Latest California Healthline Stories
California’s Mental Health System May Be Headed for Crisis
Like many of the patients it serves, California’s county-based mental health system seems to operate on a cycle of coping and crisis. Indications are we’re headed into crisis mode. Three counties are threatening to drop out of the Medi-Cal mental health program, and several other counties are experiencing other mental health meltdowns.
Assembly Bills Target Emergency Preparedness, Rent Increases at Assisted-Living Facilities
Assembly members Karen Bass and Lois Wolk, and a spokesperson from the Campaign to Improve Assisted Living spoke with California Healthline about regulation of the assisted-living industry.
California Health Care Quality Dips Slightly in HHS Report Card
According to a national report card issued last week, the quality of California’s health care dropped slightly last year compared to the year before. Hospital officials and physicians welcome quality comparisons but urge patients and purchasers to keep report cards in context.
Debate Over Health Insurance Cancellations Brings Criticism, Suggestions From All Sides
Sen. Sheila Kuehl and officials from a consumer group, the Department of Managed Health Care and a health insurer trade group spoke with California Healthline about regulating health insurance policy cancellations.
Medicaid Contractions Inspire New State, National Opposition
Proposals to cut back Medicaid spending at the federal level and in California are galvanizing the opposition and inspiring dark predictions of physician flight and growing barriers to care for beneficiaries.
Bill on Pricing Transparency Moves to Senate Health Committee
A proposal to ban “gag” clauses aims at making more pricing data public to improve price comparison shopping for individual consumers and large industrial buyers of health care. That said, Sutter Health defends the confidentiality agreements as standard practice.
Officials Grapple With Physician Substance Abuse as State Diversion Program Nears End
Officials from the Medical Board of California, the Department of Medical Affairs and the California Society of Addiction spoke with California Healthline about drug treatment programs for physicians.
State’s New Catastrophe Response Plan Leaves Nurses Skeptical
Presented as the first of its kind in the nation, California’s comprehensive plan for delivering health care in the event of a major disaster leaves front-line providers — nurses — less than impressed.
California Groups Look To Tackle Persistent Racial Disparities in Infant Mortality Rates
Catherine Camacho of the state Center for Family Health and other public health experts spoke with California Healthline about programs aimed at reducing racial disparities in infant mortality.
State Partnerships for Long-term Care Policies Under Fire
California health officials defend the state’s public-private partnership that urges people to buy long-term care insurance, but consumer advocates caution consumers to examine such policies carefully before taking the plunge.