Former news exec Brad Dennison dissects stories about healthcare and separates fact from fiction in this podcast from the Healthcare Financial Management Association.
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The crumbling wall between journalism and advocacy
24:57
24:57
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24:57Editor, professor, author, columnist and commentator Otis Sanford talks with Brad about decades of change in the journalism industry, and how reporter biases and opinions are seeping into healthcare news writing. Also in this episode, people who celebrate meeting their deductible, and a special musical treat. Mentioned in this episode: Society of P…
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Healthcare Blame Game, Live from Las Vegas!
22:43
22:43
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22:43Deepak Manmohan Goyal, MD, MBBS, MBA, joins Brad and Erika at HFMA Annual on June 27, 2024, to discuss his work as executive director for revenue cycle and supply chain at Monument Health in Rapid City, S.D. and the financial assistance program that has increased the system’s charity care by $7.8 million in its first year. Also in this episode, the…
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What media and lawmakers don’t understand about hospital finances
16:25
16:25
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16:25HFMA Policy Director Andrew Donahue’s column, “An open letter to Congress on nonprofit hospital finances,” has struck a chord with members. In this episode, he discusses margins, investments and M&A and what measure tells the real story of hospital finance. Also in this episode, Brad talks about the recent HFMA report Curing Payment Confusion. Also…
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New York Times medical debt piece dubbed "laziest story of the year,' plus revisiting charity care policies
22:40
22:40
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22:40Brad examines a New York Times article by investigative reporter Sarah Kliff about a recent study of patients whose debt was eliminated by RIP Medical Debt. Researchers say the results surprised them. Also in this episode: The cover story in the May issue of hfm magazine focuses on a South Dakota health system that developed a new process to identi…
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Bloomberg Philanthropies puts $250 million into educating new healthcare workers while Patient Rights Advocate spends on spreading misinformation
11:25
11:25
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11:25Chad Mulvany, vice president of federal policy for the California Hospital Association and former HFMA policy director, discusses Bloomberg Philanthropies $250 million investment in the future healthcare workforce, as well as what will actually move the needle on price transparency. Discussed in this episode: ‘Healthcare High’ coming to Woodside No…
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Patient Rights Advocate's distortion of price transparency regulations and data, and the ad campaign that's catching attention
21:52
21:52
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21:52Patient Rights Advocate (PRA) has engaged hip hop artists like Fat Joe, Busta Rhymes and Method Man in its “Power to the Patients” campaign, claiming that regulations around price transparency are not being enforced, allowing hospitals to hide their prices and “charge whatever they want.” On this episode, HFMA Policy Director Shawn Stack and Ruth L…
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TIME hits the mark, Modern Healthcare misses, and a longtime HFMA member talks about why CFOs should build media relationships
14:28
14:28
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14:28Brad speaks with retired CFO and longtime HFMA member Jim Heffernan about why CFOs should be at the forefront of telling an organization’s financial story. Also in this episode, a physician takes to TIME to explain what’s happening in primary care, and the AHA corrects the record on a Modern Healthcare story about charity care.…
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Bigger may prove to be better in healthcare, despite critics' take
23:50
23:50
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23:50Brad talks with Susan Dentzer, president and CEO of America’s Physician Groups, about why healthcare consolidation is more nuanced than critics understand. Mentioned in this episode: PRESS RELEASE: Lown Institute awarded $1.5M to study U.S. hospital tax exemptions, financial practices Susan Dentzer: Is consolidation in healthcare the work of modern…
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Healthcare Blame Game, Live from HFMA's Annual Conference
34:43
34:43
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34:43Brad and Erika are joined by Shawn Stack, policy director at HFMA, and Ruth Lande, vice president of hospital relations at RIP Medical Debt, at HFMA’s Annual Conference in Nashville for a discussion about what hospitals get right and wrong when it comes to patient and media communications.By healthcareblamegame
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Reporters are knee-deep in press releases. Most lack context.
28:12
28:12
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28:12Media veteran Jean Hodges joins Brad to discuss a Washington Post error and the inner workings of the modern newsroom. Mentioned in this episode: Americans are knee-deep in medical debt. Most owe hospitals. Healthcare Blame Game: How news outlets mishandled a medical debt study Most adults with post-due medical debt owe money to hospitals…
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Kaiser Health News investigative report confuses policy for practice and misses the real story
20:40
20:40
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20:40A blog post by HFMA Chief Content Executive Brad Dennison has caught the attention of healthcare and media leaders. In this episode, Dennison and Executive Producer Erika Grotto discuss the article that made them question the narrative of a recent Kaiser Health News investigation.By healthcareblamegame
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