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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Aug 13 2019

Full Issue

Hospital Deals With Drugmakers To Mine Patients' Genetic Data Raise Privacy Concerns

Drugmakers have been buying access to patients’ genetic code data from hospitals. But those facilities don't always disclose to patients the full ways their data could be used. In other news, Modern Healthcare reports on how policy differences complicate potential business deals between religious and secular hospitals.

Deals between drugmakers and hospital systems to mine the genetic profiles of hospital patients are triggering concerns over the control of valuable genetic data. Drugmakers have been spending hundreds of millions of dollars for access to patient information because of the data’s potential to help unlock disease insights and discover new drugs. They are striking deals to sequence patients’ genetic code, including with hospital systems like Geisinger in Pennsylvania, Mount Sinai Health System in New York and Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. (Evans, 8/12)

Earlier this year, CEO Chris Thomas and the board at Community Hospital in Grand Junction, Colo., were deep in merger talks with Centura Health, a 17-hospital system that’s a partnership between Catholic Health Initiatives and Adventist Health System. But some community residents and board members of the 60-bed hospital raised objections to Community coming under the Catholic Church’s Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services, or ERDs .... Hospital leaders across the country are facing these types of quandaries as Catholic and non-Catholic healthcare systems increasingly consider merging or partnering to gain scale and survive in the rapidly consolidating healthcare market. (Meyer, 8/10)

More industry news is reported on hospitals and health systems in Ohio, New Hampshire, Florida and New York —

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center employs eight nurses whose only job is to read the electronic transmissions flowing from thousands of implanted heart devices living in their patients' chests. Like health-data workers across the U.S., the nurses at the Columbus, Ohio, medical center scan the transmissions every day for signs of problems like atrial fibrillation. Lately, though, the team was drowning in bad data thrown off by a popular implantable heart monitor, Medtronic's industry-leading Reveal Linq implantable loop recorder. (Carlson, 8/12)

The state’s first freestanding fertility center and in vitro fertilization laboratory is expected to open its doors next year in Bedford. The new center will be an expansion of the existing Boston IVF satellite office at 18 Constitution Drive in Bedford, but will offer a full-service array of fertility tests and treatments. ...The expansion of the Bedford site was warranted after the approval of SB279, a state law that now requires group insurance plans to cover the diagnosis and treatment of fertility-related conditions for patients, according to Wright. (Houghton, 8/12)

St. Anthony's Hospital is about to undergo a $152 million renovation, which will significantly expand the number of patient beds and services the St. Petersburg hospital has to offer. The hospital, which is owned by Tampa Bay-based BayCare,will add a new 90-bed patient tower featuring all private rooms. The expansion will also relocate several hospital services, including cardiology, inpatient dialysis, pre-admission testing for surgical patients, new educational classrooms, a new electrical plant and an expanded loading dock. The hospital's cafeteria and kitchen will be moved to the first floor for better access to visitors, according to a news release. (Griffin, 8/12)

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Health CEO and President Joanne M. Conroy, MD, is one of seven people who have been named to the American Hospital Association (AHA) Board of Trustees. Her three-year term begins Jan. 1. The board of trustees is the highest policy-making body of the AHA and has ultimate authority for the governance and management of its direction and finances. (8/12)

A jury awarded $55.9 million to a Pomona woman and her husband after a medical malpractice trial over allegations that a botched spinal surgery left her a quadriplegic. The woman, Patricia Jones, was 56 when she underwent surgery in 2009, at Good Samaritan Hospital in Suffern, after complaining of pain and tingling in her arms, hands and neck, said her lawyer, Evan Torgan. (Brum, 8/12)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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