink at Sonoma West Medical Center’s sterile processing area, has forced the financially strapped hospital to cancel surgeries until it completes proper remediation. While the mold was not found in the operating rooms, the work to remove it affects the hospital’s ability to sterilize surgical instruments for operations. The discovery and loss of revenue is yet another financial blow to a hospital. (Espinoza, 6/21)
What's In The Senate Health Plan? Medicaid Changes, Preexisting Conditions, Tax Cuts And More
Media outlets which have seen the draft proposal examine how the legislation is different than the House's version. The bill is expected to be released today after weeks of only selected Republican senators' work.
The Washington Post:
Senate Republicans Set To Release Health-Care Bill, But Divisions Remain
Senate Republicans on Thursday plan to release a health-care bill that would curtail federal Medicaid funding, repeal taxes on the wealthy and eliminate funding for Planned Parenthood as part of an effort to fulfill a years-long promise to undo Barack Obama’s signature health-care law. The bill is an attempt to strike a compromise between existing law and a bill passed by the House in May as Republicans struggle to advance their vision for the country’s health-care system even though they now control both chambers of Congress and the White House. The Senate proposal largely mirrors the House measure with significant differences, according to a discussion draft circulating Wednesday among aides and lobbyists. (Winfield Cunningham, Eilperin and Sullivan, 6/21)
The Associated Press:
AP Sources: Senate GOP Health Bill Would Reshape Obama Law
After weeks of closed-door meetings that angered Democrats and some Republicans, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell planned to release the proposal Thursday. The package represents McConnell's attempt to quell criticism by party moderates and conservatives and win the support he needs in a vote he hopes to stage next week. In a departure from the version the House approved last month, which President Donald Trump privately called "mean," the Senate plan would drop the House's waivers allowing states to let insurers boost premiums on some people with pre-existing conditions. It would also largely retain the subsidies Obama provided to help millions buy insurance, which are pegged mostly to people's incomes and the premiums they pay. (Fram and Alonso-Zaldivar, 6/22)
The New York Times:
Abortion Adds Obstacle As Republicans Plan To Unveil Health Bill
Abortion flared up Wednesday as the latest hot-button issue to complicate passage of a bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, which Senate Republican leaders hope to unveil on Thursday and pass next week. The repeal bill approved last month by the House would bar the use of federal tax credits to help purchase insurance plans that include coverage of abortion. But senators said that provision might have to be jettisoned from their version because of complicated Senate rules that Republicans are using to expedite passage of the bill and avoid a filibuster. (Pear and Kaplan, 6/21)
Los Angeles Times:
Senate Set To Unveil Secretive Obamacare Repeal Bill, With A Vote Likely Next Week
McConnell hopes to call a vote on the measure next week, all but daring Republican holdouts to oppose it and prolong what has already been a painstaking process to advance their promise to do away with Obamacare. “It will not be the best possible bill; it will be the best bill possible,” Republican Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas said as he headed into a closed-door meeting. “We’ve been in the backseat of Thelma and Louise’s convertible for quite a while, and we’re getting pretty close to the canyon. It’s time for us to get out of the damn car.” (Levey and Mascaro, 6/22)
Politico:
Senate Republicans Set To Unveil Obamacare Repeal Bill
It won’t immediately be clear if Cornyn and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) have the votes until sometime next week, after a Congressional Budget Office analysis illustrates how many fewer Americans are likely to be insured by the bill and answers the crucial political question of whether premiums would be reduced. Republicans are hoping for broader buy-in from the healthcare industry Thursday than the House bill received, some senators said. Republicans also said they expected the bulk of the caucus will endorse the bill immediately, with leadership allies expected to give the legislation a quick jolt of momentum. (Everett, Haberkorn and Cancryn, 6/22)
Politico:
McConnell Tries To Split The Difference On Protections For Sickest Americans
Senate Republican leaders racing to finalize their health care bill want to preserve Obamacare’s central protections for people with pre-existing conditions to avoid the firestorm that nearly derailed the House’s repeal effort a few months ago. But Senate Leader Mitch McConnell can’t afford a conservative rebellion as he attempts to ram through an Obamacare repeal bill before the July 4th recess. (Cancryn, 6/21)
Bloomberg:
Senate GOP Health Bill To Break With House Bill On Key Points
As in the House bill, states could receive waivers of some of Obamacare’s consumer protections including provision of “essential health benefits.” However, unlike the House bill, they couldn’t waive them for people with pre-existing health conditions. On abortion, the Senate bill, like the House bill, would ban funding for Planned
Parenthood for one year. However, the measure won’t include abortion restrictions on the tax credits used in the insurance exchanges after the Senate parliamentarian ruled against their inclusion. Senate leaders are trying to work out an alternative approach. (Litvan, Kapur, 6/22)
The Wall Street Journal:
Senate Republicans’ Support For Health Bill Wavers
The opposition is coming both from conservative Republican senators, who believe the proposal doesn’t repeal enough of the Affordable Care Act, as well as GOP centrists, who are balking at steep cuts to Medicaid that would leave more people uninsured. The situation is fluid and could change, but the political double bind leaves GOP leaders with little room to maneuver. Lawmakers on both ends of the GOP spectrum are also increasingly joining Democrats in criticizing the lack of transparency and rapid-fire timeline for a vote. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) plans to release draft legislation Thursday morning; many lawmakers said they hadn’t seen the bill’s text as of Wednesday afternoon. (Armour, Peterson and Radnofsky, 6/21)
Reuters:
Most Americans Say Republican Healthcare Plan Will Be Harmful: Reuters/Ipsos Poll
When U.S. Senate Republicans unveil their plan to overhaul America's healthcare system, they will face a skeptical public that already does not buy the justification for an earlier version that passed the House of Representatives, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Wednesday. The June 9-13 poll shows that a majority of the country thinks the American Health Care Act would be harmful for low-income Americans, people with pre-existing health conditions and Medicaid recipients. (Kahn, 6/21)
Los Angeles Times:
Trump Says He Hopes Senate Healthcare Bill Has 'Heart'
As Senate Republicans prepare to unveil their version of an Obamacare alternative, President Trump expressed his hope for a final plan “with heart.” “I can’t guarantee anything, but I hope we’re going to surprise you with a really good plan,” Trump said at a campaign-style rally in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Wednesday night. (Memoli, 6/21)
Obamacare Exchanges Are Deteriorating But Not Imploding
Health insurers had until Wednesday to declare whether they planned to sell coverage next year on exchanges in most states.
The Associated Press:
Government Health Insurance Markets Holding Up--Barely
Enough insurers are planning to sell coverage on the Affordable Care Act's insurance exchanges next year to keep them working — if only barely — in most parts of the country. Competition in many markets has dwindled to one insurer — or none in some cases — and another round of steep price hikes is expected to squeeze consumers who don't receive big income-based tax credits to help pay their bill. (Murphy, 6/21)
The Washington Post:
Obamacare’s Exchanges Face Their Moment Of Truth
Insurers hit a major deadline Wednesday: They must inform regulators in 39 states whether they will sell insurance on many Affordable Care Act marketplaces and, if so, how much they would like to charge. It's something of a moment of truth for the Affordable Care Act's marketplaces, whose health depends in large part on the participation of private insurers. And so far, states are seeing mixed results: One major insurer has made a big pullout, while a different one announced it would expand into new states. (Johnson, 6/21)