Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Spending Package Could Mean Coverage For 2 Million Uninsured In Southeast
At least 2.2 million low-income adults 鈥 nearly all in Texas and the Southeast 鈥 would be eligible for government-funded health insurance under the Democrats鈥 $1.75 trillion social spending and climate change plan. That鈥檚 the number of people who are eligible for Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act but have been left uninsured because they live in one of the dozen states that have not expanded coverage under the 2010 law. They are in the coverage gap 鈥 with incomes too high to qualify for Medicaid, but below the $12,880 annual federal income minimum for an individual to qualify for subsidized coverage in the insurance marketplaces created by the ACA. (Galewitz and Miller, 11/11)
North Carolinians die of traumatic brain injuries at a rate higher than the national average, according to a recent analysis by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.聽The study, published in the CDC鈥檚 weekly morbidity and mortality report in October, analyzed death statistics collected between 2016 and 2019. It found that Southern states and states where a high proportion of residents live in rural areas see higher death rates from TBIs than other parts of the country. (Donnelly-DeRoven, 11/12)
The seed of a potentially good business opportunity lies in much of the biomedical research going on at the Johns Hopkins University and the University of Maryland, Baltimore. Both schools have developed technology transfer protocols, incubators and lab space in research parks to help professors, students and would-be entrepreneurs cultivate those seeds into startups. But as those life science, pharmaceutical, medical technology and biotechnology firms grow, they鈥檙e finding that Baltimore doesn鈥檛 have enough of the kind of real estate they need. (Miller, 11/12)
0 seconds of 15 secondsVolume 90%聽Michael Bloomberg announced on Wednesday that his eponymous philanthropy is making a $120 million investment to help fight聽fatal drug overdoses. Bloomberg Philanthropies will invest $120 million over five-years in Kentucky, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina and Wisconsin to help address the opioid overdose crisis, according to a statement from the group. The organization said those five states represent areas that have been 鈥渉ard hit鈥 by the opioid epidemic. They will each receive $10 million over the next five years. (Schnell, 11/11)
West Virginia鈥檚 first medical cannabis dispensary is opening more than four years after state lawmakers allowed a regulatory system for those products to be established. Trulieve Cannabis Corp. is set to debut a retail location in Morgantown on Friday with a second shop opening in Weston next Monday. 鈥淲e鈥檙e thrilled to be first to market in West Virginia and to continue building the foundation for the West Virginia鈥檚 emerging medical cannabis market,鈥 Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers said in a statement. (11/12)
Four Minnesota political leaders toured a veterans center in St. Paul on Thursday to pay tribute to those who served in the military and call for better access to mental health care and readjustment services for veterans. Gov. Tim Walz, U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar and U.S. Reps. Angie Craig and Dean Phillips made the visit on Veterans Day to highlight the value of centers like the three in Minnesota for helping veterans get the support they need. Among other things, the centers provide counseling, employment assistance and referrals for other services. (Karnowski, 11/11)
Throughout the pandemic, the city and county of Los Angeles have rented thousands of hotel rooms for homeless people at risk of contracting coronavirus. This massive effort was partially made possible by the federal government鈥檚 willingness to reimburse local governments for each dollar they spent renting the rooms and repurposing hotels into temporary housing. The Federal Emergency Management Agency鈥檚 reimbursement of costs associated with sheltering people in individual rooms was slated to run through the end of the year. (Oreskes, 11/11)
Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore said he is ready to fire any of the department's 12,000 employees who refuse to get vaccinated against聽COVID-19聽or get tested twice a week for the disease. The LAPD's goal of having a fully vaccinated workforce is to ensure the safety and welfare of the department's officers, civilian workforce, their families and the public, Moore told CBS MoneyWatch. That means enforcing the city's stringent vaccine mandate, which requires that unvaccinated employees get immunized by December 18; meantime, unvaccinated workers must get tested twice weekly on their own time and dime. Those who receive medical or religious exemptions will be reimbursed for the cost of testing.聽(Gibson, 11/11)
Meanwhile, in Texas 鈥
The impact of Texas's near-total ban on abortions is being felt in states as far away as California and Maryland, according to new research. In the weeks since SB8, which outlaws most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, went into effect, Texas residents have undergone abortions in more than one dozen states and Washington, D.C., according to research from the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights organization. (Kindelan, 11/11)