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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Apr 8 2024

Full Issue

New England Journal Of Medicine Often Ignored Nazi Atrocities, Article Says

An article in the NEJM criticizes the journal itself for its weak reporting when the Nazis were rising in Germany and performing horrific medical experiments. Also in the news: a probe into liver transplants at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center.

The journal was 鈥渁n outlier in its sporadic coverage of the rise of Nazi Germany,鈥 wrote the article鈥檚 authors, Allan Brandt and Joelle Abi-Rached, both medical historians at Harvard. Often, the journal simply ignored the Nazis鈥 medical depredations, such as the horrific experiments conducted on twins at Auschwitz, which were based largely on Adolf Hitler鈥檚 spurious 鈥渞acial science.鈥 In contrast, two other leading science journals 鈥 Science and the Journal of the American Medical Association 鈥 covered the Nazis鈥 discriminatory policies throughout Hitler鈥檚 tenure, the historians noted. The New England journal did not publish an article 鈥渆xplicitly damning鈥 the Nazis鈥 medical atrocities until 1949, four years after World War II ended. (Nazaryan, 4/6)

More health care industry developments 鈥

Federal regulators are investigating a "pattern of irregularities" in the liver transplant program at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center. In a statement Thursday, the hospital said it voluntarily halted liver transplants after it was notified of irregularities related to its "donor acceptance criteria," or physical factors such as height and weight that help physicians decide whether a donated organ is compatible with a transplant candidate. (Gill, 4/5)

The country鈥檚 biggest hospital chain, HCA Healthcare, told the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services it doled out almost $1 billion more in financial assistance to needy patients than it reported on its financial statement in 2022, helping the enormously profitable company extract billions of dollars from taxpayer-funded programs. It鈥檚 normal for hospital systems to report more charity care 鈥 free and discounted care provided to low-income patients 鈥 in their annual filings with CMS than on their financial statements. (Bannow, 4/8)

麻豆女优 Health News: Rising Complaints Of Unauthorized Obamacare Plan-Switching And Sign-Ups Trigger Concern

Federal and state regulators aren鈥檛 doing enough to stop the growing problem of rogue health insurance brokers making unauthorized policy switches for Affordable Care Act policyholders, say consumers, agents, nonprofit enrollee assistance groups, and other insurance experts 鈥淲e think it鈥檚 urgent and it requires a lot more attention and resources,鈥 said Jennifer Sullivan, director of health coverage access for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. (Appleby, 4/8)

A little-known data firm helps health insurers make more when less of an out-of-network claim gets paid. Patients can be on the hook for the difference. (Hamby, 4/7)

As more healthcare organizations adopt artificial intelligence, there's a newcomer in some C-suites: the chief AI officer. Two-thirds of health systems plan to increase spending on AI by 25% or more in the next three years, according to a survey published in November by consulting firm Healthcare IT Leaders. Health insurers are also increasingly using AI to streamline operations, train employees and enhance customer service. (Perna, 4/5)

Teladoc CEO Jason Gorevic is out at the company he has led for almost 15 years.聽The Purchase, New York-based telehealth company on Friday announced Gorevic's immediate departure. Mala Murthy, the company鈥檚 chief financial officer, is stepping in as interim CEO while the company鈥檚 board searches for a CEO.聽Murthy has been with Teladoc since June 2019. (Perna, 4/5)

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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