Latest News On Hospitals

Latest California Healthline Stories

Bill on Pricing Transparency Moves to Senate Health Committee

A proposal to ban “gag” clauses aims at making more pricing data public to improve price comparison shopping for individual consumers and large industrial buyers of health care. That said, Sutter Health defends the confidentiality agreements as standard practice.

State’s New Catastrophe Response Plan Leaves Nurses Skeptical

Presented as the first of its kind in the nation, California’s comprehensive plan for delivering health care in the event of a major disaster leaves front-line providers — nurses — less than impressed.

California Seeks Changes to Medicare Audit Program

CMS has piloted a Medicare audit program in California since 2005, but many California hospitals, nursing homes and now lawmakers say there are major problems in the program and are calling for it to be re-examined before it is rolled out nationwide.

California Seeks Fines, Penalties Against Insurers for Claims Processing Violations

Cindy Ehnes, director of the Department of Managed Health Care, and Santiago Munoz of the UC Health System spoke with California Healthline about the state’s record fines against PacifiCare for alleged improper claims handling.

Bill Targeting Drug-Resistant Staph Infections Introduced in California Legislature

Sen. Elaine Alquist, who introduced the bill, highlighted the bill’s provisions for California Healthline, and Dr. Henry Chambers of San Francisco General Hospital and Debby Rogers of the California Hospital Association offered their insights.

Funding Crunch Could Stall Progress on Emergency Preparedness in California

Leigh Hall of the Sonoma County Department of Health Services, Mark Horton of the state Department of Public Health and Jeff Levi of the Trust for America’s Health spoke with California Healthline about funding for disaster preparedness.

Proposed Changes in Medicaid Rules Could Cost California Millions in Federal Funding

Officials from CMS, Medi-Cal, the hospital industry and patient advocacy groups spoke with California Healthline about how proposed changes to federal Medicaid rules could affect hospitals, patients and the state budget.

Costs Push Americans To Look Abroad for Health Care Services

With health care costs on the rise, more U.S. residents are considering traveling overseas to undergo medical procedures, often at a fraction of the cost the operation would cost stateside. Health care advocates say the trend highlights shortcomings in the U.S. health care system.

Study: California To Face Critical Shortage of Allied Health Care Workers by 2020

Abdi Soltani of the Campaign for College Opportunity, Jose Millan of the community college system and Marilyn Chow of Kaiser Permanente spoke with California Healthline about the lack of allied health workers and what can be done about it.