Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
MedPAC Endorsing 2024 Medicare Payment Increases To Congress
MedPAC wants Congress to increase hospitals and clinicians' 2024 Medicare payment rates. If Congress opts not to follow the recommendations, CMS has to make payment updates according to current law 鈥 setting up another year of providers running to lawmakers for relief from Medicare cuts after the fact. (Goldman, 12/12)
In other news about Medicare and Medicaid 鈥
KHN: KHN Investigation: The System Feds Rely On To Stop Repeat Health Fraud Is Broken聽
The federal system meant to stop health care business owners and executives from repeatedly bilking government health programs fails to do so, a KHN investigation has found. That means people are once again tapping into Medicaid, Medicare, and other taxpayer-funded federal health programs after being legally banned because of fraudulent or illegal behavior. In large part that鈥檚 because the government relies on those who are banned to self-report their infractions or criminal histories on federal and state applications when they move into new jobs or launch companies that access federal health care dollars. (Tribble and Weber, 12/12)
KHN: Journalists Explain Medicaid Work Requirements And Hospital Price Transparency聽
KHN senior editor Andy Miller discussed Georgia鈥檚 Medicaid work requirements on WUGA鈥檚 鈥淭he Georgia Health Report鈥 on Dec. 5. ... KHN senior correspondent Julie Appleby discussed hospital price transparency on Newsy on Dec. 1. (12/10)
In other health care industry news 鈥
In a TikTok video last week, four employees wearing nurse scrubs at an Atlanta hospital revealed their 鈥渋cks鈥 regarding labor and delivery patients. 鈥淢y ick is when you come in for your induction,鈥 a nurse began the video, 鈥渢alking about, 鈥楥an I take a shower and eat?鈥欌 鈥淢y ick is when you ask me how much the baby weighs,鈥 another nurse followed, 鈥渁nd it鈥檚 still 鈥 in your hands.鈥 ... In a statement posted online Thursday, after the video received much online backlash, Emory Healthcare wrote that it had 鈥渢aken appropriate action with the former employees responsible for the video.鈥 (Melnick, 12/12)
University of Maryland Baltimore Washington Medical Center opened a new wing of its critical care unit Tuesday. The renovation, which will include 22 new intensive care beds, will allow the Glen Burnie hospital to potentially more than double its capacity if it can hire additional workers to staff the unit, hospital officials said. (Munro, 12/12)
A patient advocacy organization in late November found part of an Eleanor Slater Hospital building in 鈥渄eplorable condition,鈥 according to a report the organization sent to the state-run hospital鈥檚 leadership Tuesday. (Amaral, 12/9)
General Electric Co.鈥檚 healthcare division plans to cut debt, bring down costs and pursue tuck-in acquisitions after its spinoff in early January, finance chief Helmut Zodl said Thursday at an investor event in New York. (Trentmann, 12/8)
CEOs at some of the nation鈥檚 largest insurance companies raked in tens of millions of dollars apiece last year, with insurtech leaders聽easily topping the list in terms of聽total compensation, according to data AIS Health published this month. (Hudson, 12/9)
Also 鈥
A Tallahassee startup wants to make visits to the doctor a little easier. WellConnector is an app that replaces the paperwork patients have to fill out before visits with new doctors. (McCarthy, 12/9)
Dentistry has a diversity problem, and medical and dental experts say the best way to fix it is to start the pipeline early in Black and brown communities. (Castillo, 12/9)
Type 鈥淓hlers-Danlos syndromes鈥 into a search engine, and multiple suggestions pop up. Is Ehlers-Danlos an autoimmune disease? Is EDS hereditary? Rare? Then, the algorithm might suggest: Is Ehlers-Danlos syndrome a disease?聽鈥淚s EDS real?鈥 The latter is a question that really annoyed Cortney Gensemer, a postdoctoral researcher who studies and has EDS. (Cueto, 12/12)