Florida Blue has signed a letter of intent to form an accountable care program with Cleveland Clinic Florida. The Weston-based hospital, with more than 215 physicians, is part of the nonprofit Cleveland Clinic in Ohio and is known for having its physicians work exclusively for its hospitals and cooperate across specialties when managing patient care.
The top executive at Carolinas HealthCare System received $4.76 million in 2012 compensation, a 12 percent increase over 2011, as the system celebrated a profitable year and met all of its systemwide performance goals, the system announced. The top 10 executives at Carolinas HealthCare each received more than $1 million in total compensation. Most received increases of more than 8 percent.
Methodist Medical Center's lawsuit against OSF Healthcare System portrays the area's largest health care provider as a bully that continually thwarted Methodist's efforts to join preferred provider networks of some of the area's most profitable health insurers. The antitrust lawsuit, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court, alleges OSF Healthcare has engaged in practices that limit competition, drive up costs and reduce quality and consumers' choices.
State and federal officials have come up with a way to preserve Minnesota's subsidized health care plan for the working poor when the federal health overhaul takes effect, Minnesota's human services commissioner said Wednesday. Around 130,000 Minnesotans are currently enrolled in MinnesotaCare, which helps cover premiums for people who make too much to enroll in Medicaid but not enough to afford regular insurance.
Janiya Colon hasn't left the hospital since she was born three weeks ago. But her mother, at home, has been able to keep an eye on her every day since. Jacelia Colon has watched her baby on a near-constant basis since her Jan. 16 birthday, using her computer and her smartphone. That's because of BabyCam, a new technology at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Salisbury Township that lets some parents remotely view live footage of their babies in real time.
The number of Americans projected to gain insurance from the U.S. health-care law is eroding, by at least 5 million people, as the Obama administration struggles to implement the $1.3 trillion overhaul amid Republican opposition. About 27 million people are expected to gain coverage by 2017, according to a report today from the Congressional Budget Office. The CBO had projected when the law passed in 2010 that 32 million uninsured people would be on a health plan within a decade, and a year later raised its estimate to 34 million.