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2025 Hospital Finance & Reimbursement Conference Approaching

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

What’s happening: On Nov. 3-4, California hospital finance experts will gather at CHA’s members-only Hospital Finance & Reimbursement Conference to examine the fiscal impact of state and federal regulations and policies on hospitals.  

Courts Must Intervene to Protect Californians’ Health Care

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

Yesterday, CHA took a critical step to push back on actions taken by the Office of Health Care Affordability (OHCA) that are threatening access to care, putting health care workers’ jobs in jeopardy, impeding efforts to improve health equity, and risking the quality of care Californians receive. 

2025 Hospital Finance & Reimbursement Conference

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

What’s happening: On Nov. 3-4, California hospital finance experts will gather at CHA’s members-only Hospital Finance & Reimbursement Conference to examine the fiscal impact of state and federal regulations and policies on hospitals.  

New Dashboard Allows Hospitals to Show the Local Harms of OHCA Spending Limits

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

What’s happening: CHA has created an interactive dashboard tool to help members see the local impact of the Office of Health Care Affordability (OHCA) hospital spending caps. The tool allows members to filter by California Assembly, Senate, or congressional district to visualize the potential losses in hospital revenue, jobs, and local economic activity by 2029...

2025 Hospital Finance & Reimbursement Conference Agenda Now Finalized

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

What’s happening: On Nov. 3-4, California hospital finance experts will gather at CHA’s members-only Hospital Finance & Reimbursement Conference to examine the fiscal impact of state and federal regulations and policies on hospitals.  

CHA Encourages OHCA to More Comprehensively Capture Behavioral Health Spending

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

What’s happening: CHA has submitted comments on the Office of Heath Care Affordability’s (OHCA’s) proposed methodology for determining California’s behavioral health spending, encouraging the office to ensure its data collection accurately reflects the volume of services provided to patients across the state. 

Ahead of Rule Development, OHCA Board Signals a More Balanced Approach to Spending Target Enforcement

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

What’s happening: At this week’s Office of Health Care Affordability (OHCA) board meeting, members acknowledged a variety of potential reasons that a health care entity’s spending growth may justifiably exceed the target — a stark contrast from their sentiments at the July board meeting.  

OHCA Continues to Barrel Toward Deeper Health Care Cuts

This post has been archived and contains information that may be out of date.

In remarks that are as baffling as they are dangerous, many Office of Health Care Affordability (OHCA) board members are doubling down on an arbitrary, accelerated, and punitive process to drain hospitals of resources needed for patient care.