A committee of doctors at Nashville-based Saint Thomas Hospital has raised concerns about the healthcare system that runs the facility.
The hospital's medical executive committee raised the concerns at a meeting as four-hospital Saint Thomas Health Services completes a thorough review of operations that's expected to lead to significant changes.
Nashville companies are on the leading edge of one of the significant concepts being touted as a major tenet of health reform.
Healthcare delivery has long been organized in micro systems that tend to function effectively in their own specialized universes. Earlier this year, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Kerry Weems referred to these healthcare micro systems as "silos in healthcare," and announced a demonstration project to bring about a single, comprehensive payment to cover a bundle of services. CMS announced five major health systems had been selected to participate in the project to explore the concept.
Two of the participants are owned by Ardent Health Services of Nashville.
The Senate defeated an effort by Republicans to make it harder for states to extend government-sponsored health insurance to children of legal immigrants. By voice vote, senators rejected an amendment that would have required states to extend health coverage to the vast majority of other low-income children first before covering legal immigrants. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said that if states covered 95 percent of children already eligible for government-sponsored coverage, only then would his amendment allow them to insure children of newly arrived legal immigrants.
California insurers are discriminating against women by charging them more for individual health insurance than men, the city of San Francisco maintained in a lawsuit filed against the state regulators who govern them. The suit contends that Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner and Cindy Ehnes, director of the Department of Managed Health Care, approved a system that allows the insurance companies to impose "gender rating" when pricing policies. The ratings resulted in women paying as much as 39% more for coverage then men.
The leaders of an Oakland, CA, union have been removed from office by their Washington bosses, the culmination of months of fighting.
The Service Employees International Union served the officers of the 150,000-member United Healthcare Workers West with a trusteeship notice. It appointed its executive vice presidents, Eliseo Medina and Dave Regan, as trustees. The two groups have been in a protracted disagreement over organizing and negotiating methods and how best to represent California's healthcare workers.
As the commercial real estate market limps along during global recession, some investors say they believe medical office buildings might serve as a crutch, as it has in past economic downturns.
Although there was a sharp drop in the sales of medical buildings in the last quarter of 2008, real estate professionals say such properties are still being viewed favorably by lenders. In recent years, landlords have begun viewing doctors as particularly desirable tenants, said Robert J. Coughlan, a principal at the Tritec Real Estate Company, which has developed more than 300,000 square feet of medical offices on Long Island in the last 20 years.