Thursday, August 31, 2017
Schoolchildren who use e-cigarettes are more likely to try tobacco
AAP Statement on Hurricane Harvey
Hackers Breached More Than A Million Health Records Of Georgians Since 2016 | WABE 90.1 FM
Report: Programs to remove lead would save next generation of kids | Georgia Health News
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Many Parents Don't Tell Doctor About 'Complementary' Therapy Use in Kids
Health Groups Demand 'R' Rating for Movies That Show Smoking
Familiar face in health care circles picked to run Georgia Medicaid | Georgia Health News
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Many Parents Not Happy With Later School Start Times
Gov't report: 28.1M in US lack health coverage - ABC News
Strong friendships in adolescence may benefit mental health in the long run
Does Race Matter in Care 'Preemie' Babies Receive?
Monday, August 28, 2017
Hep B Vaccine Should Be Given Sooner: Pediatricians Group
Serious Reactions to Vaccines Rarely Recur: Review
Public Health: Vaccinations should remain at forefront as flu season approaches | Local News | albanyherald.com
Trump’s Threats on Health Law Hide an Upside: Gains Made by Some Insurers - The New York Times
Friday, August 25, 2017
Pensions, Medicaid fuel calls for more money in Georgia budget
More U.S. Teens Getting Vaccinated Against HPV
Cookies, Apples or Yogurt? Not Always a Simple Choice for Kids
This is why drinking soda could make you fat, Georgia scientists say | Columbus Ledger-Enquirer
Community Health asks for extra millions for Medicaid | Georgia Health News
Climbing Cost Of Decades-Old Drugs Threatens To Break Medicaid Bank | Kaiser Health News
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Women Who Receive Discouraging Information About Vaccines More Likely to Delay Immunization
Does Autism Risk Reside in Cells' Energy Engines?
Cyberbullying Weighs Heavily on Young People
State officials take center stage in ACA stabilization efforts | FierceHealthcare
Rural America seeks more doctors - Local News - East Oregonian
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Transitioning to Adult Care Should Not Be Defined by Arbitrary Age Limits
Nation's Pediatricians Caution About Rapid Weight Changes in Youth Athletes
Kids' Cases of High Blood Pressure May Rise Under New Guidelines
Medicaid alternative payment models: How they're faring and how payers can capitalize | FierceHealthcare
Democratic senator wants Medicaid buy-in option on Affordable Care Act exchanges | FierceHealthcare
Medicaid Directors See Boon in Newfound Public Awareness | Bloomberg BNA
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
Too Many Babies Still Placed on Stomach to Sleep: Study
Having Same-Sex Parents Won't Affect Kids' Gender Identity: Study
Are Depressed Teens Prone to Violence?
Human milk sugars may protect against group B strep
Plans for White House vaccine commission appear to have stalled
Past Health Chiefs: Insurance Market Stability Is the Goal - The New York Times
Monday, August 21, 2017
Anti-Vaccine Family Members, Friends Spur Many Moms to Delay Baby's Shots
Nurse education key to curbing maternal death rate | FierceHealthcare
Home Visits Help New Parents Overcome Tough Histories, Raise Healthy Children | Kaiser Health News
Time Crunch Among Hurdles for Bipartisan Senate Push to Bolster ACA - Morning Consult
Friday, August 18, 2017
Young Breakfast Skippers Lack Vital Nutrients
Opioid Crisis Strains Foster Care System; Programs Aim To Keep Kids With Mom | Kaiser Health News
Express Scripts to limit opioids; doctors concerned - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events
DOJ, Mylan finalize $465 million EpiPen Medicaid settlement - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events
Thursday, August 17, 2017
UnitedHealth CEO Hemsley stepping down - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events
Study finds links between exposure to violence and obesity in teens
'Herd Immunity' May Be Curbing U.S. Zika Numbers
Feds Award Georgia $2.3M To Boost Health Centers | WABE 90.1 FM
Centene Fills Empty Insurance Markets in Nevada
Editor’s Note: St. Louis-based Centene is one of the four Medicaid HMO’s in Georgia, operating here as Peach State Health Plan.
CQ HEALTHBEAT NEWS
Aug. 15, 2017 – 4:40 p.m.
Aug. 15, 2017 – 4:40 p.m.
Centene Fills Empty Insurance Markets in Nevada
By Lauren Clason, CQ
Centene Corp. is stepping in to sell health exchange plans in the 14 Nevada counties previously at risk of having no insurer for their exchange plans next year, the state's governor announced Tuesday. The insurer had previously announced it was expanding into the state, but did not specify which counties it was entering.
The Nevada news follows the announcement that Centene is also stepping into the last remaining so-called “bare county” in Indiana, potentially leaving just two Midwestern counties — Paulding County, Ohio, and Menominee County, Wisconsin — without an exchange plan for consumers next year.
Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval, a Republican, delivered the news in Silver Springs, a sparsely populated part of the state, to underscore the importance of access to health care in rural areas. Nevada’s 14 bare counties only contain 8,000 customers of the exchanges created by the 2010 health law (PL 111-148, PL 111-152). Only 381 exchange customers live in the bare counties in Ohio and Wisconsin.
“I know there is more work to do,” said Sandoval, whose term ends after next year. “There is no doubt about that. We’re going to be talking about pricing and things as we move forward.”
Sandoval personally reached out to Centene to help cover the stranded counties, but the looming filing deadline meant the insurer had to build a network of doctors and health care professionals quickly. Centene’s Nevada subsidiary, SilverSummit Healthplan, consequently decided to lease the network of Reno-based Hometown Health, the insurance arm of health system Renown Health.
Heather Korbulic, executive director of the state exchange, Nevada Health Link, said the team was “grateful and enthusiastic,” to SilverSummit and Renown, noting that the last few months had been “tumultuous.”
Korbulic had been exploring a number of alternative options for consumers in the stranded counties, including letting those residents enroll in plans offered in other parts of the state or finding ways to absorb them through government-run health programs. She said she’s already reaching out to health plans about what she can do to create stability and competition in 2019.
More than 60 counties nationwide have at one point been at risk of having no exchange options, according to Kaiser Family Foundation health insurance expert Cynthia Cox. Centene, which also has a large operation running Medicaid plans, has now covered more than half of those counties, according to Cox. That makes Centene the only major insurance company to expand in an exchange market that has cost others hundreds of millions of dollars.
Centene Chief Executive Officer Michael Neidorff has repeatedly said that the exchanges are “business as usual,” in stark contrast to other insurance CEOs like Aetna’s Mark Bertolini, who publicly said the exchanges are in a “death spiral.”
Other local plans have helped to fill the gaps as well. CareSource, a nonprofit insurer, stepped in to cover three of Indiana’s bare counties, and joined four others in covering bare counties in Ohio. In Virginia, Optima Health expanded to cover 50 counties that would have been left bare when Aetna, Anthem Inc. and UnitedHealth Group announced their withdrawal from the state, according to Cox.
Centene’s experience in Medicaid, where consumers often have low incomes with complex health problems and fluctuating home and work situations, makes the company better suited for the individual market, where many consumers’ situations are similar. Neidorff also attributes the company’s success to its small-scale, locally adaptable business model.
Republicans are still working on a way to repeal and replace former President Barack Obama’s legacy health law, while simultaneously starting work on a bill that would stabilize the insurance marketplaces. A Senate bill to repeal parts of the law fell short of passage by one vote last month, but Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Bill Cassidy, R-La., are working with governors on a plan that would extend federal block grants to states.
Rising premiums and insurer exits have dogged the exchanges every year, but the uncertainty over Republicans’ bid to repeal the law has exacerbated the problem. President Donald Trump has also repeatedly threatened to end critical subsidies for the out-of-pocket costs of low-income consumers on the exchanges. As a result, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently extended the rate filing deadline by three weeks to Sept. 5.
Some state officials have had to get creative to keep insurance companies at the negotiating table. In California, exchange director Peter V. Lee would let insurers increase prices for silver plans an additional 12.4 percent if the subsidies are canceled, in addition to the 12.5 percent average increase granted for all plans on the state exchange. Lee is also presenting a plan that would let insurers recoup losses from the uncertainty about White House and congressional actions through rate hikes in future years.
While the number of bare counties has shrunk considerably, thousands of counties will only have one exchange option in 2018. And while studies have shown that insurers’ profit margins are improving, consumers still face rising premiums and deductibles they often struggle to afford.
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Lack of Sleep May Raise Child's Type 2 Diabetes Risk: Study
Fatal Opioid ODs on the Rise Among U.S. Teens
White House to pressure McConnell on ObamaCare | TheHill
Working on a new Rx—for video games - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
State Medicaid chief departs with no official explanation | Georgia Health News
Do Pets Really Boost Kids' Health?
Premiums to edge up for state workers and teachers, with options unchanged | Georgia Health News
Health Insurers Get More Time to Calculate Increases for 2018 - The New York Times
Climbing Cost Of Decades-Old Drugs Threatens To Break Medicaid Bank | Kaiser Health News
Monday, August 14, 2017
Calming Those Back-to-School Jitters
Price signals support for bipartisan healthcare reform fix even as Trump trades barbs with McConnell | FierceHealthcare
Could sleep disorders raise the risk of preterm birth?
Therapy for Kids With Autism Pays Off for Moms, Dads
Americans Eager For Leaders To Cooperate To Make Health Law Work | Kaiser Health News
Trump Plans to Declare Opioid Epidemic a National Emergency - The New York Times
Thursday, August 10, 2017
No wonder cure, but music therapy can still be helpful for children with autism
By Age 12, Poor May Show Signs of Heart Risks Ahead
Rotavirus Vaccine Cut Kids' Hospitalization, Medical Costs
Wednesday, August 9, 2017
U.S. Opioid Crisis Continues to Worsen
Preterm Birth Risk Spikes in Mothers With Sleep Disorders
Georgia may allow more suits in child sex abuse cases
Blue Cross move leaves Georgia without statewide insurer
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Sandy Springs names street for pediatrician
Decline in Kids' Ear Infections Linked to Pneumococcal Vaccine
Can Video Game Playing Cost You Gray Matter?
Providers warn Anthem’s ER policy may violate federal law | FierceHealthcare
Blue Cross agrees to stay in counties where there’s no other exchange option | Georgia Health News
FDA to step up targeting of fentanyl, other synthetic opioids at postal facilities - The Washington Post
McConnell to Consider Bipartisan Plan to Pay Health Insurers - The New York Times
Monday, August 7, 2017
Georgia hospitals in line to lose millions due to inaction on health care | Political Insider blog
Aetna trumps 2Q expectations after scaling back ACA coverage - ABC News
Picky Eater? It Might Just Be Your Child's Personality
Prenatal Exposure to Certain Flame Retardants Linked to Lower IQs
Friday, August 4, 2017
Can Breast Milk Feed a Love of Vegetables?
Fulton County will help Grady hospital fund $165M expansion
Georgia Lawmakers Talk 'Medicaid Waivers,' But What Are They? | WABE 90.1 FM
Bipartisan moves to steady insurance market face same old conflicts over regulation - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events
Thursday, August 3, 2017
Access to High Quality Sites Needed in Early Education and Child Care
Psychological marks of spanking may last 10 years
J.D. Power: Medicaid managed care plans do better than commercial plans on customer satisfaction | FierceHealthcare
McConnell leaves door open for second try on healthcare | TheHill
Wednesday, August 2, 2017
Georgia leaders renew talk of Medicaid waivers
Breast-Feeding Lowers Mom's Breast Cancer Risk: Study
Parents applaud school’s new safety tool for students | WSB-TV
What candidates for Georgia Governor would do about Medicaid | Political Insider blog
GOP shows signs of reaching out to Democrats on health care - ABC News
Appeals court rules states can fight to preserve ACA subsidies - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
Country Kids Less Likely to Develop Bowel Disease Than Their City Cousins
Health care ideas, questions multiply at state and federal levels | Georgia Health News
U.S. Health Secretary Says His Job Is to Follow Obamacare Law - The New York Times
Bipartisan coalition looks to solve problem of individual market - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events
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