Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Elective Surgeries And Hospital Profits Rise, But Supply Chain Still A Problem
Hospital revenues appear to be on the upswing as more patients receive care 鈥 which is welcome news for the hospital industry and not-so-great for insurers. Hospitals have been warning for months that their financial stability is threatened by inflation, labor costs and other factors in the wake of the pandemic, which could ultimately threaten patient care. (Owens, 6/15)
Older adults are catching up on missed hip and knee replacements and other non-urgent surgeries, a shift that will benefit medical device makers this year, Wall Street analysts said after insurer UnitedHealth warned of higher costs due to a spike in some procedures. While heart-related surgeries have returned to pre-pandemic numbers after delays due to lockdowns and hospital staffing shortages, orthopedic surgeries had initially lagged as older Americans chose to postpone them. (Mishra and Leo, 6/15)
Nearly half of 233 hospital and health system employees surveyed had to cancel or reschedule procedures at least quarterly in 2022 due to product shortages, according to a poll conducted from late March to聽 mid-April by Premier, a consulting and group purchasing organization. Health systems have been managing shortages for hundreds of products, ranging from intra-aortic balloon pumps to chemotherapy drugs. (Kacik, 6/15)
In other health care industry news 鈥
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra and Mayor Sheng Thao appeared together in Oakland on Thursday to announce a program intended to boost the diversity of the nation鈥檚 health care workers.聽In brief remarks at Samuel Merritt University, Becerra said HHS鈥 new Health Workforce Initiative would ensure that medical students from聽underserved communities have the resources they need to succeed 鈥 and that those communities would benefit from their talent. (Castro-Root, 6/15)
Racial bias is everywhere in medicine, including the calculators doctors commonly use to predict a patient鈥檚 risk of disease and inform their treatment. A growing movement is encouraging medical specialties and hospitals to reconsider the use of race in those tools. But a new study shows that removing bias isn鈥檛 as simple as taking race out of the equation. (Palmer, 6/16)
A majority of Americans with health insurance said they had encountered obstacles to coverage, including denied medical care, higher bills and a dearth of doctors in their plans, according to a new survey from KFF, a nonprofit health research group. As a result, some people delayed or skipped treatment. Those who were most likely to need medical care 鈥 people who described themselves as in fair or poor health 鈥 reported more trouble; three-fourths of those receiving mental health treatment experienced problems. (Abelson, 6/15)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: What One Hospital鈥檚 Slow Recovery From A Cyberattack Means For Patients
In fall 2021, staffers at Johnson Memorial Health were hoping they could finally catch their breath. They were just coming out of a weeks-long surge of covid-19 hospitalizations and deaths, fueled by the delta variant. But on Oct. 1 at 3 a.m., a Friday, the hospital CEO鈥檚 phone rang with an urgent call. 鈥淢y chief of nursing said, 鈥榃ell, it looks like we got hacked,鈥欌 said David Dunkle, CEO of the health system based in Franklin, Indiana. (Yousry, 6/16)