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Morning Briefing

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Friday, Dec 22 2023

Full Issue

CMS Reveals Medicare Appeal Process For Incorrect Hospital Observation Stays

The process is aimed at Medicare beneficiaries who feel hospitals inappropriately classified stays as observations instead of admissions, resolving a 12 year-old class action lawsuit. Also in the news: cancer patients facing frightening delays in treatment approvals.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has outlined an appeals process for Medicare beneficiaries who believe hospitals inappropriately classified their stays as observations instead of admissions. The proposed rule published Thursday aims to resolve a 12-year-old class-action lawsuit seeking redress for fee-for-service enrollees whose hospital or nursing home care wasn't covered under Medicare Part A because hospitals designated them as outpatients. (Bennett, 12/21)

麻豆女优 Health News: Cancer Patients Face Frightening Delays In Treatment Approvals聽

Marine Corps veteran Ron Winters clearly recalls his doctor鈥檚 sobering assessment of his bladder cancer diagnosis in August 2022. 鈥淭his is bad,鈥 the 66-year-old Durant, Oklahoma, resident remembered his urologist saying. Winters braced for the fight of his life. Little did he anticipate, however, that he wouldn鈥檛 be waging war only against cancer. He also was up against the Department of Veterans Affairs, which Winters blames for dragging its feet and setting up obstacles that have delayed his treatments. (Sausser, 12/22)

In other health care industry developments 鈥

The Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department challenged 50 merger and acquisition proposals across all sectors of the economy in 2022, including six proposed healthcare deals, according to a new report. The FTC鈥檚 24 merger enforcement challenges in 2022鈥攊ncluding five in healthcare鈥攎arked the second-highest number over the prior 10 years, according to the annual report for the fiscal year ended Sept. 30 on the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act premerger notification program issued Thursday. (Kacik, 12/21)

In Wesley Medical Center, and in most hospitals today, the people monitoring patients鈥 heart rhythms,聽blood pressure or respiratory functions聽are not聽nurses who interact with聽them.聽They are 鈥渢elemetry鈥 technicians who are supposed to alert聽those聽nurses to聽meaningful聽changes聽in the vital signs transmitted by electronic devices聽hooked up to the patients. The technicians in聽telemetry聽units聽typically聽watch screens showing heart rhythms and numbers for many patients at a time 鈥 sometimes dozens 鈥 and often sit in a room far from the patients they are watching. (Morgenson, 12/21)

In ten years, the United States could be short as many as 48,000 primary care doctors. The specialty is underpaid, to a point that doctors are lobbying Medicare to pay it extra. Even medical residents who chose the specialty are leaving primary care; some 45% of residents who planned to be generalists changed their mind during their residencies. (Trang, 12/22)

First, her favorite doctor in Providence, R.I. retired. Then her other doctor, at a health center a few miles away, left the practice. Now, Piedad Fred has developed a new chronic condition: distrust in the American medical system. "I don't know,'' she said, eyes filling up. "To go to a doctor that doesn't know who you are? That doesn't know what allergies you have, the medicines that make you feel bad? It's difficult...I know that I feel cheated, sad, and like I have my hands tied.'' (Arditi, 12/22)

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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