Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Hospital News: 'Bedless Hospitals' Follow Shift Toward Outpatient Care; Florida Readmissions Decline
As treatments get less invasive and recovery times shrink, a new kind of hospital is cropping up 鈥 the 鈥渂edless hospital." They have all the capabilities of traditional hospitals: operating rooms, infusion suites, and even emergency rooms and helipads. What they don鈥檛 have is overnight space. ... The growth in outpatient healthcare is a fundamental shift in US medicine. MetroHealth, which gets part of its funding from taxpayers and serves a large Medicaid population, has expanded outpatient visits from 850,000 to 1.2 million in the last four years, a 40 percent increase. (Ross, 9/16)
Hospitals in Florida and most other states have made progress in reducing preventable 鈥渞eadmissions,鈥 the unplanned return of patients within a month of discharge, federal officials say. A report estimates that 100,000 Medicare beneficiaries 鈥 including more than 3,000 in Florida -- were spared a quick return to the hospital last year because of changes the industry has made since 2010. (Gentry, 9/16)
Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is giving $300 million to Johns Hopkins University to deal with public health challenges. The university announced the gift Thursday. Officials say the money will create the Bloomberg American Health Initiative. The initiative will study ways to fight air pollution, gun violence and obesity. (Jones, 9/15)
The Henry Ford Health System says it will聽save more than 聽$125 million after undertaking 聽a massive debt refinancing this week that could聽be the biggest of its kind in Michigan history. The Detroit-based health system announced聽that聽it聽sold about $1 billion in bonds on Tuesday in order to buy back聽older bonds that had聽higher interest rates. (Reindl, 9/15)
Highland Hospital, with a $6 million grant from the Kaiser Permanente Community Fund, is buying magnetic resonance imaging equipment that will double the number of patients who can be tested for cancer, disease and health problems. Early detection is key to keeping them healthy and alive. Highland Hospital in East Oakland is the flagship for Alameda Health System, a public health consortium that runs several hospitals and clinics. (Hedin, 9/15)
Ascension's operating surplus exceeded three-quarters of a billion dollars last year, as the hospital system bought new facilities and recorded more outpatient activity. The system's $753 million operating surplus came from $21.9 billion of revenue in its most recent fiscal year, which ended June 30, resulting in a 3.4% operating margin, according to Ascension's financial documents (PDF) filed with bondholders this week. The operating margin was almost identical to what Ascension recorded in fiscal 2015. Revenue was 6.6% higher. (Herman, 9/15)
Medical Center of Trinity, a 288-bed hospital at 9330 State Road 54, is the first hospital in the Tampa Bay area and the third in the state to use this technology as a way to enhance bonding, said Mary Sommise, director of marketing. Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami and Memorial Hospital West in Pembroke Pines are also using NicView, Sommise said, adding that the $40,000 financial investment at Trinity came from leftover construction funds from the $7 million Level II neonatal intensive care unit that opened this year. (Miller, 9/15)
Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson has been asked to intervene in a dispute involving Allina Health and an elected north suburban hospital board after the board voted Wednesday night to dissolve and stop collecting taxes to support Unity Hospital in Fridley. The North Suburban Hospital District was formed in the 1960s to build and support Unity as a general hospital for the surrounding communities, but board members say the organization鈥檚 purpose is dwindling in an era of hospital consolidations and mergers. (Olson, 9/15)
Stormont Vail Health of Topeka is closing two regional clinics because of financial pressures created by recent cuts in Medicaid reimbursements and the decision by state leaders not to expand the health care program. Stormont will close Cotton O鈥橬eil clinics in Lyndon and Alma, according to a news release issued Thursday. The Lyndon clinic will close Dec. 31. The clinic in Alma will close Jan. 31, 2017. (McLean, 9/15)