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37 votes
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Centene to sell GP clinics and hospitals in exit from UK market
14 votes -
Risk of death related to pregnancy and childbirth more than doubled between 1999 and 2019 in the US, new study finds
58 votes -
Maryland reports first locally acquired malaria case in forty years
16 votes -
A single reform that could save 100,000 lives across the USA immediately
24 votes -
The hidden fee costing US doctors millions every year
22 votes -
Provisional suicide deaths in the United States, 2022
12 votes -
How one doctor in the USA keeps practicing, despite a long string of sanctions, fines, and lawsuits
30 votes -
Why haven’t we made it safer to breathe in US classrooms?
9 votes -
The impact of vaccines and behavior on US cumulative deaths from COVID-19
9 votes -
Private equity firms in US health insurance - the private-equity backed health insurer Friday Health Plans shut down under order by Colorado state regulators in July
27 votes -
Cardiovascular ER visits plunged after Pittsburgh coal plant shut, study finds
33 votes -
The vanishing family: They all have a 50-50 chance of inheriting a cruel genetic mutation — which means disappearing into dementia in middle age
29 votes -
Report identifies higher rate for leprosy in central Florida
9 votes -
American Physician Partners is latest physician staffing firm to fold — it follows Envision, and physicians consider further consequences of difficult market
9 votes -
Thermo Fisher Scientific settles with family of Henrietta Lacks, whose HeLa cells uphold medicine
26 votes -
Illegal medical lab containing bioengineered mice and infectious agents including HIV and herpes discovered in Fresno, California
32 votes -
New report from the US Centers for Disease Control claims more than 100,000 suffer from tick-caused meat allergy and the number is rising
42 votes -
Why diversity is essential to the National Bone Marrow Donor pool
24 votes -
Maternal deaths are expected to rise under US abortion bans, but the increase may be hard to measure
18 votes -
A political gap in excess deaths in the USA widened after COVID-19 vaccines arrived, study says
36 votes -
US health insurance giant Cigna sued over algorithm allegedly used to deny coverage to hundreds of thousands of patients
27 votes -
Measuring private equity penetration and consolidation of ownership in emergency medicine and anesthesiology in the USA
10 votes -
'Hospital-at-home' trend means family members must be caregivers — ready or not
15 votes -
Professor of medicine claims that curing America’s loneliness epidemic would make us healthier, fitter and less likely to abuse drugs
16 votes -
America’s therapy boom
29 votes -
United States FDA says aspartame is safe, disagreeing with World Health Organization finding
37 votes -
The post Dobbs dilemma for US emergency healthcare - Navigating the conflict between EMTALA and State abortion restrictions
21 votes -
2022 guidance from President Biden's administration assures doctors they’ll be protected by US federal law for providing emergency abortion care even if their state bans the procedure
40 votes -
First over-the-counter birth control pill gets US FDA approval
58 votes -
US states scrutinize the amount of charity spending from nonprofit hospitals in light of high salaries and large tax breaks
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/article/nonprofit-hospitals-tax-breaks-community-benefit/ POTTSTOWN, Pa. — The public school system here had to scramble in 2018 when the local hospital, newly...
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/article/nonprofit-hospitals-tax-breaks-community-benefit/
POTTSTOWN, Pa. — The public school system here had to scramble in 2018 when the local hospital, newly purchased, was converted to a tax-exempt nonprofit entity.
The takeover by Tower Health meant the 219-bed Pottstown Hospital no longer had to pay federal and state taxes. It also no longer had to pay local property taxes, taking away more than $900,000 a year from the already underfunded Pottstown School District, school officials said.
The district, about an hour’s drive from Philadelphia, had no choice but to trim expenses. It cut teacher aide positions and eliminated middle school foreign language classes.
“We have less curriculum, less coaches, less transportation,” said Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez.
The school system appealed Pottstown Hospital’s new nonprofit status, and earlier this year a state court struck down the facility’s property tax break. It cited the “eye-popping” compensation for multiple Tower Health executives as contrary to how Pennsylvania law defines a charity.
The court decision, which Tower Health is appealing, stunned the nonprofit hospital industry, which includes roughly 3,000 nongovernment tax-exempt hospitals nationwide.
“The ruling sent a warning shot to all nonprofit hospitals, highlighting that their state and local tax exemptions, which are often greater than their federal income tax exemptions, can be challenged by state and local courts,” said Ge Bai, a health policy expert at Johns Hopkins University.
The Pottstown case reflects the growing scrutiny of how much the nation’s nonprofit hospitals spend — and on what — to justify billions in state and federal tax breaks. In exchange for these savings, hospitals are supposed to provide community benefits, like care for those who can’t afford it and free health screenings.
More than a dozen states have considered or passed legislation to better define charity care, to increase transparency about the benefits hospitals provide, or, in some cases, to set minimum financial thresholds for charitable help to their communities.
The growing interest in how tax-exempt hospitals operate — from lawmakers, the public, and the media — has coincided with a stubborn increase in consumers’ medical debt. KFF Health News reported last year that more than 100 million Americans are saddled with medical bills they can’t pay, and has documented aggressive bill-collection practices by hospitals, many of them nonprofits.
(article continues)
15 votes -
How UnitedHealth’s US acquisition of a popular Medicare Advantage algorithm sparked internal dissent over denied care
14 votes -
A new ACLU lawsuit alleges that Washington DC is discriminating against people with mental health disabilities by continuing to send armed officers to mental health calls
https://theappeal.org/dc-police-mental-health-crisis-response-aclu-lawsuit/ The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, D.C., filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday alleging that the...
https://theappeal.org/dc-police-mental-health-crisis-response-aclu-lawsuit/
The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, D.C., filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday alleging that the district’s practice of sending police officers—instead of mental health specialists—to mental health emergencies violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.
“Someone who calls 911 for a physical health emergency gets trained medical providers who can treat and stabilize them,” said Susan Mizner, director of the ACLU’s Disability Rights Program, in a press release. “But someone who calls 911 for a mental health emergency gets a police officer with handcuffs and a gun.”
According to the lawsuit, these differing responses constitute a breach of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits government entities from denying people with disabilities equal access to government services and programs. The ACLU is suing on behalf of Bread for the City, a local nonprofit that provides healthcare and social services to lower-income and unhoused communities.
31 votes -
Weight obsession is ruining everyone’s health
38 votes -
US maternal deaths more than doubled over twenty years
90 votes -
Freedom House Ambulance Service - a history of the USA's first paramedics
11 votes -
There’s finally a psychedelic caucus in congress — here’s what they’re doing
21 votes -
Five locally transmitted cases of Malaria in USA, first since early 2000s
20 votes -
How often do US health insurers say no to patients? No one knows.
21 votes -
How a year without Roe shifted American views on abortion
61 votes -
How and why the work of John Hart Ely a liberal scholar, profoundly influenced the Dobbs decision to overturn Roe v Wade re abortion rights in the US
5 votes -
This is why it’s so hard to find mental health counseling in the USA right now
56 votes -
How a dose of MDMA transformed a white supremacist
27 votes -
General surgery resident in the US on a 28 hour shift. AMA!
Hi everyone! I am new to Tildes and wanted to say hi to the ~Health community. I am on a 28 hour emergency general surgery call today and have a bit of downtime. I also noticed that the post on...
Hi everyone! I am new to Tildes and wanted to say hi to the ~Health community. I am on a 28 hour emergency general surgery call today and have a bit of downtime. I also noticed that the post on the moral crisis of America's doctors had some interest so I thought I would answer any questions about that or training to be a surgeon in the United States. I am finishing my 2nd year of a 7-year training program. Ask me (almost) anything!
44 votes -
The moral crisis of America’s doctors
15 votes -
Several charged with trafficking body parts stolen from Harvard Medical School morgue
14 votes -
The great grift: How billions in COVID-19 relief aid was stolen or wasted
21 votes -
US medical insurers clamping down on doctors who prescribe Ozempic for weight loss
22 votes -
This nonprofit health system cuts off US patients with medical debt
14 votes -
Catch up quick: COVID-19
7 votes