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Mo. woman hospitalized after SUV hits rock wall, overturns

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPHOLT- A Missouri woman was injured in an accident just after 3 p.m. on Wednesday in Clinton County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Mercury Mountaineer driven by Jennifer P. Wetzel, 30, Lathrop, was southbound on Interstate 35 two miles northeast of Holt. The driver braked suddenly and lost control of the vehicle.

The vehicle traveled off the west side of the road, struck a rock wall and overturned.

Wetzel was transported to Liberty Hospital.

The MSHP reported they did not know if she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Mo. driver faces murder charge after gunfight kills two

PoliceEL DORADO SPRINGS (AP) – A southwest Missouri man accused of fleeing a weekend traffic stop is charged with second-degree murder after his passenger jumped out and exchanged gunfire that left him and a deputy sheriff dead.

KYTV reports 28-year-old Joshua Brown of El Dorado Springs is accused of causing the death of Cedar County Sheriff’s Deputy Matthew Chism while committing another felony.

Officials say Chism tried to pull over Brown for having no headlight just before 12:30 a.m. Sunday in El Dorado Springs but the driver fled. Eventually Brown’s passenger, 28-year-old William Collins of El Dorado Springs, jumped out of the car and ran.

Chism chased Collins on foot and the two fought before exchanging gunfire. The 25-year-old Chism died at a hospital, while Collins died at the scene.

Kansas City Zoo has new red panda

Screen Shot 2014-11-06 at 6.14.57 AMKANSAS CITY (AP) – A red panda cub born at the Kansas City Zoo over the summer is about to make his public debut.

The cub named Fei Jai (FAY JAY) will be unveiled to zoo attendees at 10:30 a.m. on Thursday. He was born in June and weights a little more than 4 pounds. The red pandas are a part of the zoo’s Tiger Trail exhibit.

Zoo officials will discuss red pandas with the public 30 minutes before the event.

They say the cub has just begun to eat bamboo. The pandas are indigenous to east Asia. They have red and white markings and bushy tails. They grow to about the size of a house cat.

GOP gubernatorial victories make Medicaid expansion unlikely in five states

Republican Govs. Scott Walker, Nathan Deal, Rick Scott, Sam Brownback and Paul LePage won close contests in Florida, Georgia, Wisconsin, Maine and Kansas - states where Medicaid eligibility has not been expanded.-photo Kaiser Health News
Republican Govs. Scott Walker, Nathan Deal, Rick Scott, Sam Brownback and Paul LePage won close contests in Florida, Georgia, Wisconsin, Maine and Kansas – states where Medicaid eligibility has not been expanded.-photo Kaiser Health News

By Phil Galewitz
Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Tuesday’s re-election of Republican governors in closely contested races in Florida, Georgia, Wisconsin, Maine and Kansas dims the chances of Medicaid expansion in those states.

Advocates hoping for Democratic victories in those states were disappointed by the outcomes, but Alaska, which also has a Republican incumbent, remains in play as an independent challenger holds a narrow lead going into a count of absentee ballots.
“No one would say it was a good night for the prospects of Medicaid expansion,” said Joan Alker, executive director of the Center for Children and Families at Georgetown University.

Still, Alker said the playing field for Medicaid expansion didn’t shift dramatically. “The debate continues to be within the Republican party — with more pragmatic Republicans saying yes and ideologues driving the opposition. So what happens next is a good test case to see how Republicans will resolve these internal tensions.”

Even if Democrats had been victorious in governor races, they still faced a long shot getting Medicaid expansion through Republican-controlled legislatures. The one exception was Maine, where Gov. Paul LePage, who was re-elected, has five times vetoed efforts by his state’s Democratic-controlled legislature to expand the program.

In Florida, Republican Gov. Rick Scott has supported Medicaid expansion, but has done little to persuade state lawmakers to extend the program to 850,000 residents.

If Democratic challenger Charlie Crist had won, he would have faced strong opposition in the Republican-dominated state House, said Sean Foreman, associate professor of political science at Barry University in Miami Shores. “Scott’s victory means Medicaid expansion is dead the next four years,” he said.

Meanwhile, the future of Arkansas’ “private option” Medicaid expansion could be in trouble with the election of Republican Asa Hutchinson as governor and GOP gains in the state House and Senate. Hutchinson replaces Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe, who had championed the state’s expansion plan and who was barred by term limits from running.

Hutchinson has not taken a position on the program, saying he will assess its costs and benefits to “determine whether the program should be terminated or continued.” Arkansas’ expansion is vulnerable because by law, the legislature must reauthorize it every year with a 75 percent majority.

In Alaska, Bill Walker, an independent candidate who favors expansion, holds a small lead over incumbent Gov. Sean Parnell, who opposes it. Should Walker prevail after absentee ballots are counted, he still must get the support of his Republican-controlled legislature. About 26,000 Alaskans would gain coverage through expansion.

Since the Supreme Court made Medicaid expansion an optional part of the Affordable Care Act, 27 states and Washington, D.C., have extended the program to individuals with incomes under $16,100. While most of those states expanded eligibility at the beginning of 2014, Michigan and New Hampshire came on later this year and Pennsylvania’s expansion will start in January.

Nationally, Medicaid enrollment has increased by more than 8 million people since last October and has been seen as the biggest factor in reducing the number of uninsured Americans by about 25 percent this year.

State lawmakers have sometimes blocked Medicaid expansion even with a supportive executive. In 2013, Democrat Terry McAuliffe had campaigned on expanding Medicaid, but after he was elected Virginia governor he was unable to persuade state lawmakers who demanded the program be reformed first.

Caroline Pearson, vice president of consulting firm Avalere Health, said expansion advocates will turn their attention to Utah, whose Republican governor hopes to take a plan to the GOP-controlled legislature, and Wyoming, where Gov. Matt Mead, also a Republican, has expressed interest in widening eligibility for Medicaid. Indiana is also negotiating with the Obama administration to expand Medicaid.

Pearson argued that Arkansas lawmakers are unlikely to unravel that state’s Medicaid expansion, which has helped more than 60,000 gain coverage. “It is incredibly difficult to take benefits away from state residents once they have been granted,” she said.

She said more Republican-led states could move ahead as the issue cools politically.

Sara Rosenbaum, professor of health policy at George Washington University, said it’s hard to tell how big an impact the election will have.

“One possibility is that now that a bitterly contested election is over, the governors may be open to discussion,” she said.

Missouri House GOP picks new leaders

Richardson
Richardson

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Republicans in the Missouri House have unanimously chosen Rep. Todd Richardson as the new majority leader and affirmed their support for Rep. John Diehl as the next House speaker.

Wednesday’s decisions came the day after Republicans won the greatest number of seats they’ve ever had in Missouri’s House.
Diehl’s role as speaker must be approved by the full chamber in January, but Republicans easily can vote the Town and Country lawmaker in without support from Democrats.

Richardson, of Poplar Bluff, needed only Republican approval to become majority leader.

Diehl says the party’s plans for 2015 include an economic development proposal to help small businesses. Additional support for the state’s agricultural industry and a measure to incorporate more workforce preparedness into education also could come up.

Missouri appeals gay marriage ruling

ST. LOUIS (AP) – Missouri’s top prosecutor has appealed a judge’s ruling overturning the state’s constitutional ban on gay marriage.

Attorney General Chris Koster said in a news release Wednesday that the issue needed to be resolved by the Missouri Supreme Court. The announcement came after St. Louis Circuit Judge Rex Burlison said in a written ruling that Missouri’s measure recognizing marriage as only between a man and woman violates the due process and equal protection rights of the U.S. Constitution. The decision mirrored ones handed down recently in numerous other states.

The city of St. Louis issued four marriage licenses to same-sex couples in June and then quit doing so, intentionally setting up a legal challenge to the state’s 2004 constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.

Nurse charged with sex crimes faces board action

Screen Shot 2014-11-05 at 2.07.30 PMKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas State Board of Nursing has approved disciplinary action against a fired nurse charged with sexually assaulting three patients.

Board attorney Alma Heckler said Wednesday that no details would be provided about the type of discipline until paperwork was filed in the case against 47-year-old Dennis Clark of Gardner. That was expected to happen in the next few days.

Clark was released from the Wyandotte County Jail on Tuesday night after posting bond. He faces three counts of aggravated sexual battery. Prosecutors are urging anyone with information about other possible victims to call police.

Clark didn’t have a listed number, and his attorney didn’t return a phone message.

Prosecutors say the alleged assaults occurred from December through May while Clark worked at Providence Medical Center in Kansas City, Kansas.

 

Obama: More work needed to improve veterans care

Screen Shot 2014-11-05 at 5.33.32 PMWASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is telling the Veterans Affairs Department it needs to keep working to improve services, health care and accountability for veterans.

Obama met on Wednesday with VA Secretary Robert McDonald and his deputy, Sloan Gibson. The White House says Obama urged them to continue strengthening VA management, cutting the backlog of disability claims, speeding up access to health care and ending homelessness for veterans.

Obama nominated McDonald to head the agency in June after his former VA secretary resigned amid a nationwide scandal over long wait times for veterans seeking medical care, and falsified records covering up the delays.

The White House says McDonald updated Obama on his plans to improve how the VA functions and what choices veterans have to access services.

 

Benedictine wants tobacco-free campus

BenedictineBenedictine College

Over the past two years, Benedictine College has been working on a plan to move the campus to a tobacco-free environment in the best interest of student and employee health. That plan was announced internally on Monday, Oct. 27. The new plan will institute three (3) designated smoking areas in a central location and on the north and south ends of campus on January 1, 2015. The college plans to move to a ban on the use of cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, and e-cigarettes on July 1, 2015. The usage ban will apply to all students, faculty, staff, visitors, contractors and vendors while on college grounds.

“College-age individuals are at a heightened risk of picking up or continuing a tobacco habit,” said Dr. Joseph Wurtz, dean of students at Benedictine College. “We believe this decision will encourage a healthier lifestyle in the future.”

The State of Kansas is smoke-free in all public spaces. Many organizations in Atchison are already smoke-free or tobacco-free, including Mount St. Scholastica Monastery, USD 409, USD 377, Maur Hill-Mount Academy, the Atchison YMCA, Atchison Hospital, and the Atchison Sports Complex. And St. Benedict’s Abbey is smoke-free in all public spaces, including the Abbey Lookout.

The Office of Student Life conducted research on the health risks of tobacco use and visited with USD 409, Maur Hill-Mount Academy and Atchison Hospital, all of which had already implemented tobacco-free policies on their grounds. Additional research was conducted into the state of tobacco-free policies at colleges in Kansas and around the country.

According to Janet Adrian, RN, BSN, the director of Benedictine’s Student Health Services, the facts are alarming. Here is what she found:
Tobacco causes nearly 500,000 Americans to die prematurely EVERY YEAR.
Approximately one person dies every six seconds due to tobacco, accounting for one in ten adult deaths.
Smokeless tobacco contains more nicotine than cigarettes and includes 28 other cancer-causing agents. Smokeless tobacco users have an increased risk of developing cancer of the oral cavity.
E-cigarettes are no better. They worsen air quality and contain chromium, a toxic element not present in traditional cigarettes, and nickel at levels four times higher than normal cigarettes.
And, there is NO risk-free level of secondhand smoke exposure; even brief exposure can be harmful to the health of others according to the Centers for Disease Control.

To help those currently addicted to these substances, Benedictine College will pay for Atchison Hospital’s smoking cessation courses for its employees. Benedictine’s Alcohol and Drug Task Force will pay for students who complete the Atchison Hospital’s course.

Judge overturns Missouri ban on gay marriage

marriage gayST. LOUIS (AP) – A judge in St. Louis has ruled that Missouri’s ban on gay marriage is unconstitutional.

St. Louis Circuit Judge Rex Burlison issued the ruling Wednesday. He heard arguments in the case on Sept. 29.

The city of St. Louis issued marriage licenses in June to four same-sex couples, setting up a court case over the state’s 2004 constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Assistant Attorney General Jeremiah Morgan argued that 71 percent of Missourians voted for the referendum defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

St. Louis City Counselor Winston Calvert countered that the existing law treats same-sex couples as “second-class citizens.”

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