Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Calif. Attorney General Delays Hospital Deal Decision
California Attorney General Kamala Harris on Wednesday said her office will delay for two weeks a decision she was expected to announce Thursday on a proposed deal between the struggling Daughters of Charity Health System and a New York-based hedge fund. (Seipel, 11/19)
A widely supported program to create 1,000 mostly entry-level jobs at Johns Hopkins and other local hospitals was dealt a blow Wednesday when state regulators recommended against letting the facilities raise their prices to fund it. Administrators at Hopkins and other hospitals conceived the program to address the hopelessness expressed by many in Baltimore's toughest neighborhoods during the unrest of April. (Cohn, 11/18)
Iowa鈥檚 largest hospital-and-clinic system plans to start selling health insurance. UnityPoint Health announced Tuesday that it is joining forces with a Minnesota-based company, HealthPartners, to sell Medicare Advantage policies, starting in fall 2016. Medicare Advantage policies are private plans that seniors can choose instead of traditional Medicare coverage. (Leys, 11/17)
Florida hospitals paid for $1.5 billion in health costs for uninsured and underinsured patients last year. The Florida Hospital Association released its annual report Wednesday, noting it provided inpatient care for 2.7 million people and treated 9.5 million patients in emergency rooms in 2014. Hospitals contributed a total of $4.2 billion in community benefits, including charity care. Hospitals also spent about $22.4 million to ensure they are prepared to for emergencies, including hurricanes or outbreaks such as Ebola. (11/18)
Delirium is a common and a terrifying experience for elderly hospital patients and their loved ones. But the hallucinations, paranoia and other symptoms can be avoided. More than two dozen Minnesota hospitals have new programs to help. (Benson, 11/19)
The stomach cramp and nausea began one hot Friday evening in August, midway through a vacation on Martha鈥檚 Vineyard. The next morning, nearly doubled over in pain, a patient who we鈥檒l call 鈥淣ancy鈥 walked gingerly into the emergency room at Martha鈥檚 Vineyard Hospital. Nancy is a 55-year-old former nurse who would prefer not to use her real name because she works with the hospitals in this story. Even Nancy, who spends hours every day focused on health care costs, would gasp when she saw the bill for this visit. (Bebinger, 11/18)
Also, Modern Healthcare examines these trends -
Hospitals in dozens of U.S. markets are now cramming for a compulsory test of Medicare payment reform. The hardest part may be that their success relies on the work of partners they aren't used to collaborating with. Hospitals in 67 metropolitan areas learned this week they have no choice but to accept a single sum for the cost of care during and 90 days after patients visit the hospital for hip and knee replacement surgery, a strategy known as bundled payments. (Evans, 11/18)
A stronger economy is increasing employee turnover rates at hospitals, particularly among nurses, and putting additional pressure on wages that are already straining hospital balance sheets. Hospital operators around the country have been reporting increases in staffing costs, including contract labor, in the third quarter. Nursing positions have been most in demand, and the need is compounded by the increased patient volume that many health systems are seeing under the Affordable Care Act. (Kutscher, 11/17)