Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Doctors Allege HCA Hospitals Push Hospice Care To Lift Mortality Stats
This article is based on鈥痠nterviews with six nurses and 27 doctors who currently practice at 16 HCA hospitals in seven states or did so previously. All said their HCA hospitals pushed palliative and end-of-life care in pursuit of better performance metrics. Internal HCA hospital documents and texts between hospital staffers provided to NBC News support these health care professionals鈥 views. (Morgenson, 6/21)
The North Carolina Department of Justice today expressed 鈥渟erious concerns鈥 about HCA Healthcare鈥檚 compliance with the commitments it made as a condition of acquiring Asheville鈥檚 nonprofit Mission Hospital system in 2019. In a June 20 letter to Greg Lowe, CEO of HCA鈥檚 North Carolina Division, the North Carolina Attorney General鈥檚 office cited HCA鈥檚 sharp reduction in cancer services, consisting of just one physician 鈥渨here it once had as many as 14.鈥 (Jones and Lewis, 6/20)
On health care personnel 鈥
Sen. Bob Casey worries that many of the 1 million-plus people living in 15,000 nursing homes across the United States are in facilities that haven鈥檛 been inspected for a long time. About one in four nursing homes hadn鈥檛 been inspected in at least 16 months, as required by federal law. (Gutman, 6/22)
Nurses working at Fox Chase Cancer Center have voted to unionize, becoming the latest group of workers to form a collective-bargaining unit in recent months at the Northeast Philadelphia specialty hospital. Nearly 80% of the roughly 350 registered nurses who work at the Cottman Avenue center participated in Tuesday鈥檚 election, which was administered by the National Labor Relations Board. (Gutman and McLellan Ravitch, 6/21)
Los Angeles voters will decide next spring whether to clamp down on pay for hospital executives, capping their total wages and other compensation at $450,000 annually, after the Los Angeles City Council voted Wednesday to put the proposed measure on the March 2024 ballot. The L.A. ballot measure is backed by a union representing healthcare workers, which argues pay for hospital executives has been excessive and out of line with the mission of providing affordable care. (Alpert Reyes, 6/21)
In other health care industry news 鈥
A recent cyberattack exposed the personal information of more than 2 million current and former Harvard Pilgrim Health Care customers, including in New Hampshire. But it has also interfered with the insurer's ability to pay out medical claims, and some local providers say that's creating significant strain. (Dario, 6/21)
The prosecution of a former Harvard Medical School employee over an alleged human remains theft ring prompted experts to call for federal rules for a practice that they said is largely unregulated and has grown in recent years with the rise of for-profit 鈥渂ody brokers." (Stelloh, 6/22)
The market for artificial intelligence in health care is about as transparent as a brick wall. New tools achieve impressive results in published studies. But it is often difficult to compare them head to head with similar products, or tell whether they will work on different kinds of patients. (Ross, 6/21)