August 27, 2024 | Volume XIII | Issue 35

OIG: For-profit nursing homes not complying

Infection control staffing rules go unheeded


Healthcare Dive reports:


About 1 in 4 for-profit nursing homes across the country are likely not complying with federal regulations surrounding infection control staff, increasing health and safety risks for residents and workers, according to an estimate by the HHSOffice of Inspector General.


In a report analyzing a sample of 100 facilities, 17 potentially didn’t follow rules that require an infection preventionist — a staffer responsible for managing the nursing home’s infection prevention and control policies — to complete specialized training before taking the job.


Seven nursing homes potentially failed to designate an infection preventionist entirely, according to OIG.

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Traveling to die: The latest form of medical tourism

Debby Waldman


In the 18 months after Francine Milano was diagnosed with a recurrence of the ovarian cancer she thought she’d beaten 20 years ago, she traveled twice from her home in Pennsylvania to Vermont. She went not to ski, hike, or leaf-peep, but to arrange to die.


“I really wanted to take control over how I left this world,” said the 61-year-old who lives in Lancaster. “I decided that this was an option for me.”


Dying with medical assistance wasn’t an option when Milano learned in early 2023 that her disease was incurable. At that point, she would have had to travel to Switzerland — or live in the District of Columbia or one of the 10 states where medical aid in dying was legal.


But Vermont lifted its residency requirement in May 2023, followed by Oregon two months later. (Montana effectively allows aid in dying through a 2009 court decision, but that ruling doesn’t spell out rules around residency. And though New York and California recently considered legislation that would allow out-of-staters to secure aid in dying, neither provision passed.)

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McKesson acquires majority stake in Florida community oncology

Fierce Healthcare reports:


McKesson plans to grow its oncology platform by investing nearly $2.5 billion into a community oncology clinic operator’s business and administrative services arm. Announced Monday, the deal sees Irving, Texas-based McKesson picking up a 70% stake in Community Oncology Revitalization Enterprise Ventures (Core Ventures)...

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Children and long COVID

Most prior studies of the condition focused on adults

NJ Spotlight News


New studies by Rutgers University and other researchers have found that among children who had COVID-19 over the course of the pandemic, nearly half of them are experiencing at least one prolonged symptom.

Watch the video HERE.

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