Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Minnesotans May Soon Get Paid Sick, Family Leave
The Minnesota Senate approved a plan Monday to entitle workers across the state to paid leave when they鈥檙e sick or caring for relatives who are ill. While Senate Democrats hold only a one-seat majority, paid family and medical leave has been a priority of the party for several years, and the final 34-33 vote followed party lines. The proposal passed the House last week on a 68-64 vote, and Democratic Gov. Tim Walz is expected to sign the final version that emerges from a House-Senate conference committee. (Karnowski, 5/8)
In other health news from across the U.S. 鈥
For nearly 20 years, uninsured people in the Sandhills have turned to Moore Free and Charitable Clinic for medical services. Operating in a converted warehouse at the end of an unassuming road near Pinehurst in Moore County, the clinic provides free or low-cost care to patients with diabetes, hypertension and other chronic illnesses. Construction is underway to add a dental treatment area to the facility. (Baxley, 5/9)
Medicaid, known as聽HUSKY in Connecticut, provides health coverage to people with incomes below certain thresholds.聽Over a quarter聽of Connecticut residents currently receive coverage through Medicaid. The Connecticut General Assembly has proposed several changes to the state鈥檚 Medicaid program this legislative session. Here鈥檚 an overview of what they are and where they stand as the session enters its final month. (Golvala, Carlesso and DeBenedictis, 5/8)
When Patty Troyan鈥檚 son Logan Castello died by suicide in November 2019 in his Central Texas home, she immediately tried to understand what prompted him to take his own life not long after getting married and days before a planned family Thanksgiving gathering. Castello was a 21-year-old private first class in the Army. He was stationed at Fort Hood but had died in his off-post home in Killeen, a city of about 156,000 people that abuts the massive military installation. Troyan assumed she鈥檇 get some details about what happened from the civilian police, who responded to the scene. (Davila, 5/9)
Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita's office is appealing a lawsuit that forced the Bureau of Motor Vehicles to reinstate its policy of issuing driver's licenses with an "X" listed as the gender marker for nonbinary residents. A group of mostly anonymous plaintiffs who identify as nonbinary sued the state in 2021 for clamping down on a BMV policy from聽2019 that allowed people to select 鈥淴鈥 instead of 鈥淢鈥 or 鈥淔鈥 for a gender designation on their ID. A Monroe County judge sided with the plaintiffs in December. (Magdaleno, 5/9)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: California Debates Extending PTSD Coverage To More First Responders
A paramedic for about 30 years, Susan Farren knew all was not well with first responders: Eight of her colleagues had died by suicide. Others had grappled with substance abuse or gone through painful divorces. So, in 2018, Farren founded a nonprofit in Santa Rosa to train and support emergency personnel struggling with trauma and stress. Hundreds of firefighters, police officers, and other first responders have since availed themselves of the organization鈥檚 timely help. (Sciacca, 5/9)
In environmental health news 鈥
Texas officials and Shell Plc sought to reassure worried residents that a three-day chemical fire at the company鈥檚 Deer Park plant poses minimal risks, even as advocates raised alarms.聽The blaze 鈥 which began Friday and flared up again over the weekend 鈥 ignited highly volatile, toxic fuels that sent black plumes of smoke over the Houston area. Firefighting efforts required wastewater runoff to be discharged into the Houston Ship Channel at an initial rate of 11,000 gallons a minute, and Shell reported a light sheen in the water Monday. (Xu, Dlouhy and Ferman, 5/8)
Air pollution near a Kalamazoo paper products company and the city's wastewater treatment plant could harm nearby residents' health over the long term, state health officials said Monday. (Matheny, 5/9)