Plus: Nurses at Cooperman Barnabas ratify contract Northwell notches a 2% margin for Q3 Labor issues mean tough road ahead for health nonprofits, S&P says
Plus: Northwell opens $10M multidisciplinary practice on Long Island State launches $9M loan repayment program for psychiatric providers Feinstein Institutes awarded $3.6M state grant for spinal cord research
The debut of the most recent new state dashboard shows the lengths states are going to in order to increase transparency into nursing home quality and operations.
The New York State Health Facilities Association this month asked state officials to repeal spending and staffing mandates adopted by the Department of Health.
Plus: NYC Health + Hospitals approves $11M contract with construction firm for Elmhurst modernization Jersey City courts the life sciences industry with new lab from SGA Covid back among top telehealth diagnoses for the first time since January, report says
The Biden administration is considering a requirement that the nation’s 15,500 nursing homes spend most of their payments from Medicaid on direct care for residents and limit the amount that is used for operations, maintenance, and capital improvements or diverted to profits.
The Biden administration is considering a requirement that the nation’s 15,500 nursing homes spend most of their payments from Medicaid on direct care for residents and limit the amount that is used for operations, maintenance, and capital improvements or diverted to profits. If adopted, it would be the first time the federal government insists that
The Biden administration is considering whether Medicaid, which pays the bills for 62% of nursing home residents, should require that most of that funding be used to provide care, rather than for maintenance, capital improvements, or profits.