Tuesday, August 30, 2011
North Carolina Medicaid coordinator program pilots for private sector
Children Being Harmed Through Lack Of Free Play
Infants Being Vaccinated Against Rotavirus Can Prevent Serious Disease In Unvaccinated Older Children And Adults
Friday, August 26, 2011
NIH finalizes financial conflict-of-interest rules - The Washington Post
State panel recommends more school nurses | ajc.com
State Medicaid program to request more money from governor | ajc.com
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Medical News: Autism Not Caused by Vaccines, IOM Report Concludes - in Infectious Disease, Vaccines from MedPage Today
Docs sue CMS, launch task force to improve primary care pay - FiercePracticeManagement
Supercommittee may risk Medicare, Medicaid to avoid automatic cuts - FierceHealthcare
Reform, pay cuts likely to widen gap between rich and poor hospitals :: Aug. 15, 2011 ... American Medical News
Inactivity Linked With Risk Factors For Type 2 Diabetes
Pandemic Could Quickly Overwhelm Children's Hospitals
House Dust Mite Test On Wheezy Toddlers Predicts Asthma In Teenage Years
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Congenital heart disease screening recommended for newborns - latimes.com
Baby Research Challenged In New Report | FoxNews.com
Steps to creating sustainable physician integration - FierceHealthcare
Health Insurers Seek Delay Of New Consumer-Friendly Coverage Forms - Kaiser Health News
Rising Hospital Employment of Physicians: Better Quality, Higher Costs?
Extreme Morning Sickness Linked To Behavioral Disorders In Kids
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Advocates say supercommittee threatens Medicaid - The Hill's Healthwatch
amednews: 2 Blues plans work together on Medicaid management :: Aug. 22, 2011 ... American Medical News
amednews: Mississippi tort reforms lead to reduction in lawsuits :: Aug. 22, 2011 ... American Medical News
amednews: Economy disrupts doctors' retirement plans :: Aug. 22, 2011 ... American Medical News
Firm says hospitals unjustly billing its workers | Georgia Health News
Georgians kept in dark on hospital infections | ajc.com
Sunday, August 21, 2011
WellCare stock price drops on Georgia Medicaid move - Tampa Bay Business Journal
A Scalpel, Not an Ax, for Medicaid - NYTimes.com
Students Face Bigger Classes, Longer Days
State health officials can’t track hospital-related infections | ajc.com
Childhood ADHD Prevalence Rises By 28% In Ten Years In USA
Fatter Mothers Have Fatter Babies With More Liver Fat
Friday, August 19, 2011
CHIP Outreach Gets More Kids Covered
Medical Expenses Related To Obesity Costs States Billions
Boys Reach Sexual Maturity Younger And Younger
Childhood Hospitalizations For Skin And Tissue Infections Doubles In Ten Years
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Pediatricians frustrated over parents not vaccinating children
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
School Districts Rediscover Value of From-Scratch Meals - NYTimes.com
State slams Medicaid contractor for poor job, providers paying the price - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance
$4.7B in cuts threaten Medicaid expansion - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance
$4.7B in cuts threaten Medicaid expansion - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance
Group exploring options for Georgia health insurance exchange | ajc.com
Excess Weight In Young Adulthood Predicts Shorter Lifespan
Autism More Present In Second Child Study Reports; Mostly Boys
Can Oral Care For Babies Prevent Future Cavities?
AMA Chief to Congress: Deal With the Doc Fix
AMA Chief to
Congress: Deal With the Doc Fix
By Dena Bunis, CQ HealthBeat Managing
Editor
“Any serious proposal to confront our nation’s fiscal challenges must address the massive shortfall in funding for Medicare payments for physician services,”
The Medicare Payment Advisory Committee said in March that it will tackle this problem and could issue a recommendation to Congress in October.
“The final report released by the president’s National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform in December, as well as the recommendations of the Senate bipartisan ‘Gang of Six,’ included funding to permanently reform the SGR while also achieving a $4 trillion in overall deficit reductions. So it can be done,”
Physician groups had hoped that the debt deal would have included a remedy for the SGR, and soon after the law was passed, doctor lobbies made it clear that they would try to influence the panel to take up that issue.
Judge allows cuts to Arizona's Medicaid program
Judge
allows cuts to Arizona 's
Medicaid program
by Mary K. Reinhart
- Aug. 11, 2011 12:00 AM
TheArizona
Republic
The
Judge Mark Brain's ruling means an enrollment cap for childless adults will remain in place, eliminating an estimated 110,000 people from the rolls in the coming year and freezing out an untold number of low-income Arizonans.
Lawyers representing people who have been denied health care since the freeze was imposed July 8 argued that it violated state law, passed by voters in 2000, and the state Constitution, which voters amended in 1998 to prevent legislative meddling with ballot measures.
|
"The Voter Protection Act does not impose an enforceable duty on the Legislature to fund Proposition 204," he wrote in his seven-page ruling. "Simply put, the court lacks the authority to make the Legislature fund Proposition 204."
State lawmakers and Gov. Jan Brewer cut Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, the state's Medicaid program, by more than $500 million to help balance the budget. AHCCCS won federal approval last month to cap enrollment for adults without dependent children, for savings estimated at $190 million.
Anne Ronan, an attorney with the
She said they will appeal the decision. In the meantime, she said, low-income, chronically ill Arizonans are at risk.
"People are calling us every day who are being denied, with very serious health problems," Ronan said.
Prop. 204 initially relied on tobacco settlement dollars as the primary source of funding but required that it "shall be supplemented, as necessary, by any other available sources."
Attorneys for Brewer and AHCCCS argued that the reference to "available sources" gave them authority to cut AHCCCS, which serves 1.3 million people and has seen dramatic growth since the recession took hold. The state's financial crisis meant there was no money "available," lawmakers argued, and freezing programs beyond minimal federal requirements was the only way to keep the rest of the AHCCCS intact.
They also argued that the judicial branch had no business telling the Legislature how to appropriate state funds. "
Thousands of people fall off the AHCCCS rolls every month. Community groups, including Don't Get Dropped, say phone calls and anxiety levels are increasing.
"People are asking, 'What am I going to do?' " said Allen Gjersvig, executive director of the Keogh Health Foundation, which is spearheading Don't Get Dropped. "There aren't a lot of good choices."
Among those who are losing coverage are parents whose children reach maturity or who lose custody. Gjersvig said some people also are having trouble getting through to the state Department of Economic Security to complete their re-enrollment paperwork and required phone interview. The agency handles AHCCCS eligibility.
Roughly 250,000 people are covered under Prop. 204, including about 6,100 people with serious mental illness, 1,200 with HIV/AIDS and 1,500 young adults poised to age out of Medicaid coverage for children. Those three groups are largely exempted from the freeze.
AHCCCS also is awaiting federal approval for a raft of other reductions, including freezing enrollment for some low-income parents, eliminating non-emergency medical transportation in urban areas, imposing mandatory copayments, eliminating emergency services funding for people who can't prove citizenship and requiring AHCCCS patients to re-enroll every six months instead of annually.
Georgia continues to lag behind in child well-being | ajc.com
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Medicaid Pays Less Than Medicare for Many Prescription Drugs, U.S. Report Finds - NYTimes.com
Patient health care records ready to go viral | ajc.com
Physician organizations fight states' proposed cutbacks to Medicaid :: Aug. 15, 2011 ... American Medical News
More states turn to Medicaid managed care to control costs :: Aug. 16, 2011 ... American Medical News
Monday, August 15, 2011
How Fatty Diets Cause Diabetes
Brown Fat, Also Known As Good Fat, More Common In Leaner Children
Legal Fight Over Health Care Law Jolted by Appeals Court Decision in Favor of States
Legal Fight Over Health Care Law Jolted by Appeals Court
Decision in Favor of States
By Jane Norman, CQ HealthBeat
Associate Editor
The turmoil and uncertainty that surround
the implementation of the health care law increased Friday with an appeals
court ruling in a multistate legal challenge striking down the heart of the
law: its requirement that all Americans have health insurance. While every
court decision so far has been a jolt, the 304-page opinion affirmed the view
of a majority of the very bodies putting the law in place — the states.
The decision that the individual mandate is
unconstitutional also means that federal appeals courts now are split on the
law, appearing to increase the likelihood that the U.S. Supreme Court will take
up the case. The speed with which that might happen, and whether it will come
during the 2012 campaign, will depend on how quickly the Justice Department
wants to move.
Not all was a victory for the 26 states
that brought the suit, Florida v. Department of Health and Human Services
. They lost their argument that the expansion of the Medicaid program was
unconstitutional because it is so costly for them to bear their share of the
federal-state program. The court said the expansion to an estimated 16 million
additional beneficiaries “is not unduly coercive,” especially considering that
the federal government will bear nearly all of the costs.
The White House downplayed the 2-1 decision
by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. Aides stressed that four
other federal courts, including one appeals court, already have found the law (
PL 111-148 , PL 111-152 )
constitutional. “We strongly disagree with this decision, and we are confident
it will not stand,” said Stephanie Cutter, assistant to the president and
deputy senior adviser.
Ron Pollack, executive director of the
group Families USA, which supports the law, said the ruling will help
implementation. “Today’s court ruling allows the Affordable Care Act to move
forward,” he said. “All of the provisions of the act — save possibly for one,
the personal responsibility provision — will be implemented in states across
the country. On the personal responsibility issue, the appellate courts are now
split.”
But the ruling was a victory for the
states, many of which were prodded to the challenge by Republican lawmakers
elected in 2010 and tea party activists. Earlier this week, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback , a
Republican, returned a $31.5 million grant from the federal government to set
up an “early innovator” exchange, citing the uncertainty over the future of the
health care law and its cost. Exchange planning in other states has been slowed
by conservative objections.
Two of those suing — Mississippi and Nevada
— had just hours earlier on Friday been awarded multimillion-dollar grants by
the Department of Health and Human Services for the development of their health
insurance exchanges, which will be used in the law to provide insurance for
individuals and small businesses.
After a district court decision earlier
this year that the entire law was unconstitutional, states hesitated on
implementation. It wasn’t clear by Friday night if that would happen again,
especially since it was just the mandate found unconstitutional, but state
officials said they were heartened by the ruling and looking toward the likely
next phase in the Supreme Court. “Today we have prevailed in preventing
Congress from infringing on the individual liberty protected by the U.S.
Constitution,” said Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi.
In addition, a judge appointed by President
Bill Clinton was one of the two 11th Circuit judges ruling that the individual
mandate is unconstitutional. Judge Frank M. Hull joined with Chief Judge Joel
Dubina, who was appointed by President George Bush. Dissenting was Judge
Stanley Marcus, another Clinton
appointee, who had his own 96-page opinion explaining why the law should stand.
This was a twist on a ruling earlier this
summer by the 6th Circuit, where conservative judge Jeffrey S. Sutton upheld
the law, much to the joy of the law’s advocates. That case was brought by the
conservative Thomas
More Law
Center and now has been
appealed to the Supreme Court, the first challenge to the law to sent to the
high court. The Supreme Court has not signaled which, if any, cases it will
accept.
Still pending is a decision from the 4th
Circuit in Richmond , Va. ,
which is considering two cases: one by Virginia
and a second by Liberty
University . Yet another
case is scheduled for oral arguments in the District of Columbia Circuit in
September.
House Speaker John A. Boehner ,
R-Ohio, called for a speedy resolution by the Supreme Court. “The costly
mandates, regulations, and taxes that are hanging over small businesses are adding
to our economic uncertainty and joblessness,” Boehner said.
Celebrating was the National Federation of
Independent Business Small Business Legal Center, a party to the suit with the
states. Elizabeth Milito, senior executive counsel, said the group was
disappointed that the entire law wasn’t struck down but nonetheless it was a
“good day for small business.”
The government is almost certain to appeal
the decision to the Supreme Court, and Milito said the NFIB wants that to
occur as soon as possible so as to eliminate uncertainty for businesses and
states in whether and how to implement the law. “A decision from the Supreme
Court in the next term would be a good thing for the country,” she said.
But she said opponents also are worried
that the Justice Department will ask for an “en banc” review from the 11th
Circuit, which would mean a review by all of the judges on the appeals bench
rather than just the three who heard oral arguments. That could mean a delay of
a final decision by the high court.
The uncertainty must be resolved quickly,
said James A. Klein, president of the American Benefits Council, a trade
association representing those who administer or sponsor health and retirement
plans for 100 million Americans.
“The fact that today’s decision upheld the
rest of the law, while striking down the mandate, does not make the situation
any clearer,” Klein said. “Knowing whether people must obtain health coverage
is critical for individuals and for the employers from whom most Americans get
their coverage. Citizens, employers and all stakeholders deserve the clarity
that only the Supreme Court can provide.”
The ruling did not kill the entire law but
just the individual mandate. The appeals court judges were considering a
federal district court ruling by Judge Roger Vinson that declared the entire
law unconstitutional. Hull
and Dubina in their opinion explicitly said they do not intend to strike
down portions of the law that protect consumers. Those provisions require
insurance companies to end their practice of denying insurance because of
pre-existing conditions, and require that they accept all applicants.
This was highlighted by the law’s
supporters. “This decision makes clear that the courts will not undo health
care reform and that insurance company abuses like discrimination against
people with pre-existing conditions will not be tolerated,” said Ethan Rome,
head of the advocacy group Health Care for America Now.
But the judges said that the individual
mandate is an overreach by Congress and violates the Commerce Clause of the
Constitution. “We have not found any generally applicable, judicially
enforceable limiting principle that would permit us to uphold the mandate
without obliterating the boundaries inherent in the system of enumerated
congressional powers,” the judges wrote.
Another tussle has been over whether the
individual mandate is a penalty, as described in the law, or a tax, as
described by supporters. Hull
and Dubina said that the mandate was enacted as a regulatory penalty, not
a revenue-raising tax, and thus cannot be sustained as an exercise of
congressional power under the Taxing and Spending Clause.
The mandate “represents a wholly novel and
potentially unbounded assertion of congressional authority: the ability to
compel Americans to purchase an expensive health insurance product they have
elected not to buy and to make them re-purchase that insurance product every
month for their entire lives.” Supporters argue that the health insurance
market is unique and so must be regulated, but “uniqueness is not a
constitutional principle in any antecedent Supreme Court decision,” the judges
said.
Appeals Judges Strike Down Individual Mandate, but Medicaid Expansion Remains
Appeals Judges Strike Down Individual Mandate, but Medicaid
Expansion Remains
By Jane Norman, CQ HealthBeat
Associate Editor
Judges for the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals on Friday declared the individual mandate in the health care law to be
unconstitutional. But they left the rest of the law intact, including a key
component — the expansion of Medicaid to millions of uninsured Americans.
The 2-1 ruling from the Atlanta-based court
came in a suit filed by 26 states led by Florida ,
as well as the National Federation of Independent Business and two individuals.
The Obama administration has vigorously opposed this and other lawsuits.
This is the second federal appeals court
ruling on the law. The administration prevailed in the first, filed by the Thomas More Law Center
in Ann Arbor , Mich. That case, before the Cincinnati-based
6th Circuit, has been appealed by the law center to the Supreme Court, which
could make the final ruling on the health care law ( PL 111-148 , PL 111-152 ) during
its term beginning this fall.
The 11th Circuit judges said that “Congress
exceeded its commerce power in enacting its individual mandate” and that “its
tax power does not provide an alternative constitutional basis for upholding
this unprecedented individual mandate.”
The decision was written by Chief Judge
Joel Dubina, an appointee of President George Bush, and Judge Frank M. Hull,
who was appointed by President Bill Clinton. Dissenting was Judge Stanley
Marcus, another Clinton
appointee.
Earlier this year, U.S. District Court
Judge Roger Vinson had ruled the entire law unconstitutional. But the appeals
court said just the requirement that all Americans hold insurance is
unconstitutional.
The 26 state plaintiffs are Alabama, Alaska,
Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana,
Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin,
and Wyoming.
Late Friday, another health care lawsuit
was thrown out of a federal court in California .
In the 9th Circuit, appeals judges ruled that Steve Baldwin, a former state
assemblyman, and the Pacific Justice Institute did not have standing to bring a
suit against the law. They were appealing an August 2010 federal district court
ruling.
New Money And New Rules For The Exchanges – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Health-Law Mandate Ruled Unconstitutional by Appeals Court - WSJ.com
Positive Impact Of Growing Public Awareness Of Obesity Epidemic Highlighted In Childhood Obesity Journal
Researchers Identify A Target That Could Combat Allergies Of Early Childhood
Friday, August 12, 2011
Health-Law Mandate Ruled Unconstitutional by Appeals Court - WSJ.com
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Augusta doctors sue over Medicare | The Augusta Chronicle
Medicaid enrollees may cost more to treat under reform - FierceHealthcare
Regents discuss medical education needs, challenges | ajc.com
State health plan to get wellness, kids changes | Georgia Health News
Report: States cutting kids' access to healthcare - The Hill's Healthwatch
Judge allows cuts to Arizona's Medicaid program - Forbes.com
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Deal Orders Agencies To Cut 2%
New Study Helps Clarify Symptoms And Characteristics Of Acid Reflux In Neonates
Bullying May Contribute To Lower Test Scores
4 tips for a strong post-recession practice - FiercePracticeManagement
Medical board lacks resources to punish dangerous docs - FierceHealthcare
Hospital groups contest Medicaid cuts in Supreme Court argument - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Routine Gun Inquiry Is Off Limits for Doctors in Florida - NYTimes.com
Democrats Break With Obama on Medicaid Lawsuits - NYTimes.com
The Tanning Bed Talk; Advice For Parents
Fetal Gender Test Determines Sex Of Fetus At 7 Weeks Gestation
Toilet Training Our Kids - When And How?
Pediatricians: Sports in heat OK with precautions - State news - Macon.com
Democrats Break With Obama on Medicaid Lawsuits - NYTimes.com
Deal: Get primed for more cuts || OnlineAthens.com
Pro & Con: Are high schools doing enough to prevent heat-related deaths? | ajc.com
Back-to-school anxiety a problem for kids | ajc.com
Common Concerns About Testing Children Are Rooted In Assumption; More Research Is Necessary To Determine True Effects
Exercising In Extreme Heat Causes Serious Illness And Death, CDC
More U.S. kids in hospital for mental illness | Reuters
Monday, August 8, 2011
Baby's Palate And Food Memories Shaped Before Birth
What editorial writers are saying about the debt-ceiling deal :: Aug. 8, 2011 ... American Medical News
Rated negatively online? What’s a physician to do? :: Aug. 8, 2011 ... American Medical News
The Real Cost Of Poorly Controlled Asthma
Impact Of Hand Hygiene Knowledge On Risk Of Infection At Elementary Schools And Hospitals
Thursday, August 4, 2011
General Surgery News - Should 2-Year-Olds Be Screened for Obesity? Group Says Yes
New Rules Against Bullying
Happy Meals? The Nutritional Value Of What Kids Actually Eat At A Fast Food Restaurant
Using Comic Books To Combat Childhood Obesity
Audit: Georgia driver's ed money goes elsewhere | The Augusta Chronicle
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Debt-ceiling deal leaves physicians at risk for massive cuts - FiercePracticeManagement
DHA Taken During Pregnancy Has Protective Effect On Babies
Only 4% Of US Hospitals Fully Support Breastfeeding, CDC Finds
Planet Health Obesity Prevention Curriculum: Cost/Benefit Analysis Shows Net Savings For Obesity And Eating Disorders
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Two high school football players die after practices | ajc.com
Medicare, Medicaid could be cut with debt agreement - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance
Indoor Air Cleaners Ease Asthma Symptoms In Children Living With Smokers
Attention On Breastfeeding Benefits, Education This Week
Judge set to rule on Arizona's freeze of Medicaid enrollment :: Aug. 1, 2011 ... American Medical News
Faulty ECG readings may endanger young athletes :: Aug. 2, 2011 ... American Medical News
Children's Exposure To Unhealthy TV Ads Not Reduced Through Self-regulation By Food And Beverage Industry
Direct primary care model: Cutting out the insurer :: Aug. 1, 2011 ... American Medical News
Pace of mergers, acquisitions revs up for physician practices :: Aug. 1, 2011 ... American Medical News
Extremely Low-Birth Weight Kids Do Not Suffer Worse Health During Teen Years
Parenting Styled To Personality Halves A Child's Anxiety, Depression
Monday, August 1, 2011
Dr. Joseph S. Wilson, Jr. Becomes New Chairman and CEO of MAG Mutual Insurance
Database of perks, payments: Law will allow patients to see value, nature of industry gifts to physicians - AAP News
PolitiFact Georgia | Nearly half of Hispanic children in Georgia rely on Medicaid for health care
Cobb Co.'s birth rates down since 2006, economy blamed - Atlanta Business Chronicle
WABE: Babies "Healthier" When Pregnant Mothers Take Omega-3 Supplement, Study Finds (2011-08-01)
Judge orders circumcision ban off San Francisco's ballot - Los Angeles Times
Excess Salt Consumed By 70 Percent Of 8-Month-Olds
Asthma Studies Focus On Wheezing Toddlers And Children; Vitamin D And Asthma
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