Monday, December 30, 2013
Hair analysis found elevated stress hormone concentrations in obese children as young as 8 - Medical News Today
Almost half of parents concerned their child will try e-cigarettes - Medical News Today
New quality, payment initiative positively impacts pediatric care - Medical News Today
Adding cognitive behavioral therapy to treatment of pediatric migraine improves relief of symptoms - Medical News Today
Sunday, December 29, 2013
H1N1 Flu Spreading in South-Central U.S.
FDA Warns Consumers Against Body-Building Supplement
Poll: Support Slipping for Affordable Care Act
The top 10 health stories in Georgia for 2013 | Georgia Health News
GOP opposition hasn't quieted Kan. Medicaid debate | www.ajc.com
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Eating peanuts in pregnancy lowers allergy risk for child - Medical News Today
Girls' brains reorganize earlier, may explain their faster maturity - Medical News Today
Big Strides in Battle Against Pediatric AIDS
Behavioral Therapy Might Ease Kids' Migraine Symptoms
U.S. Spends 5 Times More Than U.K. on Antibiotics for Kids: Study
Concussions Linked to Alzheimer's Risk in Study
H1N1 Flu Spreading in South-Central U.S.
Another (brief) extension for insurance buyers | Georgia Health News
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
1 in 6 Fathers Doesn't Live With His Kids: CDC
Girls' Brain Connectivity Happens Sooner Than for Boys: Study
Eating More Nuts During Pregnancy Might Help Prevent Allergies in Kids: Study
White House Extends Insurance Enrollment Deadline by a Day
Hospital operator hit with false claims allegations - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Key insurance deadline is upon us | Georgia Health News
Monday, December 23, 2013
Increased risk of complications for mother and baby from elective early-term deliveries - Medical News Today
Small rewards encourage children to eat fruit and veg - Medical News Today
Don’t fall for ‘Patients’ Compensation Act’ | Georgia Health News
Key insurance deadline is upon us | Georgia Health News
Wisconsin Senate passes Medicaid delay | Sheboygan Press Media | sheboyganpress.com
Thursday, December 19, 2013
New technique for reducing postoperative pain in children - Medical News Today
Survey Finds Support for Banning E-Cigarette Use by Kids
Memorial, Novant to build $28 million children's hospital | savannahnow.com
Will health care reform work out? An interview | Georgia Health News
Senate passes bipartisan budget agreement - The Washington Post
New Independence for California Midwives - California Health Report | California Health Report
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Obese Kids Might Have Higher Levels of Stress Hormone
State fires back at critical public health report | Georgia Health News
States to get Medicaid cases from federal website - Yahoo News
Obama, first lady meet with moms on health care - The Washington Post
Study: It’s All Healthy People — Not Just Young Adults — Who Are Critical To ACA Success – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Experts: Don't Waste Your Money on Multivitamins
Brain Chemicals May Signal Which Preemies Will Have Delays
E. Coli 'Superbug' May Pose Major Health Threat: Study
FDA Wants Tighter Rules on Antibacterial Soaps, Body Washes
Northeast Georgia Medical designated as Level II trauma center
Twenty-three states aren’t expanding Medicaid. Here’s who they leave behind.
Report: Medicaid “coverage gap” mostly hits minorities - CBS News
Monday, December 16, 2013
Frustration grows over delay in docs’ pay raise | Georgia Health News
The Marietta Daily Journal - WellStar Kennestone Hospital prepares for residency training
Dogs May Guard Babies Against Asthma, Allergies
Diabetes Drug Metformin Tied to Slight Weight Loss in Obese Kids
NIH, NFL Team Up to Take On Concussion Research
Brain Scan Study Suggests 'Pothead' Stereotype Might Be Real
Bad Night's Sleep May Raise Blood Pressure in Kids
Doctors Warn Against Raw Milk for Kids, Pregnant Women
New research shows performance feedback may not improve outcomes - FierceHealthcare
State Lawmaker Looks To Rework Child Fatality Review | WABE 90.1 FM
Children, cord blood could be part of GRU transplant program | The Augusta Chronicle
POLITICAL NOTEBOOK: Gwinnett doctor testifies on Obamacare | Gwinnett Daily Post
Poll: Many Georgians nervous about ACA | Georgia Health News
Phoebe cutting ties with Fitzgerald hospital | Georgia Health News
AP-GfK poll: Health law seen as eroding coverage - Yahoo Finance
Ga. lawmakers plan legislation to block care act | www.ajc.com
Friday, December 13, 2013
Will Music Make Your Child Smarter?
New Flu Vaccine May Provide More Protection to Kids
Kids' Movies Deliver Mixed Messages on Eating, Obesity
Could a Tiny Worm Help Treat Autism?
Flu Vaccine Prevented 6.6 Million Illnesses Last Season: CDC
Atlanta children's hospital surprises sick kids with snow | www.wsbtv.com
To Get Kids Exercising, Schools Are Becoming Creative : Shots - Health News : NPR
A Mixed Report on Georgians' Health | WABE 90.1 FM
Poll: Many Georgians nervous about ACA | Georgia Health News
Congress Moves Closer To Changing How Medicare Pays Doctors - Kaiser Health News
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Even Mild Hits to the Head Might Harm the Brain, Study Finds
Kids' Social Skills May Suffer When Mothers Drink During Pregnancy
FDA to Limit Use of Antibiotics in Farm Animals
Probiotics Don't Prevent Childhood Asthma, Study Finds
Probiotics Don't Prevent Childhood Asthma, Study Finds
West Virginia, Virgin Islands, Work Together On Medicaid – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Sebelius Asks Inspector General To Probe Website Problems - Kaiser Health News
Obamacare enrollments in Georgia rose in November | www.ajc.com
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Parental stress linked to childhood obesity - Medical News Today
Grieving dad pushes fight against synthetic drugs | Georgia Health News
A win-win plan: Protecting providers, reducing costs | Georgia Health News
CBO Cuts Cost of SGR Repeal Yet Again
Report: Most States Do A Poor Job Informing Consumers About Physician Quality – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Iowa Wins Approval To Expand Medicaid By Using Federal Funds To Buy Private Plans – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Monday, December 9, 2013
The presence of peers affects adolescents' reward-seeking behavior - Medical News Today
One child an hour treated for high chair-related injuries - Medical News Today
Study examines drug labeling and exposure in infants - Medical News Today
Kids Who See Movie Violence Also See Smoking, Drinking, Sex: Study
Early Puberty in Girls Might Be Linked to Bad Behavior
Pot Smoking in Pregnancy Tied to Stillbirth Risk
Sunday, December 8, 2013
CDC report: measles 'eliminated' in US but still poses threat - Medical News Today
Many Young Americans Know Little About Cervical Cancer Vaccine
Teens Who Feel Supported At Home And School Sleep Better : Shots - Health News : NPR
Smoke shops fade as synthetic marijuana industry slips | The Augusta Chronicle
Study calculates cost of expansion decision | Georgia Health News
Managed care for foster kids delayed 2 months | Georgia Health News
Friday, December 6, 2013
Study Examines Role of Electronic Health Records in Helping Uninsured Children Obtain Coverage
Research highlights the value of fathers in both neurobiology and behavior of offspring - Medical News Today
Study increases understanding of the development of obesity and insulin resistance - Medical News Today
Sensory Therapy Might Work for Kids With Autism
Too Few Americans With Asthma Are Getting Flu Shots, CDC Says
Parents Of Sleep-Deprived Teens Push For Later School Start Times : Shots - Health News : NPR
Feds’ site gives states incomplete Medicaid data - The Washington Post
Study: Refusing Medicaid expansion will cost states billions of dollars
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Why Johnny Can't Sleep
U.S. Pregnancy Rates Continue to Fall
Technical Work-Around Could Mean Medicaid Headache for Georgia | WABE 90.1 FM
Child advocate's sudden departure raises new DFCS questions | 11alive.com
Study calculates cost of expansion decision | Georgia Health News
1.46 Million Determined To Be Eligible for Medicaid And CHIP In October – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Medicaid Expansion To Cover Many Former Prisoners - Kaiser Health News
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Home Visits During Pregnancy and Beyond May Give Poor Kids a Boost
Mother's Smoking, Early Birth May Raise ADHD Risk in Children
Ecstasy Use on Rise Again Among U.S. Teens: Report
Georgia leads in ‘pregnancy-associated deaths’ | Georgia Health News
Obama declares health care law is working | www.ajc.com
Monday, December 2, 2013
How Worried Are Parents About Kids' Online Safety?
Chickenpox Vaccine Not Responsible for Rise in Shingles, Study Says
Medicaid Growth Could Aggravate Doctor Shortage - NYTimes.com
Doctors Groups Share Concerns About Narrow Networks, Confusion With White House – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Violent video games reduce teens' self-control, study shows - Medical News Today
Study: Kids are less fit than their parents were | Online Athens
Med school expands options for patients, doctors | Georgia Health News
Taking Antidepressants During Pregnancy May Not Raise Autism Risk
Physician recommendation key to HPV vaccine coverage : Family Practice News
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Preemies Show Subtle Differences in Brain Development
Brain Connections Strengthen As Kids Sleep, Study Suggests
Brain Connections Strengthen As Kids Sleep, Study Suggests
Cuts, closures face top hospitals in states that didn't expand Medicaid - FierceHealthcare
Rick Scott’s Medicaid push stalled in Florida - Jason Millman - POLITICO.com
Even Without Expansion, S.C. Will See 16% Jump In Medicaid Enrollment - Kaiser Health News
Monday, November 25, 2013
Kids Hospitalized for Flu Need Antiviral Meds Right Away: Study
Why Many U.S. Preteens Aren't Getting the HPV Shot
ACA's Medicaid Enrollment Fairly Smooth
‘Narrow Networks’ Trigger Push-Back From State Officials - Kaiser Health News
Hearing focuses on health care in rural Georgia | www.ajc.com
Research Probes Autism's Origins in the Brain
Steroids for Preemies May Raise ADHD Risk, Study Says
1 in 10 U.S. Children Now Has ADHD, CDC Says
Georgia needs PAs, and more are on the way
Health Law Is Dividing Republican Governors - NYTimes.com
Obamacare Deadline For Jan. 1 Coverage Extended One Week – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Vaccine for rotavirus may protect against seizures - Medical News Today
Concussion's Damage to Brain Lingers After Symptoms Fade: Study
Sports for Teens Are Beneficial -- Up to a Point
Gainesville to host health care committee hearing
Medicaid Enrollment Is Brisk Despite HealthCare.gov Troubles : Shots - Health News : NPR
President’s Cancellation 'Fix' Likely To Affect A Limited Number Of Consumers - Kaiser Health News
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Ga. rate of uninsured kids improves, but still high | Georgia Health News
Natural Delivery After a C-Section Often Successful: Study
Kids Worldwide Getting Less Heart Fit, Research Shows
Survey: Docs don’t like Obamacare - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Pediatric care program in College Park prepares to close | www.wsbtv.com
Doctors propose pilot program for Mo. Medicaid - NewsTimes
New Jersey Herald - Maine hires group for $1M Medicaid program review
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Panel blocks health coverage expansion | The Augusta Chronicle
Medical providers urged legislators to expand Medicaid | savannahnow.com
State update will revise hospital Medicaid payments | Georgia Health News
NC AG says refusal of Medicaid expansion was wrong :: WRAL.com
Scott Walker’s Medicaid Maneuver - Kaiser Health News
Doctors Complain They Will Be Paid Less By Exchange Plans - Kaiser Health News
Monday, November 18, 2013
New Push by Doctors to Limit Antibiotic Use in Kids
Breast Milk With Solid Foods Might Stave Off Allergies
Hospitals and moms debate rooming in vs. nurseries for newborns - FierceHealthcare
New synthetic drug "NBOMe" spreading to Georgia | www.wsbtv.com
Obama health care woes become credibility fight - Yahoo Finance
Tennessee Governor Hesitates on Medicaid Expansion, Frustrating Many - NYTimes.com
Nurses on leading edge of public health strategies | www.ajc.com
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Fewer Infants, Toddlers Harmed by Cough and Cold Medications Since Withdrawal of Infant Products and Label Changes
Preterm birth puts baby boys at higher risk of death and disability - Medical News Today
Insurance lobby: ACA fix no panacea - POLITICO.com
NH Medicaid compromise hinges on private coverage | www.ajc.com
Friday, November 15, 2013
Preterm Boys Face Worse Odds Than Girls, Study Says
Atlanta Mayor urging Medicaid expansion | Online Athens
Obama’s patch for ACA much like Georgia’s | Georgia Health News
Oregon Shines On Medicaid, As Texas Stalls On Sign-Ups - Kaiser Health News
Ohioans can enroll in expanded Medicaid next month - Cincinnati News, FOX19-WXIX TV
Lack of younger enrollees threatens exchanges | www.ajc.com
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Sign-up figures tell disappointing tale | Georgia Health News
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
SIDS: Brainstem abnormalities found in infants, in both safe and unsafe sleep environments - Medical News Today
Most Teens Who Misuse Painkillers Aren't After a High, Study Finds
Obamacare glitches shadowing Medicaid - Kyle Cheney - POLITICO.com
Navigators seeing more calls on health exchanges | www.ajc.com
Youth who are night owls are at greater risk for adverse outcomes - Medical News Today
Pediatrician: Obamacare an improvement, but doesn’t fix all » Local News »
How technology can transform health care | Georgia Health News
Problems With Federal Health Portal Also Stymie Medicaid Enrollment - NYTimes.com
Medicaid Chief Thanks State Leaders, Even As They Skip Expansion Option – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Medicaid is health overhaul's early success story | www.ajc.com
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Teens May Have Less Impulse Control When Faced With Danger
Fewer ER Visits for Kids After Cold Medicine Restrictions
Urine Test May Spot Heart, Kidney Risk in Kids With Type 1 Diabetes
Losing a hospital can be the ultimate hazard | Georgia Health News
Cuts in Hospital Subsidies Threaten Safety-Net Care - NYTimes.com
Gun violence in PG-13 films tops level in R-rated movies
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Parents and students in favor of school-based health centers - Medical News Today
Chronic childhood stress pain 'worsened' by later stress exposure - Medical News Today
Adolescent children's relationships affected by Moms' relationships - Medical News Today
Kids in Southern U.S. More Likely to Have Hay Fever: Study
What Happens When a Child With Autism Refuses Most Foods?
Sugary Soda Habit May Harm Kidneys, Study Suggests
White House pushes Florida, Louisiana on Medicaid - POLITICO.com
State health centers get $5.3 million from feds | Georgia Health News
Judge refuses to delay fired Medicaid contractor’s lawsuit against the Jindal administration - The Washington Post
Friday, November 8, 2013
State health centers get $5.3 million from feds | Georgia Health News
Marcus Autism Center Seeking Infants to Expand Study | WABE 90.1 FM
State affirms benefit contracts; court fight likely | Georgia Health News
State affirms benefit contracts; court fight likely | Georgia Health News
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Study shows antireflux procedures are overused in infants : Family Practice News
FDA to Ban Trans Fats in Foods
IVF Conception Doesn't Seem to Raise Kids' Cancer Risk: Study - US News and World Report
GOP lawmakers in Ohio under fire for supporting Medicaid expansion - latimes.com
Hospital groups to lawmakers: Halt Medicare and Medicaid cuts - FierceHealthcare
Immune-suppressing cells explain newborn infection vulnerability - Medical News Today
Inside the Autistic Brain: New Research Challenges Current Beliefs
Web-based, at-home interventions can help mothers address behaviors known to protect against childhood obesity - Medical News Today
Autism Sign May Appear in First Months of Life
Stomach Troubles Common for Kids With Autism, Study Confirms
State Leaders Continue to Oppose Medicaid Expansion in Georgia | WABE 90.1 FM
McAuliffe elected governor, defeats Cuccinelli after pledging to expand state’s Medicaid rolls - The Washington Post
Medicaid Enrollment Tops Private Insurance Sign-Up in Expansion States
Retail Clinics Boom, But Still Small Part Of Overall Market – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Autism, Language Problems May Be Linked in Families: Study
Childhood Music Lessons May Offer Lifelong Benefits
654,000 eligible for subsidies on exchange | Georgia Health News
Obama to Campaign to Ensure Health Law’s Success - NYTimes.com
Sebelius faces lawmakers anew on health care law | www.ajc.com
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Candidate vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus developed - Medical News Today
Don't Ask, Just Tell Parents When It's Time for Vaccines: Study
Kids Who Add Sleep Can Subtract Pounds, Study Suggests
Weight-Loss Surgery Safe for Very Obese Teens, Study Says
Study Points To “Imbalance” In Spending On Doctor Training – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Monday, November 4, 2013
Childhood Obesity Again Tied to Earlier Puberty in Girls
Few Parents Use Kids' Asthma Meds Correctly: Study
Kids Who Add Sleep Can Subtract Pounds, Study Suggests
WHO study: Midwives, nurse practitioners as effective as docs - FierceHealthcare
Prescription drug abuse hits newborn babies hard
Georgia shows progress on preterm births | Georgia Health News
So You Found An Exchange Plan. But Can You Find A Provider? - Kaiser Health News
Doctors Treat New Condition: Questions About Health Law - Kaiser Health News
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Young Athletes' Concussions Often Unreported: Report
One in 10 Teens Has Misused Prescription Painkillers: Survey
Gov. Deal: expect more problems with Obamacare | 11alive.com
Bullying: A grim problem with no easy answers | Georgia Health News
Georgia’s Largest Hospital Advocacy Group Comes Out In Favor of Medicaid Expansion | WABE 90.1 FM
Hudgens: ‘Obstructionist’ remark was overblown | Georgia Health News
Key Senate, House Committee Chairmen Offer Plan To Fix Medicare Doctor Payments - Kaiser Health News
Key Senate, House Committee Chairmen Offer Plan To Fix Medicare Doctor Payments - Kaiser Health News
Ryan strikes collaborative tone in opening talks | www.ajc.com
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
GOP outside groups airing health care ads challenging Senate incumbents - The Washington Post
MNT - Greatly elevated risk of depression in children with brain injuries
MNT - Cyberbullying of children greatly underestimated by parents
MNT - Concussion risk and the 'right' helmet
MNT - Higher breastfeeding rates likely with early skin-to-skin contact
MNT - Hours spent in organized sports may predict young athlete injury
Gov. Deal: expect more problems with Obamacare | 11alive.com
Concerns raised about security of health website | www.ajc.com
Obese Teens Eat Up Fast-Food Hype, Study Says
Children's Healthcare says exec stole data - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Grady chief fears effects of funding loss | Georgia Health News
Medicaid enrollment surges ahead of ACA sign-ups - Jennifer Haberkorn - POLITICO.com
Medicare Head Tavenner Apologizes For Healthcare.gov Problems - Kaiser Health News
Health policy cancellations: New blow for admin. | www.ajc.com
Monday, October 28, 2013
More Weight Gain in Pregnancy Tied to Higher Autism Risk for Kids: Study
Flu Can Kill Even Healthy Children, Study Finds
Concussed Kids Need Break From School
St. Mary's, medical partnership closer to getting new residency program | Online Athens
Health Site Woes Undermine Obama’s Vow on Government - NYTimes.com
Ralph Hudgens on informing Georgians of the 'law of the land' | Political Insider | www.ajc.com
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Too Few Kids Follow Bike Helmet Laws, Study Finds
Moms With Lupus More Likely to Have Children With Autism, Study Suggests
'Super-Magnets' Pose Rising Threat to Kids, Study Finds
Insurance industry veteran upbeat on navigator role | Georgia Health News
Medical Schools See Record Numbers Of Enrollees – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Pennsylvania Governor Talks Up Plan To Expand Medicaid His Way - Kaiser Health News
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Risk factors and promising interventions for childhood obesity
Halloween Contact Lenses Can Be Horror Story for Eyes
ACA uncertainties worry docs - FiercePracticeManagement
Children's-Emory receive $10M grant for sickle cell research - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Medicaid could be the next headache for Obamacare - POLITICO.com
Republicans, Sensing Weakness in Health Law Rollout, Switch Tactics - NYTimes.com
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Low Vitamin D Tied to Anemia Risk in Kids
Three-Quarters of U.S. Teens Say They Don't Drink
Parents Favor Email Medical Consults for Kids' Minor Illnesses: Survey
Infants Exposed to Smoking in Womb at Risk of Infections, Death: Study
Child 'Cured' of HIV Remains Free of Virus, Doctors Report
Halloween treats tricky for children with food allergies
The residency hunt: A big chapter in the lives of young doctors | Georgia Health News
WellStar plans another ‘health park’ | Georgia Health News
Sebelius Names Administration Veteran to Lead Tech Repair Efforts - NYTimes.com
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Insufficient vitamin D may raise anemia risk in children
Many Kids With Autism on Multiple Medications, Study Finds
Father fights to crack down on synthetic drugs | 11alive.com
Sebelius negotiating with House Republicans, but won’t testify Thursday
Medicaid Expansion Is Set for Ohioans - NYTimes.com
Kids With ADHD Often Prone to Bowel Problems: Study
Kids Still Spanked, to Their Detriment, Study Finds
Breast Milk Bought Online May Contain Harmful Germs: Study
Bottle-Feeding May Raise Risk of Stomach Obstruction in Infants
Kids Who Exercise More May Get Better Grades
Body-Building Supplements Pose Risks To Teen Athletes - Consumer Reports
Drug shortages, price spikes affecting care | Georgia Health News
Medicaid Expansion: Ohio Board To Decide On Governor's Proposal Today - Kaiser Health News
Obama Seeks To Reassure Consumers Frustrated With Healthcare.gov - Kaiser Health News
Monday, October 21, 2013
Babies know when you're faking
Stutterers Show Different Brain Development, Study Says
Exchange enrollment in Georgia still unknown | Georgia Health News
Newspaper: Failures by GA agency led to deaths | Online Athens
How The GOP's Shutdown Over Obamacare Fell Short : Shots - Health News : NPR
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Push Against Obamacare Leaves 5 Million Without Coverage - Bloomberg
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Study: Medicaid stance to push 400,000 Georgians into insurance gap
Study: Medicaid stance to push 400,000 Georgians into insurance gap
BY RICHARD HALICKS -
THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION
The state’s decision not to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act will push more than 400,000 Georgians into a coverage gap in which they don’t qualify for Medicaid but also can’t afford to buy private health insurance, a new report said Wednesday.
The Kaiser Family Foundation’s report is less revelation than confirmation of what experts in the state have predicted. But it underscores that, for a large group in Georgia, Obamacare will have little meaning.
“The problem is that some of these individuals are going to need health care and they are going to continue to wind up in emergency rooms and at physicians’ offices with no way to pay for the care that they need,” said Bill Custer, a health care expert at Georgia State University.
“That care will continue to be paid for by local taxpayers and by people who do buy health insurance and pay for health care.”
The health care law sought to provide health insurance to nearly all the 49 million Americans who don’t have it. The law envisioned that the lowest-income people would go onto a massively expanded Medicaid program; moderate-income people with no insurance would shop on the Health Insurance Marketplace and, in many cases, qualify for a federal tax credit.
The Supreme Court ruled last year, however, that the federal government may not compel states to expand Medicaid. Twenty-six states opted out, and one of the pillars of Obamacare dissolved for half the country. As a result, people who earn between 100 percent and 400 percent of the federal poverty level can shop on the new insurance marketplace and potentially qualify for a federal subsidy. But people who earn less than 100 percent of the poverty level can’t, because the law assumed they would go on Medicaid.
More than 5 million people in the states that have declined to expand Medicaid will fall into the resulting coverage gap, Kaiser’s report said, with the greatest numbers in Texas, Florida and Georgia.
Rachel Garfield, senior researcher with the Kaiser Family Foundation, said the study’s goal was “to put a number on something people have been talking about for a long time: who’s falling through the cracks?”
Garfield said that 31 percent of the state’s uninsured adults would fall into the coverage gap.
The Kaiser Family Foundation, a respected source of independent information on health care, is not connected to Kaiser Permanente, the insurer.
Custer, at Georgia State, has been using state-level census data to study the state’s uninsured population. He has concluded that the Medicaid decision here will result in 400,000 to 500,000 being pushed into the coverage gap.
The federal government will pay 100 percent of the cost of the Medicaid expansion for three years, decreasing to 90 percent in later years. Gov. Nathan Deal maintains the longer-term costs to the state would be untenable.
A Florida Tragedy Illustrates Rising Concern About Cyber-Bullying Suicides | TIME.com
US Outpacing UK in Autism Rates | dailyRx
Children of Teen Mothers Don't Have Mental Disadvantage, Study Suggests
U.S. Teens More Vulnerable to Genital Herpes, Study Suggests
Suspected tuberculosis investigated at Smokey Road - The Newnan Times-Herald
House leader questions governor's Medicaid request - Westport News
New Hampshire will hold special session on Medicaid expansion
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Hearing on state health contract highly charged | Georgia Health News
Senator: Deal to avoid default and open government | www.ajc.com
Multiple vs. single courses of prenatal corticosteroids not associated with increased death, disability of children at age 5
Kids in rural poverty score lower on visual, higher on verbal tests of working memory than urban counterparts
Popular Morning Sickness Drug Safe in Pregnancy, Study Finds
Northside Hospital to drop health coverage for employee... | www.ajc.com
States’ Medicaid Decisions Cost Community Health Centers – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Senators seek budget deal, House effort flops | www.ajc.com
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Air pollution linked to low birthweight babies
Births From Fertility Treatments Hit 5 Million Mark: Report
Children Benefit From Early Dose of Measles Vaccine, Study Finds
Physician assistants step up to fill holes in healthcare system - FierceHealthcare
Atlanta To Host Week-Long Obesity Conference | WABE 90.1 FM
CDC tries to maintain morale as shutdown cuts pay | Georgia Health News
Senators Near Fiscal Deal, but the House Is Uncertain - NYTimes.com
House GOP floats a counter to Senate's debt idea | www.ajc.com
Monday, October 14, 2013
Lew Lays Out Impact of Debt Ceiling Inaction on Medicare, Medicaid
Lew Lays Out Impact of Debt Ceiling Inaction on Medicare, Medicaid
By John Reichard, CQ HealthBeat Editor
A debt ceiling deal may be in the works but it isn’t done yet, and any agreement may not last long. What would happen to Medicare and Medicaid if lawmakers don’t increase the nation’s borrowing power?
Judging from a Senate Finance Committee hearing this week, the answer is likely a big interruption in cash flow and sharply lower rates of payment.
The federal government “has numerous large payments that are due shortly after Oct. 17, when we will have exhausted our borrowing authority and will only have cash on hand to meet our obligations,” Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew testified on Thursday. In the last two weeks of October, “we have large payments to Medicare providers, Social Security beneficiaries, and veterans, as well as salaries for active duty members of the military.” These could be delayed, he said.
“Doctors receiving reimbursements under Medicare would likely continue to provide services on a timely basis, but they would be operating with significant uncertainty about when they would be paid by the government for their services,” he said.
“For millions of low-income Americans who rely on Medicaid for their health care, the federal government’s payments to states for the federal contribution would likely also be impacted. These providers still have to pay their doctors, nurses, and staff. But absent timely federal payments, many could face real liquidity challenges.”
Medicare beneficiaries could be hard hit in other ways, through delayed payments of Social Security checks and shrinking 401(k)s leaving them less able to pay for basic needs.
“For those waiting on benefits who need those funds to in order to refill their refrigerator, if that money doesn’t flow, they won’t go to that grocery store to shop.”
Lew noted that during the 2008 financial crisis retirements assets shrank. “Now if you create a crisis that causes assets to shrink in value, for retirees, they don’t have a lot of time to catch up.”
Lew did not dispute an assessment by the panel’s chairman Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., that payments by Medicare and other federal programs could fall to 70 to 80 percent of their current rates.
Lew rejected the idea advanced by some GOP lawmakers that the impact of failing to raise the debt ceiling could be reduced by paying some creditors and delaying payments to others.
“How can the United States choose whether to send Social Security checks to seniors or pay benefits to our veterans? How can the United States choose whether to provide children with food assistance or meet our obligations to Medicare providers?” he asked. “Prioritization is just default by another name,” he declared.
Republicans didn’t dispute Lew’s assessment of the impact of failing to lift the debt ceiling. But they bridled at his description of the current crisis as “manufactured,” saying Democrats have repeatedly failed to curb spending and that entitlement spending is on an unsustainable path.
“I think this is a manufactured crisis because we didn’t work on it yesterday,” said Sen. Michael B. Enzi, R-Wyo.
Kasich administration will seek state Controlling Board's OK to use federal funding to expand Medicaid in Ohio | cleveland.com
Ohio nears Medicaid expansion - Toledo Blade
Bullet Wounds Kill 8 Percent of U.S. Kids Treated at ERs
Irregular Bedtimes Lead to Behavior Problems in Kids: Study
Medical experts demand energy drink makers stop marketing to kids | Health | Macon.com
Patients Mired in Costly Credit From Doctors - NYTimes.com
Children’s Hospital aims to cut asthma-related ER visits - The Washington Post
The Soaring Cost of a Simple Breath - NYTimes.com
Senate Democrats Press New Front in Shutdown Budget Battle - WSJ.com
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Cafeteria Debit Cards Linked to Less-Healthy School Lunches
Poultry Plants Linked to Salmonella Outbreak to Remain Open: USDA
Low-income families push for healthier lives for kids | Latest News | Columbus Ledger Enquirer
CDC quarantine staff reduced during shutdown | www.wsbtv.com
Geography Is Destiny When It Comes To Enrolling In Health Insurance Exchanges - Kaiser Health News
Why Some Virginia Health Plans Cost So Much - Kaiser Health News
Squaring off over shutdown | www.ajc.com
New insurance networks cut back on doctors, hospitals | www.ajc.com
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Infections in newborns linked to later behavior problems
High Blood Pressure Common Among Overweight Kids
Study: Privately insured patients receive better hospital care - FierceHealthcare
Douglas Co. football players get skin infection - Atlanta News, Weather, Traffic, and Sports | FOX 5
Douglas Co. football players get skin infection - Atlanta News, Weather, Traffic, and Sports | FOX 5
A change in services and a Medicaid pay hike | Georgia Health News
Massachusetts delegation withholds support of device tax repeal to end shutdown, despite previous backing - Nation - The Boston Globe
FAQ: Dental And Vision Care Part Of 'Essential Benefits' For Kids - Kaiser Health News
Muscogee County School District warns about potentially deadly 'Knockout Challenge' | Education | Columbus Ledger Enquirer
Negative Effects Noted for 2011 ACGME Requirements --Doctors Lounge
Are We Overmedicating Foster Care Children?
Are We Overmedicating Foster Care Children?
A new GAO report finds that states don't do a particularly effective job of monitoring kids on psychotropic meds.
BY: JONATHAN WALTERS | OCTOBER 8, 2013 GOVERNING MAGAZINE
Mental health issues are front and center in human services. Every day, caseworkers work in an environment where mental health services aren't as robust as they should be and where medication for kids in custody sometimes serves as a substitute for more appropriate care.
A good example of this is in New York state, where a crew of data hounds found that on Fridays, requests for psychotropic meds for kids in custody -- especially those in institutional settings -- spiked. Why? The unavoidable conclusion the data crunchers came to was that weekends at institutional facilities means fewer staff, and fewer staff means that properly attending to kids' needs is tougher. To be blunt about it, it's just cheaper and easier to drug kids than to take care of them in the most therapeutically appropriate way.
Of course, concerns over the use of medication among foster children certainly aren't exclusive to New York . AGovernment Accountability Office (GAO) report released at the end of last year highlights two alarming facts: First, children under state supervision generally aren't getting consistent, appropriate mental health care of any kind, even though mental health issues are a huge part of why kids wind up in state custody. Second, nearly 20 percent of children in foster care are taking psychotropic medication -- three times the rate of children on Medicaid and four times higher than kids covered by private health insurance.
Psychotropic meds, which are used to manage mood and behavioral disorders, can be effective, but the GAO report notes that using them wisely and well takes skill and close monitoring. And according to the GAO, kids who are prescribed medication don't usually receive timely follow-up visits. Furthermore, "mental health researchers and others have stated that there is a need for further research on the safety and effectiveness of anti-psychotics for children," the report's authors wrote, "particularly long-term effects."
Dorothy Miller and Kathleen Noonan, researchers with PolicyLab, the policy research arm of the Children'sHospital of Philadelphia , have been following the issue of psychotropic meds and children for several years. They are quick to emphasize that PolicyLab isn't against the use of medication for children. "If they work, and suddenly a kid is able to stay in school and do well, that's great," says Noonan. Adds Miller, "It's important and helpful to kids who need them, but they have to be monitored. and they should be accompanied by other therapeutic interventions."
Miller and Noonan agree with the GAO report's findings: The extent to which states do a good job of monitoring and tracking is very uneven. It is especially uneven in states where human services are administered by counties with state oversight, they note. But there are states that have become models for how to deal with the issue. Miller and Noonan point to Texas as such a state. "They made a bold, strong move in favor of kids," says Noonan.
Legislation signed by Gov. Rick Perry that went into effect last month expands oversight of psychotropic medication in two ways. First, the law requires that kids who've been prescribed medication be seen by their prescribing physician at least every 90 days. Second, the legislation requires that judges overseeing a child's foster care case be informed of behavioral and pharmacological treatments at all court hearings.
While it is clearly important to focus on the complicated mix of drugs and kids, perhaps it is more important to focus on the issue of mental health overall. The GAO report notes that "30 percent of foster children with a potential mental health need had not received any mental health services within the previous 12 months or since the start of the child's living arrangement, if less than 12 months."
There are lots of reasons for this, not the least of which is a lack of skilled mental health care professionals willing to deal with a population that's typically covered only by Medicaid. But some states are tackling that larger issue. Massachusetts ' Child Psychiatry Access Program and Washington 's Partnership Access Line are cited by the GAO as programs that have improved access to mental health care for kids in custody.
Still, we are way behind in providing the sort of appropriate, high-quality mental health services that will be necessary in the long run if we're going to really help kids escape multigenerational cycles of state involvement.
CDC Scales Back Surveillance Efforts in Face of Shutdown
CDC Scales Back Surveillance Efforts in Face of Shutdown
By Rebecca Adams, CQ HealthBeat Associate Editor
The government shutdown has forced the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to dramatically scale back its monitoring of illnesses nationally and across the globe as well as its assistance to local health departments, agency director Tom Frieden said Tuesday.
“From outside of the agency, it may be very hard to understand just how incredibly disruptive this is for our efforts to protect Americans,” Frieden told HealthBeat in an interview.
Since the government shut down on Oct. 1, House Republicans passed stand-alone continuing funding bills for the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration. They have not yet passed a separate continuing resolution for the CDC, although some House Republicans say they want to do so.
“We do not have a commitment yet” from House GOP leadership for a floor vote on a CDC funding measure, said Rep.Jack Kingston, R-Ga., who chairs the appropriations subcommittee that oversees Department of Health and Human Services funding and is pushing for a vote on a continuing resolution for the CDC. “I hope would happen sooner rather than later. A lot of it just depends on the calendar and the evolution of discussions. So as things develop, the leadership knows of my desire to move it. I think they’re sympathetic to it but they’re looking at some mega-picture scheduling issues.”
As far as the overall budget negotiations go, Kingston said, “We’re all in a holding pattern. Once you’re past the first day or two, then the next you know it’s a few weeks. On the rank and file level, I’m not optimistic it’s going to reopen anytime soon and the issues are tremendous.”
Senate Democrats and President Barack Obama have said they won’t accept a piecemeal approach to reopening the government and there is no indication when the House may pass a comprehensive funding resolution that Democrats will accept.
More than two-thirds of CDC employees — almost 9,000 people — were furloughed because of the shutdown. Overall, 52 percent of the Department of Health and Human Services was furloughed.
One example of problems that the CDC is not able to handle as fully as usual is a recent outbreak of salmonella that started in California but spread to 18 states and has caused roughly 300 illnesses. Because of the shutdown, only a small number of the CDC food borne disease staff have been allowed to work, although CDC officials have brought some of them back.
What worries Frieden most is the uncertainty of whether the government is missing another major disease outbreak or other threat.
“We’ve got free-floating anxiety,” said Frieden, adding, “Where is there a problem that’s spreading that we’re not recognizing?”
The agency has suspended the daily updates on global outbreaks it provides to other federal officials involved in public health and emergency response.
A telephone hotline for the public to report concerns about disease that routinely fielded 100 questions a day is now closed, Frieden said.
Nine of 10 global disease detection systems around the world have shut down, said CDC spokeswoman Barbara Reynolds. In a typical year, the centers respond to about 200 outbreaks and detect 6 to 10 new pathogens. Officials are particularly concerned about threats such as Ebola and new pathogens such as MERS-CoV and H7N9 flu that are circulating around the globe. But the centers — scattered throughout Latin America, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, South Africa and the Western Pacific regions — are blocked from doing active surveillance during the shutdown. Only a system in the Republic of Georgia , which is funded in a different way, remains active.
At international ports within the United States , the CDC staff has dropped from five to eight officials to one. As a result, the number of cases of disease that were reported dropped in half from the week before the shutdown to the first week of the shutdown.
About 85 percent of the CDC’s officials who monitor the spread of influenza throughout the nation are furloughed. The agency will no longer be able to produce its weekly snapshots informing medical providers and government officials where the outbreak is worsening, which can affect the distribution of flu shots and other supplies.
For some of the CDC’s operations, a couple of weeks of lost data can skew the results for an entire year.
Frieden likened the problem to one of a huge ship in the ocean that loses its navigational system. A couple of days without surveillance is a manageable.
“But if you lose it for a week or two, you can get very off track and it can get dangerous,” he said.
For every day that passes, Frieden and his top officials are reassessing whether they have the legal justification to bring back some furloughed workers.
“The challenge is this balancing act,” Frieden said. “We have to obey the law and have to do everything we can to protect people’s lives at the same time.”
For instance, the CDC is scheduled to inspect some labs that work with dangerous pathogens. “Do we do that or not?” Frieden said.
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