Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Record Number Of Americans Involved In Change Healthcare Data Breach
A ransomware attack against Change Healthcare last year exposed data on a record-breaking 190 million people, parent company UnitedHealth Group reported Friday. That's 90 million more people than the company, which operates Change Healthcare through its Optum subsidiary, disclosed to federal regulators in October. It also amounts to 55% of the U.S. population. A cyberattack against Anthem (now Elevance Health) in 2015, which affected nearly 80 million people, was the previous record holder in the healthcare sector. (Berryman, 1/24)
In other health industry news 鈥
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reversed course Friday on a plan to appeal UnitedHealthcare鈥檚 Medicare Advantage star ratings win.聽Outgoing U.S. Attorney Damien Diggs notified the court on his last day in office Tuesday that CMS intended to appeal the unfavorable ruling. Acting U.S. Attorney Abe McGlothin Jr. reversed course on his first day in office, swiftly withdrawing the notice to appeal from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.聽(Tepper, 1/24)
Longitude Health named Brett Moraski interim chief executive officer of the health system-backed company following the death last week of former CEO Paul Mango. Mango was deputy chief of staff at the Health and Human Services Department and chief of staff at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services during President Donald Trump鈥檚 first term. He is survived by his wife Dawn Rucker and five daughters. (Kacik, 1/24)
The University of Minnesota and Essentia Health are in early discussions to form a nonprofit entity that aims to boost financial support for the school and improve rural healthcare. The university and the Duluth, Minnesota-based integrated health system said in a news release Friday they are in talks to create an 鈥渁ll-Minnesota health solution,鈥 although the release included minimal details about how the proposal is structured. (Kacik, 1/24)
When Mary Campbell gave birth to her first daughter in 2021, her maternity room at UNC Health Southeastern was cramped and loud. The hospital鈥檚 thin walls did little to muffle the sounds of crying babies and foot traffic in the hallways, and Campbell could barely nap during her 36-hour stay.聽But when Campbell, who works as an emergency room nurse at the hospital in Lumberton, had her second child last month, her experience was very different. (Perez-Moreno, 1/25)
Health systems are forming multi-year partnerships with medtech companies, investing millions of dollars to keep up with the latest technology and develop a more holistic way of managing their operations. It鈥檚 an involved process that pairs a company's technology consultants, technicians and program managers with health systems to evaluate their equipment and operations, advise on upgrades and provide service, training and consulting. (Dubinsky, 1/24)
麻豆女优 Health News: 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 鈥楢n Arm and a Leg鈥: The 鈥楽hkreli Awards鈥 鈥 For Dysfunction And Profiteering In Health Care
Every year, a health care think tank called the Lown Institute ranks the 10 worst examples of 鈥減rofiteering and dysfunction鈥 in health care and 鈥渉onors鈥 the winners. The 鈥淪hkreli Awards鈥 are a kind of Oscars for the most outrageous examples of greed, fraud, and general brokenness in American health care. (Weismann, 1/27)
In obituaries 鈥
Loretta C. Ford, a pediatric nurse who worked tenaciously to expand access to health services, co-founding the profession of nurse practitioner and helping to transform the way millions of Americans receive health care, died Jan. 22 at her home in Wildwood, Florida. She was 104. The death was confirmed by her daughter, Valerie Monrad, but no cause was noted. (Bass, 1/25)