October 30, 2003 - Governor Pawlenty said today (THURSDAY) that he'll encourage the Legislature to pass a bill next session that would lower the legal blood alcohol limit from point one zero to point zero-eight. Pawlenty says lowering the legal limit will reduce the number of drunk drivers on the roads. The state will also receive millions of dollars in federal highway money that was only going to states that have the point-zero-eight standard. The Legislature failed to pass the bill in previous sessions. Opponents argue the lower limit could hurt business for bars, restaurants and bowling alleys. Minnesota Public Radio's Tom Scheck reports...
October 31, 2003 - The threat of bioterrorism is now part of our reality. That means new skills are necessary for doctors and nurses. An outbreak of smallpox, an untreatable disease, could be especially dire. Its last known occurrence in the United States was in 1947. So most healthcare practioners don't know what it looks like, let alone, how to treat it. Nothing indicates that smallpox is an imminent threat. Still, hospitals around the country need to plan for a potential outbreak. Doctors in St. Cloud were tired of the same old song and dance, so they came up with a new one. Mainstreet Radio's Annie Baxter reports. {
November 7, 2003 - On this hour of Midday, host Gary Eichten talks with William McGuire, chief executive officer of UnitedHealth Group, about healthcare reform and what could happen in Minnesota. McGuire discusses healthcare resources and defining ‘essential’ healthcare.
November 17, 2003 - The St. Paul Companies plans to merge this spring with a rival nearly twice its size. The St. Paul would join with Travelers Property Casualty, a Connecticut-based provider of business and personal insurance. The combined company would be the nation's second-largest commercial insurer. The company will have its headquarters in St. Paul. But the move raises questions about the future in Minnesota of one of the state's oldest companies. Minnesota Public Radio's Jeff Horwich reports.
November 17, 2003 - Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch was in Hennpin County District Court this morning to ask a judge to force the drug company GlaxoSmithKline to produce documents related to sales in Canada. Hatch is conducting an investigation into whether Glaxo and other drug companies are conspiring to limit drug sales to Canada in retaliation for cross-border drug sales. Many Canadian mail order and internet pharmacies are profiting by selling less expensive, price-controlled prescription drugs to Americans. Hatch says he wants Glaxo to turn over any documents that exist in Canada and England, where the company is based. Glaxo attorneys say Hatch is overstepping his authority. Minnesota Public Radio's Tom Scheck reports...
November 18, 2003 - Congress is nearly finished with a bill that would add a prescription drug benefit to Medicare and increase the role of private insurers in the program. House and Senate negotiators announced over the weekend that they had reached initial agreement on the 400 billion dollar measure. One of the criticisms of the bill is that it does too little to control the cost of presciption drugs. While it does make it easier for generic copies of brand-name drugs to get approval, it leaves in effect the current ban on the importation of lower-cost prescription drugs from other industrialized countries. The bill would allow Americans to buy drugs from Canada, but only if the FDA certifies that the drugs are safe... which the FDA has said it won't do. Minnesota Republican Congressman Gil Gutknecht favors the importation of prescription drugs and authored a House bill that would allow importation from 25 countries. He joins us now.
November 19, 2003 - Governor Tim Pawlenty is taking his prescription drug importation plan to Washington. Pawlenty will testify before the Senate Commerce Committee tomorrow morning at the invitation of chairman Senator John McCain. Pawlenty is the only Republican governor to actively push the idea of importing drugs from Canada. Larry Jacobs is a political science professor at the University of Minnesota who follows the politics of health care. He's also the author of the book "The Health of Nations." Jacobs says the importation issue comes at a good time for Pawlenty.
November 24, 2003 - The Medicare prescription drug legislation moved closer to passage in Congress today, as Senate supporters turned back attacks launched by opponents. The bill would make the most sweeping changes in Medicare since its creation in 1965 by providing a prescription drug benefit for the program's beneficiaries and giving insurance companies broad leeway to offer private coverage to 40 million elderly and disabled Americans. Susan Foote is the director of the division of Health Services Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. She says that, while the numbers are shifting as the bill moves closer to passage, the benefit would require significant contributions from individual Medicare recipients.
November 24, 2003 - The prescription drug benefit in the Medicare bill under debate in the U.S. Senate is getting a mixed reaction from Minnesota seniors. Supporters say the bill would finally provide a prescription drug benefit for Medicare beneficiaries, something that's been missing from the program since it was started in 1965. Opponents of the 400 billion dollar bill say the bill benefits drug and insurance companies, but does little to lower the overall cost of drugs. Minnesota Public Radio's Tom Scheck reports...
November 25, 2003 - DFL lawmakers say the budget cuts made last session are creating life-threatening problems for some people enrolled in the state's subsidized insurance plan. The 2003 Legislature cut health benefits for about 20-thousand low-income adults without children. Democrats say the problem is particularly acute for diabetics. They say medical supplies such as glucose testing strips are no longer covered, which will result in more expensive emergency room visits for many diabetics. State officials say they made a choice between offering some benefits or no benefits to adults without children. Minnesota Public Radio's Laura McCallum reports...