Good morning! Here are your headlines:
: Taxmageddon Sparks Rising Anxiety
The halls of the U.S. Capitol are already teeming with people warning of disaster if lawmakers fail to defuse a New Year鈥檚 budget bomb scheduled to raise taxes for every American taxpayer and slash spending at the Pentagon and most other federal agencies. Last week, hospital executives came to complain about big scheduled cuts in Medicare payments. Next month, university presidents plan to raise the alarm about big scheduled cuts in federal research grants. And the chief executives of Lockheed Martin and other aerospace giants last Wednesday passed out digital countdown clocks ticking off the seconds until 鈥渙ver 1 million American jobs鈥 will be lost to big scheduled cuts in defense (Montgomery and Helderman, 5/15).
: Boehner Sees Battle Over Debt Limit As 鈥楢ction-Forcing Event鈥
Republicans alarmed by the depth of cuts on tap for the Pentagon are scrambling to replace them, but Democrats say they will only agree to undo the defense cuts in exchange for higher taxes on the wealthy. Boehner鈥檚 remarks suggest that Republicans believe they have leverage, too, and that they are willing to resist a needed increase in the debt limit unless Democrats agree to far-reaching changes to federal health programs such as Medicare and Medicaid (Montgomery, 5/15).
For more headlines 鈥
: Romney Medicare Plan Draws A Stark Contrast
President Obama and Mitt Romney agree on one thing about Medicare: the differences between them are huge. Each man says his opponent鈥檚 policies would end Medicare as it now exists, undermining the rock-solid guarantee of health care for older Americans (Pear, 5/15).
: Gay Marriage Is One Thing, Benefits Another
President Barack Obama鈥檚 endorsement of same-sex marriage may have given the marriage equality movement a big morale boost. But it won鈥檛, on its own, give gay couples equality when it comes to health insurance. The Defense of Marriage Act, which forbids the federal government from recognizing any marriage not between a man and a woman, has hog-tied federal agencies when it comes to liberalizing gay Americans鈥 access to federal government benefits, from collecting their spouse鈥檚 Social Security benefits to marriage-related tax breaks (Norman, 5/14).
: Clock Ticking As Alzheimer鈥檚 Strategy Sets 2025 Goal For Better Ways To Treat, Stall, Disease
The clock is ticking: The first National Alzheimer鈥檚 Plan sets a deadline of 2025 to finally find effective ways to treat, or at least stall, the mind-destroying disease. The Obama administration finalizes the landmark national strategy on Tuesday, laying out numerous steps the government and private partners can take over the coming years to fight what is poised to become a defining disease of the rapidly aging population (5/15).
: Bernie Sanders Floats Plan To Make HIV Drugs Less Costly
Why do American patients pay tens of thousands of dollars each year for HIV drugs that cost just hundreds in Africa? Drugmakers wave their patent rights in developing countries as part of the President鈥檚 Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief. But the higher cost of brand-name drugs in the United States makes it difficult for many HIV patients to stay on drug regimens that can cost as much as $30,000 a year (Feder, 5/14).
: Another Disability Judge Placed On Leave
The judges have wide discretion in how to decide cases, with Mr. Krafsur awarding benefits in virtually every case that crosses his desk. In the fiscal year that began Oct. 1, Mr. Krafsur awarded benefits in 338 of the 339 decisions he has reached. 鈥 The Social Security Disability Insurance program is one of the government鈥檚 most rapidly growing entitlement programs, and it is projected to pay more than $130 billion in benefits to close to 11 million people in 2012. Those collecting benefits receive monthly payments from the government, and they also qualify for early Medicare benefits (Paletta, 5/14).
: Should Parents Be Able To Sue For 鈥榃rongful Birth鈥?
Several states, including Kansas and New Jersey, are debating so-called 鈥渨rongful birth鈥 laws that would prevent parents from suing a doctor who fails to warn them about fetal problems. Abortion rights activists say the laws give doctors the right to withhold information so women don鈥檛 have abortions (Lohr, 5/15).
: Sick From Fracking? Doctors, Patients Seek Answers
The natural gas industry says there鈥檚 no evidence the drilling is causing health problems. Public health experts say the only way anyone鈥檚 going to really know whether the drilling is making people sick or not is to do some big studies (Stein, 5/15).
: Gray, Catania Face Off Over Health Funding
Mayor Vincent C. Gray is heading for a final showdown Tuesday with D.C. Council member David A. Catania over city funding for a health insurance program that pays for hospital care for thousands of undocumented immigrants (Craig, 5/14).
: California Gov. Jerry Brown Urges Austere Cuts, Tax Hikes To Tackle Reemerging Deficit
Brown said California鈥檚 sputtering economic recovery is putting a heavier-than-expected drag on state tax revenue. The state has been blocked from making cuts to Medi-Cal and In-Home Supportive Services in court and by federal requirements. The revised budget deficit is $6.5 billion more than the $9.2 billion gap Brown anticipated in January (5/15).
: RI Governor Signs Order To Recognize Same-Sex Marriages Performed Out Of State
Rhode Island鈥檚 governor on Monday declared that the state will recognize same-sex marriages performed elsewhere, giving gay couples the same rights as heterosexual ones when it comes to health insurance and a slew of other benefits (5/14).
: Espada Guilty Of Stealing Clinic鈥檚 Funds
Former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr., the flamboyant Bronx politician who claimed one of New York鈥檚 most powerful offices only to quickly fall from power, was convicted Monday on federal charges of theft from a health clinic he founded (El-Ghobashy, 5/14).