Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Affordable Health Care To Become Constitutional Right In Oregon
Oregon will be the first state in the nation to enshrine the right to affordable health care in its constitution.聽Ballot Measure 111 narrowly passed, with nearly 50.7% of voters in favor and 49.3% of voters opposed. The measure鈥檚 long-term impact on Oregon health care is unclear because it doesn鈥檛 prescribe how the state should ensure that everyone has affordable health care. (Botkin, 11/15)
In nursing home news 鈥
A federal judge has approved a nearly $58 million settlement in a class-action lawsuit filed in response to the deaths of dozens of veterans who contracted COVID-19 at a Massachusetts veterans home. 鈥淚t was with heavy hearts that we got to the finish line on this case,鈥 Michael Aleo, an attorney for the plaintiffs said Tuesday, the day after the settlement was approved by a judge in U.S. District Court in Springfield. (11/15)
Lisa Cabrera saw the warning signs of poor care at her father鈥檚 California nursing home 鈥 the bug bites on his back, the facial injuries from a fall, the times he was soaked in urine instead of being ready for trips to church. Still, she believed repeated assurances that the staff had inspected the pressure sore on his heel and changed the bandages. But her dad, Louie Sira, 67, a disabled former janitor, kept gesturing to his right leg, indicating he felt pain. Finally, Cabrera peeled the dressing back herself, which had grown worse since the last time she looked. (Rowland, 11/15)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
A federal judge in Texas has ruled that the Biden administration cannot prohibit doctors from denying certain medical care based on a patient鈥檚 sexual orientation and gender identity. (McGaughy, 11/15)
鈥淛eopardy!鈥 champion Amy Schneider is opposing Ohio legislation that would ban gender-affirming procedures and therapies for minors. The Dayton native, who was the first transgender person to qualify for Jeopardy鈥檚 鈥淭ournament of Champions,鈥 is expected to attend a hearing on the bill Wednesday morning at the Ohio Statehouse. (Hendrickson, 11/16)
One weekday morning in July, Kerstie Bramlet was at her workstation inside the Warren County Sheltered Workshop near St. Louis, Missouri, putting plastic labels on rabbit-meat dog chews one by one. The 30-year-old, who wore a St. Louis Cardinals shirt and a blue-and-white tie-dye hat, is autistic and has intellectual disabilities. (Hopkins, 11/15)
For more than four months, the mayor of the nation鈥檚 fourth-largest city let few people know he had been diagnosed with bone cancer. Not even his 35-year-old daughter was aware. (Fechter, 11/15)