Pittsburgh-based health insurer Highmark Inc. has agreed to a $10 million settlement with a doctors group. The group had alleged unfair business practices against Highmark, and the total cost to Highmark could swell to $14 million or more once legal fees and other expenses are tallied.
The Food and Drug Administration is considering allowing pharmaceutical makers to provide doctors with medical journal studies of unapproved uses for drugs. Critics say the move would undermine long-standing restrictions on marketing medicines for "off-label" purposes.
A recent survey of parents who had suffered the loss of a child found that they believed end-of-life care for children could be improved. Specific areas that need to be changed ranged from better communication and displays of emotion by medical staffers, to respect for the role of the parents, according to the survey.
A report that uses Medicare information to compare the performance of Ohio hospitals is now available to consumers. Consumers can use the information to review how well hospitals treat 11 separate conditions in the areas of cardiac care, pulmonary disease, orthopedic surgery and general surgery.
Deborah Zastocki is CEO of Chilton Memorial Hospital in Pompton Plains, NJ, but for the purposes of this interview, I focused on her prior career as a registered nurse. I recently spoke with Deborah about a shift in thinking whereby healthcare executives are now seeing nurses not as overhead but as rainmakers. What that means is that given their greater interactive roles with patients, nurses will be increasingly important to the hospital's financial health as doctors do more work outside the hospital and nurses become the primary touchpoint for patients. Since nurses have more opportunities than ever before to influence quality, and since most people believe incremental gains in hospital reimbursement are beginning to hinge on quality measures, nurse morale and retention will be increasingly important.
In an effort to cut costs, the University of Texas Medical Branch may stop offering cancer care to indigent and undocumented immigrants. Its Cancer Patients Acceptance Committee has been studying the issue, but implementing the policy, but it raises obvious ethical questions, says hospital representatives.