Contract Standoff Between Anthem And Hartford HealthCare Could Disrupt Services
Outlets report on hospitals and medical system news from Connecticut, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Florida and Kansas.
Connecticut state officials heard a renewed call on Tuesday for legislative action聽to avoid another disruption in health care like the one caused by the contract standoff between Hartford HealthCare and Anthem that lasted seven weeks starting Oct. 1. The Legislature鈥檚 Insurance and Real Estate Committee had scheduled a hearing before the two sides came to an agreement on Nov. 18, but decided to go forward with it despite the settlement. (Rigg, 11/28)
Two debt ratings agencies offered different takes this week on bonds issued for the University of Maryland Medical System as it鈥檚 poised to break ground Thursday on a new hospital in Prince George鈥檚 County.聽S&P Global Ratings announced that it has raised its ratings on the Maryland Health & Higher Education Facilities Authority's health care revenue bonds issued for the state medical system to A from A- with a 鈥渟table鈥 outlook for the future. Fitch Ratings, however, downgraded UMMS bonds to A- from A as the authority is about to issue nearly $175 million in new bonds for UMMS to pay for its share of the new hospital and other projects. (Dinsmore, 11/28)
Blossom Philadelphia said Tuesday in a letter to families that it will transition its residential services for adults with intellectual disabilities to four providers, with the goal of completing the move by the end of the year. It did not identify the new providers of services for Blossom鈥檚 89 residents.聽The letter from Blossom鈥檚 chief executive, Paula Czyzewski, emailed at about 5:30 p.m., said the Chestnut Hill nonprofit would work closely with city and state officials and the new providers to ensure a smooth transition. 鈥淲e understand that any change can be difficult, but remaining with Blossom Philadelphia for residential services is not an option,鈥 the letter said. (Brubaker, 11/28)
Florida鈥檚 leading cancer treatment center is setting up shop in Pembroke Pines under a new partnership with South Broward鈥檚 public hospital network, Memorial Healthcare System, to provide clinical care of leukemia and lymphoma and to establish the county鈥檚 only blood and marrow transplant cellular therapy program. (Chang, 11/28)
Inspectors arrived Tuesday at Osawatomie (Kansas) State Hospital to determine whether the state-run psychiatric facility can regain its federal certification and, with it, its Medicaid funding.聽Osawatomie State Hospital聽lost its certification in December 2015聽after a patient attacked a staff member, prompting an investigation that revealed staffing shortages and other issues that put patients and staff at risk. (Fox, 11/28)
And a New York hospital improperly bills sexual assault survivors for rape exams聽鈥
A Brooklyn Hospital violated state law when it charged dozens of patients for sexual-assault evidence kits, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said at a news briefing Tuesday. The Brooklyn Hospital Center conducted 86 forensic rape examinations鈥攂etter known as rape kits鈥攆rom January 2015 to February 2017. In 85 of those cases, the center billed the patient directly or their private insurance plan without letting the patient know they could receive the exam without charge. (Kanno-Youngs, 11/28)
Dozens of sexual assault survivors were improperly billed for their rape exams by a New York City hospital, the state鈥檚 attorney general said Tuesday. Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said that under an agreement with his office, the Brooklyn Hospital Center will reimburse patients who paid out of pocket for a rape kit and will inform rape survivors going forward that under a 2005 New York state law the rape kits can be billed to the state鈥檚 Office of Victim Services. (Matthews, 11/28)