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New state hiring restrictions unlikely to quash DSS proposal

The Malloy administration announced that it will exercise tighter scrutiny on hiring by state agencies, but Department of Social Services Commissioner Roderick L. Bremby said he doesn’t expect the higher standards to get in the way of his request to hire more than 100 new workers. Benjamin Barnes, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s budget director, agreed […]

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St. Francis, Johnson Memorial hospitals to form affiliation

The parent companies of St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford and Johnson Memorial Hospital in Stafford Springs announced plans to form an affiliation Monday, becoming the latest in a series of hospital partnerships across the state. The agreement between the companies, which requires regulatory approval, would bring capital and access to clinical services […]

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Healthcare Advocate doubles cases, savings in 2011

The state Office of the Healthcare Advocate announced Wednesday that it saved consumers $11.46 million and handled 5,515 cases last year, double the savings and more than twice the caseload of the previous year. The office helps consumers address managed care insurance issues. The savings figure represents the costs of health care services, procedures and […]

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Survey: Payment cuts would lead docs to limit access for Medicare patients

Nineteen percent of doctors responding to a survey said their practices are already limiting appointments for patients with Medicare and the military health plan TRICARE, and nearly three-quarters said their practices would make changes to access for patients with the plans if a looming cut to the programs’ payment rates takes effect in March. The […]

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Legislators raise doubts about need for Medicaid restrictions

Key legislators have cast doubt on an effort by the state Department of Social Services to restrict eligibility and benefits in a Medicaid program that had been growing at higher-than-expected levels. In an October “concept paper” sent to federal authorities, DSS officials outlined ways to limit eligibility and scale back benefits in the Medicaid Low-Income […]

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Porter named to lead Bureau of Rehabilitation Services

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy on Tuesday named Amy Porter director of the state Bureau of Rehabilitative Services, which serves people with disabilities and was created last summer by the consolidation of several state offices. Porter, a certified rehabilitation counselor, currently leads the agency’s rehabilitation services division, and previously directed the Department of Social Services’ bureau […]

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Amid contract dispute, closure proposal, Wethersfield nursing home announces 145 layoffs

The operator of a Wethersfield nursing home has notified 145 workers that their jobs will be eliminated as it awaits word on a request to close the facility. The notices also come amid a contract fight between the operator, HealthBridge Management, and the union representing workers at Wethersfield Health Care Center and five other HealthBridge […]

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Child welfare: Anne Mahoney wants to repeat John Rowland’s blunders

A child previously known to the Connecticut Department of Children and Families dies a horrible death.  A prominent public figure rushes to scapegoat efforts to keep families together.  Connecticut is putting too much emphasis on family preservation, the public figure claims. Of course I’m talking about – 1995.  The child was “Baby Emily” and the […]

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Legislators sign on to health reform brief for Supreme Court

Forty-three Connecticut legislators have signed on to expressed their support for the federal health reform law through an amicus brief being filed on behalf of state legislators across the country. The legislators’ effort, organized by the Progressive States Network and the Working Group of State Legislators for Health Reform, is targeted at a challenge to […]

Posted inEnergy & Environment, Health

Of caps and emissions and a program named Reggie

The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative — the first-and-only-in-the-nation carbon dioxide trading and reduction program — has reached its first three-year compliance and evaluation cycle with mixed results. Total emissions from more than 200 plants in the 10 participating Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states were 34 percent below the cap at the end of 2011, according to preliminary calculations by […]

Posted inEducation, Health

UConn Health Center: Professor falsified data

A three-year investigation has determined that a tenured professor at the University of Connecticut Health Center fabricated and falsified data, the university announced Wednesday. The health center has begun dismissal proceedings against Dipak K. Das, director of the Cardiovascular Research Center and a professor in the department of surgery. It has notified 11 scientific journals […]

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Manchester Memorial, Rockville General back in UnitedHealthcare’s network

Manchester Memorial and Rockville General hospitals are once again part of the network of UnitedHealthcare and Oxford Health Plans after reaching a two-year contract agreement. The hospitals’ parent company, Eastern Connecticut Health Network, severed ties with UnitedHealthcare — which includes Oxford — in October after the previous contract expired without a new agreement. Since then, […]

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“Boston’s Brain Drain: The Cost of Being America’s Drunkest City”

I know of few families who have not been touched, even scarred by alcoholism.  But that’s not even the point of this short commentary by Ford Vox, identified as a brain injury physician and journalist based in Boston. This depressing piece — infuriating may be a more accurate description — in the Atlantic, http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/01/bostons-brain-drain-the-cost-of-being-americas-drunkest-city/250727/ — outlines […]

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