CMS Proposes 0.1% Average Pay Raise For 2027 Medicare Advantage Plans
The increase is far below the 4%-6% bumps the industry expected, Stat reports, and comes alongside proposed restrictions on insurers' coding practices. Other industry news is on a Kaiser Permanente strike in California and Hawaii, health system investments in pulsed field ablation, and more.
The Trump administration plans to increase payments to next year鈥檚 Medicare Advantage plans by less than 0.1% on average 鈥 far below what the industry had expected. (Herman, 1/26)
More health care industry updates 鈥
More than 31,000 Kaiser Permanente nurses and other health care workers walked off the job early Monday, launching an open-ended strike across California and Hawaii that could disrupt operations at dozens of hospitals and hundreds of clinics. The workers, represented by the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals, say the strike was triggered by what they describe as unfair labor practices and Kaiser鈥檚 refusal to return to national bargaining talks. (Vaziri and Flores, 1/26)
Hennepin Healthcare is cutting five medical programs and about 100 full-time positions to address聽a $50 million budget聽shortfall聽by the end of March. (Zurek, 1/26)
The University of Minnesota, Fairview and M Physicians have reached a 10-year agreement to fund the U鈥檚 medical school and support physician training and research after聽seven聽weeks of intensive mediation. (Zurek, 1/26)
In Alamance County, Ivey Broadnax works with young people who may be struggling with mental health issues. Instead of focusing on mental health symptoms or deficits, Broadnax and other 鈥測outh partners,鈥 through Vaya Health, want to build positive childhood experiences for the young people they are helping. (Fernandez, 1/27)
Health systems are making big investments in pulsed field ablation systems, reasoning that the technology will help expand their cardiac programs and the short-term financial hit quickly will be recouped. Pulsed field ablation has only been available in the U.S. within the past two years. Despite it being reimbursed at the same level as older technology, hospitals have embraced it as an atrial fibrillation treatment because it鈥檚 considered safer, in demand by patients and the procedure is faster. (Dubinsky, 1/26)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News:
Watch: A Strange Checkup Bill Revealed A Firefighter鈥檚 Kids Were Mistakenly Uninsured
After Susannah Reed-McCullough鈥檚 husband died in 2018, she and their young daughters continued to receive health insurance through his job as a firefighter in Maryland. Then, in 2024, she got an unexpected medical bill: $377 for a checkup for one of her children the previous fall. Reed-McCullough said she called the doctor鈥檚 billing department and learned the insurance company had dropped the children鈥檚 coverage. The drop turned out to be a mistake. (Jackman, 1/27)
In obituaries 鈥
In time, his surgical innovations were credited with saving millions of lives, and publications hailed him for his supreme skill and accomplishments as the 鈥淭homas Edison鈥 and even the 鈥淢ickey Mantle鈥 of medical device inventors. But long before Thomas J. Fogarty drew such renown, he was a tinkerer 鈥 a boy growing up in Cincinnati in the 1940s, fixing things around the house for his widowed mother. (Longman, 1/26)