MNA Daily NewsScan May 1, 2012 CA Nurses on Strike; $18 for baby aspirin; more fallout from Fairview debt collection debacle (Page 110)

What is this? The MNA Daily NewsScan is a round up the day’s biggest nursing, health care and organized labor stories.  As news unfolds in real-time, we update the NewsScan with new links and info, so check back often!

Stories we’re scanning:

Health Care

$18 For A Baby Aspirin? Hospitals Hike Costs For Everyday Drugs For Some Patients    Sudden chest pains landed Diane Zachor in a Duluth, Minn., hospital overnight, but weeks later she had another shock – a $442 bill for the same everyday drugs she also takes at home, including more than a half dozen common medicines to control diabetes, heart problems and high cholesterol.

In Fight Over Obama Health Care Law, a Front in Minnesota  In setting up a marketplace where people can shop for insurance, the state has sought advice from consumer groups, labor unions, doctors and hospitals, employers, insurance companies, agents and brokers, and American Indian tribes.

OpEd:  Health Care Providers Have Lost Their Way  Putting your life in someone’s hands is grossly different than buying a hamburger. The April 28 column by D.J. Tice (“Pay up front? Be still my beating heart“) — in which he equated “everyday shakedowns for payment in advance” with payment upon admission to hospitals, presumably Fairview (“AG: Fairview put squeeze on patients,” April 25) — missed the mark.  Note to Nurses:  You can comment on any of these stories – please make your important perspective known. 

Tax Man Cometh for Hospitals That Flout Charity-Care Mission    But when hospitals send bill collectors to patient bedsides, file suits against the sick, all while erecting sparkling new buildings as they raise prices for their care, observers wonder whether the money is coming before the mission.

Labor Updates

Sutter Nurses On Strike.  Give them your support.    Northern California RNs will strike eight Sutter corporation hospitals Tuesday, May 1 to once again protest the wealthy corporation’s outrageous demands for more than 100 reductions in patient care protections and RN standards.  Watch RNs speak up about going on strike.

GREAT video of Albert Lea RNs speaking up and walking in solidarity.

Policy

CALL TODAY.   The Minnesota House passed the National  Nurse Licensure Compact by a 75-56 vote.    Govenor Dayton is our last line of defense on this highly flawed legislation that may jeopardize patient care. Don’t delay.  651-201-3400.  Learn more.

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Health Care

Minnesota Hit Hard After Medicaid Missteps   It was painful to watch Minnesota’s stellar health care reputation and its Human Services commissioner, Lucinda Jesson, get pummeled on Wednesday at a congressional hearing on Medicaid oversight.

Sen. Franken to Investigate Fairview’s Medical Debt Collector’s Tactics   Sen.
… Read more about: MNA Daily NewsScan 4-27-12 Call NOW to Halt Natl Nurse Licensure  »

[youtube=http://youtu.be/CnP0LOypaK0]

 

Albert Lea’s MNA RNs took to the streets yesterday to talk about negotiating a fair contract that keeps community nurses in the community.

Great job Albert Lea RNs! Nearly 1/3 of the bargaining unit participated in yesterday’s action, which was also picked up by local media outlets as well. Way to stand up, nurses, for your patients and your profession!

TV News Coverage

[youtube=http://youtu.be/ak-SNtu29o0]
… Read more about: Albert Lea RNs “Walk and Talk” in the community to advocate for safe patients, fair contracts  »

Attorney General:  Fairview Put Squeeze on Patients   Attorney General Lori Swanson said employees of the hospital system tried to collect upfront money from patients before treatment.

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Wisconsin Loses More Jobs Than Any Other State   The bureau’s figures show the state lost 23,900 jobs from March 2011 to March 2012. No other state lost more than 3,500 jobs, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (http://bit.ly/IpnExl).

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Live Tweeting:  Jill Burcum from the Congressional hearing on HMO spending.

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… Read more about: MNA Daily NewsScan  »

Concerned about whether billions in Minnesota taxpayer funds were actually being used for direct patient care, MNA RN leaders including President Linda Hamilton began pushing in early 2011 for what has now become a federal investigation of the state’s financial dealings with non-profit HMOs. With the story continuing to evolve, we’ve compiled this post to help chronicle the history of the issue and MNA’s role in it.

Background: In late 2010, KSTP-TV Investigative Reporter Jay Kolls broke a story featuring former Minnesota Hospital Association Attorney Dave Feinwachs. Dave was fired by the MHA after insinuating that Department of Human Services officials under Governor Tim Pawlenty’s administration had been looking the other way while non-profit HMO Executives raked in nearly $4 billion in taxpayer dollars per budget cycle for services they could not prove they provided.
… Read more about: MNA RNs and the (nearly) $4 Billion Question  »

Update May 10, 2012:  The House adjourned for the session in the wee hours of this morning, WITHOUT taking a final vote on the National Nurse Licensure Compact. That means it’s dead for this year. It will most likely come back next session, so stay tuned, but for now, be proud of all the calls, emails, letters and visits that nurses made to stop this dangerous bill!

This troubling story (published by Pro Publica and USA Today) provides yet another reminder why we need your help in opposing the National Nurse Licensure Compact bill moving through the state legislature.
… Read more about: Nurse Licensure Compact Legislation  »