Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
CVS Health Sues Tennessee Pharmacy Board Over New Law Targeting PBMs
CVS Health sued the Tennessee Board of Pharmacy over a law targeting pharmacy benefit managers. The law, signed by Gov. Bill Lee (R) last week and set to go into effect in 2027, will prohibit people or companies from owning, managing or controlling pharmacies in the state at the same time as PBMs and health insurance issuers. In the complaint filed Friday in the Middle District Court of Tennessee, CVS Health argues the law allegedly unfairly favors independent, local pharmacies and is unconstitutional. (DeSilva, 5/26)
More health industry developments
Equity in pay should be a professional and public health imperative in pediatrics, where pervasive gender-based pay gaps impact an increasingly female pediatric workforce, a new policy statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) said. The organization made several recommendations to help organizations address those inequities, including metric-based compensation, family-friendly work practices, transparent career advancement pathways, and equitable attainment of leadership positions. (Henderson, 5/26)
Dr. Katie Min was 36 when she took over her fathers primary care practice in the Queens Physicians Office Building in Honolulus Punchbowl neighborhood in 2022. Mins father had taken the practice over from his father, who had started it in the 1940s. Now after three generations, Min says the multigenerational practice is facing an existential financial threat after the states largest insurer gave her 60 days notice that it was radically changing its reimbursement model for primary care doctors. (Yerton, 5/26)
Leading Democratic candidates for California governor say they support universal healthcare, but have offered few concrete plans on how to make it happen. An article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association last week, co-authored by a UCSF physician, proposes one way the state could move toward a single-payer system: Make primary care a public utility, like electricity or clean water, and create a common fund financed by public and private sources that would directly pay primary care doctors to treat patients. (Ho, 5/26)
窪蹋勛圖厙 News: Nurse Convicted In Patients Death Turns Fatal Drug Error Into A Cautionary Tale
When RaDonda Vaught got her first speaking request, it had been a year since that day in a Nashville courtroom, when she listened as a jury read her guilty verdict for negligent homicide and neglect of an impaired adult. That was in 2022. Vaught was sentenced to three years of probation for administering the wrong medication and killing a patient at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 2017. (Farmer, 5/27)
With the future of West Suburban Medical Center still up in the air, local faith leaders, doctors and employees gathered in front of the hospital Tuesday to demand it be reopened with the communitys needs in mind. We need to have a serious call to action, said Bishop Dwight Gunn of Heritage International Christian Church in Austin, noting that his two children were born there. Not so long ago this hospital stood as a place of hope for many. (Schencker, 5/26)
WakeMed Health & Hospitals rejected an unsolicited proposal from UNC Health to combine. The proposal followed Atrium Healths May 1 announcement it plans to merge with WakeMed. A UNC Health spokesperson said the Chapel Hill, North Carolina-based system submitted a proposal to WakeMed for a broader partnership May 5. (Hudson, 5/26)
High construction costs, shrinking margins and lower reimbursement rates are making it harder for healthcare organizations to invest in capital projects. (DeSilva, 5/26)
On AI in healthcare
At Stanford University, its easy to get carried away with technology. The computer mouse was invented there. So was Google. And now, its pumping out a myriad of tools for artificial intelligence in health care. (Trang, 5/27)
Chief artificial intelligence officer, vice president of AI and chief data & AI officer the titles may differ but the newest executives in the C-suite are taking on larger roles as the technology becomes a critical part of healthcare.As these roles have become more common, the expectations for them have evolved. Defining the role, and finding the right person for it, depends on the specific needs of the health system. For example, a chief AI officer might be focused on AI governance, ethics and implementation. A chief data and AI officer might oversee the data environment, with AI as one component of the work. (Famakinwa, 5/26)