by Scott McIntyre on Friday, December 18, 2009
Featuring hospital and health care headlines from the media and Web from December 12-December 18.
Iowa Headlines
Harkin takes to radio, TV to back bill
The Iowa Democrat has been dispatched to ease the concerns of liberal groups and leaders who have voiced their frustrations with compromises the Democratic leadership has made to hold together its tenuous coalition. (December 18, Des Moines Register)
Union membership to decide whether to back Culver, leader says
Whether Iowa’s largest public employee union will work to help Democratic Gov. Chet Culver in his re-election bid will be up to the members of the union, its leader said Friday. GOP challengers are lining up for the chance to take on Culver, who is expected to seek his second term next year. Support for Culver from at least one union is not yet assured. (December 11, Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier)
Official: UIHC turns financial corner
University of Iowa Health Care officials say the hospital has “turned the corner” after months of financial woes, and they are prepared to move forward with work on a new outpatient clinic in Coralville. (December 17, Iowa City Press-Citizen)
Allen Child Protection Center to open next year
Each year more than 100 sexually or physically abused Black Hawk County children are sent to Cedar Rapids for a forensic interview and treatment. Nina Thomas has made that journey to the St. Luke’s Child Protection Center with several young people. She has seen the extra stress placed on the families and the child. (December 14, Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier)
We should shoot for higher Iowa health ranking
Just as the Hawks were a few plays from maybe making the Top 5, Iowans could be a few calories or a couple of packs of cigarettes away from sliding further down the rankings. (December 14, Dubuque Telegraph Herald)
Iowa set to get Mercy Capitol keys
The people of Iowa are about to become the new owners of an old hospital. The east-side Des Moines facility, most recently known as Mercy Capitol, “is not the greatest building,” said Ray Walton, director of the state Department of Administrative Services. But it’s in a valuable location, just northeast of the Statehouse, and it could house about 400 government employees now using rented space elsewhere. (December 14, Des Moines Register)
Experts weigh in on health care reform
If Mid-Iowa is to get meaningful health care reform, there has to be a focus on what’s causing spiraling costs, and Iowa must get a better level of Medicare funding, according to experts who addressed the Ames Chamber of Commerce Friday. Four panelists from the fields of medicine, politics and private health insurance spoke to a group of about 50 people at Mary Greeley Medical Center. (December 12, Ames Tribune)
Broadlawns’ Hall fights audit release
The chief pharmacist at Polk County’s public hospital wants a judge to block release of documents related to allegations the pharmacy was mismanaged. Mark Hall has asked for an injunction to prevent Broadlawns Medical Center from giving The Des Moines Register copies of the documents, including an internal audit of how the pharmacy tracked drug supplies. (December 17, Des Moines Register)
U.S. Headlines
Hospital, physician lobbyists fought Medicare buy-in plan
The proposal to allow people ages 55 to 64 to buy insurance through Medicare — one of the most significant ideas to emerge from the Senate’s side of the debate — appeared and vanished in a mere six days. (December 16, Washington Post)
Unified, yes; united, no
As the new nursing union behemoth – the National Nurses United – is unveiled, some of its new members aren’t exactly jumping for joy. (December 16, Modern Healthcare)
California hospital vote pits upstart union against colossus
Hundreds of workers at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital are scheduled to go to the polls in a closely watched union vote pitting the giant Service Employees International (SEIU) against an upstart rival. The balloting at has drawn scrutiny in labor circles nationwide because of the nasty underlying conflict between the SEIU and its breakaway competitor, the National Union of Healthcare Workers. (December 17, Los Angeles Times)
Public cooling to health-care reform as debate drags on, poll finds
Anew Washington Post-ABC News poll finds the public generally fearful that a revamped healthcare system would bring higher costs while worsening the quality of their care. A bare majority of Americans still believe government action is needed to control runaway healthcare costs and expand coverage to the roughly 46 million people without insurance. (December 16, Washington Post)
Top 10 health care issues in 2010
Some might say that there’s no juice left to squeeze from the cost of providing care, but a new report from PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Health Research Institute says health leaders are going to have to try. (December 18, HealthLeaders Media)
Smoking rate drops in Massachusetts, drawing attention
When Massachusetts began offering virtually free treatments to help poor residents of the state stop smoking in 2006, proponents hoped the new Medicaid program would someday reap benefits. But state officials never expected it would happen so soon. (December 17, New York Times)
New hospital debuts in Minnesota; patients wanted
The construction crews have gone. Balloons and bouquets dot the lobby, and fish swim placidly in an aquarium near the lounge. Now the Twin Cities’ newest hospital just needs some patients. (December 16, Minneapolis Star Tribune)
Massachusetts ER policy passes checkup
A new Massachusetts policy requiring crowded hospital emergency rooms to accept all patients delivered by ambulance has not worsened conditions, as some doctors had feared. According to an analysis by state public health officials, the average time patients spent in 75 of the state’s emergency rooms remained about the same since the rules went into effect in January 2009. (December 14, Boston Globe)
Immigrants lose lawsuit against Atlanta hospital
Efforts to force the public hospital here to continue providing free dialysis treatment to a group of immigrants, most of them illegal, suffered a setback on Tuesday when a judge dismissed a lawsuit challenging the recent closing of the hospital’s outpatient renal clinic. (December 15, New York Times)










