Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Minnesota Investigates Allina Health Over Medical Debt Policy
Minnesota authorities are investigating Allina Health over reports that the nonprofit provider refused to treat some patients who owed medical debts, state Attorney General Keith Ellison (D) announced Friday. ... Allina Health continues to work with Minnesota authorities about its compliance with state billing and debt collection rules and offers 鈥渃omprehensive support for patients with financial needs,鈥 the company said in a statement. (Kacik, 8/21)
In other health industry news 鈥
Most of the claims of sexual abuse and other mistreatment made in a lawsuit by dozens of former patients of a Virginia children鈥檚 hospital can move forward, a judge has ruled, rejecting arguments that many of the allegations were time-limited under the state鈥檚 medical malpractice law. Judge Bradley Cavedo issued the ruling Aug. 14 in favor of most of the dozens of plaintiffs who are suing publicly traded health care company Universal Health Services Inc. and its co-defendants. His decision came two weeks after a hearing on the matter in Richmond Circuit Court, where attorneys for UHS, related corporate entities and the doctor at the center of many of the allegations urged him to whittle down the claims. (Rankin, 8/21)
A state board that disciplines physicians is asking the Department of Public Health to explain why it didn鈥檛 respond sooner to malpractice allegations filed against a doctor in another state. That doctor was the subject of a recent report by The Accountability Project, which found聽key information聽was missing聽about discipline and felony charges聽from some of the state鈥檚 licensing records. (Lloyd, 8/21)
Corewell Health has parted ways with the president of its metro Detroit hospitals a year after his hiring. Dr. Ben Schwartz was hired in July last year to lead the eight former Beaumont Health hospitals, now called Corewell Health East, succeeding former president and CEO John Fox, who departed the system as part of Spectrum Health's merger with Beaumont. Schwartz left the role effective Monday. (Walsh, 8/21)
Membership-based primary care provider Cano Health named Mark Kent as its permanent CEO on Monday.聽Cano struck the interim title from Kent聽making him CEO and also elected him to the board of directors. The company also announced that former CEO Dr. Marlow Hernandez was stepping聽down from the board of directors, effective immediately.聽(Turner, 8/21)
Also 鈥
For Paige Hall, a single mother living in Eugene, Ore., getting paid by Medicaid to care for her son James during the pandemic was life-changing.聽She no longer had to worry about finding a reliable, qualified caregiver who could care for James, a nonspeaking 11-year-old with autism and severe drug-resistant epilepsy. (Hellmann, 8/21)
Medical illustration is both an art and a science. But it can have a huge cultural impact, too, as medical student and illustrator Chidiebere Ibe discovered when his illustration of a pregnant Black woman and her fetus went viral in 2021. The image was groundbreaking precisely because it shouldn鈥檛 have been. People have a wide range of skin colors, and everyone develops medical conditions; it鈥檚 common sense that medical illustrations should feature a diverse range of bodies. (Merelli, 8/22)
Benjamin Young didn鈥檛 set out to be the first Native Hawaiian psychiatrist. Nor did he go looking to be the first physician on board what would become a landmark epic voyage from Tahiti to Hawaii back in 1976, using only the stars, sun, moon, and cloud and wave patterns as guides. And Young had no clue that, toward the beginning of his career, he would be called on to start up a first-of-its-kind program at the University of Hawaii to diversify the number of Pacific Islanders and other underrepresented groups in medicine. (Castillo, 8/22)
麻豆女优 Health News: Life In A Rural 鈥楢mbulance Desert鈥 Means Sometimes Help Isn鈥檛 On The Way聽
Annie Jackson can鈥檛 know whether her sister Grena Prude might have survived had an ambulance been more readily available when she went into cardiac arrest on May 10. But Jackson is convinced her sister would have at least had a chance. Prude, 55, died at the steps of Carrollton City Hall, less than a half-mile from her county鈥檚 only ambulance station. When someone called 911 to get her help, two ambulances were on duty: One was transporting a patient to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 45 minutes away, and the other a patient to Columbus, Mississippi, a 30-minute drive. (Sisk, 8/22)