State Highlights: State Highlights: NY Nursing Home Homicide; Concerns Raised About KanCare Waivers
A selection of health policy stories from New York, Kansas, Colorado and Missouri.
The New York Times:
Death In Bronx Shows Vulnerability Of State’s Nursing Home Residents
The death, which was ruled a homicide by the medical examiner, underscores the vulnerability of frail nursing home residents in New York State, where rates of substandard care, neglect and abuse are high, according to national studies. Advocates for elderly and disabled residents complain that state enforcement has dwindled in recent years, even as private companies have been on a buying spree, acquiring nonprofit facilities and often cutting staff to enhance profit margins. (Schlossberg and Bernstein, 12/15)
Kansas Health Institute News Service:
Kansans With Disabilities Concerned About Proposed KanCare Changes
Groups that advocate for Kansans with disabilities and for frail seniors say they will file objections to proposed changes in the waivers defining the state’s approach to Medicaid-funded services that help them live in community-based settings rather than in nursing homes. (Ranney, 12/15)
Kansas Health Institute News Service:
Parents Worry Managed Care Oversight Will Affect KanCare Services
The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services has proposed allowing the managed care companies that have administered the state’s Medicaid program since February 2013 to have a say in deciding which services “best meet (a) participants needs.” (Ranney 12/15)
Health News Colorado:
Governor Boots Vocal Appointee From Health Exchange Board
Gov. John Hickenlooper booted a vocal critic from Colorado’s health exchange board after the November elections and before Colorado auditors released a scathing account of financial mismanagement at Connect for Health Colorado last week. Hickenlooper had appointed Ellen Daehnick, a supporter of the Affordable Care Act and a small business owner, to the exchange board in July of 2013. Now registered independent, Daehnick said she has always voted for Democrats including Hickenlooper and President Obama. (Kerwin McCrimmon, 12/15)
Kansas Health Institute News Service:
Proposal To Raise Missouri’s Cigarette Tax Would Fund Children’s Initiatives
The campaign aims to increase Missouri’s cigarette tax from 17 cents to 67 cents a pack. Campaign leaders estimated the increase would generate $250 million in state proceeds, which they said is about seven times more than Missouri currently spends on early childhood care and education programs. (Sherry, 12/15)