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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jul 6 2022

Full Issue

Colorado Funeral Home Operator Guilty Of Selling Body Parts

The operator pled guilty to an illegal body part selling scheme Tuesday. In other news, health insurers in Michigan are reported to be planning rate boosts next year by an average of 5.8% for small group policies. Also: St. Louis' inefficient 911 system, giant African land snails in Florida and more.

The operator of a Colorado funeral home who was accused of stealing body parts and selling them to medical and scientific buyers, making hundreds of thousands of dollars in what the authorities called an 鈥渋llegal body part scheme,鈥 pleaded guilty to mail fraud on Tuesday, the Justice Department said. The woman, Megan Hess, 45, the principal figure in the scheme, was assisted by her mother, Shirley Koch, who is in her late 60s, prosecutors said. As part of a plea agreement, eight other criminal charges against Ms. Hess were dropped. She could face up to 20 years in prison. (Traub, 7/5)

In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥

Most health insurers聽in Michigan are seeking more rate hikes next year for their individual聽and small groups plans, and the scheduled end of temporary "Obamacare"聽subsidies could raise the pain level聽higher. State regulators announced Tuesday that insurance companies are seeking an average 5.8% rate increase for their 2023 small group policies聽鈥 those for organizations with fewer than 51 employees. (Reindl, 7/5)

St. Louis County鈥檚 911 system is "inefficient" and "fragmented," according to a preliminary report released by Forward Through Ferguson. The report details several key findings through its digital platform #transforming911, including big-budgeted and heavily staffed police departments in the county, low dispatcher staffing levels and outdated technology. (Lewis-Thompson, 7/5)

Did you know some snails can cause meningitis?聽The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) is warning Pasco County to beware of the giant African land snail (GALS) that can carry a rare rat lungworm called Angiostrongylus cantonensis, which may cause meningitis in humans, according to the state鈥檚 recent "Pest Alert." (Sudhakar, 7/5)

A Native American community neighboring the only operating uranium mill in the U.S. is hoping a new study will answer longstanding questions about whether it is affecting their health. Members of the Ute Mountain Ute tribe living in White Mesa, Utah, say they have seen an alarming increase in health problems in recent years. (Brady Woods, 7/6)

In nursing home news from North Carolina and Pennsylvania 鈥

Until they heard from Gov. Roy Cooper, the state Division of Military and Veterans Affairs slow-walked directives and missed legislative deadlines to look into the state veterans nursing home system and to report regularly on their progress, state records show.聽(Goldsmith, 7/6)

Doug Mastriano, Pennsylvania鈥檚 Republican nominee for governor, has made a campaign staple out of the allegation that Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf鈥檚 policy of readmitting COVID-19 patients from hospitals to nursing homes caused thousands of deaths 鈥 a baseless claim for which no investigator or researcher has provided any evidence. In fact, layers of inspections by researchers have pointed to entirely something different 鈥 nursing home employees ushering in the virus every day 鈥 while investigators found administrators flouting staffing requirements or infection-control procedures. (Levy, 7/5)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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