Search Results for: "2022 Disaster Conference"

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A Bullish Budget

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On Thursday, the Legislature approved the first budget under this new Governor — a nearly $214 billion spending plan that makes significant investments in the new Governor’s top priorities, including health care (we anticipate the trailer bill related to health care will be approved later in the month).

One of the key takeaways from Newsom’s first budget negotiation effort is that he is clearly disposed to use the budget — his most powerful tool as Governor — in a proactive and impactful way to advance his health care goals.

CEO Message: In Your Service

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Our hospital association — and I’d like to emphasize “our” here because it’s you, our members, who drive all we do — exists for one reason: to support your mission of care in California.

Hospital Discharge Planning Final Rule

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Recording

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Overview

On September 30, 2019 the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published in the Federal Register, a final rule that addresses discharge planning requirements for hospitals, critical access hospitals (CAHs), and home health agencies.  Provisions of the final rule went into effect November 29, 2019.

CEO Message: Best Wishes for a Happy and Healthy New Year

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With the approaching holidays, many of us will have an opportunity to slow down, spend time with family, recharge – and reflect on the year that has passed and the one that is just around the corner.

As the leaders of your statewide and regional hospital associations, preparing to close out 2019, we find ourselves looking forward to 2020, energized by its challenges and buoyed by the promise of even greater collaboration with all of you.

We’ll carry forward the momentum of 2019, a year when we leveraged our greatest strength – our unity – like never before. We’re grateful for all you did to help us advance policies that protect patients, and we’re honored that you trust us to advocate on your behalf for solutions that help you meet your mission of care.

Thank you for your support, for the extraordinary care you deliver to patients, and for the enduring service you provide in your communities. We look forward to the new year and our work together to help improve care for all Californians.

Best wishes for a joyous holiday season, and a healthy and rewarding New Year.

Carmela Coyle, President & CEO, California Hospital Association 

Bryan J. Bucklew, President & CEO, Hospital Council — Northern & Central California

George W. Greene, President/CEO, Hospital Association of Southern California

Dimitrios Alexiou, President & CEO, Hospital Association of San Diego & Imperial Counties

CMS Issues Proposed Rule on Transparency in Coverage

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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Service (CMS) — along with the Departments of Labor and Treasury — has issued a proposed rule that would establish a number of new price transparency requirements for health plans. The proposed rule is intended to build on newly finalized price transparency requirements for hospitals, and reflects President Trump’s June 24 executive order. 

Proposed Regulations Address Confidentiality of Patients With Substance Use Disorder

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The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released two proposed rules last week about the confidentiality of substance use disorder (SUD) patient information. The first proposed rule includes several changes to the law governing medical records created by federally assisted substance use disorder (FASUD) programs, also known as the Part 2 regulations.

Hospitals Joining Forces Can Expand Access and Quality — and Shrink Costs

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“When considering cost containment, are researchers and policymakers considering hospital system membership separate from market concentration? They probably should.”

That tweet, posted by the University of Southern California’s Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics, references a study it just published on hospital system participation and health care spending. The study offers an important counter-perspective to the conventional wisdom that hospital “systemness” increases costs.

Recent public discourse about hospital integration often assumes that it contributes to overall health care spending, but the USC researchers discovered some trends to the contrary that must be considered:

Hospital system membership and market concentration are two different issues. The researchers found that hospital systems are not strongly correlated with market concentration and tend to have a broad reach beyond geographic markets. 
States with the highest proportion of system hospitals tend to have lower per capita hospital costs. California ranks as the ninth lowest state in per capita hospital costs (75% of hospitals beds in the state are part of hospital systems).

What we also know about hospitals that join forces within systems is that they improve their ability to leverage resources, innovation, and technology. This creates efficiencies for coping with burdensome regulations and enables a shift of resources to quality initiatives. In many areas — like rural and underserved communities — system integration preserves access to care by keeping open hospitals that might otherwise shutter.

Patient care in the 21st century has meant more hospitals reinventing themselves to meet their patients’ and communities’ needs by integrating and, in so doing, creating more options for people to get the right care at the right time and in the right setting.

This new data suggesting hospital systems yield lower health care spending means that policy makers will need to reconsider some common assumptions if they want to preserve high-quality care while keeping costs in check.

In 2020, as California lawmakers focus more keenly than ever on the issue of health care affordability, integration will be part of the discussion — and studies like these, which demonstrate the need for more research, will be critical to shifting the tone in the Capitol.

— Carmela

CHA to Participate in Workgroups Addressing Medi-Cal Innovation

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The California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) has appointed CHA to two important workgroups for its multi-year California Advancing and Innovating Medi-Cal (CalAIM) initiative, which seeks to improve health outcomes for Medi-Cal members through payment, program, and delivery system reforms.

DHCS Releases 2017-18 Phase 2 Volume Charts for Hospital Fee Directed Payments

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Last Friday, the Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) released state fiscal year (SFY) 2017-18 Phase 2 encounter volume charts for the Hospital Fee Program to all health plans and hospitals. The data cover Jan. 1 – June 30, 2018, and are available via the secure file transfer protocol site.

CHA Urges Department of Managed Health Care to Clarify Exceptions to New Licensing Requirements

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Yesterday, CHA submitted comments on the Department of Managed Health Care’s (DMHC) draft guidance implementing its recently finalized Knox-Keene licensure regulation. The regulation greatly expands the types of financial arrangements requiring a license, and hospitals are encouraged to consult with counsel to determine how the new requirements will impact their organization.