Panel says New Jersey won't save all hospitals
New York Times, January 24, 2008
A commission appointed by New Jersey Gov. Jon S. Corzine has recommended that the state establish guidelines for identifying hospitals in financial distress that are worth helping, and those are that are not. Hospitals deemed essential would then be propped by state grants and loans, with what the state health commissioner described as an early-warning system. The report did not spell out which hospitals should be shuttered, but said that a good number of New Jersey's 78 hospitals were poorly managed and inefficient, and that a "large number of hospitals appear headed toward distress in the next few years."
Most Viewed
Most Emailed
- Some physicians not always honest with patients
- CMS Reveals Central Line Infection Rates, Finally
- Keeping Readmission Rates Low with Treatment Guidelines
- 5010 Logjam Means No Pay for Physicians
- Parkland Keeping Consultant's Analysis Under Wraps
- Getting to the Heart of Cardiology Alignment
- Payment Cuts to Critical Access Hospitals 'Inevitable'
- Medicare Physician Payment Rule Factors in GPCI
- Leading Change is Tough from the Back of a Limo
- Marketing Health Coach Services

