Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
US News Pauses New Med, Law School Rankings Amid Controversy
U.S. News & World Report, already under scrutiny for the way it ranks some college programs, is delaying the release of its influential annual list of top law schools and medical schools as it answers 鈥渁n unprecedented number of inquiries鈥 from schools about the data. The news outlet did not give a new publication date, but said the lists would not be released until work to address the questions has been completed. 鈥淲e take our role as a journalism enterprise very seriously and are working as quickly as possible to produce the best information available for students,鈥 the company said in a statement. (Svrluga, 4/20)
In hospital news 鈥
Beverly Hospital filed for bankruptcy protection on Wednesday, a step that hospital officials said was needed to avoid the closure of the Montebello facility. Hospital officials said their goal is to find a buyer to keep the hospital open and maintain crucial services for residents in Montebello and nearby communities, including El Monte, Whittier and East Los Angeles. They laid the blame for their financial plight on surging costs that they said had outpaced government reimbursements to care for low-income patients. (Alpert Reyes, 4/20)
A nonprofit designated by law in Virginia to advocate for the mentally ill has launched an investigation into the death of Irvo Otieno at the hands of law enforcement officers and other state workers last month 鈥 but the inquiry is being stonewalled by the private hospital where police first took him, the nonprofit alleged in a lawsuit filed in federal court this week. Otieno, a 28-year-old Black man, was in handcuffs and leg restraints when Henrico County sheriff鈥檚 deputies and workers at Virginia鈥檚 Central State Hospital piled on him for 11 minutes, leading to his death by suffocation on March 6, according to surveillance video and the medical examiner. (Rizzo, 4/20)
HCA Healthcare and LCMC Health each sued the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice on Wednesday, saying antitrust enforcers at the federal agencies are illegally trying to halt their recently closed hospital deal 鈥 and threatening the hospital systems with millions of dollars in penalties. (Herman, 4/20)
Hospital giant HCA Healthcare is deploying artificial intelligence-enabled medical dictation software in a partnership with healthcare tech company Augmedix, the two organizations said Thursday.聽The Nashville, Tennessee-based HCA Healthcare will add dictation software for its acute care clinicians. The AI solution will convert clinician-patient conversations into medical notes that physicians and nurses can review before they鈥檙e transferred in real time to the electronic health record system.聽(Tepper, 4/20)
鈥淓veryone realizes that we鈥檙e on the precipice of a major cliff,鈥 said Greg Till, chief people officer at the Renton, Washington-based Providence health system, which operates 51 hospitals and 1,000 clinics in the western US. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way that we鈥檙e going to be able to build a workforce that鈥檚 large enough to take care of the population.鈥 (Coleman-Lochner, 4/20)
In insurance news 鈥
The Department of Defense has upheld its $65.1 billion decision to award the next generation contract to manage Tricare's West Region to TriWest, a ruling that will affect more than a million patients in the DoD health system. The company that currently has the contract for that segment of the Tricare system and lost out to TriWest, Health Net Federal Services, had filed a protest to stop the deal. (Kime, 4/20)
Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield, the state鈥檚 largest insurance company, owes the state鈥檚 hospitals nearly $300 million in unpaid claims, according to a report released Wednesday by the New Hampshire Hospital Association. It said Anthem has not followed through on promises made in 2021 to improve its handling of claims. (Timmins, 4/20)
Express Scripts will increase reimbursement for independent rural pharmacies, whose ranks have continued to dwindle over the past decade. Express Scripts, the pharmacy benefit manager of insurer Cigna, plans to pay rural pharmacies that aren鈥檛 affiliated with a drug wholesaler more, as well as increase聽outcome-based reimbursement, such as metrics related to drug adherence. (Kacik, 4/20)