Public Health

Latest California Healthline Stories

Task Force Tackles Access, Coverage, Workforce Issues

The state’s health care task force met yesterday with an ambitious end goal and a complex agenda that broached access and coverage issues, as well as health workforce concerns.

The end goal, according to Diana Dooley, HHS Secretary and a co-chair of the task force, is embodied in a single question: “What will it take for California to be the healthiest state in the nation?”

Getting to that simple question is a complex, multi-layered, 10-year effort. Yesterday’s meeting was the third of four opening workshops of the Let’s Get Healthy California Task Force, formed by executive order of Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown.

University of California Campuses Gear Up To Implement, Enforce Upcoming Smoking Ban

UC-Berkeley student Irene Cheng, Kevin Confetti of the University of California, Colleen Stevens of the California Department of Public Health, Kim Homer Vagadori of the California Youth Advocacy Network and a scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory spoke with California Healthline about the upcoming smoking ban at UC campuses.

Ombudsman, Immunization Bills Up for Floor Vote

Dozens of health-related bills passed through committee last week, setting up pending floor votes starting this week.

The last hurdle for many bills is the appropriations committee of each house. Those committees ran at high speed last week, churning out approvals for hundreds of bills.

The Legislature has until the end of August to vote on all bills.

Some of the health-related bills that cleared committee last week:

Nearing Consensus on Dense Tissue Bill

In case you missed it, yesterday was the day to ask people if they’re dense. The Legislature last session officially approved Aug. 8 as Are You Dense Day. Not surprisingly, the occasion yesterday marked the reintroduction of a bill that would notify women if their dense breast tissue might interfere with mammogram results.

SB 1538 by Joseph Simitian (D-Palo Alto) has passed the Legislature before despite opposition from provider groups. Last year the governor vetoed it.

“Dense breast tissue can appear white in a mammogram, and cancer can appear white in a mammogram,” Simitian said at yesterday’s Assembly Committee for Appropriations hearing.

Governor Signs Veteran-Benefit Bill

It was a bill that had no organized opposition, and passed through every committee without a single “nay” vote.

The governor added his approval Tuesday to that overwhelming support, signing AB 1869 by Assembly Speaker John Pérez (D-Los Angeles) into law.

The legislation affects approximately 130,000 veterans who remain uninsured despite possibly being eligible for federal Veterans Affairs health benefits, according to a Senate analysis of California Health Interview Survey data compiled by UCLA.

‘Where You Live Matters’ to Your Health

Health care numbers are interesting to Angela Russell but they only become important when you remember what they represent, Russell said.

“Data rankings are a starting point, not an endpoint, and the key is using that information to take action,” Russell said. “You have to remember, this data is alive. It represents families and individuals and communities.”

Russell is the engagement lead for the County Health Rankings and Roadmaps program at the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute. Yesterday, she was in the Capitol Building to talk about using federal and state health care data to make policy changes at the local level. The event was part of a California Health Policy Forum briefing called: “Health Rankings for Communities Across California: Using Data To Improve Population Health.” The event was funded in part by California HealthCare Foundation, which publishes California Healthline.

Task Force Starts with Population Health

When you’re trying to take on reformation of the complex and arcane system of health care in California, where do you even begin?

At population health, apparently.

The state’s recently formed “Let’s Get Healthy California” task force convened yesterday for the first of four scheduled webinars. The meetings are part of the task force’s plan to eventually organize the unruly health care system in California by creating a priority list and action plan for what needs to be done, according to Diana Dooley, Secretary of Health and Human Services.

No-Cost Clinic Faces Hard Times, Uncertain Future

Al Shifa Free Clinic near San Bernardino — one of two no-cost clinics in Riverside and San Bernardino counties providing care for uninsured residents — is scraping to make ends meet and exploring ways to survive under health care reform.

What Food Issues Mean to Health Care

A new policy brief from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research found that 3.8 million Californians in 2009 had times during the year when they could not afford food.

Based on data from the California Health Interview Survey, the new study of showed a marked rise from the 2.5 million Californians with food insecurity eight years before, in 2001. That’s an increase of about half (49%), during a time period where California’s population grew by about 10%.

“The numbers are quite striking,” said UCLA researcher Gail Harrison. “We knew what the trend was going to be, but this was a much more striking increase than I thought there would be.”

Paramedics Could Lighten L.A. County’s EMS Load

Proponents of expanded roles for emergency medical personnel say a goldmine of untapped health care resources in Los Angeles County is ripe for mining. Changes brought on by health care reform could make the transition smoother.