From California Healthline...
California Hospitals, Advocates Seek Stable Funding to Retain Behavioral Health Navigators
02/26/2024Health providers and addiction experts warn the funding structure is unstable for a California initiative that steers patients with substance use disorder into long-term treatment.
From California Healthline...
‘Fourth Wave’ of Opioid Epidemic Crashes Ashore, Propelled by Fentanyl and Meth
02/20/2024The United States is knee-deep in what some experts call the opioid epidemic's "fourth wave," which is not only placing drug users at greater risk but is also complicating efforts to address the nation's drug problem.
From Monterey Herald...
Largest COVID Vaccine Study Yet Finds Links to Health Conditions
02/20/2024Vaccines that protect against severe illness, death and lingering long COVID were linked to small increases in neurological, blood, and heart-related conditions in the largest global vaccine safety study to date.
From California Healthline...
Faceoff Between Anthem Blue Cross, UC Health Shows Hazards of Industry Consolidation
02/15/2024For weeks, Anthem Blue Cross enrollees who receive health care from the University of California were in suspense, as the health system and one of its largest insurance partners struggled to reach a new contract.
From Los Angeles Times...
All This Rain Could Invite Mosquitoes Into Your Backyard
02/14/2024While temperatures aren’t warm enough for mosquitoes to run rampant, now’s the time to prevent breeding grounds.
From Los Angeles Times...
New Eligibility Rules Mean Nearly 2 Million on Medi-Cal Can Now Save for a Rainy Day
02/13/2024Nearly 2 million Medi-Cal enrollees can now accumulate savings and property without limitations and still qualify for the state's health insurance program for low-income residents.
From CalMatters...
She Opened a Business to Deliver Babies. California Policies Drove Her Out of the Country
02/11/2024Midwives provide many of the same services as doctors in low-risk pregnancies. A new UCSF study highlights obstacles they face doing business in California, especially when serving patients with Medi-Cal insurance.
From CalMatters...
Bankrupt California Hospital Left a Health Care Desert. Two Medical Groups Move to Reopen It
02/08/2024The closure of Madera Community Hospital created a new health care desert in a community that already had fewer doctors per capita than other parts of the state. UCSF and Adventist have a plan to reopen it.
From California Healthline...
Is Housing Health Care? State Medicaid Programs Increasingly Say ‘Yes’
02/05/2024States are plowing billions of dollars into a high-stakes health care experiment that’s exploding around the country: using scarce public health insurance money to provide housing for the poorest and sickest Americans.
From CapPublicRadio...
California Universities Are Required to Offer Students Abortion Pills. A Lot Just Don’t Mention It
02/04/2024One year after California became the first state to require its public universities to provide the abortion pill to students, basic information on where or how students can obtain the medication is lacking.
From Los Angeles Times...
As Climate Hazards Converge, More Californians Are Living in Harm’s Way
02/02/2024When wildfire smoke and extreme heat combine, they create “a synergistic effect” or an “additional burden” on people’s health, researchers say.
From California Healthline...
Possibility of Wildlife-to-Human Crossover Heightens Concern About Chronic Wasting Disease
02/01/2024Each fall, millions of hunters across North America bag deer. Over the winter, people chow down on the venison steaks, sausage, and burgers made from the animals.
From California Healthline...
Back From COP28, California Climate Leaders Talk Health Impacts of Warming
01/31/2024As Californians increasingly feel the health effects of climate change, state leaders are adopting sweeping policies they hope will fend off the worst impacts.
From Los Angeles Times...
Your Guide to Proposition 1: Newsom’s Overhaul of California’s Mental Health System
01/31/2024Gov. Gavin Newsom crafted the measure to reform California’s mental health system, including a $6.4-billion bond for new facilities.
From CalMatters...
Bill Would Let Therapists and Social Workers Decide When to Confine Mentally Ill Californians
01/29/2024A pending bill would extend the so-called 5150 confinement authority to county-designated psychiatrists, psychologists, clinical social workers, licensed marriage and family therapists, and clinical counselors.
From CalMatters...
Gavin Newsom Raised Millions for His Mental Health Ballot Measure. His Opponents Have $1,000
01/28/2024The March ballot measure would raise billions for mental health care, but some clinics fear it would strip them of revenue they need for services they provide today.
From California Healthline...
How Fringe Anti-Science Views Infiltrated Mainstream Politics
01/28/2024Rates of routine childhood vaccination hit a 10-year low in 2023. That, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, puts about 250,000 kindergartners at risk for measles.
From California Healthline...
Senate Probes the Cost of Assisted Living and Its Burden on American Families
01/25/2024A U.S. Senate committee launched an examination of assisted living, holding its first hearing in two decades on the industry as leaders of both parties expressed concern about the high cost and mixed quality of care facilities.
From KFF Health News...
A Record Number of Californians Are Visiting Emergency Rooms for Dog Bites
01/25/2024Those pandemic puppies are growing up to be a public health concern.
From California Healthline...
988-Hotline Counselors Air Concerns: More Training Needed to Juggle Calls
01/23/2024In the year and a half since its launch, 988—the country’s easy-to-remember suicide and crisis hotline—has received about 8.1 million calls, texts, and chats. Curiosity is growing about the people taking those calls.
From Santa Cruz Sentinel...
California Panel Holds Up Studies on Psychedelics. Some Researchers Want It Gone
01/19/2024At the Pacific Neuroscience Institute in Santa Monica, scientists are eager to explore whether a psychedelic chemical found in a toad could help people with depression. But research has been put on hold by the state.
From KFF Health News...
America’s Health System Isn’t Ready for the Surge of Seniors With Disabilities
01/16/2024The number of older adults with disabilities that affect their performance of daily tasks will soar in the decades ahead, as baby boomers enter their 70s, 80s, and 90s.
From CalMatters...
Parents’ Rights Groups Mobilize as California Advances a Ban on Youth Tackle Football
01/15/2024The Assembly has until the end of January to decide the fate of the youth tackle football bill, which would prevent kids under 12 from playing the sport to protect them from brain trauma.
From KFF Health News...
What Would a Second Trump Presidency Look Like for Health Care?
01/15/2024On the campaign trail, former President Donald Trump is again promising to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act—a nebulous goal that became one of his administration's splashiest policy failures.
From Los Angeles Times...
Newsom Talks Projected $37.9 Billion Deficit
01/10/2024Gov. Gavin Newsom has proposed that lawmakers tap a rainy day reserve and that a minimum wage increase for health care workers be delayed to help the state fight a $37.9 billion deficit. This projection is more than double what Newsom and other officials had anticipated last year.
From Sacramento Bee...
$10M-Plus Lawsuit Follows Multiple Deaths at Sacramento Jail
01/09/2024Sacramento attorney Mark Merin has filed a lawsuit on behalf of the family of a man who died in May after being held at the county jail. Other inmates have died in recent years, and the jail is under a federal consent decree to improve its health care.
From Voice of San Diego...
San Diego County Schools Face Post-Pandemic Funding Woes
01/04/2024San Diego Unified School District has received more than $700 million in federal and state relief funds since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, with these funds ending, some schools could be facing serious deficits.
From SFGate...
Avian Flu Outbreak Hammers California Poultry Industry
01/04/2024An outbreak of the avian flu that began in California in October has killed 5.5 million birds throughout the Golden State. About 20% of the deaths have come in Sonoma County.
From CapPublicRadio...
01/03/2024Leaders of a parental rights advocacy group announced they’re planning to sue California Attorney General Rob Bonta over the way his office has characterized a 2024 ballot initiative they authored.
From CalMatters...
Monterey County Hospitals are So Expensive Even Fully Insured Patients Avoid Them
01/03/2024
High prices at hospitals in Monterey County are “an anomaly even among the most expensive” communities in California. One insurance plan there saves money by paying for members’ travel to other counties for procedures.
From Voice of San Diego...
San Diego County Lacking Behavioral Health Beds
01/03/2024County leaders in San Diego are gearing up for a March bond measure that could help provide more behavioral health beds. More beds are needed for areas like mental health and detox.
From Los Angeles Times...
Hospitals Seeing More People with COVID-19 and Flu
01/02/2024Los Angeles County has entered the medium category of COVID-19 hospitalization defined by the CDC, with providers warning that illnesses like RSV like to travel in tandem with the virus. Officials are urging the public to mask when visiting hospitals or other indoor facilities.