Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Amazon Adds Behavioral Health To Amazon Care
Amazon is adding behavioral health services to Amazon Care, a medical care service it sells to employer health plans. Care coordinators will聽refer patients to in-network behavioral health specialists for acute and moderate behavioral health concerns, according to an Amazon Care webpage that describes the program.聽(Kim Cohen, 8/11)
Kristen Helton, who ran one of Amazon.com Inc.鈥檚 most important healthcare initiatives, is on a break that began earlier this summer. 鈥淎fter more than 5 years at Amazon, Kristen decided to take some well-deserved time off to spend the summer with her family,鈥 an Amazon spokesperson said Thursday in a statement. It wasn鈥檛 clear when she would return. (Soper, 8/12)
In other news from the health care industry 鈥
It鈥檚 health tech hunting season for some of America鈥檚 biggest brand names. Over the last year, companies like Amazon, CVS Health, and Walmart have made significant plays to beef up their health care infrastructure. (Herman and Palmer, 8/11)
A federal judge has ruled that the federal law outlawing many types of surprise medical bills does not violate the constitutional rights of a New York surgeon. (Herman, 8/11)
The funding will go to organizations that address social determinants, which are nonmedical issues, such as food, housing, transportation and the financial means to pay for basic daily needs. These factors influence about 80 percent of a person鈥檚 physical health, according to the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. (Carballo, 8/11)
In hospital updates 鈥
Frisbie Memorial Hospital in Rochester recently announced plans to close its birth center, citing financial problems. The move is on hold pending a review from the New Hampshire Attorney General, which said the hospital promised to keep its birthing center open for at least five years after it was acquired by HCA Healthcare in 2020. (Bratton, 8/11)
Harborview Medical Center in Seattle will temporarily stop accepting less acute patients and will divert them to other health care systems as capacity challenges worsen, according to the hospital鈥檚 CEO. 鈥淎ll hospital systems (are) very much over capacity with very high census numbers, particularly because of an inability to discharge patients into post-acute care settings,鈥 Harborview CEO Sommer Kleweno Walley said in a media briefing Thursday. 鈥淭his morning 鈥 Harborview reached an unprecedented census level.鈥 (8/12)
The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern Division of the Northern District of Illinois, alleges that Northwestern Memorial allows Meta鈥檚 Pixel tracker to 鈥渦nlawfully鈥 collect private medical information from the hospital鈥檚 patient portal to use for its own profit. (Davis, 8/11)
And Johns Hopkins is offering a free course on infectious disease transmission 鈥
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health has launched a free virtual course on infectious disease transmission models for public health officials and practitioners who make policy decisions.聽The three-hour course is available for free on Coursera, and those who pass the exam will receive a certificate. (Carbajal, 8/11)