Safety Net Hospital Sees Temporary Shutdown Over Faulty Billing System
West Suburban Medical Center in Illinois has been facing difficulties with a new computerized billing system for a year, and that has translated into a lack of revenue to cover normal operating expenses and has led to its temporary closure. Plus: Health care AI company OpenEvidence has just launched a feature to automate the medical coding and billing process.
In less than 24 hours, all patients will be out of West Suburban Medical Center in Oak Park as the hospital blames its abrupt shutdown on a computerized billing system. On Thursday hospital signs were getting covered up, but no one who works there was hiding how they feel. (Brennan, 3/26)
Healthcare artificial intelligence company OpenEvidence launched a feature designed to automate the medical coding and billing process. Coding Intelligence is part of OpenEvidence Visits, the company鈥檚 digital assistant for clinicians, which launched in August. The product introduction comes two months after the company closed a $250 million series D funding round, which gave it a $12 billion valuation. (Famakinwa, 3/26)
More health care industry developments 鈥
Advocate Health plans to start delivering prescriptions, lab samples and home health supplies via drones next year. It is partnering with Zipline, a drone-based delivery company, Advocate said Thursday. Drone deliveries will launch in Charlotte, North Carolina, where Advocate is based, followed by Chicago and Milwaukee, two areas where it has a significant presence. (DeSilva, 3/26)
HCA Florida on Wednesday unveiled an air ambulance program in Gainesville that will increase emergency transportation capacity in rural and hard-to-reach communities of north central Florida. (Roches, 3/26)
The State University System Board of Governors has approved Florida State University's $110 million contract with Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare and the city of Tallahassee. It's part of the agreement for the city to transfer the hospital and its assets to FSU. (Wood, 3/27)
March is Autoimmune Disease Awareness Month, and for families navigating celiac disease, treatment does not come in the form of medication or a cure. Instead, it requires a lifelong commitment to a strict gluten-free diet. At Boston Children's Hospital's Needham campus, that education is happening in an unexpected place - the kitchen. What looks at first like a cooking class, is actually a doctor's appointment designed to help children and families build real-life skills around food and health. (Pitts, 3/26)
In kitchens, the 鈥渇ive-second rule鈥 offers a small, comforting fiction鈥攖hat what falls and is retrieved quickly can be salvaged germ-free. A similar story can surface in surgical settings, where dropped objects are surprisingly common. But a new randomized study suggests that even brief contact with a contaminated surface can affect the sterility of surgical implants and that certain disinfection methods can reduce, but not fully eliminate, contamination.聽(Bergeson, 3/26)
On rural health care 鈥
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News:
Give And Take: Federal Rural Health Funding Could Trigger Service Cuts
The emergency department at Big Sandy Medical Center is one room with a single curtain between two beds. It鈥檚 one of the many parts of the 25-bed rural hospital that need updating, former CEO Ron Wiens said. He said the hospital, an essential service in its namesake town of nearly 800 residents in the state鈥檚 sprawling north-central high plains, needs at least $1 million for deferred maintenance, including a failing HVAC system. But the facility has struggled to make payroll each month and can鈥檛 afford to make all the fixes, Wiens said. (Bolton and Zionts, 3/27)
Crystal McEntire lives two lives. Every morning, she wakes up to tend to her family鈥檚 ranch near the top of the Texas Panhandle that houses a herd of Red Angus cattle. But after mornings of farm work, she exchanges her ranch jeans for pharmacy jeans, she said, and drives 26 miles to Hyland鈥檚 Pharmacy in Wheeler County 鈥 one of two pharmacies she owns 鈥 a drive she described as a moment for decompression. (Johnstone, 3/26)