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Victims in Chicago-area crash were Kansas doctors

crashDON BABWIN, Associated Press

CHICAGO (AP) — A Kansas hospital system has identified three physicians as victims of a small plane crash in suburban Chicago.

Stormont-Vail HealthCare in Topeka said Monday that the victims of Sunday night’s plane crash included two of its doctors.

They were neurosurgeon Tausif Rehman and pulmonologist Ali A. Kanchwala.

Stormont-Vail also identified the third victim as Kanchwala’s wife. She was Maria Javaid, a cardiologist at the Providence Medical Center in Kansas City, Kansas.

The National Transportation Safety Board said there were no obvious reasons why their twin-engine Beechcraft Baron plane crashed in the Chicago suburb of Palos Hills shortly after a takeoff from Midway’s International Airport. The Federal Aviation Administration said the plane was flying to Lawrence, Kansas.

It crashed in a vacant lot on a street crowded with houses.

Review of Missouri water patrol merger continues

OSAGE BEACH, Mo. (AP) — Missouri lawmakers are gathering more testimony on the wisdom of the decision three years ago to make the Water Patrol a division of the State Highway Patrol.

A special House committee planned to hear from the public and a state trooper during a meeting Tuesday at Osage Beach City Hall. It’s the second of four scheduled hearings on the 2011 merger.

 Water PatrolThe review follows the May drowning in the Lake of the Ozarks of a handcuffed Iowa man who fell from a trooper’s boat. The trooper had arrested 20-year-old Brandon Ellingson on suspicion of drunken boating.

Lawmakers now question whether the merger of the Water Patrol and the Highway Patrol overwhelmed troopers while saving the state money. Combining the departments was supposed to save about $3 million a year.

MIAA hands out weekly football awards

riggertMIAANebraska-Kearney’s Bronson Marsh was named the MIAA Football Offensive Athlete of the Week. Central Oklahoma’s Chass Glaspie was named Defensive and Northwest Missouri’s Marcus Jones earned the award on Special Teams.

MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week

Bronson Marsh, QB, Nebraska-Kearney

Had one of the best rushing days in UNK history, finishing with 21 carries for 242 yards and four touchdowns (1, 1, 59 & 87). This was the second best rushing day by a Loper QB and the sixth highest single game total. Marsh also completed 50% of his passes and had completions to five different players. The 6-0 junior quarterback is a native of Omaha, Neb. where he competed at Millard South prior to spending two and half years at the University of Nebraska.

MIAA Defensive Athlete of the Week

Chass Glaspie, LB, Central Oklahoma

Glaspie racked up 23 tackles in UCO’s 43-41 triple-overtime win over Missouri Southern, the first 20-tackle game for the Bronchos since 1996. The senior linebacker had nine solo and 14 assisted stops in the game. The 6-1 senior linebacker is a native of Los Angeles, Calif. where he competed at Westchester High School prior to spending two seasons at Cerritos College.

MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week

Marcus Jones, CB, Northwest Missouri

Jones had a breakout game on special teams for Northwest in a 50-21 win over Lindenwood on Saturday. Jones blocked a first quarter punt to set up the Bearcat’s second touchdown and followed it up with a 96 yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. Jones finished the day with five tackles and a fumble recovery. The 6-0 freshman defensive back is a native of Gladstone, Mo. where he competed at North Kansas City High School.

— MIAA Press Release —

ALCS Game 3 postponed because of rain

DAVE SKRETTA, AP Sports Writer

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Game 3 of the AL Championship Series has been postponed because of rain.

The game was pushed back from Monday to Tuesday at 8:07 p.m. EDT. Game 4 was rescheduled Wednesday at 4:07 p.m. EDT and Game 5, if needed for Thursday at 4:07 p.m. EDT.

Kansas City leads the best-of-seven series 2-0.

Major League Baseball Senior Vice President Peter Woodfork says: “We want a game we know we can get through nine innings, hopefully play dry baseball, not risk player safety or uncomfortable fans.”

Big 12 announces weekly football award winners

Big12riggertBryce Petty (Baylor), Zack Sanchez (Oklahoma), Tyreek Hill (Oklahoma State) and Josh Lambert (West Virginia) were chosen Big 12 Football Players of the Week for October 11 games by a panel of media that cover the Conference. It was the second career award for Petty (offensive) and Lambert (co-special teams) while Sanchez (defense) and Hill (co-special teams) picked up their first recognition.

Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week

Bryce Petty, Baylor, QB, Sr, Midlothian, Texas

Bryce Petty had career-highs of 510 passing yards and six touchdowns to lead No. 5 Baylor to a 61-58 come-from-behind win over No. 9 TCU. He completed 28-of-55 passes as the Bears tied their largest deficit overcome in a game (1980 vs. SMU, 2011 at Kansas). BU trailed by 21 points with 11:38 remaining in the fourth quarter before scoring 24 unanswered points. In the final period, Petty had 123 yards through the air and two passing scores to engineer scoring drives of 45, 92, 91 and 44 yards. The senior’s passing yards were the second-most in a game in BU history, while the six TD passes tied the school record set by Blake Szymanski.

Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week

Zack Sanchez, Oklahoma, CB, So, Fort Worth, Texas

Cornerback Zack Sanchez intercepted his fifth pass of the season and returned it 43 yards for a touchdown in No. 11 Oklahoma’s 31-26 win over Texas. It was the seventh interception of his career. Sanchez scored his first defensive touchdown of the season and the second of his career. The sophomore also tied a career high with eight tackles.

Big 12 Special Teams Co-Players of the Week

Tyreek Hill, Oklahoma State, KR, Jr, Pearson, Ga.

After Kansas kicked a field goal to tie the game at 20, Tyreek Hill returned the kickoff 99 yards with 6:43 to play to lift No. 16 Oklahoma State to a 27-20 win. He made program history in the process by becoming the first Cowboy to return a kickoff for a touchdown in back-to-back games. Hill is the only player in the country to accomplish the feat this season. The final kickoff was the only one Hill had a chance to return on the day.

Josh Lambert, West Virginia, PK, Sr, Greenville, Ga.

Josh Lambert connected on 3-of-4 field goals at Texas Tech, including the game-winning 55-yarder as time expired to give West Virginia the 37-34 victory. He also hit from 42 and 38 yards. The 55-yarder tied the school record set in 1984 by Paul Woodside and was the longest field goal made on the road by a Mountaineer. It was the second game-winning field goal hit by Lambert this season as he hit a 47-yarder at Maryland with no time left.

— Big 12 Press Release —

Kansas’ Mundine named to Mackey Award midseason watch list

riggertKUThe John Mackey Award Selection Committee announced Monday that Kansas senior tight end Jimmay Mundine was named to the 2014 John Mackey Award midseason watch list.

Awarded to the nation’s most outstanding collegiate tight end since 2000, the Mackey Award is named in honor of collegiate and professional all-time great John Mackey. Mackey, a product of Syracuse University, played 10 years of professional football as a tight end. Spending nine seasons with the Baltimore Colts and one year with the San Diego Chargers, Mackey found success on and off the field as he was a Super Bowl champion and a member of the NFL Hall of Fame, as well as the first president of the National Football League Players Association.

A native of Denison, Texas, Mundine was one of two tight ends from the Big 12 Conference, and one of the 33 total honorees, selected for the committee’s midseason watch list. He leads all Big 12 tight ends in receiving yards with 212 yards on 16 receptions. Mundine had five catches for a career-best 88 yards in the Jayhawks last outing against Oklahoma State.

Semifinalists for the award will be revealed on Nov. 17 while on Nov. 24 the list will be trimmed down to three finalists. The winner of the 2014 Mackey Award will be announced on Dec. 11 as part of the Home Depot College Football Awards Red Carpet Show.

Mundine and Kansas travel to Texas Tech Saturday, Oct. 18 in search of their first Big 12 Conference win. Both the Jayhawks and Red Raiders enter the game with 2-4 records overall and 0-3 ledgers in conference play.

— KU Sports Information —

Christie returns to Kansas to stump for Brownback

Brownback and Christie on Monday
Brownback and Christie on Monday in Wichita- courtesy photo

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has made another trip to Kansas to campaign for Republican Gov. Sam Brownback re-election bid.

Christie is chairman of the Republican Governors Association. He joined Brownback on Monday at Freddy’s Frozen Custard in Wichita where he visited with restaurant patrons.

A private fundraising event was scheduled later Monday.

Brownback is locked in a tough race with Democratic challenger Paul Davis amid voters’ concerns about massive tax cuts that have created budget shortfalls.

But Christie said indications from several polls show Kansas voters are swinging toward Brownback as they consider what he called the positive record of Brownback’s first term in office.

Christie also made a campaign stop Monday in Minnesota, with others planned Tuesday in in Maine and Connecticut.

 

Patient at University of Kansas Hospital being tested for ebola

Dr. Lee Norman, Chief Medical officer at the University of Kansas Hospital at Monday's press conference
Dr. Lee Norman, Chief Medical officer at the University of Kansas Hospital at Monday’s press conference

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Officials at the University of Kansas Hospital say a man being treated in isolation is considered at low to moderate risk of having contracted the Ebola virus.

Chief medical officer Dr. Lee Norman says the patient came to the hospital Monday morning with significant weakness and diarrhea. The man also said he had previously had a fever.

But Norman also said it was encouraging that the man did not have a fever nor internal bleeding — two symptoms of Ebola. Norman said the man was being rehydrated and regaining strength.

The man worked recently as a medic on a commercial ship off Africa’s west coast. Norman said he had been exposed to typhoid, but that it’s unknown if he was also exposed to Ebola.

Norman said results of blood tests are expected Tuesday.

Tea Party group endorses Roberts in Senate race

 

Senator Robert's at Monday's announcement in Wichita
Senator Robert’s at Monday’s announcement in Wichita

ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A national tea party group that derided U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts during Kansas’ bitter Republican primary race is now backing him in the general election.

Leaders of the Tea Party Express made the announcement Monday in Wichita. Roberts says he is pleased with the endorsement, saying the tea party activists “have fire in the belly.”

Roberts won less than 50 percent of the vote in defeating tea party favorite Milton Wolf in the August GOP primary. The three-term Senate incumbent is now in a tight race with independent Greg Orman.

Orman’s campaign says that Roberts’ embrace of what it called extremists like Ted Cruz, Sarah Palin and the Tea Party Express is more evidence that Roberts is part of a broken political system.

Prescription prices steep, even for those with insurance

drugs pills prescriptionBy Julie Appleby
Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Sandra Grooms recently got a call from her oncologist’s office. The chemotherapy drugs he wanted to use on her metastatic breast cancer were covered by her health plan, with one catch: Her share of the cost would be $976 for each 14-day supply of the two pills.

“I said, ‘I can’t afford it,’” said Grooms, 52, who is insured through her job as a general manager at a janitorial supply company in Augusta, Ga. “I was very upset.”

Even with insurance, some patients are struggling to pay for prescription drugs for conditions such as cancer, arthritis, multiple sclerosis or HIV/AIDS, as insurers and employers shift more of the cost of high-priced pharmaceuticals to the patients who take them.

Increasingly, health plans – even those offered to people with job-based coverage – require hefty payments by patients like Grooms. In some plans, patients must pay 40 percent or more of the total cost of medications that insurers deem to be specialty drugs and place in the highest tiers of patient cost-sharing.

The trend is controversial, prompting a civil rights complaint in Florida, legislative action in a few states and debate over how to slow the rapid rise of spending on prescription drugs without hurting consumers or stifling development of new treatments.

Proponents say the high-priced drug tiers encourage patients to select lower-cost medications, just as similar efforts in the past decade led to a dramatic rise in the use of lower-cost generics.

Brendan Buck, spokesman for the industry group America’s Health Insurance Plans, said insurers rely on cost-sharing tiers in their policies “as a way to keep premiums down for consumers and promote more cost-effective health care choices.”

In some cases, drugs placed in the highest tiers have equally effective alternatives that are in a lower-cost tier, he said, adding that high drug prices have spurred the use of specialty tiers: “If a drug maker is concerned that its treatment is on a higher tier than they would like, the solution is to lower the price.”

Skeptics say it remains unproven whether requiring consumers to pay more actually will result in lower overall medical costs. Many patients facing life-threatening diseases will choose the expensive drugs anyway, some studies have shown, even if there is a less pricey alternative.

Meanwhile, some patient advocates fear such payments are simply a way for insurers to skirt the health law’s rules requiring them to accept all enrollees, including those with medical conditions. While not rejecting anyone, they can discourage patients with health problems from enrolling if they set high payments for drugs for specific medical conditions.

“We will wind up with a race to the bottom where plans will design benefits to shift the greatest burden of cost to those with the greatest health needs,” said Wayne Turner, staff attorney at the National Health Law Program, which advocates for low-income individuals.

Along with another advocacy group, the AIDS Institute, the law program has filed an administrative complaint with the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office For Civil Rights, focused on four Florida insurers that put all HIV/AIDS drugs, including generics, into a category with the highest patient cost-sharing.

“This amounts to discrimination based on disability,” said Turner, something federal law prohibits.

For Grooms, a solution came when her oncologist selected a different drug – an intravenous medication – for which her share of the cost is $100 a month.

While she’s relieved, she said requiring huge payments by consumers sharply affects “middle-class people who are working and trying to make a living, even though they may be living with a serious illness.”

$10,000 a month for a cancer drug

Driving the increasing use of such drug tiers and other cost-control efforts are a growing number of high-priced treatments that offer the hope of curing or managing debilitating diseases.

A new Hepatitis C drug, for example, costs $84,000 per 12-week treatment, and the average cost of brand-name cancer drugs has doubled to $10,000 for a month’s supply in the past decade, according to a May report from the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics. Drugs for severe arthritis and multiple sclerosis can costs tens of thousands per year.

Responding to the increased use of such drugs and their rising prices, employers and insurers have changed their policies. Many already require patients to first try other drugs before moving to specialty medications, a practice called “step therapy.” About 20 percent of workers insured through their jobs – and many of those who buy their own insurance through the new federal health law – have multiple tiers of drug-payment categories, with patient costs going up in each consecutive tier.

Insurers often place into the higher tiers specialty drugs, which have no standard industry definition but are generally the most expensive products. Many do not have lower-cost alternatives.

Ninety-one percent of 600 insurance plans sold to individuals through the new health law marketplaces this year had four or more tiers, according to a study by Avalere Health, a private research firm. It produced the report last year for the pharmaceutical industry’s lobbying group.

In addition, more than 60 percent of the most popular level of coverage purchased through those markets, the silver-level plans, place all medications for multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease and certain cancers in their highest-cost sharing tier, according to an Avalere report this year.

“The plans definitely think it’s a way to contain costs by shifting them to consumers,” said Caroline Pearson, vice president of Avalere.

Advocacy groups for patients are urging some states and Congress to cap how much workers would have to pay.

“Is it fair that because you need that type of benefit that you have to pay that much more out of pocket than someone else?” asked Kim Calder, director of health policy at the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Calder said it would be better to spread the cost of such drugs to everyone through increases in premiums.

Lawmakers in nine states have debated ways to limit the consumer costs, but only three have passed legislation. Delaware, Louisiana and Maryland each cap the out-of-pocket cost of specialty-tier drugs at a maximum of $150 for a 30-day supply, according to a report by researchers at the Georgetown Health Policy Institute.

But the effect on overall consumer costs is uncertain. Capping monthly costs for prescriptions could simply lead insurers to raise premiums or the annual deductibles, the amounts consumers pay before most coverage kicks in.

Looking for an alternative

Even as new specialty treatments offer promise for many patients, they pose a dilemma for benefit administrators like Judith Muck, executive director of the Missouri Consolidated Health Care Plan.

Specialty drugs account for only 1 percent of all prescriptions filled by the nearly 100,000 state workers and retirees covered by the plan, but they accounted for 28 percent – $66 million – of drug spending over a recent 18-month period.

“Specialty drugs are life-changing for individuals who take them and can be life-saving,” Muck said. “Our goal is to find a way to pay for them.”

Muck rejected the idea of creating a specialty tier in the plan’s drug benefit. Instead, the plan is considering options, including treating some patients needing high-priced intravenous drugs at doctors’ offices rather than more expensive hospitals, which could save $428,000 a year, and negotiating with hospitals that charge higher-than-average prices, which could save $400,000 a year.

Other insurers are trying different methods. WellPoint, one of the nation’s largest insurers, will pay oncologists a bonus of $350 a month per patient for sticking with specific, less-costly chemotherapy regimens. Florida Blue has created cancer-specific “accountable care organizations” that reward doctors if the new organizations save money while hitting quality targets.

While some critics of the drug industry have called for more direct government influence on prices drug makers can charge, that idea is still seen as a political nonstarter.

“At the end of the day, that undermines innovation,” said Bradford Hirsch, an adjunct professor at Duke Medical School and medical director at the health economics and outcomes division of U.S. Oncology, a network of cancer treatment centers.

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