Creighton University President Timothy R. Lannon, S.J.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) Creighton University will soon begin offering health benefits to legally married same-sex spouses of its employees despite the objections of the local Catholic archbishop.
Creighton President Rev. Timothy Lannon announced the change Monday. He said 21 of the 28 Jesuit universities already offer similar benefits.
The Omaha World-Herald first reported the policy change Monday morning.
Lannon says Creighton continues to support the Catholic Church’s teaching about marriage.
But Lannon says the university is taking this step to meet the needs of its employees and remain competitive with other universities that already offer similar benefits.
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A former city technology director has admitted purchasing more than $100,000 in electronic devices with city money and either giving them away or selling them on eBay.
U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom says 44-year-old Andrew Davey of Overland Park pleaded guilty Monday to wire fraud. He is expected to be sentenced to a year and a day in prison.
Davey admitted that when he was director of technology for the city of Lenexa he purchased the devices with city funds. City officials discovered the purchases after he left to take another job.
Grissom says he gave iPads to members of his church and gave his mom a 50-inch television and iPad that he told her were obsolete and no longer needed by the city.
KANSAS CITY- A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 7 a.m. on Monday in Wyandotte County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Saturn passenger car driven by Darcy J. Ruis, 30, was northbound on Interstate 635 just north of State Street in Kansas. The driver lost control of the vehicle. It spun to the left and struck the center concrete wall.
Ruis was transported to KU Medical Center.
The KHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.
Staff at the Douglas County Dental Clinic in Lawrence say they are working to let more adults in KanCare know that their insurance now covers basic dental cleanings. About 6 percent of eligible adults took advantage of new dental coverage offered under KanCare in the first year of the managed care Medicaid program.-photo by Andy Marso
TOPEKA — About 6 percent of eligible adults took advantage of new dental coverage offered under KanCare in the first year of the managed care Medicaid program.
The switch to managed care Medicaid administered by three private companies extended basic dental cleanings to more than 130,000 adults age 19 to 64
According to Kansas Department of Health and Environment statistics, about 7,600 adults had a cleaning paid for by one of the managed care companies in 2013.
Representatives of the managed care companies and dental providers offered several possible reasons why the rate of use of the cleanings, which dentists recommend twice a year, was not higher.
Ray Munoz, a coordinator at Douglas County Dental Clinic, said adults on KanCare might not know they now have insurance coverage for the cleanings.
“We do have to tell a lot of people that their coverage will cover certain things,” said Munoz, whose clinic serves low-income and uninsured residents of Douglas County. “It doesn’t seem like they’re aware of that before we tell them.”
The three managed care companies responsible for KanCare administration are Amerigroup, Sunflower State Health Plan (a division of Centene) and United HealthCare.
Denise Malecki, a spokeswoman for Amerigroup, also said she thought lack of awareness of the new coverage was a factor. The company has better rates of use for its children’s dental coverage, she said, but “adult dental services are a new KanCare benefit, so many adult recipients, who have never had access before, may not know how to use the services.”
As new benefits go, she said, the rate of adult dental use so far has been “better than expected,” citing the city of Iola as a region where use has been particularly high.
She said her company is working to make more adults aware of the dental benefits, in both written materials like member handbooks and one-on-one interactions.
“Our case managers and service coordinators conduct proactive outreach to encourage use,” Malecki said. “Also, our call center representatives are trained to provide information about available services and access when members call with questions.”
Need for higher-level care
A sign at the Douglas County Dental Clinic in Lawrence outlines benefits to patients.-photo by Andy Marso
Kendra Davis, who also works at the Douglas County Dental Clinic, said some KanCare clients who are aware of the new coverage can’t take advantage of it.
Davis said customers who have been without regular checkups for extended periods of time often need higher-level dental care like periodontal maintenance, scaling or debridement – services that are not covered – before they can receive a basic cleaning.
Consequently, the clinic can’t order the covered services until a customer pays out of pocket to get caught up on years of higher-level dental care.
Malecki confirmed that some Amerigroup clients go to clinics for their cleaning only to “leave knowing that they need advance dental work and are unsure if they can afford it.”
“We want members to at least start with accessing basic screenings, so they know where they stand with their oral health and how it can impact their physical health,” Malecki said. “From there, we may be able to assist on a case-by-case basis so they can access advance services, especially when special circumstances exist or when there is medical necessity to avoid more serious health setbacks.”
Malecki provided three examples. In two cases Amerigroup helped clients find referrals so they could get their advanced dental work done at lower out-of-pocket costs. A third client received coverage for her fillings because she was undergoing chemotherapy that made it imperative that her teeth not be allowed to decay to the point of extraction.
“Extractions are a covered benefit, but fillings are not,” Malecki said via email. “However, in this situation, the chemo and radiation had made the member’s bones so brittle that extracting her teeth would cause her jawbone to crumble, resulting in the need for oral surgery and wires to hold her jaw together. Because of the medical necessity, we were able to help this member get special approvals to cover the cost of fillings, and the result was that more costly and painful oral surgery and services were avoided.”
Kevin Robertson, executive director of the Kansas Dental Association, said his organization would like to see Medicaid cover more services in KanCare. But he said the group’s members are pleased with the addition of basic adult dental coverage and encourage those who received it to take advantage.
Not doing so, he said, will end up costing more in the long run.
“If people take care of their teeth, brush regularly and seek preventative treatment from a dentist, dental services don’t have to cost that much,” Robertson said. “When things get out of control, now suddenly they’ve got cavities that linger and start having other problems.”
Robertson said he’s aware of “some different pockets” of the state where it’s difficult to recruit dentists and other areas where dentists did not join the managed care networks.
A September network report for the three managed care companies stated that 96.6 percent or more of KanCare clients in each of the companies had access to a dental provider. But the dental coverage map attached to the report shows many of the counties in western Kansas have only one provider who accepts Medicaid or none at all.
Amerigroup’s dental network is most robust, with 425 providers at 305 locations. Sunflower State Health Plan is close behind with 413 providers at 300 locations, and United HealthCare has 391 providers at 287 locations.
Cleaning clinics
Miranda Steele, a spokeswoman for Sunflower State Health Plan, said her company is now using Centene’s Dental Health and Wellness dental benefits manager, which she said will “help reduce the administrative burden for providers and provide the highest quality dental services for our members by being able to more closely coordinate all medical and dental care.”
“DHW began operations with Sunflower on August 1, and we’re looking at interventions such as hosting a series of dental cleaning clinics for adults and coordinating with medical outreach programs to improve access for our adult population,” Steele said.
Steele said Sunflower also had started offering sedation dentistry to adult clients with intellectual and developmental disabilities at some community health providers, like GraceMed in Wichita.
More covered cleanings could give a boost to low-income clinics like GraceMed, Marian Clinic in Topeka and the Douglas County Dental Clinic. Munoz said so far the clinic hasn’t seen a difference with the added benefit.
“As far as the (KanCare) switch helping the bottom line, I would say it has a small amount,” he said. “Everything has been pretty much the same. It hasn’t really been very noticeable.”
Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon says dozens of Army soldiers and their two-star general are being isolated at their base in Vicenza, Italy, as they return after serving in West Africa to help with the Ebola fight.
Maj. Gen. Darryl A. Williams, the commander who led the U.S. response in Liberia, returned to Italy with 11 staff. They will be restricted in an isolated location and will not be allowed to go to their homes for 21 days. Several dozen more are returning in the coming days and will also be isolated.
Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, says Army leaders made the decision. So far, it only affects soldiers. He says no exposure incident triggered the decision, but they will be checked regularly for any Ebola symptoms.
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — A central Missouri prosecutor is facing multiple felony charges after a weekend car crash at a popular downtown Columbia restaurant left four people injured.
The Columbia Daily Tribune reported that Shayne Healea, 36, of the Moniteau County town of California faces a charge of leaving an accident scene and four counts of second-degree assault after allegedly backing his truck into Addison’s restaurant on Saturday night. Helea was released from the Boone County jail Sunday night after posting a total of $22,500 in bonds.
Columbia police said Healea backed his Ford F-150 pickup truck, which had the tailgate down, into a part of the building made of glass blocks before moving his truck around the corner. Four restaurant customers were injured by flying debris.
In a written statement, the Moniteau prosecutor said he wasn’t initially aware of the crash but immediately returned to the restaurant and identified himself to police as the driver when alerted.
“Apparently, while turning around in a small parking lot, my lowered tailgate contacted a glass block window without my knowledge,” he said. “As I was driving less than a block away from this parking lot, an individual advised me of the accident and I immediately returned. I identified myself to police as the driver. Police took me into custody and their investigation continues.”
Helea, a Republican, was elected Moniteau County prosecuting attorney in November 2010, two months after receiving his law license and five months after graduating from the University of Missouri law school in Columbia. He earned 63 percent of the votes cast to defeat incumbent Democrat John T. Kay, who had served as county prosecutor for nearly three decades.
Healea, a former police officer, is seeking a second four-year term and is unopposed in the Nov. 4 general election.
The incident took place during homecoming weekend at the nearby Missouri campus.
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Attorneys for a condemned Missouri man and several former judges have filed an appeal asking the U.S. Supreme Court to halt the execution, saying a mistake by his former attorneys denied him his right to a federal court appeal.
Mark Christeson is scheduled to die at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday for the killing a southern Missouri woman and her two children in 1998. He would be the ninth person put to death in Missouri this year.
Christeson’s attorneys and 15 former judges filed a brief Friday with the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals claiming Christeson was denied federal court review because his court-appointed attorneys missed a deadline by four months in 2005.
The 8th Circuit refused the stay request, so the attorneys filed an appeal Monday with the Supreme Court.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of Americans signing contracts to buy homes ticked up slightly in September, as it remained difficult to qualify for mortgage financing.
The National Association of Realtors says its seasonally adjusted pending home sales index rose 0.3 percent over the past month to 105. The index remains half a percentage point below its 2013 average, although 1 percent higher than a year ago.
Tight credit and price increases through the middle of 2013 have limited buying activity. About 15 percent of the real estate agents surveyed for the index say they couldn’t close a deal because the buyer was unable to obtain a mortgage.
Pending sales are a barometer of future purchases. A one- to two-month lag usually exists between a contract and a completed sale.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas will not be able to let high school students skip state mathematics and English tests so they can focus on college entrance exams and career-oriented tests.
The U.S. Education Department says Kansas’ proposal would conflict with federal testing requirements that ensure accountability in schools.
Interim Kansas Education Commissioner Brad Neuenswander says the state wanted to let schools choose whether to drop state tests so student could concentrate on such tests as the ACT and job skills.
Kansas students are to take state math and English tests at least once in high school but Neuenswander says some students were testing more than once in high school.
The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the state now plans to restrict the math and English tests to the 10th grade.
FAYETTE, Mo. (AP) — Central Methodist University has received the largest donation in the 160-year history of the school in Fayette.
School officials announced the$3.6 million gift from Jay and Kelly Jacobs of Laguna Niguel, California, during homecoming events on Saturday.
The gift will help the school meet a $20 million fundraising effort announced in August.
The Columbia Daily Tribune reports Jacobs served on the school’s board of trustees for eight years and his sister, Janet, is a current trustee. He did not graduate from the school.
At Jacobs’s request, the school will name a new Center for Allied Health for the late James and Helen Thogmorton. James
The new Thogmorton Center for Allied Health
Thogmorton was Dean of Men when the school was a men’s college and later was dean of students and dean of alumni affairs.