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Thursday, May 2 2024

Full Issue

After HCA Cut Staff At North Carolina Hospital, Profits 'Soared'

Carolina Public Press reports on financial affairs at the Mission Hospital in Asheville after it was acquired by HCA Healthcare. Also in the news: Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital nurses call for better pay, a new medical school is slated for Northern Colorado, more.

Staff cuts have driven up patient-care profits at Mission Hospital in Asheville after HCA Healthcare acquired the facility, according to a draft report by Mark Hall, director of the health law and policy program at Wake Forest University. (Vitaglione, 5/2)

Hundreds of Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital nurses and their supporters rallied outside the medical center on Wednesday, calling for better pay, benefits, and staffing levels. Many held signs that read: 鈥淚f nurses are out here, something is wrong in there,鈥 and 鈥淎 fair contract means safe patient care.鈥 鈥淚t鈥檚 absolute chaos,鈥 Kerrie Young, 50, a Brigham nurse for more than 22 years, said about the hospital鈥檚 long wait times and staffing levels. 鈥淲e have a lot of nurses that do pick up time; if that didn鈥檛 happen, we鈥檇 probably be down 10 nurses a shift.鈥 (Walia, 5/1)

Colorado will create its third medical college 鈥 likely in 2026 鈥 after Gov. Jared Polis on Wednesday signed a bill into law that will expand health care programs at higher education institutions across the state in a bid to overcome workforce shortages that worsened during and after the pandemic. (Breunlin, 5/2)

In other health industry developments 鈥

A sweeping new hospital oversight and industry reform bill is on the move atop Beacon Hill, representing what aides to House Speaker Ron Mariano view as the most significant health care cost control legislation in more than a decade. The Legislature鈥檚 Health Care Financing Committee on Tuesday moved to advance a redrafted, 97-page proposal that combines lessons learned from the Steward Health Care crisis, major changes to how state regulators work to contain health care spending, and new tools to deal with facility expansions and closures. (5/1)

Senior living services company Ensign Group acquired seven skilled nursing facilities in six states, as well as a long-term acute care hospital. The deals closed Wednesday, the same day聽Ensign Group will report first quarter 2024 earnings. San Juan Capistrano, California-based Ensign Group did not disclose the price of the deals, which bring its portfolio of skilled nursing facilities to 310 operations across 14 states. (Eastabrook, 5/1)

Last fall, CVS Health made seniors an enticing offer: If they signed up for the company鈥檚 Aetna Medicare plans, they could score free pickleball paddles. The benefit might also fund golf clubs, fishing rods and an array of other equipment appealing to spry retirees. The gambit worked. Enrollment in Aetna鈥檚 Medicare products surged this year. But it turned out CVS got more than it bargained for. (Mathews, 5/1)

A growing number of families are pursuing legal action against a Memorial Hermann doctor who has been聽accused of potentially preventing some patients from聽receiving liver transplants.聽On Monday, the family聽of Jerry Whittington joined a case filed last week on behalf of three other families who are seeking a temporary restraining order and injunction against Dr. J. Steve Bynon, according to a copy of the document provided to the Chronicle. The families are trying to prevent the doctor from destroying or manipulating any records that might be relevant to a potential lawsuit.聽(Gill, 5/1)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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