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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Sep 27 2022

Full Issue

Massachusetts Set To Vote On Revamp Of Dental Insurance

Massachusetts voters will be offered a question about new rules for dental insurers, forcing them to spend no less for patient care than 83% of collected premiums. Also: fentanyl penalties in Alabama, boosted funding for labor and delivery care in New Hampshire, and more.

When Massachusetts voters head to the polls in November, they鈥檒l get the chance to settle an arcane dispute that could upend the dental industry. To boil it down: Question 2 would require dental insurers to spend no less for patient care than 83 percent of premiums they collect. It would be a sweeping change for an industry with no minimum threshold today, and one that could affect not just the insurers that do business here, but also the state鈥檚 dentists 鈥 not to mention anyone with dental insurance. It might even become a model that鈥檚 replicated in other states. (Chesto, 9/26)

In other news from across the U.S. 鈥

Alabama lawmakers may consider harsher penalties for traffickers and distributors of illicit fentanyl next year, but some say a comprehensive approach should also include more health services and helping drug users reduce overdoses. Republicans Reps. Matt Simpson of Daphne and Chris Pringle of Mobile tell Al.com they plan bills next year to increase penalties for distributing the deadly drug that accounted for 66% of all U.S. overdose deaths in 2021. (9/26)

Lawmakers and state health officials are boosting funding for birthing services, amid concerns that closures of labor and delivery units have made it harder for many New Hampshire residents to access that care. (Cuno-Booth, 9/26)

KHN: At This Recovery Center, Police Cope With The Mental Health Costs Of The Job聽

Ken Beyer can鈥檛 think of a day in the past few months when his phone didn鈥檛 flutter with calls, text messages, and emails from a police department, a sheriff鈥檚 office, or a fire station seeking help for an employee. A patrol officer threatening to kill himself with his service weapon before roll call. A veteran firefighter drowning in vodka until he collapses. A deputy overdosing on fentanyl in his squad car. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the worst that I鈥檝e seen in my career,鈥 said Beyer, co-founder and CEO of Harbor of Grace Enhanced Recovery Center, a private mental health and substance use recovery and treatment center for first responders in the waterfront Maryland town of Havre de Grace. Established in 2015, Harbor of Grace is one of only six treatment centers in the U.S. approved by the Fraternal Order of Police, the world鈥檚 largest organization of law enforcement officers. (Ridderbusch, 9/27)

On West Nile virus 鈥

Wisconsin's first human case of West Nile Virus this year was confirmed in a Sheboygan County resident, prompting state health officials to once again emphasize the importance of preventing mosquito bites. Earlier this year, the virus had聽been found in three animals: a horse in聽Trempealeau County, a horse in聽Monroe County and a bird in Milwaukee County. (Shastri, 9/26)

The Florida Department of Health in Volusia County on Friday reported its second human case this year of the mosquito-borne West Nile virus. (Byrnes, 9/26)

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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