Lurie Children’s Hospital In Chicago Halts Even More Trans Care For Minors
Lurie was one of just a few Chicago-area hospitals that still provided gender-affirming medications to minors. The hospital announced Tuesday that it had been threatened with a federal probe and would no longer offer the meds for those under 18 who hadn't previously been treated at the hospital.
Lurie Children鈥檚 Hospital is scaling back its gender-affirming care for minors, the hospital said Tuesday, days after a top federal official called for an investigation into the hospital. The hospital will no longer offer gender-affirming medications for patients younger than 18 who have not previously been treated with the medications at Lurie, the hospital said in a statement. (Schencker, 1/20)
More health industry news 鈥
Two recent deaths at Chicago-area nursing homes highlight a growing problem not just of poor care, nursing home advocates say, but of difficulty in holding those responsible accountable. (McCoppin, 1/20)
In a Jan. 20 letter to CMS, 10 national healthcare organizations asked the federal agency to issue clear guidance on emergency department signage that discourages violence against healthcare workers. Hospital surveyors have questioned and cited workplace violence signs as potential violations of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, claiming the signs could dissuade patients from continuing care, the letter said. (Twenter, 1/20)
Clinicians are using artificial intelligence on the job, whether the tools are endorsed by their employers or not, creating a challenge for health systems trying to oversee its implementation. Despite an abundance of vendor solutions, health systems are not adopting and investing in AI solutions fast enough for a clinician workforce eager to use the tools. As a result, some clinicians are using AI in an unauthorized manner, which has sped up the need for more comprehensive governance. (Perna, 1/20)
Updates on the New York nurses' strike 鈥
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders rallied with nurses Tuesday in Manhattan during the ninth day of the largest strike of its kind that the city has seen in decades. The democratic socialists, speaking to a boisterous crowd of nurses in front of Mount Sinai West on the Upper West Side, called on hospital executives to return to the negotiating table to resolve the contract impasse that prompted some 15,000 nurses to walk off the job last week. (Marcelo, 1/20)
Thirty-eight weeks pregnant and bracing for labor, Filipino American emergency room nurse Kaye Tamayao-Miane and her husband, Jo, are walking the picket line instead of walking into a hospital as patients. They have lost the health insurance they were counting on for their baby鈥檚 birth.聽聽The couple, both nurses at Mount Sinai Presbyterian in Manhattan, said they feared exactly this scenario when a strike vote was called but ultimately joined colleagues in what has become the largest nurses鈥 strike in New York City, now on its ninth day. (Lugay, 1/20)
Strikes cause mortality rates at hospitals to go up by 19.4%, according to a 20-year study. 鈥溾奛urses matter,鈥 Jonathan Gruber, an MIT economist and coauthor of the study, told Gothamist. 鈥淎nd nurses that know the system and know the patients matter, and the displacement that happens when nurses go on strike, it's consequential for patient health.鈥 (Venugopal, 1/18)
As they marched back and forth in front of the hospital doors on Amsterdam between West 114th and 113th streets, they shook noisemakers and shouted 鈥淪afe staffing saves lives!鈥 Some held signs saying 鈥淢ount Sinai Unfair!鈥 and 鈥淒on鈥檛 Mess With Our Benefits.鈥 Many wore bright red beanies, scarves, and headband ear warmers with the New York State Nurses Association logo on them. (Gohn, 1/19)