First Edition: July 20, 2016
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations.
California Healthline:
What Do Covered California’s Big Rate Hikes Mean For You?
The average rate hike doesn’t tell the full story for individual consumers. Health plan prices vary across the state, and within regions. How much you’ll pay depends on a variety of factors: where you live, how much money you make, what level of coverage you want and which insurer you choose. Keep in mind that these premium increases affect only a fraction of insured Californians — not the majority, who get their coverage through work or a government program such as Medicare or Medi-Cal. (Bazar, 7/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
Justice Department To Challenge Two Health-Insurance Mergers
Antitrust lawsuits against the planned mergers would be the culmination of concerns the Justice Department has had about the deals from the outset. During a yearlong review of the mergers, the department’s skepticism hasn’t subsided, people familiar with the matter said. (Kendall and Wilde Mathews, 7/19)
New York Times:
Justice Dept. Will Seek To Block 2 Health Insurance Mergers
The proposed mergers would greatly reshape the health insurance landscape. The combination of Anthem with Cigna would create a powerful presence in the market to offer insurance administration to large employers. And Aetna’s combination with Humana threatened to further consolidate the market for private Medicare plans. (Picker and Abelson, 7/19)
The Washington Post:
Antitrust Officials Reportedly Preparing To Block Insurance Mega-Mergers
Those involved in the deals have argued that the mergers would benefit consumers and shareholders, giving the companies more clout to drive better deals with hospitals and physician groups. But politicians, state regulators and the American Medical Association have raised questions about whether the deals would reduce competition and drive up costs for patients. (Merle and Johnson, 7/19)
USA Today:
Obama Admin May Sue To Block Health Mergers
In the event of a lawsuit, a federal judge would decide whether the mergers must be killed under antitrust provisions — and although there's no guarantee the Justice Department will prevail, corporations often choose to give up instead of waging an uncertain, lengthy and costly fight against the government. (Bomey, 7/19)
Los Angeles Times:
Two Major Healthcare Mergers Could Be In Trouble Amid Competition Concerns
A decision whether to file the suits could come as early as this week, and the companies could fight in court or agree to settle, the reports said. A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment. Shares of the four companies fell 2% to 4% on Tuesday. (Puzzanghera, 7/19)
The Washington Post:
Florida Is Checking Possible Local Case Of Zika
The Florida health department said late Tuesday that it is investigating what could be the first case of locally spread Zika virus in the continental United States. In a brief statement, the department said it is "actively conducting an epidemiological investigation" of a non-travel-related case in Miami-Dade County in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Sun, 7/19)
The New York Times:
Florida Investigates Possible First Homegrown Case Of Zika Virus In U.S.
It would be the first time the Zika virus had been transmitted locally by mosquitoes in the United States. There are about 1,300 cases of Zika in the continental United States; nearly all were contracted by a mosquito bite abroad or through sex with someone who had become infected in another country. (Tavernise, 7/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
Florida Health Officials Investigate Possible Case Of Locally Acquired Zika
Florida’s announcement comes one day after Utah health officials disclosed that they are trying to determine how a family member of a man who had been infected with Zika got the disease himself. The family member—identified as the man’s son, according to people familiar with the matter—didn’t travel to an area where Zika was circulating, nor have sexual contact with an infected person. He did care for his acutely ill father, however. (McKay, 7/19)
The Washington Post:
Obamacare’s Surcharge For Smokers May Have Backfired
A provision of the Affordable Care Act that allows insurers to charge smokers higher premiums may have discouraged smokers from signing up for insurance, undercutting a major goal of the law, according to a study published this month. The surcharges, of up to 50 percent over nonsmokers' premiums, also showed no sign of encouraging people to quit. (Johnson, 7/19)
Los Angeles Times:
California Obamacare Rates To Rise 13% In 2017, More Than Three Times The Increase Of Last Two Years
The big hikes come after two years in which California officials had boasted that the program helped insure hundreds of thousands people in the state while keeping costs moderately in check. ... On Tuesday, officials blamed next year’s premium hikes in the program that insures 1.4 million Californians on rising costs of medical care, including expensive specialty drugs and the end of a mechanism that held down rates for the first three years of Obamacare. (Petersen and Levey, 7/19)
Politico:
Arkansas Governor Bashes Clinton On Health Care Yet Backs Key Obamacare Provision
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson used part of his speech Tuesday night at the Republican convention to bash Hillary Clinton over health care — without mentioning the way he has earned scorn from conservatives by the way he has implemented Obamacare in his own state. (Temple-West, 7/19)
The Washington Post:
Norovirus Strikes The Republican National Convention
A terrifying word circulated Tuesday at the Republican National Convention: norovirus. A dozen staffers in the California delegation who had arrived in Cleveland early have fallen ill with the extremely contagious virus, California GOP chairman Jim Brulte said. (Achenbach, Izadi and O'Keefe, 7/19)
The New York Times:
California Staff Workers Are Sidelined By Illness
The first signs of illness, thought to be norovirus, the highly contagious intestinal illness, appeared on Thursday night, just after the staff members arrived in the Cleveland area. By early Monday, symptoms had sufficiently spread among the group to notify the Erie County Health Department. (Purdy, 7/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
UnitedHealth’s Profit Jumps on Health-Services Growth
UnitedHealth Group Inc. on Tuesday posted a strong earnings beat as revenue continued to surge in its pharmacy-services business, and the biggest U.S. health insurer lifted the low end of its profit guidance for the year. (Wilde Mathews and Steele, 7/19)
The Associated Press:
UnitedHealth’s Profit Surges, Yet Affordable Care Act Drags
UnitedHealth’s second-quarter earnings jumped 11 percent to beat investor expectations even though the nation’s largest health insurer took a bigger hit than expected from coverage linked to the Affordable Care Act. (Murphy, 7/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
Johnson & Johnson Raises Guidance, Buoyed by Pharma Growth
Johnson & Johnson on Tuesday raised its guidance for the year again as the health-care giant topped expectations in the latest quarter, helped by growth in its pharmaceutical business. (Steele and Rockoff, 7/19)
Stateline:
With Uptick In Home Births, Midwives Seek To Practice In More States
But what’s clear is the state regulatory terrain for midwives poses a problem for consumers when the nation is experiencing an increase in the number of births taking place outside hospitals, usually in homes or freestanding birthing centers. The percentage of out-of-hospital births crept up from 0.87 percent of all births in 2004 to 1.36 percent in 2012, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Ollove, 7/19)
The Wall Street Journal:
Tackling Workers’ Mental Health, One Text At A Time
As employers seek to reduce the costs of untreated mental illness among staffers, more companies are trying mobile apps that help workers easily find and receive treatment. Some apps mine data about employees’ phone usage, or medical and pharmaceutical claims, to determine who might be in need of care. Others allow workers to text and video chat with therapists—in what are being called “telemental” health services. (Silverman, 7/19)
NPR:
Maryland Switches Opioid Treatments, And Some Patients Cry Foul
Maryland Medicaid officials have made what appears to be a small change to the list of preferred medications to treat opioid addictions. The agency used to pay for the drug in a dissolvable film form. Now it's steering patients to tablets, which some doctors say are not as effective for their patients. Those doctors say the change is having a profound effect on some people struggling to stay clean. (Kodjak, 7/19)
The New York Times:
I.V.F. Does Not Raise Breast Cancer Risk, Study Shows
Women undergoing in vitro fertilization have long worried that the procedure could raise their risk for breast cancer. ... But the largest, most comprehensive study to date, published Tuesday, provides further reassurance: It finds no increased risk among women who have undergone I.V.F. (Saint Louis, 7/19)
The New York Times:
Cutting Sugar Rapidly Improves Heart Health Markers
Obese children who cut sugar from their diets saw improvements in markers of heart disease after just nine days, a study in Atherosclerosis found. For the study, researchers evaluated 37 children ages 9 to 18 who were obese and at high risk for heart disease and Type 2 diabetes. (Peachman, 7/19)