Over 100 House Republicans call for health center funding More than 100 House Republicans are calling on Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) to quickly reauthorize a pot of money crucial to community health centers, which serve millions of the nation's most vulnerable. In a letter sent Friday, 105 Republicans, led by Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), expressed concern over the fact that long-term funding for community health centers lapsed Sept. 30. They urged reauthorization in the "next moving piece of legislation to be signed into law." Lawmakers are racing to pass another short-term spending bill this week. Community health center advocates are anxiously awaiting word on whether it will include a reauthorization of federal funding for the centers. Read more here. Trump on Dems' 'universal' health-care push: 'No thanks' President Trump on Monday said "no thanks" to any push from Democrats for a "universal" health care system in the United States. "The Democrats are pushing for Universal HealthCare while thousands of people are marching in the UK because their U system is going broke and not working," the president wrote on Twitter. "Dems want to greatly raise taxes for really bad and non-personal medical care. No thanks!" Thousands of people marched in London over the weekend to protest funding cuts to health services, according to reports. Read more here. Trump's comment that Britain's National Health Service (NHS) was "not working" sparked pushback from figures across the U.K.'s political spectrum... Theresa May defends universal health system after Trump attacks British Prime Minister Theresa May on Monday defended her country's National Health Service following comments from President Trump. "The prime minister is proud of our NHS, that is free at the point of delivery," a spokesman for May told The Washington Post. The spokesman noted that funding for the universal health-care system is at a "record high" and was prioritized in the budget with an extra 2.8 billion pounds. Trump early Monday morning tweeted that "thousands of people are marching in the UK because their [universal] system is going broke and not working." Read more here. The head of the U.K. Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, also hit back at Trump, tweeting: "Wrong. People were marching because we love our NHS and hate what the Tories are doing to it." "NHS may have challenges but I'm proud to be from the country that invented universal coverage -- where all get care no matter the size of their bank balance," said British Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt. Also piling on, British tabloid the Daily Mirror and commentator Piers Morgan, who called the U.S. health system "a sick joke & the envy of no-one." Pro-ObamaCare group launches ad against Idaho rollback The pro-ObamaCare group Save my Care is launching a TV ad against the Republican governor of Idaho after he moved to roll back ObamaCare rules. "Gov. Butch Otter is putting the interests of his insurance industry contributors ahead of the people of Idaho," the ad states. "He's trying to overturn the law of the land so he can take Idaho back to the old days when insurance companies could deny care, cap coverage and charge people more just for being older or having a pre-existing condition," it continues. Otter signed an executive order last month designed to allow cheaper plans that don't meet all of ObamaCare's requirements to be sold. Idaho officials say they need to encourage healthy people to enroll in plans to stabilize their market. Read more here. Poll: Majority of voters say lowering drug prices should be priority for Congress More than 80 percent of voters think lowering drug prices should be a priority for Congress, according to a new poll released Monday. The poll, completed by GS Strategy Group, shows 85.5 percent of registered voters surveyed think lowering the cost of prescription drugs should be a "top priority" or an "important priority" for Congress. Only 9.6 percent said lowering drug prices is not "too important of a priority" while 2.1 percent of those surveyed said it should not be done. The poll also showed the majority of registered voters think Congress and President Trump need to do more to lower the cost of drugs. About 75 percent said they need to do more, while 9.6 percent said they've done enough. Read more here. Government watchdog finds safety gaps in assisted living homes More than half of all states lack adequate federal reporting about assisted living facilities, meaning serious health and safety problems go unnoticed by federal authorities, according to a new bipartisan report from a government watchdog. The Government Accountability Office report found that 26 states could not report the number of "critical incidents" -- physical assaults, sexual abuse, unexplained death, unauthorized use of restraints, medication errors and inappropriate discharges or evictions -- occurring in assisted living facilities in their state. Assisted living facilities increasingly receive federal Medicaid dollars but are not subject to the same federal rules as nursing homes. Read more here. What we're reading Public health workers find surprise cuts in paychecks (Politico) Congress has quietly created a new health care crisis for 26 million Americans (Vox) U.S. pays billions for 'assisted living' but what does it get? (The New York Times) State by state Medicaid plans: We're not 'hyperventilating' about Medicaid work requirements (The Washington Post) California to drug users: We'll pay for you to test your dope (Kaiser Health News) Legal clash over Medicaid premiums could derail GOP rollback of expansion (Modern Healthcare) From The Hill's opinion page: Can three of America's most innovative business minds really transform health care? |
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