Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Governor Signs Healthcare Bills


This week Governor Jerry Brown signed various health care bills into law ahead of a midnight Sunday deadline. The following are a just few of the 140 that Brown signed.  


  • Ø  One of the bills was designed to protect teenagers from skin cancer by making it illegal for teenagers younger than 18 to use tanning beds. California will be the first state to impose such a law. Currently, using tanning beds is illegal in California for those 14 and under, but teens ages 15-17 can tan with their parents’ permission. Public Health officials praised this decision quoting the statistic released by The Indoor Tanning Association that states 5% to10% of its customers are younger than 18. The bill, which goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2012, was also supported by the American Cancer Society.


  • Ø  A second law is designed to protect teenagers from sexually transmitted diseases, allowing children as young as 12 to be vaccinated against the human papillomavirus (HPV), without the consent of their parents. HPV is the leading the cause of cervical cancer. This topic has been hotly debated in the recent Republican presidential race. Public Health officials applaud the Governor for this decision claiming that it will slow the spread of disease among minors. Conservative politicians, pro-family organizations, and religious leaders are concerned about the loss of parents' rights to make decisions about their children's health. Currently, in California, minors are allowed access to confidential care for contraception, pregnancy, mental health care and drug abuse treatments.


  • Ø  
Brown vetoed one health care bill which would have required extra warnings for the 40 
percent of women over 40 who have breast tissue dense enough to mask or mimic cancers on mammograms. Brown reportedly debated whether the warning was “a path to greater knowledge or unnecessary anxiety.”


  • Ø  Another bill signed by the Governor was the safe patient handling law This bill would require an employer to maintain a safe patient handling policy for patient care units, and to provide trained lift teams or staff trained in safe lifting techniques in each general acute care hospital.  The safe patient handling policy would require the replacement of manual lifting and transferring of patients with powered patient transfer devices, lifting devices, or lift teams.  




  • Ø  The governor also approved measures that required health insurers to provide coverage for autism and vetoed bills to legalize industrial hemp and to ban the practice of shackling pregnant inmates.



What are your thoughts on these issues???

No comments:

Post a Comment