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Crist policy director promises big effort on Cover FL

By Christine Jordan Sexton
1/8/2009 © Florida Health News
TALLAHASSEE -- Early miscues that bedeviled the Cover Florida kickoff this week were only to be expected in a new program of this magnitude, the governor’s health care point man said in an interview Wednesday. David Foy, policy director for Gov. Charlie Crist, promised a big push in coming weeks to let uninsured Floridians know about the plans and help them get signed up.   More...

Hospitals face huge budget cuts in today's House vote

1/8/2009 © Miami Herald
TALLAHASSEE -- Florida hospitals now face a $137-million reduction that could push the system into crisis and even force some to close, according to the industry and Sen. Durell Peaden, who heads a health budget committee. ''I don't think the hospital system can take any more,'' he said. Medicaid HMOs, nursing homes and other parts of the industry also voice concern about the proposal that comes up for a House vote today. And the Lakeland Ledger reports that lawmakers are hoping for a rescue from Washington. More...

FL doctor serving as advisor for Obama transition team

1/8/2008 © Palm Beach Post
Dr. Claude Earl Fox, founding director of the Florida Public Health Institute in Lantana, is one of just 20 experts serving on the transition team for Health and Human Services, advising former Sen. Tom Daschle, nominated to become the HHS Secretary. Fox, 62, served in the Clinton administration but reportedly is not interested in moving back to Washington. More...

UM study finds Medicare Web site confounds seniors

1/08/2008 © WWSB-TV
Many seniors who visit the Medicare Web site find getting the information they need frustrating, University of Miami researchers report. It's  difficult to navigate and the language is too complex, lead researcher Sara J. Czaja said. More...

In sleep-strangling case, school principal returns to work

 1/8/2009 © South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Middle-school principal Mark Kaplan, charged with trying to strangle his wife in a bizarre case linked to a sleep disorder, was released Wednesday and allowed to return to his job after the school board said the arrest had no bearing on his work. Kaplan claims his parasomnia  keeps him from being aware that he's attacking his wife in his sleep. A University of Miami researcher cites evidence that bolsters his claim. More...

Groups call for tracking of addictive prescription drugs

1/07/2008 © St. Petersburg Times
Groups are gathering around the state to push for passage of a bill setting up a prescription-drug registry so that abuse of controlled drugs could be detected. Previous bills seeking such a registry have failed three times. But now, according to speakers at a rally at St. Petersburg College, deaths from prescription drugs outnumber deaths from illicit drugs such as cocaine or heroin by a 3-to-1 margin. More...

Pharmed brothers get maximum sentence in fraud

1/08/2008 © Miami Herald
A federal judge sentenced Carlos and Jorge de Céspedes to nine years in prison Wednesday despite pleas for leniency from almost 200 South Florida leaders, who cited the brothers' many contributions to charity.  The brothers used their company, Pharmed, to bilk Kendall Regional Medical Center out of $5 million in a scam that lasted 14 years. More...

Delayed MRSA diagnosis led to death, lawsuit alleges

1/07/2008 © Tampa Tribune
Ronald Carl, who went to a doctor last July to have a boil lanced, ended up dead from the virulent staph infection methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA. His widow has sued Oak Hill Hospital, saying staff and physicians failed to diagnose the problem in time to prevent his death. More...

Woman says hospital left knife blade in her neck

1/07/2008 © WTSP-TV 
Three years after Edith McQueen was treated at Shands Jacksonville for a stab wound to the neck, an x-ray showed a knife blade still lodged near her spine. McQueen has been suffering from headaches and she can feel the blade through the skin, but she thought it was scar tissue from the wound, her attorney says. More...

Trailer full of mannequins carries warning

01/07/2008 © St. Petersburg Times
Five years ago a doctor told Steve Franks he had Lou Gehrig's disease and probably had five years to live. Today Franks, 50, is driving around Florida in a black pickup with a trailer stuffed with 150 mannequins to draw attention to what his body -- and others afflicted with the paralyzing ailment -- will become. More...

Liberty Medical says it's adding 800 jobs in Port St. Lucie

1/07/2008 © Palm Beach Post
Diabetes-equipment firm Liberty Medical, one of Port St. Lucie's largest private employers, plans to expand its operations there, creating up to 800 full-time jobs during the next two years. In November, 10.4 percent of the county's workforce was unemployed, up from 6.4 percent the prior year, according to the Florida Agency for Workforce Innovation. More...

Cover FL delays a mystery, but there are signs of life

 By Christine Jordan Sexton and Carol Gentry
1/6/2009 © Florida Health News
TALLAHASSEE -- Florida’s ambitious effort to help lower the state’s number of uninsured has gotten off to a bumpy start. On opening day, Monday, the Cover Florida program Web site had no phone numbers or links to application forms.  And in an embarrassing gaffe, Gov. Charlie Crist’s office sent out a press release saying the information was up when it wasn't. By Tuesday, information was beginning to appear, but the delays remained unexplained. More...

Crist warns lawmakers their cuts are too deep

1/07/2008 © St. Petersburg Times
Thousands of nursing home workers are bracing for layoffs, and other health organizations are also moaning about proposed cuts in state funding as lawmakers furiously work at slashing as much as $1 billion from the current state budget. The bulk of the cuts will, however, hit schools, where teachers are already paying for school supplies out of their pockets. Gov. Charlie Crist says his fellow Republicans, who dominate both chambers of the Legislature, are going too far. More...

Embezzlement suspected at 'Hands on Miami'

1/07/2008 © Miami Herald
Two officials with Hands on Miami are suspected of embezzling nearly $25,000, even as the well-known volunteer group was laying off four other employees, according to a search warrant filed in Miami-Dade court. It identified them as Bruce Howard Smith, an office manager who was fired in late August, and controller Debbie A. Lightbourn, who resigned a few days later. The organization's volunteers clean beaches, feed the homeless and tutor children. More...