"The climate crisis is also a children’s rights crisis: one in four children globally are already affected by the climate emergency and by 2050 virtually every child in every region will face more frequent heatwaves, according to a new Unicef report.For hundreds of millions of children, heatwaves will also last longer and be more extreme, increasing the threat of death, disease, hunger and forced migration.The findings come less than a fortnight before the Cop27 UN climate talks get underway in Egypt, and after a catastrophic year of extreme weather events – heatwaves, storms, floods, fires and droughts – have demonstrated the speed and magnitude of the climate breakdown facing the planet.According to Unicef, 559 million children currently endure at least four to five dangerous heatwaves annually, but the number will quadruple to 2 billion by 2050 – even if global heating is curtailed to 1.7 degrees, currently the best-case scenario on the table."
Providing accurate and timely information about what matters in Franklin, MA since 2007. * Working in collaboration with Franklin TV and Radio (wfpr.fm) since October 2019 *
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
The Guardian: "Virtually all children on Earth will face more frequent heatwaves by 2050"
Franklin TV and wfpr.fm schedule for Wednesday, Oct 26, 2022
- wfpr.fm or 102.9 on the FM dial = Wednesday
9:00 AM 12:00 Noon and 6:00 PM Franklin Matters Radio/FPS Voice – Steve Sherlock
Franklin and its local government, services and events (repeats Saturday at 9 AM)
- This slot features my conversation with State Senate candidate Rep Shawn Dooley https://www.franklinmatters.org/2022/10/conversation-with-state-representative.html
This hour features my most recent Making Sense of Climate, episode #16 features a return visit with Rep Jeff Roy https://www.franklinmatters.org/2022/10/now-that-climate-bill-was-signed-whats.html
- Franklin All Access TV - Our Public Access Channel (Comcast 8, Verizon 26) = WEDNESDAY
- Franklin Pride TV - Our Educational Channel (Comcast 96, Verizon 28) = WEDNESDAY
- Franklin Town Hall TV - Our Government Channel (Comcast 11, Verizon 29) = WEDNESDAY
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Tabulator/voting machine testing - October 26 at 9 AM
- See for yourself how voting is paper ballot based
- See how the machines have no connection to the internet
All of our tabulators have been tested for accuracy & have been confirmed as ready for voters (Town of Franklin photo) |
"The Great Pumpkin Weigh In" at the Farmers Market - Oct 28, 2022
MA Senate Enacts Bill to Limit the Use of Step Therapy
The Massachusetts State Senate on Monday enacted legislation to limit the use of step therapy, or 'fail first' protocols that too often direct patients to cheaper medications rather than those more suitable to treat their condition. The bill, An Act relative to step therapy and patient safety, gives health care providers more leverage in determining the most effective treatment options for patients, saving patients expensive and painful regimens on medications they know to be ineffective or harmful. This bill builds on similar legislation passed by the Senate in 2020.
"Today, the Senate has taken action to reinforce its belief that health care decisions should be made by patients and their providers," stated Senate President Karen E. Spilka (D-Ashland). "I'm proud that the Senate has consistently led on the issue of limiting the use of step therapy as part of a wider strategy to shift the balance of health care back in the direction of the patient. I want to thank Senators Cyr, Friedman, and Rodrigues for continuing to work to get this important legislation onto the Governor's desk."
"Providing access to groundbreaking treatments that help improve the quality of life for those fighting cancer, debilitating diseases and a wide range of other medical conditions is a vitally important step we need to take, which is why the Senate acted again today to pass this critically important legislation," said Senator Michael J. Rodrigues (D-Westport), Chair of the Senate Committee on Ways and Means. "I applaud Senate President Spilka for her continued leadership, Senator Cyr, Senator Friedman, our colleagues in the Senate and the coalition of patient advocates for their dedication, desire and hard work to help us enact legislation that provides necessary guardrails around the use of step therapy, ensuring the safety and wellbeing of patients in need."
"Today, we are taking action to ensure that patients with complicated illnesses receive the medications that their doctors know they need—not repeatedly taking medications that are ineffective," said state Senator Julian Cyr (D-Truro), Senate Chair of the Joint Committee on Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and Recovery, who sponsored the legislation. "Waiting for treatment to fail first before utilizing a preferred medication often leads to worsening symptoms that cause complications and needless suffering for patients; it is a shortsighted practice that puts patients at unnecessary risk. I am grateful to Senate President Karen Spilka for her leadership and vision on health equity. Thank you to Senator Friedman, Senator Rodrigues, and our colleagues in the House, Representative Roy, Representative Decker, and Representative Lawn, for their partnership in advancing this legislation to the Governor's desk."
"This bill is a major step forward in ensuring patients and doctors have access to the right medication at the right time," said Senator Cindy F. Friedman (D-Arlington), Senate Chair of the Joint Committee on Health Care Financing. "We are finally joining over half the states in the nation in reforming step therapy practices, putting the focus back on health care providers working with patients to offer the best treatment possible."
Step therapy serves as a cost-saving mechanism that can limit a patient's ability to access the medication that is most suitable for treating their condition. Insurers that utilize step therapy protocols require medical providers to prescribe lower-cost medications to patients first, and only grant approval for alternative medications when the cheaper options have failed to improve a patient's condition. In practice, this results in insurers effectively choosing medications for the patient, even in cases where their providers have recommended an alternative. When patients change insurers, they are often forced to start at the beginning of the step therapy protocol again, which results in wasteful health care expenditures, lost time for patients, and potentially devastating health care impacts on the patient.
Step therapy is not limited to specific diseases. It affects patients across the healthcare spectrum, with particularly dramatic impacts on the allergy and asthma, antipsychotic, arthritis, cancer, coronary artery, depression, diabetes, HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis, and Parkinson's patient communities.
To address this, the bill establishes guardrails to protect patients in circumstances in which following step therapy protocols are counterproductive or harmful. The bill prohibits insurance providers from establishing a step therapy protocol that requires an insured individual to utilize a medication that is not likely to be clinically effective for the prescribed purpose. When establishing clinical criteria for step therapy protocols, the bill would ensure that insurance providers determine effectiveness through clinical review and take into account the needs of typical patient populations with similar diagnoses.
The bill provides patients who are subjected to step therapy sequences with an accessible exemption request process whenever coverage is restricted. The legislation enumerates specific timelines for insurers to review requests and grant exceptions, and in cases where interruptions in the patient's medication schedule puts them at considerable risk, the turnaround time is faster. Under the bill, providers would accept or deny a request within 3 business days or within 24 hours if additional delay would significantly risk the insured individual's health or well-being. If an exception to step therapy is denied, the bill includes a process for the decision to be appealed. Upon granting exemptions, MassHealth and private insurers would be required to provide coverage for the drug recommended by the patient's provider.
To assist in future reforms, the bill would create a commission on step therapy protocols within MassHealth to study and assess the implementation of this bill and any future step therapy reforms.
If passed, Massachusetts would join 28 other states in curbing unfair step therapy practices. The bill, An Act relative to step therapy and patient safety, is now before the Governor for his consideration.
The legislative text can be found -> https://malegislature.gov/Bills/192/H4929
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MA Senate Enacts Bill to Limit the Use of Step Therapy |
Franklin Residents: 2022 Town Annual Report
The Town of Franklin has released the Annual Report for FY2022.
You may access it here: https://www.franklinma.gov/sites/g/files/vyhlif6896/f/uploads/2022_annual_report_0.pdf
FHS field hockey, volleyball and both girls and boys soccer teams post wins on Monday
"It’s getting crowded at the top of the Kelley-Rex division standings.
Despite falling behind after an epic opening set, Franklin volleyball rallied for three straight wins to secure a 3-1 victory over Attleboro (33-35, 25-16, 25-19, 25-19), moving the Panthers into a three-way tie in first place along with the Bombardiers and King Philip, who also won on Monday.
All three teams split their respective season series and sit at 13-2 in league play with one match left, none of which are against one another.
The battle between the Panthers and Bombardiers — a clash of two top 10 teams in Division 1 in the latest MIAA rankings, and a rematch of a superb five-set thriller from earlier this season — started with a first set that neither side wanted to lose, as seen by the score."
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Franklin freshman Makayla Kuykendall (20 kills) attacks the ball in the second set against Attleboro. (Ryan Lanigan/HockomockSports.com) |
Reminder: The 47th Annual Franklin Newcomers Craft Fair is scheduled Nov 5
The 47th Annual Franklin Newcomers & Friends Craft Fair is set for Sat. November 5, 2022 from 9 AM to 3 PM.
It will still be held at Tri-County Regional Vocational Technical High School, 147 Pond St., Franklin, after taking a break following two years of COVID.
This year, the craft fair will be held at the school’s gymnasium. Plenty of space for mingling, browsing, and shopping. Enter at the left of the building instead of the front doors. Lots of parking right in front of the entrance.
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47th Annual Franklin Newcomers Craft Fair |
Here’s a sample of what you can buy: home décor and housewares, jewelry, paper crafts, pets, wood crafts, glass crafts, handbags, health and wellness products, food, holiday, art and photography, bath and body, adult and children’s clothing and accessories.
The club is accepting donations for the Franklin Food Pantry. The entry fee is $3 for people 12 years of age and older.
Visit Franklin Newcomers & Friends Club (FNC) on Facebook for more Craft Fair details: @FranklinNewcomersCraftFair
For club information and activities, visit them on Facebook page: @FranklinNewcomersFriends Club.
Senior Center: Rainbow Café - Tuesday, October 25 at 2:30 PM
"It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences." ~ Audre Lorde
Rainbow Café - Tuesday, October 25 at 2:30 PM |
Senator Becca Rausch: Do you have a voting plan?
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Urban Air- "Urbie's Scare in the Air WeeK" - Oct 24 to Oct 28
Enjoy frights and delights as Halloween takes over Urban Air for this free Fang-astic, family-friendly event all week long!
Nightly Raffle & Prizes
We're giving away prizes ghoul-ore every night!
Wear your Costume
Show us your spooky spirit by wearing your costume and receive a $5 arcade card & receive an entry into the nightly raffle.
Ghoulish Games
Compete in creepy competitions and ghoulish games for prizes and haunted bragging rights.
Creepy Crafts & Coloring Station
What creepy creation will you come up with?
Bewitching Bingo
You'll be rewarded when you complete activities on the Bewitching Bingo card.
Twilight Trick or Treating
No Halloween Haunt would be complete without candy!
Join us for a fun and frightful week.
Have you been affected by a data breach? Read on
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Have you been affected by a data breach? Read on |
Franklin TV and wfpr.fm schedule for Tuesday, Oct 25, 2022
- wfpr.fm or 102.9 on the FM dial = Tuesday
2 hours. An insightful tour of Jazz Greats in a golden era
- Franklin All Access TV - Our Public Access Channel (Comcast 8, Verizon 26) = TUESDAY
- Franklin Pride TV - Our Educational Channel (Comcast 96, Verizon 28) = TUESDAY
- Franklin Town Hall TV - Our Government Channel (Comcast 11, Verizon 29) = TUESDAY
Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm)