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health take - a tip sheet on Minnesota's health care economy

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STATEFAIR: From UCare via KARE-TV, VERBATIM: “When you visit the fair be sure to check out HealthFair 11. Along with health education... you'll find free and low-cost screenings.” WATCH: https://kare11.tv/2U76RcJ (SPONSORED: UCare)
 
RESEARCH: From Jordan Wiggins via Patch, VERBATIM: “On August 28 and 29, the Minnesota State Fair Health Fair will host the National Institutes of Health’s All of Us Journey, a traveling, hands-on exhibit to raise awareness about the All of Us Research Program. All of Us aims to speed up health research and medical breakthroughs. To do so, All of Us is asking 1 million volunteers to share different types of health and lifestyle information – information like where you live, what you do, and your family health history.” READ: http://bit.ly/3459qkb
 
 
RX: “Having trouble affording your insulin or other medicines? Our Medicine Assistance Tool connects patients with over 900 resources that could help. Learn more at: www.MAT.org.  (SPONSORED: PhRMA)
 
SIGNUP:  Now signing up for Fluence tip sheets is easy and can be found at one site, www.fluence-newsletters.com - VISIThttp://bit.ly/2019FluenceTipSheets
 
HMO: The Star Tribune’s Christopher Snowbeck reports on plans by Philadelphia-based for-profit insurer AmeriHealth Caritas to apply for a license to operate as an HMO in Minnesota, a move that, if approved, would make it the second for-profit HMO in the state after UnitedHealth. READ: http://strib.mn/347Ez6D
 
2020ELECTION: From Megan Thielking via Stat, VERBATIM: “To bring down the rising suicide rate in the U.S., Cory Booker wants to appoint a federal coordinator tasked solely with suicide prevention. Amy Klobuchar wants to fund more local programs designed to prevent suicides among farmers and in tribal communities. Pete Buttigieg wants to add more mental health providers to the Department of Veterans Affairs and limit access to guns and other lethal means for people at high risk of suicide. The ideas came in response to a survey sent to 2020 presidential candidates by a new nonpartisan group called Mental Health For US. The group — which includes the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, and the Kennedy Forum — launched in June with a goal of getting 2020 presidential and congressional candidates to go on the record about their mental health policy ideas.” READ: http://bit.ly/342Hm0x
 
SURVEY: From Jeff Lagasse via Healthcare Finance, VERBATIM: “With some Democratic presidential candidates advocating for a Medicare-For-All system, which would essentially create a version of single-payer healthcare in the U.S., Eligibility.com recently conducted a survey to determine how much the general public actually knows about Medicare. The short answer: Not a whole lot. While the sample size was small -- only about 500 people -- the results indicate that many healthcare consumers are lacking even basic knowledge about the existing federal program, which could raise concerns among politicians who are looking to make single-payer healthcare a cornerstone campaign issue. Of those surveyed, 50 percent believe that Medicare is free. Which, of course, it isn't . . . Another misconception revealed by the survey is that Medicare is part of the Affordable Care Act.” READ: http://bit.ly/2U8weL6
 
 
HANDSFREE: The hands-free cell phone driving law is now in effect. “Lives will be saved, families kept whole and preventable tragedies will not happen,” said Mike Hanson, Office of Traffic Safety director. The "one touch" cell phone law has no grace period, and fines can be more than $120 for a first offense and more than $300 after that (includes fine and courts costs). Visit HandsFreeMN.org for more info  DEEPER: http://strib.mn/33eCR2B (SPONSORED: Minnesota Department of Public Safety)
 
VAPING: From Sydney Lupkin and Anna Maria Barry-Jester via Kaiser Health News, VERBATIM: “As patients in hospitals across the country combat a mysterious illness linked to e-cigarettes, federal and state investigators are frantically trying to trace the outbreaks to specific vaping products that, until recently, were virtually unregulated.
As of Aug. 22, 193 potential vaping-related illnesses in 22 states had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . . . Lung doctors said they had seen warning signs for years that vaping could be hazardous, as they treated patients. Medically it seemed problematic, since it often involved inhaling chemicals not normally inhaled into the lungs. Despite that, assessing the safety of a new product storming the market fell between regulatory cracks, leaving doctors unsure where to register concerns before the outbreak . . . ‘It makes it really tough because we don’t know what we’re looking for,’ said Dr. Ruth Lynfield, the state epidemiologist for Minnesota, where several patients were admitted to the intensive care unit as a result of the illness. She added that if it turns out that the products in question were sold by unregistered retailers and manufacturers ‘on the street,’ outbreak sleuths will have a harder time figuring out exactly what is in them.” READ: http://bit.ly/2UaXtor
 
APARTMENTS: From Martin Moylan via Minnesota Public Radio, VERBATIM: “For nonsmokers like Nelson, it’s easy to find apartments where you shouldn’t catch a whiff of tobacco. Thousands of apartment buildings in Minnesota have declared themselves smoke-free. West Side Flats is owned by Sherman Associates, which has 5,000 apartment units in the Twin Cities. Senior vice president Chris Sherman said the company snuffed out smoking in its buildings about eight years ago. ‘You cannot smoke within our units. You cannot smoke within our common areas. You cannot smoke within a certain number of feet of the building,’ he said. Sherman says going smoke-free made sense not just from a health perspective but a business standpoint, too. He said renters were demanding smoke-free apartments.” READ: http://bit.ly/2U5J6l6
 
POLL: From Arthur Allen via Politico, VERBATIM: “One in four Americans report that their data has been hacked. And among those who have searched online for health information or products, about the same percentage are very concerned that it might be used to frustrate their efforts to get medical care, a job or health insurance, according to a new POLITICO/Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health poll. The poll also showed increasing concern about the safety of e-cigarettes, with about twice as many respondents rating marijuana safer than vaping.” READ: https://politi.co/2U8yLoA
 
LIFEGUARDS: Minnesota Public Radio’s Dan Kraker reports on a call to improve safety for swimmers at Duluth’s Park Point after a father and daughter drowned there two years ago. VERBATIM: “The drownings focused a new sense of urgency in Duluth on long-standing efforts to educate the public about the dangers of rip currents in Lake Superior, and improve public safety. But some argue that more needs to be done to make swimming on the beach safer. ‘There sorely needs to be enhancements for lifeguard services on this point,’ said Dennis Hoelscher, a retired police officer. ‘It just defies common sense and any basic rule of public safety.’ Lifeguards are on duty from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. every summer day at the city-owned beach house near the end of the point. But lifeguards don't work on ‘red flag’ days, when the Duluth Fire Department puts up red flags on Park Point to let swimmers know there's a high risk of rip currents, strong flows of water that move quickly and directly away from the shore . . . According to the Duluth YMCA, which runs the lifeguard program on Park Point, there's a good reason why lifeguards are pulled off the beach on days when the red flags fly. ‘There’s some pretty strong research that says if a lifeguard is there, people think that it’s safe,’ explained Cheryl Podtburg, aquatics safety coordinator for the Y.” LISTEN: http://bit.ly/342DBIt
 
GREATERMN: From Farmfest, the second Fluence Forum includes 9 commissioners from multiple state agencies discussing the intersection between agriculture and issues related to Greater Minnesota.  The discussion will be broadcast at 6PM on Wednesday on WCCO Radio. This Fluence Forum is sponsored by Minnesota’s Corn Growers. LISTEN: http://bit.ly/FluenceForum2 (SPONSOREDMN Corn Growers)
 
OPIOIDS: From Jackie Fortier and Brian Mann via Kaiser Health News, VERBATIM: “An Oklahoma judge has ruled that drugmaker Johnson & Johnson helped ignite the state’s opioid crisis by deceptively marketing painkillers and must pay $572 million to the state. Oklahoma sought $17 billion, blaming Johnson & Johnson’s marketing practices for fueling the crisis that has claimed the lives of 6,000 people in the state. It’s the first ruling to hold a pharmaceutical company responsible for one of the worst drug epidemics in American history . . . Johnson & Johnson marketed the opioid painkillers Duragesic and Nucynta. Lawyers for the company say that its products were highly regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, among other agencies, and that the state did not provide any evidence showing that the company’s sales practices helped fuel the crisis.” READ: http://bit.ly/342FAfT
 
RECORDS: From Andrew Joseph via Stat, VERBATIM: “After a 3 1/2 year legal battle, secret records about Purdue Pharma’s marketing of its potent opioid painkiller OxyContin will finally be made public. The Kentucky Supreme Court denied a request from Purdue to review lower courts’ decisions to release the documents, according to a one-page order received Monday by the lawyers in the case. The decision is a major victory for STAT, which first filed a motion to unseal the records in March 2016. Purdue has fought to keep the documents out of view, but the Supreme Court’s refusal is final and can’t be appealed. Now, the public stands to get a glimpse of new information about how Purdue promoted OxyContin and what executives knew about the risk of addiction that came with the drug.” READ: http://bit.ly/34d9hv4
 
IMMIGRANTS: From Michael Levenson via Boston Globe, VERBATIM: “Severely ill immigrants, including children with cancer, cystic fibrosis, and other grave conditions, are facing deportation under a change in Trump administration policy that immigration advocates are calling cruel and inhumane. The policy change will affect at least a dozen children receiving treatment at Boston hospitals and potentially thousands of additional immigrants across the country, according to lawyers and advocates. All had been granted ‘medical deferred action,’ a special status that allows immigrants to remain in the country legally, receive Medicaid, and work while they receive treatment for dire health conditions. Beginning last week, lawyers for some of these immigrants received boilerplate letters from Citizenship and Immigration Services informing them the agency’s field offices will no longer consider applications for renewal under the program. Exceptions will be made only for military families. The letters told families that if they did not leave the United States in 33 days, they would become undocumented and face deportation proceedings.” READ: http://bit.ly/340KUR2
 
GUNS: From Rachel Frazin via The Hill, VERBATIM: “The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) is calling on Congress to enact a series of proposals the group said would reduce gun violence. AFT President Randi Weingarten promoted a ban on assault weapons, improved background checks and so-called red flag gun legislation in a letter to Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.), who lead the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.” READ: http://bit.ly/2U86RsK
 
MAYO: From Jay Furst via Mayo Clinic News Network, VERBATIM: “Mayo Clinic locations in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota have been recognized as Top Performers in the 2019 Healthcare Equality Index. The index rates 680 health care facilities nationally on quality and inclusive health care. The Human Rights Campaign Foundation produces the Healthcare Equality Index, which scores health care facilities on policies and practices dedicated to the equitable treatment and inclusion of LGBTQ patients, visitors and staff.” READ: https://mayocl.in/2U5zzdO
 
MORE: Via Human Rights Campaign, the full report which highlights the Minneapolis VA and St. Cloud Hospital as Healthcare Equality Leaders. READ: http://bit.ly/3432VhH
 
CHILDRENSMN: From Sheila Mulrooney Eldred via MplsStPaul, VERBATIM: “In 2018, they brought the idea of a hospital program focused on transgender health to the leadership. The result is the Gender Health program, a pioneering health initiative that opened in April.  In its first two months, the program drew 50 new patients, ranging in age from 3 to 18. The program had anticipated serving 90 kids—over the course of an entire year. The phone line has been averaging 70–80 calls per month.” READ: http://bit.ly/2UaJMWl
 
LEADERSHIP:  From Children’s Minnesota via PRNewswire, VERBATIM: Children’s Minnesota today announced two appointments to its executive leadership team. Brenda McCormick was appointed chief financial officer and senior vice president of finance. Jennifer Soderholm was appointed chief development officer and president of the Children's Minnesota Foundation.” READ: https://prn.to/343dz7Y
 
HOPEPROJECT: From Marie T. Johnson via DL-Online, VERBATIM: “An expansive new effort is underway to tackle some of the Detroit Lakes area’s toughest issues and strengthen the social fabric of the community. Under the apt name The HOPE Project, a group of local nonprofit agencies, faith and service organizations, volunteers, and health care, school and government officials are working together to try and bring a ray of hope into the lives of people struggling with substance abuse, childhood trauma and mental well-being. Formed only a few months ago as a subcommittee of Becker County Energize, The HOPE Project has a targeted goal of ‘Improving resiliency and mental well-being and reducing the impact of substance use disorder in Becker County.’” READ: http://bit.ly/2UdgRRQ
 
If you like podcasts, listen to Beers with Blois...http://bit.ly/BWBLISTEN

CRAIG: On the next Beers with Blois, Rep. Angie Craig drinks a local IPA with Blois and discusses what constituents are concerned about as she represents a district that President Donald Trump won in 2016, but Craig won in 2018.  Talking about her plans for 2020, Craig shares how she’s approached meeting with lobbyists, what farmers have been telling her, and her work with Rep. Pete Stauber.  LISTENhttp://bit.ly/beerswblois14
 
QUALLS: In the latest Beers with BloisRepublican challenger in Minnesota's Third Congressional District Kendall Qualls sits down at the Rock Elm Tavern in Plymouth for a cold one. Qualls discusses why he decided to run for Congress, issues he thinks he can make a difference on and where he thinks Rep. Dean Phillips hasn't delivered.  LISTENhttp://bit.ly/BeerswBlois13 (Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union) 
 
CARTER:  At the Allianz Field Beer Hall, Mayor Melvin Carter shares his priorities for St. Paul neighborhoods and residents.  From major redevelopment opportunities on the riverfront, the Ford Plant and in Midway to what he’s learned during ride-alongs with police in the city. LISTENhttp://bit.ly/2Ytdprr
 
HAGEDORN: From Beers with Blois over some different Schell’s brewed beers at Crooked Pint in Fairbault, Rep. Jim Hagedorn joins Blois to discuss how Chinese trade has impacted the first district, his support of President Donald Trump, and what businesses and the agriculture community is concerned about as he travels the first district. LISTENhttp://bit.ly/BeerswBlois11  (Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union) 
 
DULUTH: In episode #10 of Beers with Blois, from Hoops Brewing in Canal Park, Duluth Mayor Emily Larson discusses how Duluth residents voted for higher taxes for infrastructure with over 70 percent of the vote, what the city is doing to address making housing more accessible, and why she’s taking the lead on pushing the EPA to study hydrogen fluoride after a refinery explosion in Superior, WI. LISTENhttp://bit.ly/BeerswBlois10  (Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union)
 
BENSON:  In episode #9 of Beers with Blois, from Invectis Brewery in Blaine, Beers with Blois catches up with State Sen. Michelle Benson on potential ways to split-up DHS and forthcoming prescription drug reform legislation.  She shares the perspective on how physicians in the Senate influence legislation and what her plan is for re-election in 2020. LISTENhttp://bit.ly/BeerswBlois9
(Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union)
 
LIVERDONORS: From Sumathi Reddy via The Wall Street Journal, VERBATIM: “Living liver donors account for only about 5%, or 400 of the roughly 7,500 liver transplants conducted annually in the U.S. Live kidney donor transplants are much more common in the U.S., with about 6,000 conducted a year. That surgery is less intense, with a shorter recovery time, doctors say. In contrast, doctors say in many Asian countries the vast majority of liver transplants done are from living donors. At hospitals like the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Cleveland Clinic and the University of California, San Francisco, doctors are pushing for more live donors and educating patients and their families about the option. The process removes 50% to 60% of the liver from donors. The organ regenerates back to its full size within a couple of months.” READ: https://on.wsj.com/2U8YgWL
 
ENDOFSUMMER: From Rally Health, (a subsidiary of UnitedHealth’s Optum), via Business Wire, VERBATIM: “The majority of Americans report feeling their happiest during the summer months and experience the blues at summer’s end. Even so, 60% report that they feel re-energized during the seasonal transition from summer to fall; they view it as an opportunity to reset their goals, which for many includes rebooting the healthy habits they let fall by the wayside during summer. These are some of the findings from the End-of-Summer Checkup, a survey from digital health company Rally Health, Inc. that examines Americans’ perception of their health routines during the summer, including changes in dietary and fitness routines, as well as end-of-summer mood shifts and their look toward autumn.” READ: https://yhoo.it/2UaU2y3
 
THUMBPAIN: From Deborah Balzer via Mayo Clinic News Network, VERBATIM: “De Quervain's tenosynovitis is a complicated name for a condition that's been referred to as ‘mother's thumb,’ ‘mommy wrist’ and ‘gamer's thumb’ — all associated with repetitive use of the hands and wrist. It is a condition that causes extreme pain in the wrist and thumb area. While the exact cause is not known, Dr. Sanjeev Kakar, a Mayo Clinic orthopedic surgeon, says that there are specific treatment options that can help.” WATCH: https://mayocl.in/342g6PZ
 
6,000+: Over 6,000 people have downloaded the Fluence Forum, an hour-long deep dive a critical issue of our community. The topic of the first one was the Enbridge Line 3 Replacement.  Joined by labor, business and Native community leaders we discussed the impact the $2.6 billion project will have on Minnesota. You can listen to the forum here.  LISTEN: http://bit.ly/2PIjBUR
 
NEXT: If you’re interested in having the Fluence Forum host a topic, please contact Blois Olson at bloisolson@gmail.com
 
CHEERS: Rep. Tom Emmer sits down with host Blois Olson and talks about his hobby of brewing beer and his beer tracking app, Rep. Ilhan Omar’s relationship with the Minnesota delegation and on Congress failure of doing its job since the 1990’s because of a lack of leadership.  He also had a few things to say about hockey parents and what people are think about Trump in his district.”  LISTENhttp://bit.ly/2WT4euR (Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union)
 
iTunes: Beers with Blois is now on iTunes, SUBSCRIBE: https://apple.co/2Mi3q2o
 
WHITEHOUSE: via Beers with Blois, Rep. Dean Phillips VERBATIMThat hour I spent in the White House Situation Room with the President was eye opening."  In addition, Phillips shares insights on how they share thoughts this weekend in the Problem Solvers Caucus trip to the border, as well as his plans for 2020.” LISTEN: http://bit.ly/BeerswBlois8  (Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union)
 
NEU: The Lindstrom Bakery and Deputy House Minority Leader Anne Neu joins Blois to discuss Gov. Tim Walz role in the budget negotiations, Trump’s influence in the 2020 elections and how Minnesota DFLers are starting to look like DC Democrats on “radical” proposals.  LISTEN: http://bit.ly/BeerswBlois5  (Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union)

FREY: Using some blue language Mayor Jacob Frey introduces Blois to actual beer at La Doña, a cervezaria near where the Minnesota United Soccer stadium was going to be.  Frey on his relationship with Chief Medaria Arradondo and how often they talk on the phone.  LISTEN: http://bit.ly/BeerswBlois4 (Sponsored by Minnesota Corn Growers and the North Central States Carpenters Union)
 
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DHS: via Ryan Faircloth of the Pioneer Press VERBATIM: “Minnesota must pay back an estimated $48 million to the federal government because it improperly dealt out money to certain state chemical dependency treatment providers… The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services told the Minnesota Department of Human Services in May that it must “immediately cease” payments to a group of substance abuse treatment providers formally known as “institutions for mental diseases.” These institutions include hospitals, nursing homes or other facilities that have more than 16 beds and treat people with mental illness or chemical dependency…Federal Medicaid money generally cannot be used to cover treatment in these facilities…State Sen. Jim Abeler, R-Anoka, said the costly errors will change the way lawmakers look at DHS going forward. ABELER: “I can’t think that either caucus, Democrat or Republican, is going to gleefully just want to write a check to these guys for another $500 million next time without really asking a lot of questions,” said Abeler, who chairs the Senate human services reform committee. “Somebody needs to say ‘we need to do better.’ The governor needs to say it, or the commissioner needs to say it.”…Abeler added that incoming DHS Commissioner Jodi Harpstead will inherit “a whirlwind of trouble” when she takes the helm at the agency next week.” READhttp://bit.ly/2ZsmzAi
 
WILSON: via the Pioneer PressVERBATIM: “A top official from Minnesota’s embattled Human Services agency has resigned, just over a month after she tendered an earlier resignation and then took it back… Claire Wilson, deputy commissioner of the Department of Human Services, will leave the agency on Friday, according to an internal email sent to employees…Wilson oversaw several divisions, such as health care, children and family services, and community supports and continuing care. She was appointed by Lourey in January but held assistant commissioner roles at DHS since June 2016.” READhttp://bit.ly/30DjSwS
 
EMAIL:  Here is the text of the email Acting Commissioner Pam Wheelock sent out about Wilson. Via Twitter follow @bloisolson READhttp://bit.ly/30NaeYA
 
TODAY: via news advisory, VERBATIM: Representative John Huot (DFL-Rosemount) will hold a meeting with various air medical directors and stakeholders tomorrow to discuss solutions to end air ambulance price gouging. Rep. Huot introduced bipartisan legislation at the end of the 2019 session to require hospitals to provide patients with pricing information regarding costs of emergency medical services via air.
 
POT: via Tim Pugmire at MPRVERBATIM: “Legislation to legalize recreational marijuana use in Minnesota still faces a big hurdle in the Republican-controlled Senate, but that hasn’t stopped DFL Gov. Tim Walz from preparing for its potential passage.,,Walz said last week he has directed relevant state agencies to be ready next year to implement the law if a bill ends up reaching his desk.  WALZ: “My agencies have been tasked to put all of the building blocks in place, from Revenue to the Department of Public Safety to the Department of Health. We will have everything ready to go, and we will be able to implement it in Minnesota the minute the Legislature moves this.” READhttp://bit.ly/2U2mWQX
 
OPIOIDS: via the Rochester Post BulletinVERBATIM: “Laura Johnsonshuffled over to her coffee pot, hunched over at a 90-degree angle. She gazed out the window, watching birds land on her deck…The 62-year-old’s spine is twisted due to slow deterioration from multiple sclerosis…Johnson, of Shafer, said she could function normally when she was taking opioids for the pain. But after being weaned off of the medication, she can hardly leave her house due to agony from regular movement…Johnson is determined to give chronic pain patients a voice in the current opioid addiction crisis.” READhttp://bit.ly/2znHHx0
 
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2020ELECTION: From Emily Rappleye via Becker’s Hospital Review, VERBATIM: “Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., issued a labor plan that could affect healthcare organizations with federal contracts, such as UnitedHealth, Humana, Cerner, McKesson, Johns Hopkins University and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Mr. Sanders plan would deny federal contracts to companies that pay CEOs more than 150 times what the average worker makes. It would also deny contracts to organizations that disrupt union activities or outsource jobs overseas. Some of the top 100 federal contractors are major healthcare corporations and health systems. UnitedHealth, for example, was a top contractor of the federal government in 2018, and its CEO David Wichmann made 316 times the average employee.” READ: http://bit.ly/2Ubh87O
 
MEDICALALLEY: Via Medical Alley Association, VERBATIM: “Five senior leaders of Medical Alley companies have joined the Medical Alley Association’s board of directors to help guide the organization and community through the coming changes facing the healthcare industry. The new board members will deepen the organization’s roots in the payer and health technology segments of healthcare while providing the organization with their expertise from careers spent leading companies that challenge the status quo in healthcare in a variety of ways. The new board members are: Tom Lindquist; CEO; Allina Health | Aetna; Darren Moquist; Chief Executive Officer, Central Region UnitedHealthcare Employer & Individual; UnitedHealthcare; Asheesh Saksena; President; Best Buy Health; Craig Samitt; President and CEO; Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota; Mike Spicer; President, Medical Business; Cantel Medical” READ: http://bit.ly/33Whkfr
 
ELECTROMED: From New Prague-based Electromed via Business Wire, VERBATIM:Electromed, Inc. (NYSE American: ELMD), a leader in innovative airway clearance technologies, today announced that it will issue its financial results press release for the fiscal 2019 fourth quarter ended June 30, 2019 on Tuesday, August 27, 2019 after the close of the stock market.” READ: https://bwnews.pr/2Tv0BuS
 
VIREO: From Minnesota-based Vireo Health via PRNewswire, VERBATIM:Vireo Health International, Inc. (CNSX: VREO; OTCQX: VREOF), a leading science-focused, multi-state cannabis company, today announced that it will report financial results for its second quarter ended June 30, 2019 on Thursday, August 29, 2019 before the market opens.” READ: https://yhoo.it/2TOYrXe
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