New Hampshire
Related: About this forumDartmouth Health, Catholic Medical Center deal falls apart after NH AG calls it unconstitutional
Dartmouth Health, Catholic Medical Center deal falls apart after NH AG calls it unconstitutional
By Valley News
May 15 2022, 4:44 PM
Editors Note: This story by Nora Doyle-Burr first appeared in the Valley News on May 13.
LEBANON Dartmouth Health and GraniteOne Health, which includes Manchesters Catholic Medical Center, are abandoning plans to combine forces after the state Attorney Generals Office said the collaboration as proposed would violate the New Hampshire constitution. ... The New Hampshire Attorney Generals office released a report Friday objecting to the proposed combination.
In a statement, Attorney General John Formella said the combination would violate a clause in the state constitution that requires free and fair competition in the trades and industries. ... Free, fair and robust competition is critical to providing employers and patients with options for lower cost and high quality health care services, Formella said in a Friday news release. Our state has experienced significant consolidation in health care over the past several years, and this transaction seeking to combine two of our top four largest systems is unacceptable without appropriate protections for consumers in place.
Formella, the son of the late Nancy Formella, a former DH leader, cited concerns about the effect of the proposal on health care costs. Specifically, the report points to the likelihood that the combination would adversely impact competition for certain health care services in the Manchester area, in the southwest region of the state and for some services statewide. ... Without remedies in place protecting the public from harm and ensuring the combined system delivers on the promised benefits, the transaction as proposed is not something that I can approve, he said in the release.
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Mopar151
(10,177 posts)Too many empire builders, wantin' to be the biggest dog.
Dartmouth health has cratered imho over the last 10 years.
Fewer and fewer family medicine doctors. Skill level among APRNs varies greatly. Too much reliance on protocols rather than actual care. Coding and billing errors rampant. Unneeded surgeries. Medical records altered. Some specialties have no doctors. Administrative staff surly.
Not all departments, but most.
Medical records software is trash, keeps bringing up the past without context.
Many specialized procedures are inaccessible for wheelchair users. Specialist docs appointment lead times are stupid long, surgery lead times are
NQAS
(10,749 posts)For example, my wife at one point had 39 different diagnoses in her record, including agoraphobia.
I just had a hip replacement, and my diagnosis for the post-op physical therapy shows me as having an endocrine disorder. Huh??! The physical therapists know that they're treating me for a hip replacement. The paperwork, however, is fucked up.