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Monday, Aug 15 2022

Full Issue

Over 2,000 Kaiser Permanente Mental Health Workers To Strike Today

The strike, which will hit Northern California, is said to be over "dangerously long" waits for appointments. (KHN is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.) Separately, Signify Health is cutting nearly 500 staff, an Oregon hospital overpaid staff by $2 million, and other stories.

The union said it was moving ahead with the strike Monday morning because Kaiser officials in negotiations Saturday shot down its members鈥 proposal to increase staffing and 鈥渆nd dangerously long waits for mental health therapy appointments.鈥 (Flores, 8/14)

The health care union organizing an upcoming strike of more than 2,000 Kaiser Permanente mental health workers said Thursday that the health care giant was illegally canceling appointments ahead of the planned labor action. (Echeverria, 8/12)

In other news about health care personnel 鈥

Nearly 11,000 physician assistants earned their certification in 2021,聽a new record for a profession that has grown by nearly 30% in the past five years. The National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants said the number of newly certified professionals rose 10.4% in 2021. Altogether, there were 158,470 certified physician assistants in the U.S. last year. (Devereaux, 8/12)

St. Charles Health System accidentally overpaid thousands of employees a total of $2 million across a few months and is now demanding employees pay that money back, according to a hospital spokesperson. Employees were notified Thursday of the total amounts they allegedly owed. Scott Palmer of the Oregon Nurses Association said the amounts range from less than $100 to as much as $3,000 for some employees. (8/12)

As the hospitals collapsed, Lovell and the facilities鈥 doctors, nurses, and patients saw evidence that the new owners were skimping on services 鈥 failing to pay for and stock surgical supplies and drugs. For example, in Callaway County, Missouri, state inspectors deemed conditions in the hospital to be endangering patients. What was less apparent, former workers said, was that Noble had also stopped paying for employee health, dental, vision, and life insurance benefits. They were unknowingly uninsured. (Jane Tribble, 8/15)

Signify Health is laying off nearly 500 employees, beginning Oct. 1. The value-based care technology company notified the Connecticut Department of Labor it planned to cut 489 employees, including 147 who work in one of the company鈥檚 five offices and 342 who work remotely. (Perna, 8/12)

The state legislature allocated $25,000 of the budget to address high rates of suicides among first responders in the state. This money was taken by the Wyoming Peace Officers Standards and Training (POST) and utilized to create the first ever First Responders Health and Wellness Conference that will take place August 22-24 in Casper. (Kudelska, 8/12)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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