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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Sep 19 2022

Full Issue

Study Links Medical Debt To Threats To Health And Housing

Medical debt is hitting more Americans, driving bad health outcomes regardless of insurance or income, a study finds. NBC News reports that 1 in 5 U.S. households suffers medical debt, including those with private insurance. Other news covers rising health costs, staffing issues, and private equity.

Soaring medical debt is setting U.S. adults up for higher risks of eviction, food insecurity and bad health outcomes regardless of insurance or income, a new study found. (Moreno, 9/19)

"The kinds of things we saw in our study are virtually nonexistent in most other wealthy nations," said the study鈥檚 lead author David Himmelstein, a professor at the CUNY School of Public Health at Hunter College in New York City. The U.S. needs a "real big change." (Lovelace Jr., 9/16)

In related news about rising health care costs 鈥

All signs are pointing toward significantly higher health costs in the employer market next year, which will translate into larger-than-normal premium increases. (Owens, 9/19)

As financial troubles grow, so do staff shortages 鈥

The national average for travel nurse pay in August was $3,045 a week, down 7.4% from the same month a year ago, according to health care staffing company Vivian Health. (Reed, 9/18)

About 450 SoonerCare members receive private-duty nursing 鈥 just a fraction of the more than 1 million Oklahomans on SoonerCare. Since April, about 150 private-duty nursing recipients have gotten notifications that their hours would be scaled back or cut completely. Kevin Corbett, CEO of the Oklahoma Health Care Authority and the state鈥檚 secretary for health and mental health, said the reevaluations for private-duty nursing are solely based on the medical necessity of the services and the patients' clinical needs.聽(Branham, 9/17)

Signs of a worsening pharmacist shortage in Alaska are everywhere: reduced hours at Anchorage pharmacies. Significant signing bonuses and multiple job offers for newly graduated pharmacy students. Patients being told to come back the next day to pick up prescriptions due to short staffing. (Berman, 9/18)

Hospitals across Missouri are facing a 鈥渃risis鈥 caring for patients in acute care settings who can鈥檛 find long-term care through the Department of Mental Health due to the agency鈥檚 chronic shortage of workers, according to hospital officials. (Weinberg, 9/16)

A staffing agency that serves health-care facilities in New York state was accused in a lawsuit of using hardball legal tactics to stop workers from quitting low-paid jobs. The complaint, filed Friday by a nurse who immigrated to the US from the Philippines, is the latest to allege that employers are resorting to illegal means to trap foreign workers in assignments that burnt-out American caregivers no longer want. (Eidelson, 9/16)

On the shift to private equity firms 鈥

KHN: Private Equity Sees The Billions In Eye Care As Firms Target High-Profit Procedures聽

Christina Green hoped cataract surgery would clear up her cloudy vision, which had worsened after she took a drug to fight her breast cancer. But the former English professor said her 2019 surgery with Ophthalmology Consultants didn鈥檛 get her to 20/20 vision or fix her astigmatism 鈥 despite a $3,000 out-of-pocket charge for the astigmatism surgical upgrade. Green, 69, said she ended up feeling more like a dollar sign to the practice than a patient. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e a cow among a herd as you just move from this station to this station to this station,鈥 she said. (Weber, 9/19)

Humana will spend up to $550 million to acquire the first set of clinics it built with a private equity firm, Chief Financial Officer Susan Diamond said during a meeting with聽investors Thursday.聽(Tepper, 9/16)

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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