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(c) 2010-2024 Jon L Gelman, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Supreme Court Battle Brewing Over Medicaid Fees

Today's post was shared by Kaiser Health News and comes from kaiserhealthnews.org

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — Rita Gorenflo’s 7-year-old son Nathaniel was in severe pain from a sinus infection.

But since the boy was covered by Medicaid, she couldn’t immediately find a specialist willing to see him. After days of calling, she was finally able to get Nathaniel an appointment nearly a week later near their South Florida home. That was in 2005.

Last month, ruling in a lawsuit brought by the state’s pediatricians and patient advocacy groups, a federal district judge in Miami determined Nathaniel’s wait was “unreasonable” and that Florida’s Medicaid program was failing him and nearly 2 million other children by not paying enough money to doctors and dentists to ensure the kids have adequate access to care.

The Florida case is the latest effort to get federal judges to force states to increase Medicaid provider payment rates for the state and federal program that covers about 70 million low-income Americans. In the past two decades, similar cases have been filed in numerous states, including California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Texas and the District of Columbia– with many resulting in higher pay.





But while providers and patient advocates nationwide hailed the Florida decision, they are deeply worried about a U.S. Supreme Court case that they say could restrict their ability across the country to seek judicial relief from low Medicaid reimbursement rates.

The high court on Jan. 20 will hear...


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EPA unveils first methane regulations




Are the proposed methane regulations string enough to protect the environment and public health from radiation exposure and global warming? Environmentalists think not. Today's post is shared from hillcom/

The Obama administration on Wednesday unveiled first-ever regulations targeting methane emissions from industrial sources directly, setting the stage, experts say, for future action to rein in the greenhouse gas.
The standards, which will be proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency this summer, are one piece of a larger effort that the administration says will help it to achieve its new goal to slash methane emissions from the oil and gas sector by 45 percent.
The 2025 reduction target will be based on 2012 levels, the White House said.
Experts say that while the initial actions announced by the administration aren’t enough to reach the 45 percent target by 2025, the move is “significant.”
Methane, the primary component of natural gas, is an extremely potent greenhouse gas with 25 times the warming potential of carbon dioxide over a 100-year time period.
Jessika Trancik, assistant professor at MIT, said one “critical” missing component from the pending proposal is language targeting methane emissions from existing wells, equipment and the like in oil and gas operations.
Wednesday’s actions include two main regulations that the EPA and Interior Department will propose, which target methane from new and modified oil and gas wells and equipment responsible for venting and flaring on public lands.
Trancik said a concern shared among scientists and researchers is that the 40 percent to 45 percent reduction target...
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Read more about methane:
Aug 08, 2013
In an internal EPA PowerPoint presentation obtained by the Tribune/Los Angeles Times Washington Bureau, staff members warned their superiors that several wells had been contaminated with methane and substances such ...
Aug 21, 2014
They returned to sites where methane spikes were detected to confirm the presence of a leak. The results were released Wednesday by the Environmental Defense Fund, which coordinated the project, revealing just how ...
Dec 01, 2014
That history ended in November, with the indictment of Donald L. Blankenship, the chief executive whose company owned the Upper Big Branch mine near here, where an explosion of methane gas in 2010 spread like a ...
Dec 15, 2013
Such accidents are usually caused by a failure to ventilate methane gas from the shaft. Safety improvements have reduced the number of deaths in recent years, but regulations are still often ignored. The official Xinhua News ...

Healthcare-associated Infections (HAI) Progress Report

Healthcare-associated infections (HAI) are a major, yet often preventable, threat to patient safety. The National and State Healthcare-Associated Infections Progress Report expands and provides an update on previous reports detailing progress toward the ultimate goal of eliminating HAIs. Infection data in this report includes central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI), catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI), select surgical site infections (SSI), hospital-onset Clostridium difficile infections (C. difficile), and hospital-onset methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteremia (bloodstream infections).

HAI Progress Report [PDF - 26 MB]

Learn more: HAI prevention activities map

The HAI Progress Report describes significant reductions reported at the national level in 2013 for nearly all infections. CLABSI and SSI show the greatest reduction, with some progress shown in reducing hospital-onset MRSA bacteremia and hospital-onset C. difficile infections. The Report shows an increase in CAUTI, signaling a strong need for additional prevention efforts.

The HAI Progress Report consists of national and state-by-state summaries of healthcare-associated infections. On the national level, the report found:
A 46 percent decrease in CLABSI between 2008 and 2013
A 19 percent decrease in SSIs related to the 10 select procedures tracked in the report between 2008 and 2013
A 6 percent increase in CAUTI between 2009 and 2013; although initial data from...


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Some 4.4 Million People Are About to Get a Raise

U.S. economy

Protesters demanding higher wages and unionization for fast food workers block traffic near Times Square on Sept. 4, 2014 in New York City.

Photographer: Andrew Burton/Getty Images

Protesters demanding higher wages and unionization for fast food workers block traffic near Times Square on Sept. 4, 2014 in New York City.

In his 2014 state of the union address, President Obama kicked off what could unofficially be dubbed the Year of the Minimum Wage. Just a year earlier, he had called for a $9 federal minimum, but there he was in early 2014, saying workers should earn at least $10.10 an hour. The shift shows how coordinated campaigns for higher wages, which started with fast-food workers and spread more broadly, raised expectations of what’s considered fair compensation.

Obama’s call to raise the federal minimum may have gone unanswered, but states and cities picked up the torch. In 2014, 13 states passed legislation or initiatives to raise the wage floor, not just in Democratic strongholds but in red states as well. Now the results of those campaigns are starting to come to fruition nationwide. About 4.4 million people will see their pay go up for the new year, according to an analysis of census data by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), which supports higher minimum pay.

EPI’s data show that more than 750,000 workers earn the minimum wage in the 13 states that passed new raises in 2014. About two-thirds of those workers will see their wages go up on Jan. 1, and the rest will see their pay increase later in 2015. EPI estimates that in those 13...

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Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Workers' comp case traps Alabama nurse in Bakersfield for 3 years

Today's post was shared by CAAA and comes from www.bakersfieldcalifornian.com

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    By Felix Adamo / The Californian

    Althea Hart and her husband, John Hart Sr. make their way to the conference room at the law offices of Leviton, Diaz, and Ginochio to meet with her attorney and a reporter.

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  2. 2 of 3

    By Felix Adamo / The Californian

    Althea Hart points to her right eye, which she says is partially blind from a fall while working at Bakersfield Memorial Hospital in 2011. She sustained other injuries as well and is still fighting for care.

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    By Felix Adamo / The Californian

    Keith Gilmetti, attorney for Althea Hart.

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BY COURTENAY EDELHART The Bakersfield Californian cedelhart@bakersfield.com

Alabama nurse Althea Hart didn't anticipate she'd still be in Bakersfield three years after agreeing to work here in 2011 under a 13-week contract with optional renewals.

In that time five of her relatives have died, her husband has had a heart attack and three of her five grandchildren have been growing up without their MawMaw.

Hart, 62, is, for all intents and purposes, trapped.

She's stuck because of a pending workers' compensation claim related to a 2011 fall on the job while working for Fastaff US Nursing, which supplies temporary nurses to Bakersfield Memorial Hospital, among others.

Doctors in her native Loxley, Ala., wary of red tape and low reimbursement rates, won't take a California workers' compensation case. So Hart is forced to see local doctors in...

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A Threat to Unionize, and Then Benefits Trickle In for Players

Today's post was shared by Steven Greenhouse and comes from www.nytimes.com

BOULDER, Colo. — College football has gone on a roll that would bring a giggle to the lips of King Midas.

On New Year’s Day, more than 28 million Americans watched the playoffs, and more still probably watched Ohio State’s 42-20 victory over Oregon in the championship matchup on Monday night. And, good God, that glorious cascade of cash: College conferences expect to pull in hundreds of millions of dollars; ESPN executives take daily baths in their riches; professional gamblers are beside themselves.

The coaches, those fellows in sweatpants and headsets, are experiencing a hedge fund moment as their salaries make joyful, geometric leaps upward. Jim Harbaugh experienced a down year in the N.F.L., but no worries: The University of Michigan, a public institution wrestling with budget cuts in a fiscally straitened state, recently agreed to pay him $5 million next year, with millions of dollars of incentives.

Athletic directors are paid like potentates. University presidential suites at stadiums serve lamb roast and Cristal.

What, I asked Kain Colter, to make of this glorious bacchanal?

We sit in his living room on a high plains ridge outside Boulder. A lean, athletic 22-year-old man, he has the Cowboys-Packers game on the television and workout equipment around him. He made the Vikings’ practice squad this season and hopes to join the team next season.

He also organized a players union movement at Northwestern, where he played quarterback for four years.

...

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Monday, January 12, 2015

Feds, Michigan crack down on shoddy asbestos removal


DFP asbestos (5).JPG
Joseph Goeddeke checks paper insulator backing
from where a heater once stood.
(Photo: Ryan Garza Detroit Free Press)
Today's post is shared from freep.com/

It was dark and bitterly cold inside the former Utica Trim Automotive Plant in Shelby Township when the crew showed up to remove asbestos from the abandoned factory. There was no running water, no heat, no light. Workers wore disposable suits so thin you could see through them.

Using 25-foot lifts to cut away asbestos insulation covering pipes along the ceiling, they tossed the debris to the floor as their bosses yelled "let it fly" or "let 'er rip." By day's end, they were covered with the cancer-causing dust.

Four years after that botched job, the property owner, Indiana Metal LLC of suburban Chicago, agreed this fall to pay the state penalties of $67,500. A second company, Northern Boiler and Mechanical Contractors of Muskegon, has paid the state $30,000. Federal prosecutors, who launched their own investigation, charged four men criminally and one got prison time.

The case is part of a stepped-up effort by the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality and federal prosecutors against contractors and property owners who violate the...


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