Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Utah Makes Fathers Responsible For Child Support From Conception
Biological fathers in Utah will be legally required to pay half of a woman鈥檚 out-of-pocket pregnancy costs under a new law unique to the state that critics say doesn鈥檛 do enough to adequately address maternal health care needs. The bill鈥檚 sponsor has presented the measure as an effort to decrease the burden of pregnancy on women and increase responsibility for men who have children. But some critics argue the new legislation won鈥檛 help women who are most vulnerable and could make abusive situations even more dangerous for pregnant women. (Eppolito, 4/5)
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) vetoed a bill Monday that would severely hamper access to care for transgender kids, citing opposition from medical experts and doctors.聽The bill would have banned doctors from prescribing puberty blockers, hormone therapies and other gender-affirming care to transgender people under the age of 18.聽Leading medical organizations including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Psychiatric Association and others opposed the proposal, citing the negative health impacts kids who don't have access to a gender-affirming care experience. (Hellmann, 4/5)
California legislation to ban some medically unnecessary surgeries on intersex children stalled Monday for the third straight year in the same committee, with the author saying that proposed amendments would have stripped much of its purpose. State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) wants to bar certain types of surgeries on children born with intersex characteristics. That鈥檚 when their genitalia, chromosomes or reproductive organs don鈥檛 fit typical definitions for male or female bodies. (4/5)
A Tennessee phone line that offers callers mental health support during the COVID-19 pandemic has added an option to talk via text messaging. The state Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services says the Emotional Support Line for Pandemic Stress now lets people call or text the line at 888-642-7886 from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Central time daily. (4/6)
U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin on Monday submitted a congressional inquiry with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention regarding an HIV outbreak in West Virginia鈥檚 largest county. The West Virginia Democrat asked for the inquiry on behalf of the Kanawha County Commission two months after a CDC official warned that the county鈥檚 outbreak was 鈥 the most concerning in the United States.鈥 (Raby, 4/6)
KHN: Missouri 鈥榁oted For This Lie,鈥 Says State Rep Trying To Block Medicaid Expansion
It is hard to qualify for Medicaid as an adult in Missouri. Single adults aren鈥檛 eligible for coverage through the state鈥檚 program 鈥 dubbed MO HealthNet 鈥 at all, and parents can鈥檛 make more than 21% of the federal poverty level: $5,400 in 2021 for a family of three. That was all set to change on July 1 because of a constitutional amendment voters approved last summer, which made Missouri the 38th state to expand Medicaid coverage through the Affordable Care Act. Single adults would be covered if they made under around $17,770. (Martinez Valdivia, 4/6)
In covid updates from Texas, Arizona, Ohio and Massachusetts 鈥
A near-capacity crowd of 38,238 gathered Monday afternoon at Globe Life Field to watch the Texas Rangers take on the Toronto Blue Jays, marking the largest publicly documented attendance at an event during the COVID-19 pandemic. The stadium was open to 100% capacity 鈥 40,158 鈥 for Monday鈥檚 home opener and was officially announced as a sellout, but health protocols established by the stadium proved difficult to enforce as thousands of people poured into the stadium throughout the afternoon. (Smith and Blum, 4/5)
Several weeks have passed since Texas ended its COVID-19 mask mandate. But if you want to pick up a snack at Soul Popped Gourmet Popcorn in Austin鈥檚 Barton Creek Square Mall, you鈥檒l still be turned away if you aren鈥檛 wearing a face covering. 鈥淲e cannot afford to take chances with the lives of my staffers. They鈥檙e young people and their parents have entrusted me with their care,鈥 says owner De J. Lozada. She鈥檚 also concerned about her 85-year-old father, who will soon return to his part-time job in the store. (Rosenberg, 4/5)
Gov. Doug Ducey on Monday signed legislation giving businesses, nursing homes and others a broad shield from lawsuits related to COVID-19, making Arizona the latest state to limit liability after the pandemic. Republican lawmakers approved the legislation in party-line votes in the House and Senate last week, saying businesses struggled during the pandemic and shouldn鈥檛 have to worry about the potential for frivolous lawsuits. (4/5)
Ohio聽consolidated many of its health orders into one,聽but masks and social distancing will still be required, Gov. Mike DeWine said Monday. The new health order聽issued Monday focuses on four priorities: wearing masks, maintaining distance, washing hands and spending more time outside rather than inside. "If we can keep those things in mind, those four things, we're going to be able to do about anything we want to do this summer," DeWine said. "People are tired. They've been at this for a year and so it has to be simple." (Balmert, 4/5)
Workers in Massachusetts鈥 child welfare agency are seeing only about half of the children under their watch in-person each month, state data show, illustrating the state鈥檚 heavy reliance on remote check-ins during the pandemic even as schools, day cares, and others have returned mostly to face-to-face interactions. The October death of David Almond, an intellectually disabled teen from Fall River, underscored the potential risks in relying solely on virtual visits, particularly as other safeguards fail. The 14-year-old鈥檚 father and his father鈥檚 girlfriend 鈥 now charged with murder in his death 鈥 routinely staged his video meetings with social workers from the Department of Children and Families to hide his abuse, state investigators found. (Stout, 4/5)