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Thursday, Nov 21 2024

Full Issue

Kaiser Permanente To Downsize Headquarters In California

In other news, federal investigators found evidence that anti-discrimination laws at Cedars-Sinai may not have been followed for Black maternity patients. Also: Texas aims to create dementia research fund; patient care workers strike; and more.

Kaiser聽Permanente, one of Oakland鈥檚 largest employers, plans to downsize its headquarters office space in another blow to the city鈥檚 downtown. The health care giant 鈥渨ill significantly reduce its space鈥 at the Ordway Building, where it has been headquartered since 1970, according to a building loan servicer note. As a result, the 530,000-square-foot tower faces 鈥渋mminent monetary default鈥 due to 鈥渋nsufficient cash flow鈥 and was transferred to special servicing earlier this year. (Li, 11/20)

More health news from California 鈥

Nearly 40,000 University of California workers began a two-day strike Wednesday to protest what they claim is bad faith bargaining by university negotiators as the two sides try to hammer out new labor agreements. The work stoppage, which affects service and patient care workers at all UC campuses and medical facilities, will continue until 11:59 p.m. Thursday. AFSCME Local 3299, the union representing the workers, and the university system have been in talks over new contracts for nearly a year. (Petrow-Cohen, 11/20)

Despite criticism from some city leaders over the past few weeks about HCA Healthcare鈥檚 previous service cuts, the San Jose City Council will not stand in the way of the health provider鈥檚 plans to build a new facility at Good Samaritan Hospital. Instead, the City Council unanimously approved rezoning the hospital鈥檚 campus Tuesday 鈥 allowing it to move forward with the permitting process to build new facilities that comply with state seismic law 鈥 amid聽overwhelming support for the project from patients, labor groups and medical professionals. (Patel, 11/20)

Federal investigators looking into the treatment of Black pregnant patients at Cedars-Sinai Health System have found evidence that federal laws against discrimination may not have been followed, according to a 鈥渓etter of concern.鈥 鈥淥ur investigation has uncovered evidence that Cedars-Sinai may have engaged in a pattern of inaction and/or neglect concerning the health risks associated with Black maternity patients,鈥 the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights said in its Nov. 12 letter to Cedars-Sinai officials. (Alpert Reyes, 11/20)

麻豆女优 Health News: California Sets 15% Target For Primary Care Spending Over Next Decade

A California agency charged with slowing health costs has set a lofty goal for insurers to direct 15% of their spending to primary care by 2034, part of the state鈥檚 effort to expand the primary care workforce and give more people access to preventive care services. The board of the state Office of Health Care Affordability in October set its benchmark well above the industry鈥檚 current 7% primary care spending rate, in hopes of improving Californians鈥 health and reducing the need for costlier care down the road. (S谩nchez, 11/21)

From Texas 鈥

Montgomery County is now the 14th county in Texas to become a medical examiner鈥檚 office after commissioners unanimously approved the decision聽without discussion. The Tuesday action comes after commissioners approved the department鈥檚聽$3.2 million budget in September. Dr. Kathryn Pinneri, who became director of forensic services in 2016, will be the county's first chief medical examiner. (Dominguez, 11/20)

On Nov. 1, Texas hospitals that accept Medicaid or Children鈥檚 Health Insurance Plan coverage started asking all patients about their immigration status and whether they are lawfully present in the United States. The requirement is part of an executive order Gov. Greg Abbott issued this summer. The information is statistical only. No identifying information about the patient is passed along to the governor鈥檚 office. (Langford, 11/21)

Two decades ago, state Rep. Tom Craddick could ask a room of his West Texas constituents what illness they feared the most and the answer, unfailingly, was always cancer. A few weeks ago, about the time Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick contacted him about a new blockbuster medical research fund idea, Craddick asked a group of his constituents the question again and no one mentioned cancer. 鈥淚t was unanimous in the room,鈥 Craddick said. 鈥淎lzheimer鈥檚 and dementia.鈥 (Langford, 11/21)

From New York, Alabama, and Iowa 鈥

A urologist convicted of sexually abusing seven patients, including five who were minors, was sentenced to life in prison on Wednesday, prosecutors said. The doctor, Darius A. Paduch, a fertility specialist, molested boys and young men for years at two prominent New York hospitals, prosecutors said. Hundreds of other young men and boys have also accused Dr. Paduch, 57, of abuse spanning more than 15 years in scores of civil suits. (McFadden, 11/20)

An Alabama prisoner convicted of the 1994 murder of a female hitchhiker is slated Thursday to become the third person executed by nitrogen gas. Alabama this year began using nitrogen gas to carry out some death sentences, the first use of a new execution method in the United States since lethal injection was introduced in 1982. The method involves placing a respirator gas mask over the person鈥檚 face to replace breathable air with pure nitrogen gas, causing death by lack of oxygen. Alabama maintains the method is constitutional. (Chandler, 11/21)

麻豆女优 Health News: After Institutions For People With Disabilities Close, Graves Are At Risk Of Being Forgotten

Hundreds of people who were separated from society because they had disabilities are buried in a nondescript field at the former state institution here. Disability rights advocates hope Iowa will honor them by preventing the kind of neglect that has plagued similar cemeteries at other shuttered facilities around the U.S. (Leys, 11/21)

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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