Washington D.C. Council Creates Nonprofit Corporation To Seize Control of United Medical Center At Foreclosure Auction

More hospital news, this time right under the nose of Washington and Congress, so if this doesn’t generate some attention here, I don’t know what will, again as most are non participants in consumer healthcare IT so it’s kind of of hard to see this I guess.  The city  will have to subsidize as the hospital can’t meet their debt and bills. 

It appears the “for profit” organization that owns the hospital is in default on the bills and they don’t expect anyone else at this point to bid on the hospital as it is on the block.  They expect the current owner though to show up and try to block this effort, go figure?  From what is posted in this article, it appears some bad management is in the picture from years past.  BD  

The D.C. Council voted Tuesday to establish a nonprofit corporation to seize control of United Medical Center at a foreclosure auction next week, even imagethough the District's chief financial officer warned members that the city might not be able to afford it. 

After months of wrangling between the city and Specialty Hospitals of America, the hospital's owner, Attorney General Peter Nickles plans to auction the Southeast Washington hospital on the steps of the John A. Wilson Building on July 9.

Nickles has accused Specialty, a for-profit company that took over the hospital then known as Greater Southeast in 2007, of defaulting on its loan agreements with the city. 

"Because the hospital cannot meet its operating expenditures, given its current streams, it is likely the city will have to continue to subsidize the hospital into the future," wrote Gandhi, noting the city is near its debt limit.

D.C. Council creates nonprofit to take over SE hospital

VA Awards 3 Year Contract to the City of Hope For End-of-Life Nursing Education And Hospice Care

This is a 3 year contract and everyone knows the City of Hope is the foremost institution for cancer and cancer research.  Recently in the news the debate and lawsuits with the City of Hope and their doctors over contracts and physicians groups.  The award of this contract may bring some revenue into the hospital while at the same time provide good training for the nurses at the VA.  image

City of Hope And Doctors Dispute with Law Suits - Board Representation Issues At Hand And Of Course the Money

In order for nurses to provide end of life training, they need a strong partnership with the doctors for sure to understand all elements of care that are needed for the patients so hopefully agreements are created so patients will not need to shift to new physicians for their care.  BD 

DUARTE, Calif.--(EON: Enhanced Online News)--The Department of Veterans Affairs has awarded the City of Hope a three-year contract to educate nurses on how to provide better palliative care for Veterans with life-threatening illnesses. This work will be conducted through the End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC), a national nursing education initiative administered by the City of Hope and the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN).

More than 54,000 American Veterans – mostly from World War II and Korea – die each month, and the Department of Veterans Affairs Hospice and Palliative Care Initiative (VAHPC) is trying to improve hospice and palliative care for them. Given that the number of Vietnam-era veterans over 65 will continue to grow through 2034, so too will the need for hospice and palliative care in the VA system. image

During the three years of the ELNEC-For Veterans project, 600 nurse educators will enroll in national “train-the-trainer” courses. The expertise gained there promises to improve the quality of palliative care for thousands of veterans in 153 Department of Veterans’ Affairs Medical Centers across the U.S.

The ELNEC-For Veterans project is collaboratively administered by City of Hope, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) in Washington, D.C., and the Department of Veterans Affairs. Co-investigator on this project is Pam Malloy, MN, RN, OCN, FPCN from AACN. For further information about this project, go to: http://www.aacn.nche.edu/ELNEC.

Veterans Administration Awards Contract to the City of Hope to Expand the End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC) Program to Improve Palliative Care at U.S. Veterans Hospitals | EON: Enhanced Online News

Hospital CIOs Are Unsure if They Can Demonstrate “Meaningful Use of Electronic Medical Records” – CMS is Outsourcing Compliance and Repository to Northrop Grumman at a Cost of $34 Million

I recently commented on the same issue myself with clarity being at the top of the heap.  It is a moving target though that never stops moving and new technologies as well as mobile devices are creating changes almost daily, is this new device meaningful?

Meaningful Use Stipulations Are Creating Nightmares for All – Not Working By Using IT Exclusively as a Method to Change Business Models

In support of the CIOs though, don’t feel so bad as CMS had to outsource the creation of establishing a “Meaningful Use Data Base” with Northrop Grumman doing imagethe work so the government is not in fact getting first hand involvement here in tracking it either after the CIOs can figure out how to meet all the standards and get on board. 

CMS Outsourcing Creation of “Meaningful Use” Database to Northrop Grumman in a $34 Million Contract

The database is designed to avoid duplication of payments by collecting information about whether physicians and hospitals are participating under the Medicare or Medicaid programs.

We also have this in the news with HHS trying to come up with some type of plan to increase health literacy.  When it comes to the Hospital CIOs, you have literacy and a whole lot more and are talking to the top of the ladder here, but like the rest of us, they don’t really get an role models at the government level either in their area of expertise. 

HHS National Plan to Improve Health Literacy – Not Going To Happen Until We Focus on Using Technology (The Tool for Literacy) Which Includes Role Models at HHS And Other Places in Government

We are all being thrown a new left curve every day with Health IT.  Not too long ago I sat down with a small group of doctors who wanted to learn some basics of social networking and some of the “free” things they could do to get up to par, and these are all doctors with paper records.  They all had the right attitudes and were willing to learn but everyone was at different levels and the exact words spoken to me was “we need someone to help us through and hold our hands”, and that does not take any credibility away from the MD group at all, it’s a reality.

This is important too as the doctors and clinicians are the ones who will demonstrate “meaningful use” after the CIOs do their part as this is all teamwork and one big collaborative effort.  Data systems and red tape don’t excite doctors, curing and treating ailments as well as saving lives does.  BD

NEW YORK, June 29 /PRNewswire/ -- A year and a half after the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act allocated billions of dollars to help hospitals and doctors purchase equipment to computerize patient medical records, even the most sophisticated hospitals in the country are struggling to qualify for the payments.

Eight in 10 hospital chief information officers (CIOs) surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP said they are concerned or very concerned they will not be able to demonstrate "meaningful use" of electronic health records (EHR) within the federally established deadline of 2015, according to a report entitled Ready or not: On the road to the meaningful use of EHRs and health IT, published today by PricewaterhouseCoopers' Health Research Institute (HRI).

Lack of clarity and a final ruling hinder meaningful use implementation. Guidelines for system certification were issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on June 7, but final guidelines for meaningful use criteria are not expected until fall of 2010, leaving many CIOs and their vendors at an impasse. CIOs surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers are most concerned about reporting requirements. Ninety-four percent of CIOs said they are concerned they can't meet government requirements about how to report meaningful use, and 92 percent are concerned about remaining lack of clarity in meaningful use criteria.

Sixty-three percent of CIOs said their organizations are either already working with physicians around meaningful use issues or plan to do so within the next six months. Moreover, an overwhelming 88 percent responded that meaningful use is somewhat or very likely to increase the involvement of non-administrative physicians in quality initiatives.

Meaningless Adoption of Electronic Health Records Could Put Meaningful Use Goals at Risk,... -- NEW YORK, June 29 /PRNewswire/ --

First Generic Version of Effexor Approved by the FDA

A little history from the past, there were some fabricated studies written about Effexor and the link below will catch you up as the one doctor stated that the anti-depressant was also good as a pain killer, not so, so no off label for pain.

Top Pain Scientist Fabricated Data in Pain Killer Studies – Was Money a powerful motivator

A prominent Massachusetts anesthesiologist allegedly fabricated 21 medical studies that claimed to show benefits from painkillers like Vioxx and Celebrex, according to the hospital where he worked.  BD

TUESDAY, June 29 -- The first generic version of Effexor extended release capsules (venlafaxine hydrochloride) to treat major depressive disorder has imagebeen approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Prescribing information for the generic version of Effexor XR may differ from that of the brand name drug because of various patents held by the brand name drug's maker, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, the FDA said in a news release. But the same safety warnings will apply.

The generic version will be manufactured by Teva Pharmaceuticals, based in Wales, Penn.

The drug's label includes a warning that antidepressants may raise the risk of suicidal thoughts or tendencies among some children, teens and young adults, the agency said.

Generic Effexor XR Approved - Drugs.com MedNews

Bayer Claim That Vitamins Prevent Prostate Cancer Is Now A Class Action Lawsuit – False Advertising

The FDA does not have jurisdiction over the advertisements relative to vitamin supplements, thus this fell under the area of the FTC and it sat around for a while, even with cancer researchers writing to the FTC.  The attorneys are on it now and according to this article the advertising worked as sales grew; however at the cost perhaps of a naive society.

Bayer Is Sued Over Labeling Stating It Helps Prevent Prostate Cancer – One A Day

You just can’t believe all the advertising you see and hear today and this is a classic case.  With current economic conditions sales and marketing has soared to almost intolerable levels at times and there needs to be some corporate responsibility to adhere to truth in advertising.  BD 

A class action lawsuit against Bayer (BAY) over its alleged false claims about One A Day Men’s Multivitamins will go to trial, a federal judge has ruled. The case is one in an avalanche of litigation over Bayer’s outlandish advertising for the product. The suits mostly hang Bayer with its own rope: The company imageran radio and TV ads claiming One A Day could prevent prostate cancer.

While Bayer may whittle down the litigation on legal technicalities, the facts are fairly clear. Vitamins don’t prevent prostate cancer or help you lose weight (another Bayer claim) and yet the company has spent years telling people the opposite. Bayer’s lies worked: The brand’s sales rose 16.1 percent to €36 million in Q1 2010. Now all that revenue is under threat — it could easily be eaten by lawyers fees and damages awards.

According to a South Carolina class action complaint, Bayer’s ads said this:

Packaging: Did you know that prostate cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in men and that emerging research suggests selenium may reduce the risk of prostate cancer?

Radio: Prostate cancer. It’s an important subject. Did you know that there are more new cases of prostate cancer each year than any other cancer? And here’s something else you should know. Now, there’s something that you can do that may help reduce your risk. Along with your regular doctor checkups, switch to One A Day men’s. A complete multivitamin plus selenium, which emerging research suggests may reduce the risk of prostate cancer.

TV: Did you know one in three men will face prostate issues? One in three, really? That’s why One A Day Men’s is a complete multivitamin with selenium which emerging research suggests can help prostate health.

The FTC has no excuses for not acting against Bayer since then. On June 18, 2009, nine prominent cancer researchers wrote to the agency, describing their research on selenium, to ask that it “halt these ads as soon as possible.”

How a Legal Loophole Let Bayer Claim That Vitamins Prevent Prostate Cancer | BNET Pharma Blog | BNET

VA Hospital in Missouri Warning Members of Potential Exposure to HIV And Hepatitis

One more story about cleanliness or lack of in this case.  This particular exposure was in the area of not keeping dental instruments clean and/or failure to clean.  BD

(CNN) -- A Missouri VA hospital is under fire because it may have exposed more than 1,800 veterans to dangerous viruses like hepatitis and HIV.image

John Cochran VA Medical Center in St. Louis has recently mailed letters to 1,812 veterans telling them they could contract hepatitis B, hepatitis C and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) after visiting the medical center for dental work, said Rep. Russ Carnahan.

Carnahan said Tuesday he is calling for a investigation into the issue and has sent a letter to President Obama about it.

"This is absolutely unacceptable," said Carnahan, a Democrat from Missouri. "No veteran who has served and risked their life for this great nation should have to worry about their personal safety when receiving much needed healthcare services from a Veterans Administration hospital."

VA hospital may have infected 1,800 veterans with HIV - CNN.com

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St. Louis Startup Cofactor Will Sequence Ozzy Osbourne For Free And 3 Companies Will Interpret

This almost has the sounds of a new reality TV show or maybe I am out to lunch on this one.  I say this because PBS has done a few documentaries on individuals that have been sequenced so with all the talk and publicity, perhaps this is moving in that direction. 

Ozzy Osbourne Is Having His Genome Sequenced And Has A New Gig As a UK Healthcare Journalist

Ozzy was originally going to pay it seems until he got a better offer here:)  We all know he loves the spotlight too and plus if we can learn how he has existed through drugging his body and drinking like mad with whatever fabulous genes he has, perhaps we could learn how to mutate some of ours to enjoy the same!  BD 

A St. Louis startup has partnered with two other companies to sequence the genome of a very high-profile client — British rocker Ozzy Osbourne.image

Cofactor Genomics LLC, along with Knome and Life Technologies, will examine the Prince of Darkness’s genetic makeup in part to find out why he has been able to survive his sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll lifestyle.

Cofactor, a two-year-old company led by President and Chief Technology Officer Dr. Jarret Glasscock, will create a map of Ozzy’s genetic makeup using an Applied Biosystems sequencer from Carlsbad, Calif.-based Life Technologies. Cambridge, Mass.-based Knome (pronounced gnome), which has run the genome of several celebrities for a PBS series, will provide the interpretation and data analysis. 

Cofactor will start the tests within the next eight weeks and perform the work for free. Ozzy approached Knome, which charges about $65,000 to analyze genome, about wanting the service done as research for his new health column for the Sunday Times of London.

Cofactor raised thousands of dollars from California angel investor Jerry Dow to help buy the startup’s first sequencing machine, which usually run about $500,000. Since then, the company has performed 500 projects, mostly for researchers and geneticists. Cofactor brought in $2.5 million in revenue in 2009 and now has a staff of eight.

St. Louis startup Cofactor to sequence Ozzy's genome - St. Louis Business Journal

Medicare Changes Will Stand to Put More Hospitals Out of Business – Bad Projections and Horrible Implementations From Generally Non IT Participating Leaders

First of all the data being used is from “old” reports and that has value but not for the future, a lot of which is unknown and changes almost daily.  Technology will help costs in many ways if it were allowed to be implemented in a “human” way instead of all the algorithms for care that keep surfacing.  The big problem too is that some of the data is created by individuals who do not even participate as a patient in their own healthcare, i.e. are not an informed patient themselves.

Tenet Signs National Agreement with Cigna – Hospitals To Receive Higher Compensation When Pay for Performance Quality Metrics Are Metimage

I just wrote about another New York hospital that closed yesterday and if everyone thinks that pay for performance is the ultimate answer, wrong, it just makes for more pressure and worse care as it disrupts the normal path of care between the doctors and patients and yes I agree there are goals to be met, we are simply going about this in the wrong way.  Pay for performance is good for sales, not all around healthcare.  

Performance Reviews at the Hospital Means Pay for Performance for the Facility – Are the Quotas Being Met

Has anyone looked around lately at the news and seen what’s on the minds of doctors and nurses that are working under these constraints now and know that there’s more to come?  The whole idea is to make their jobs easier and not more difficult.  Again, as mentioned technology will help out a lot but the methodologies here just suck.  Insurers can’t even work with their own algorithms and are making errors right and left, so how in the world do they expect to rule on pay for performance issues, granted there will be mistakes there too.  The White House is even taking a deep look at where the IT money is going. 

White House Pauses $3 Billion In IT Spending – Office of Management and Budget Conducting Review – One of the First Projects on the Agenda is the Veterans Administration

The new Los Angeles County Hospital is probably the most glaring example of a total mess up with being built without enough beds and granted they didn’t count on the Martin Luther King facility closure, but hey this is the BP version of healthcare.

L.A. County-USC Medical Center Was Perhaps Built Too Small – Severely Overcrowded

We have some folks making decisions that shouldn’t be in those spots and budget cuts that are taking their toll. It’s ugly and running performance algorithms are not the 100% cure.  ONC is finding this out too so let’s not forget the hospitals have to follow this criteria as well focus on pay for performance measures that Medicare and every other insurer comes up with. 

Meaningful Use Stipulations Are Creating Nightmares for All – Not Working By Using IT Exclusively as a Method to Change Business Models

Long and short, we have no balance here and as long as we continue to rely on algorithms for everything in healthcare and forget that it is a human business there will be more casualties and even further distrust from all, and lots more unhappy doctors and nurses. 

HHS National Plan to Improve Health Literacy – Not Going To Happen Until We Focus on Using Technology (The Tool for Literacy) Which Includes Role Models at HHS And Other Places in Government

Last but not least HHS wants to increase health literacy, well we need some role models here and they don’t do very good at all themselves and don’t understand the problem with using technology as they are “non participants” so you have the blind leading the blind here, not a good solution.  If they weren’t so far removed from the real world perhaps we would see some progress.  BD

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The U.S. government's plan to base Medicare payments to hospitals on certain quality-of-care measures could end up transferring funds away from hospitals in the nation's poorest, underserved areas, an analysis published Tuesday suggests.

The findings, researchers say, raise the possibility that the so-called "pay-for-performance" initiative could inadvertently worsen existing healthcare imagedisparities.

Pay-for-performance reimbursement plans essentially reward hospitals and doctors for meeting certain treatment goals established in medical guidelines. For example, guidelines state that heart attack patients should be given aspirin and drugs called beta-blockers when they are admitted to and discharged from the hospital; centers that better meet that goal would get greater reimbursements.

Pay-for-performance systems are in place in some countries, like the UK, Australia and Taiwan, and have been operating on a limited scale in the U.S. for several years. Now the federal government is poised to implement a nationwide pay-for-performance policy within Medicare, the health insurance program for Americans age 65 and older, and people with disabilities.

But concerns have been raised about the fairness of such a system, since it assumes that all hospitals have the resources they need to meet clinical performance measures.

Using data reported by 2,700 hospitals to Medicare between 2004 and 2007, the researchers assessed how well the centers were meeting goals for treating heart attack and heart failure patients. They also used government data to look at the economic health of each hospital's country -- including the level of poverty, unemployment and the availability of health professionals and college graduates in the local workforce.

Reuters Health Information (2010-06-29): Medicare changes could shortchange vulnerable hospitals

35,000 Humana Patients Could Soon Be Dropped From Humana in San Antonio – New Contracts and Hospital Reimbursement Was Too Low For Part of the Insured

What is also interesting here is that Humana used to own 3 of the 5 hospitals in the Methodist Healthcare System and sold them to HCA and now they are 50% ownedimage by HCA and 50% by the Methodist Healthcare Ministries, interesting combination over the yeas of acquisitions and mergers. 

Not all patients are affected but 35,000 is large enough, again this is due to contract break downs and nothing to to individually with patients, but as usual the patients are the ones who are inconvenienced.  Humana's Medicare and commercial health maintenance organization consumers are the one affected so others such as fee for service agreements remain.  Boy this get tough with contracts, as it is not either all or nothing anymore, it’s like let me check and see. BD

Humana officials in San Antonio announced Monday that talks had stalled with the Methodist Healthcare System, and they were notifying 35,000 HMO  members that the five local Methodist hospitals would no longer be part of their network beginning Aug. 1.

The move would only affect customers of Humana's Medicare and commercial health maintenance organizations, which make up about 8 percent of the insurance company's 429,000 local customers, said company spokesman Ross McLerran. The rest are covered by other plans, including preferred provider organizations and fee-for-service plans, as well as Tricare, the military insurance plan.

In a written statement, the company blamed “a difference of opinion with regard to fair and reasonable rates relative to hospital reimbursement.”

Ironically, Humana used to own three of the five local Methodist hospitals: Metropolitan Methodist, Methodist Specialty and Transplant, and Northeast Methodist. The company sold its U.S. hospitals in 1993 to the Columbia Hospital Corp., which evolved into HCA. Methodist and HCA merged the following year, with HCA acquiring half of the local Methodist system.

Remaining in Humana's HMO network are the five Baptist Health System hospitals, five area Christus Santa Rosa Health System hospitals, Nix Medical Center, Southwest General Hospital, University Hospital and TexSan Heart Hospital, the statement said.

Humana members were asked to call the customer service telephone number on the back of their identification card or the company's website to confirm in-network providers.

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/humana_breaks_off_talks_with_methodist_97352834.html

US Surgeon General Speaks About Microsoft Healthvault Collaboration with My Family Health Portrait

The original press release goes back to February of 2010 and now it appears things are up and moving.  I always seen to forget myself that there is a tool provided by the government to store health records online. 

Surgeon General and Microsoft HealthVault Expand Consumer Benefits for the My Family Health Portraitimage

The link above gives additional details on the announcement made earlier this year.  BD 

U. S. Surgeon General Regina M. Benjamin expressed her enthusiasm over the expansion of My Family Health Portrait, an existing record keeping database hosted by The Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG) at the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH) Healthvault will allow."This announcement is an important advancement in primary care and disease prevention by making family health history data available and accessible to consumers and practitioners," said Dr. Benjamin. 

"This new collaboration with HealthVault is part of a broader initiative and one of many third-party solutions that will expand the capability of My Family Health Portrait to help individuals make knowledgeable health decisions with their doctors."

For more information about the Surgeon Generals Family Health History Initiative, click here.

image

Microsoft Healthvault.com wins Surgeon General's endorsement

Performance Reviews at the Hospital Means Pay for Performance for the Facility – Are the Quotas Being Met

This is probably not the first time you have heard this but these conversations are going on all the time at hospitals and other health care facilities due to economic imagetimes.  Hospitalists are graded on their return admissions and each case is scrutinized by what actions they took and in many cases they have to check with a group of “consultants” before they can do much for you at all, and if they decide to go against what is approved, it’s back to standing up and making a real case due to the patient condition or illness.  These incentives are via Medicare and also are now included with the latest contracts with insurers.  Below is one I published today with Tenet and Cigna.  

Tenet Signs National Agreement with Cigna – Hospitals To Receive Higher Compensation When Pay for Performance Quality Metrics Are Met

Now when it comes to “quotas” some physicians are hearing “admissions are down” we need more.  Hospitals have a certain level of fixed costs that don’t change a lot and when the basics are not covered, people go digging for data.  Also what is not always taken into consideration is the overall demographics of patients and their illnesses/injuries and raw numbers are run to compare to other facilities.  One facility may see a larger number of patients with life threatening diseases than another; however when crunching statistics and working out doctor success rates too the number are skewed as cases and patients are varied. 

The algorithms for treatment approval and payment are getting so difficult to comprehend, even the peer meetings can’t figure them out, so when they get performance numbers the hospitals don’t have the foggiest sometimes on how they were really evaluated as they are proprietary algorithms from the insurers.  Medicare is different as that is open book on how they grade. 

Hospitalists, Peer Committees and Utilization Struggle to Comprehend United HealthCare Algorithms

In Texas last year when the doctors wouldn’t play and start admitting marginal patient, they were fired. 

In California, doctors cannot by law work for the hospitals, so we have this going on with doctors and hospitals suing each other as the doctors work for a group and the hospital wants to create a “new” group with new rules, etc.  It  is pretty ugly.  If the group does not meet their goals, well they just fire them and bring in a new group, or try to.  This situation here in California is a big, The City of Hope with cancer patients so you can see what damage is being done to patient care for the sake of money and using straight cold analytics to chop and reduce costs and staff with little human/patient interest at heart. 

City of Hope Files Lawsuit Against Their Own Doctors – Wants MDs Join For Profit Medical Group & Terminating Nearly All Physician Research Current Contracts

Just be aware of some of this going on behind the scenes if you are admitted as an inpatient.  It’s the algorithms of patient care screaming for meeting goals and covering costs.  Some of the hospitals that put their own plans into effect actually ended up getting penalized even though they were having good results with re-admissions, etc. but they didn't’ follow and meet the proprietary guidelines of the insurers, so go figure there.  BD

But three years ago her hospital implemented a new computer-based performance system that broke her job description down into quantifiable goals such as to keep infection rates for her unit low and patient-satisfaction scores high. When review time came, the discussion didn't dwell on how she had performed—either she had hit the goals, or she hadn't.

It's the same sort of hard-facts review system that many organizations in the U.S. are adopting. And it's changing the way companies and professionals view success and how to get ahead in a career.

Knocked around by the recession, U.S. businesses are trying to overhaul evaluations in a way that better separates top performers from underachievers. According to Hewitt Associates, 10% of managers and 11% of other employees are now judged based solely on the results they achieve, as opposed to a combination of hard figures and softer behavioral characteristics, such as demonstrating corporate values or showing leadership, up from 7% and 8% five years ago. Nearly a third of professionals at an executive level are evaluated based solely on results, up from a little more than a fifth in 2005.

New Way of Doing Performance Reviews - WSJ.com

Consumer Watchdog Warns Sebelius on Health Insurers – Good Reason for This as Insurer Subsidiaries Are in The Game to Play Just As Private Equity Groups Diversify and Collaborate Holdings

Perhaps I have had some readers over here at the Medical Quack as this is one of my areas of focus.  Companies don’t just buy subsidiaries as an investment any imagelonger, they become working cores to collaborate and supply services, data , etc. to the other subsidiaries or the parent company or holding company.  This is something we all need to wake up to today as it is happening all around us.  When you toil around with data and having been a former code writer it’s not too  difficult sometimes to project and figure out what direction things are headed.  I went a little out on a limb last year just wanting to be sure we had someone at the top level who had some Health IT background as even back then I could see how this was going to turn into a war of data and business intelligence, and guess what, it’s out there as clear as day today. 

I meant no disrespect, but common sense tells you that when you have the knowledge and can make the decisions yourself by having some first hand education and experience things move along a little faster as you don’t have to “ask” and wait for “studies”.  This works in any business and again in February of 2009 I could see this entire world of “algorithmic formulas” coming to light as it is all tied to money.

Kathleen Sebelius, Kansas Governor for HHS – Please not! Put the “Smart” People in these key positions

Prior to this post back in January of 2009 I made this post and it is also very true today, algorithms and whistle blowers are the two hot trends in healthcare, just read the news today. 

The 2 New Hot Words in Healthcare: Algorithms and Whistleblowers

When you have some knowledge of how both business and data come together, it helps to create “reasonable” and “attainable” deadline dates as you kind of know how long the data structures that support this stuff is going to take. 

HHS deadline for Medical Loss Ratio Plan Is Missed by Insurance Regulators – Not Done With the Algorithms Yet?

Insurance companies have quite a few subsidiaries today and their actions support the over all corporation and you see this on their Wall Street reports, so again they intermingle with all the other subsidiaries.  With actions happening under a subsidiary name versus the main company, sometimes it is hard to figure all this out and I try my best here.  Maybe this is a dumb question but why does HHS use Ingenix software as a shining star example of community data?   Remember these are the same folks (subsidiary of United Healthcare) that under paid everyone for 15 years with the data base that short paid doctors and patients?  Do we just give them blind trust and figure they now have “clean” algorithms?  

"Reach for the Top" Program Combines Prototype from Ingenix (A Wholly Owned Subsidiary of United Healthcare) for Public/Private Community Health Data on HHS.Gov Site

The lawsuits have not stopped and 2 weeks ago another group filed a class action suit for the same thing relating to the outpatient surgery centers getting paid short and this one brings in the 3rd parties they use to audit claims, and could include companies like Trizetto, who is owned by a private equity company in the UK. 

Outpatient Surgery Centers File Class Action Lawsuit Against UnitedHealth and Ingenix for Underpayments

While I am at it, how about the Chinese Gateway company bought 2 subsidiaries imagedown, that will help facilitate selling more Chinese drugs/devices here in the US and in other places in the world?  Is this one way the insurer is looking to keep costs for healthcare down in the US?  Remember all these subsidiaries of big companies exchange data and work together today and there are no lame ducks, Medical Quack included as far as not being lame (grin). 

UnitedHealth subsidiary (Ingenix Subsidiary I3) Acquires ChinaGate – Working to Sell Chinese Products Globally

What is also a bit odd is that these same subsidiaries get anti fraud contracts, in other words find fraud with algorithmic software formulas, but maybe they are good at it since they had the rest of us for 15 years with the short pay on the Ingenix data base?   For the employers, they offer even more software to analyze. 

Ingenix (UnitedHealthCare Subsidiary) Creates Desktop Software for Employers to Analyze Employee Benefit Use To Help Cut Costs – More Analytics and Algorithms To Save That Buck

Why do companies get anti-fraud contracts to prevent fraud like the one below.  I truly believe that due to names and subsidiaries and with all the recent acquisitions and mergers, it’s hard to know what barrel your apples are going into, so again this is the company that under paid and now gets an anti fraud contract and there are more, so are we hiring the hacker in so many words and can there be trust now?  

State of Washington Awards Contract to Ingenix (Subsidiary of UnitedHealthCare)

The link above is a good summary too of how they sell your medication records for a profit too, along with a couple others.  If that isn’t enough, you can read about the pay for performance money they have now set up to pay the pharmacists at Walgreens for signing you up for a wellness program.

UnitedHealthCare To Use Data Mining Algorithms On Claim Data To Look For Those At “Risk” of Developing Diabetes – Walgreens and the YMCA Benefit With Pay for Performance Dollars to Promote and Supply The Tools

Oh and one more item, they own some Wellness companies too so maybe it’s one of these where they feel consumers should be enrolled?  The first link is from February of this year. 

UnitedHealth Buys Another Wellness Company – Biometric Monitoring For Data With Employer Contracts

Other insurers are doing the same and you might want to give some thought to information that is stored in pharmacy benefit manager data bases, there’s no guarantee for privacy here and who knows where and how your data gets sold, a lot of gray.  Other insurers are doing the same with wellness too.

Blue Shield in Washington Buys Wellness/Fitness Company – Venture Capital Investors Were Pleased With ROI

Again today it’s a good idea to keep up with who you are doing business with and what are the “working” subsidiaries” under the main umbrella doing?  This is how they get their huge advantage at times and people have no clue on where their money is going or how it is used, and on top of that how it may be funding businesses outside the US, when the culture right now is to help the US get back on imagetrack. 

Once more it is all about those algorithms and we as citizens are running around with swords and daggers while all the above shows the type of “machine gun” technology we are up against.  This may be in part of what the Consumer Watchdog is saying be advising Kathleen Sebelius on why not to trust insurance companies.  There’s a lot to all of this and this was just a portion of one carrier and their subsidiaries, and there’s a lot more.  Blue Cross also has a venture capital division that was started from profits that came from premium payments. 

Blue Cross Venture Capital Investment in Phreesia Tablets Appears to be Paying Off

Algorithms give and they take away, working behind the scenes as designed by programmers at the direction of company officials to meet their goals.  The so called “bully tactics” are nothing more than “algorithms” they use to toss out to substantiate their decision making processes, and they can be clean or they can be dirty.  BD  

A consumer group warned in a letter to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius that health insurers “cannot be trusted” when lobbying over provisions of the new federal health reform law.

Judy Dugan, research director from Consumer Watchdog, went further, saying, “The California rate scandal shows that insurers cannot be trusted with a hand calculator, much less the language of health regulation.”

The group said the MLR is “at serious risk. If insurers get away with bully tactics on this early implementation, the rest of the health reform law will be increasingly difficult to implement in ways that curb costs and protect consumers,” the letter states.

The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) was tasked in the federal reform law with helping Sebelius determine appropriate MLR numbers, an effort it was supposed to complete by June 1. However, the NAIC said its work on MLRs would be delayed until later this summer.

Consumer Watchdog fears the role the NAIC will play.

“The NAIC has detailed knowledge of insurance but it is also closely tied to the insurance industry,” said Dugan. “Its president and board are drawn from state insurance commissioners, who often come from the insurance industry and whose common ‘next job’ is in the executive suites of the insurance industry. It is not a recipe for tough regulation of the industry.”

Consumer group warns Sebelius on health insurers’ ‘bully tactics’ | Insurance & Financial Advisor I IFAwebnews.com

The Intimia™ Breast And Chest Pillow Invented by an RN – Helps Keep Wrinkles From Developing on Your Chest

This was just too good to pass up and not post:)  We have all kinds of devices, creams, etc. for wrinkles and now a RN has invented the breast pillow and you can imagesee how it is worn at night from the picture.  There’s also a line of skin care that comes along with the pillow for purchase. 

If one were breast feeding, perhaps this would come in handy for the baby to rest it’s head too.  It appears this is an answer for wrinkles in the cleavage areas.  Now just imagine sleeping with a few other devices at night, like maybe a sleep apnea machine added in.  Getting ready for bed is going to add up to be a chore in time(grin).

I noticed there’s the standard pillow and also the “gold” edition, which are both priced the same so perhaps this is just the color.  You can read below but those of us women who sleep on our sides are at greatest risk for these wrinkles.  BD   

The Intimia™ Breast Pillow was developed by aesthetic nurse specialist, Irene Komsky, R.N, after she began noticing skin damage on her patients'  cleavage area.  She noticed that this damage was caused not only by the aging process but also by sleeping habits of her patients. 

Patients who were avid side sleepers seemed to have the most wrinkles. After months of research Irene developed a product, which she shared with a number of her patients who began to see immediate results - the dramatic improvement of the wrinkles appearance. 

image image

RN Invented - The Intimia™ Breast And Chest Pillow

Tenet Signs National Agreement with Cigna – Hospitals To Receive Higher Compensation When Pay for Performance Quality Metrics Are Met

Why are we seeing more diverse contracts with hospitals, well the link below might give a hint as to why and the agreement will allow Tenet facilities to cash in on imagesome pay for performance money if the costs are kept inline.  

Tenet Healthcare 1st Quarter Income Drops by 51% Compared to Same Quarter in 2009

United Healthcare has already jumped in here too. 

United Healthcare Who Announced 4th Quarter Profits Just Under a Billion Signs Contract with Tenet Healthcare

In the press release here it states that 42 of 257 hospitals have met the quality awards so if you are working for one who has not, be ready for some new stipulations and procedures to follow in order to meet these goals and some of these items may be topics of conversations at board and peer meetings too in the future if not already being discussed as hospitals do not want to leave any money on the table.  I hope these are workable and amiable for the physicians to understand too.  A imagewhile back I did a post about a hospital group that could not decipher what United Healthcare wanted.

Hospitalists, Peer Committees and Utilization Struggle to Comprehend United HealthCare Algorithms

As the business intelligence analytics force works harder to narrow down the qualifications and algorithms to qualify, no doubt keeping on track becomes much more complicated. The contract from the consumer side allows access for patients covered by Cigna to Tenet facilities.  Also as an interesting side note, Tenet has one medical facility opened earlier this year in a bank to make it easier for their employees to get care. 

Tenet Healthcare Set to Roll Out Cerner Millennium Solutions at 47 Hospitals Currently Using Paper Records

Also if you work at Tenet, several facilities are slated to roll out a new EHR from Cerner in the near future.  BDimage

DALLAS, Jun 29, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Tenet Healthcare Corporation today announced it signed a new multi-year agreement with CIGNA Corporation , which became effective June 1, 2010.

Under the new agreement, CIGNA health plan participants have access to health care services at all hospitals owned and operated by Tenet subsidiaries as well as Tenet's freestanding diagnostic imaging centers and ambulatory surgery centers. Tenet Physicians Inc., which contracts for the more than 400 physicians employed by various Tenet subsidiaries, is also part of the new agreement. Financial terms were not disclosed.

"This agreement shows that Tenet's hospitals are well-positioned in terms of pay-for-performance from health plans like CIGNA," said Stephen L. Newman, M.D., Tenet's chief operating officer. "It also affirms our continued commitment to providing our patients with high-quality care that is focused on evidence-based medicine. We are pleased to have strengthened our relationship with CIGNA."

Tenet Announces National Agreement with CIGNA - MarketWatch

White House Pauses $3 Billion In IT Spending – Office of Management and Budget Conducting Review – One of the First Projects on the Agenda is the Veterans Administration

This is probably not a bad thing at all as with doing this blog I see some very strange items getting funded and perhaps now with an additional review the right areas will be funded.  The focus as stated in the article is to specifically look at what is called “high risk” projects, and it also outlines that these are costly projects as imagewell,

The only mention directly impacting healthcare is the VA, and it is not specific on which project in particular may be in question.  We know our government needs infrastructure updates all over the place after years of neglect from the prior administration that somehow didn’t see the value with investing.  BD  

The White House on Monday instituted steps aimed at improving federal IT performance, including a temporary pause in more than $3 billion in annual spending on financial systems, detailed reviews of the "highest-risk" federal IT projects, and a policy review likely to result in new federal IT acquisition and management rules.  The Office of Management and Budget is conducting a detailed review of high-risk IT projects and placing a temporary pause on billions allocated annually to financial systems.

The three-pronged effort, laid out in two separate memos, one on the overall effort and another on financial systems modernization, comes as administration officials have continued the drumbeat of criticism of perceived gaps in technology and productivity between the private and public sector and wasteful spending on IT that often results in failed projects.

Agencies will have to re-scope these projects with shorter time frames, and review plans with the Office of Management and Budget. No new task orders or contracts may be awarded until OMB analysts determine that the agency plans can move forward efficiently and effectively.

OMB reviews of financial system modernization projects will begin almost immediately. The first reviews, with the Departments of Homeland Security, Energy, and Veterans Affairs, will take place next Friday.

Second, federal CIO Vivek Kundra will soon begin to carry out detailed reviews of "the highest-risk" federal IT projects. In the call with reporters, Kundra pointed out that $27 billion in federal IT spending is on projects that are "significantly" over budget or behind schedule.  As part of the review, OMB will engage the private sector, including software companies, IT contractors, academia, CIOs and more.

White House Pauses $3 Billion In IT Spending -- Federal IT Spending -- InformationWeek

North General Hospital in New York Closing – To Re-Open as a Government Subsidized Walk In Clinic & Nursing Home

This is the second hospital closure in the New York City area; however at least the facility has plans to continue on as a walk in clinic and a nursing home will move into the 200 bed facility.  Other hospitals will have to pick up the slack for inpatients but at least the facility is getting used and not sitting empty.  Below is the link about the closure of St. Vincent’s from 2 months ago.

St. Vincent's Hospital in New York City Will Close – Last Catholic General Hospital In the City

Not all of the hospital workers will have jobs when the facility re-opens but at least all will not be out of work either.  BD 

Barely two months after the closing of St. Vincent’s Hospital in Greenwich Village, North General Hospital, a potent symbol of the city’s political and imagephilanthropic commitment to Harlem, announced Monday that it was declaring bankruptcy. 

The 200-bed North General will close by next week, hospital officials said. But while St. Vincent’s closed abruptly with only the distant promise of an urgent care clinic in its place, the North General building will immediately be occupied by a large government-subsidized walk-in clinic for Harlem residents, state and North General officials said.

North General got 36,000 visits a year to its emergency room, but officials said that nearby hospitals and the walk-in clinic would pick up those patients. In a joint statement Monday, the governor and the hospital said the hospital planned to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

The city’s public hospital system will also move two of its facilities, a nursing home and a 200-bed long-term rehabilitation center, to the North General site from Roosevelt Island, officials said.

At North General Hospital, a Closing and Openings - NYTimes.com

L.A. County-USC Medical Center Was Perhaps Built Too Small – Severely Overcrowded

Back in October 2008 the new facility opened, state of the art and now we are less than 2 years later and the hospital is over crowded with patients in the hallways.  There were many studies made before building and with all the projections made it was anticipated with healthcare technology that less patients would need to be seen, but that has not been the case, so the projected studies here failed to provide the accurate information needed to build a new facility that could handle the patient load. 

LAC+USC Hospital – New Facility to Open Soon - Los Angeles

With budget cuts it was built for 600 beds instead of 750 and this is the result, another part of the debate issue and small won out.  The hospital has robots and a state of the art lab.  The link above gives some additional details about the facility.  BD 

Even before the doors opened on the $1.02-billion Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center many observers warned that the new hospital was too small.image Now, more than a year and a half of experience appears to confirm it.
The overcrowding has become so intense that health officials asked county Supervisor Gloria Molina eight months ago what she would think if the hospital began placing patients in the hallways, the supervisor recalled in an interview.

Last month, the hospital's emergency room was overcrowded about 80% of the time, with conditions considered severe or dangerous for half of the month, according to the county's own standards.
The decision to build the new County-USC at 600 beds was made by the Board of Supervisors in 1997, three years after the 6.7-magnitude Northridge earthquake damaged the old, cavernous Depression-era facility, located just northeast of downtown in Boyle Heights.

The decision was partially based on politics, which included the board majority's distaste for Molina's hardball tactics and anxiety over whether a larger hospital would be affordable, The Times reported at the time.

We're seeing sicker patients.... Sicker patients take longer to diagnose and treat," said Carol Meyer, chief network officer for the county Department of Health Services, which runs County-USC.
Increasing the emergency room staff would not solve the larger problem, said John Schunhoff, interim director of the health department.image
"It's also a matter of capacity of the size of the facility," he said.

The health department faces a nearly $600-million deficit unless it can secure more federal funding. It is still working to reopen an emergency room and inpatient services in Willowbrook, at the site of the former Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital.

Severe overcrowding is routine at L.A. County-USC Medical Center - latimes.com

Nurses Striking for Safe Patient Care While Wall Street Worries Over the Hospital Bond Issues – Why We Can’t Successfully Reform Healthcare

Do the folks on Wall Street give a darn over what goes on at the hospital and anything about safe patient care?  It doesn’t appear that way does it.  In the meantime imagethe nurses that we depend upon, who really know everything and every detail when it comes to your care are potentially striking to drive this point home so they can provide safety to patients and work in a productive atmosphere. 

There are hospitals that have laid off medical staff and they are running and working to the point to where they can’t keep up, simply as there is too much to keep track of.  Certainly technology helps but you can only cut so far before safety and care gets affected.   What is it going to be like one day when private equity and hedge funds start running all the hospitals – big clue, you are not going to like it and with the fascination of everything needing to make a profit today and being a business, that’s where we are headed. 

This could end up being one of the biggest strikes in labor history and yes it will cost money. By comparison, let’s look and see what Wall Street is doing, hiring more individuals at million dollar salaries and more. 

Wall Street Hiring Continues to Grow While Hospitals and Other HealthCare Facilities Lay Off And/Or Are Purchased by Private Equity Firms To Create Better Profit Algorithms

This scene is not limited to Minnesota and is spreading all over the US so again when it comes to the best care that money can buy for healthcare, it may not be there some day for the illusionists who don’t focus on healthcare but rather see everything as a credit or bond issue and hang on to the algorithms for dear life with their desired results. 

We need balance in life and we are certainly not seeing it here and the further erosion of ethics continues.  BD 

Wall Street analysts are taking note of the impending labor strike of more than 12,000 hospital nurses in Minnesota, and they don't like what they see.

It would create significant pressure on bond ratings at the systems. The report describes a multiplier effect on hospitals' profitability, as labor costs rise quickly through expensive temporary labor, while utilization drops, particularly among patients who would receive nonemergency procedures.

Three of the four systems in the Twin Cities rated by Moody's have a stable outlook as of today, but their balance sheets are fragile. The four systems together earned just $284 million in operating income on $7.2 billion in operating revenue in 2009, for an operating margin of 3.9%. “If the strike raises costs even slightly, it will have a significant effect on margins,” Moody's analyst Sarah Vennekotter wrote.

Minn. strike would hit systems' bond ratings: Moody's - Modern Healthcare

Porn Stars on Medical Record Privacy – Legal Suit Filed Claiming Unauthorized Employees Viewed Charts

The stars do not agree with the release forms and to work in the industry they must be tested for disease and in essence I guess there could be exposure of other imagemedical information at risk too.  Long and short of it, they want privacy too as patients.  BD 

LOS ANGELES — Two former porn actresses say their private medical information was wrongly exposed by a Los Angeles clinic that caters to the adult film industry.

Diana Lee Grandmason and Bess Garren said Monday they are suing because the release forms actors are required to sign at the Adult Industry Medical Healthcare Foundation's clinic are too broad.

The clinic caters to porn actors who must prove they are free of sexually transmitted diseases shortly before filming begins.

The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, claims the release forms wrongly allow an unlimited number of test disclosures to an undefined group of people.

The Associated Press: Lawsuit: Medical records of porn stars overexposed

IUDs Not Approved by the FDA implanted in over 400 patients by OB-GYN Associates in Rhode Island and Massachusetts

This will be interesting to follow up and see what arises when they are done as the IUDs were purchased at half the cost of what ones here in the US cost; howeverimage they are approved for use outside the US, so this is not a product that has not been reviewed and there appears to be no real danger.

What is interesting is the billing aspect of all of this too, as the article states they were billed as they were the product purchased here in the US and they were half the cost so were they looking to make money at this or was it just an honest mistake?  Obviously the cost issue is there, but by the time a seasoned biller gets the paperwork, it could be a legit mistake too with billing as she/he normally does.  BD  

If you had an IUD implanted by OB-GYN Associates, located in Rhode Island and Massachusetts, contact your  doctor to find out what type of IUD you have.

The medical group has been cited by the Rhode Island Department of Health for purchasing and implanting unapproved versions of both ParaGard and Mirena IUDs.

There is apparently no reason to worry about safety if the IUD. However, they were purchased internationally and not approved for use in the United States.

The Rhode Island Department of Health issued a press release stating that they discovered that the Rhode Island offices of OB-GYN Associates, Inc. have been purchasing non-US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved versions of the Mirena and ParaGard intrauterine devices (IUDs) from a source also not approved by FDA.

IUDs unapproved by FDA implanted in over 400 patients by OB-GYN Associates