Friday, August 5, 2011
Public health champion bravely fights cancer, inspires many
Dr. Rice Leach, who has championed public health in Kentucky for decades, is inspiring many by the upbeat way he is battling cancer. "He has talked about it at Lexington-Fayette County Board of Health meetings and at Rotary Club meetings. His hat of choice, a gift his son John bought at Cracker Barrel, reads 'I'm having a no hair day,'" the Lexington Herald-Leader's Mary Meehan reports.Leach was Kentucky's commissioner for public health from 1992 to 2004. He is now commissioner of Fayette County's health department, which has undergone a tumultuous transition after the very public replacement of Dr. Melinda Rowe. "I've really admired his dedication to the job," Geoff Reed, a senior adviser to Mayor Jim Gray, told Meehan. "He's just that kind of person who shows real passion in everything he does."
Leach, 71, has lymphoma, a cancer of the lymph nodes for which he is being treated with several rounds of chemotherapy and radiation. Meehan reports how Leach drew inspiration from the example set by his daughter, Mary Leach Whitcomb, who bravely fought breast cancer until her death in 2007. "If that 37-year-old can handle that big mess, you better believe I can handle this," he said. Meehan's piece provides a good example of how to write sensitively and informatively about a difficult subject. (Read more)
Health secretary tells legislators Medicaid budget has been balanced by moving all beneficiaries to managed care
The switch to managed care organizations has fixed Kentucky's Medicaid shortfall, with Janie Miller, secretary of health and family services, calling the budget "balanced." She said the projected savings from moving to managed care will take care of the $97 million funding gap caused by a lack of anticipated federal funding.The Courier-Journal's Deborah Yetter notes that the shortfall was the most contentious issue for the legislature this year, with Gov. Steve Beshear wanting to plug the hole by moving to managed care and Senate Republicans wanting to make across-the-board budget cuts. After a special session, Beshear got his way and 560,000 Medicaid members are slated to move into managed-care organizations starting Oct. 1. Those in the Louisville region have been in one, Passport, for several years. Passport has a one-year contract with the state; Coventry Health Care Inc., Centene Corp. and WellCare Health Plans Inc. have three-year contracts. "They have every incentive to be successful," Miller said. "They are making a huge investment in this state."
Asked by skeptical legislators how the savings can be assured, Miller said they are guaranteed by the contracts. "To achieve savings, Medicaid will pay each company a fixed rate of about $345 per month per person. In turn, the company will be responsible for all costs of the person's health care," Yetter reports. "It's got a lot of potential," said state Rep. Jimmie Lee, D-Elizabethtown. "I have faith that if it's managed right, it could work." (Read more)
Its Kendra and Her baby
After weighing in on the Hef-Crystal drama, Kendra Wilkinson focuses on her adorable 19-month-old son, Hank IV, during a mommy-and-me playdate in L.A. on Wednesday
Cute Rihanna
Still in her native Barbados, Rihanna makes for a sexy beachcomber Thursday in coordinated crochet and back-to-brown curls.
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