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INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OF CHICAGO

  • 1 Apr 2024 5:05 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The majority of healthcare providers and payers are not ready to meet shifting health equity regulatory requirements, according to Ernst & Young's latest report. [Beckers Hospital Review]

    To compile its "2024 Health Equity Outlook," the accounting firm surveyed 500 health equity leaders across stakeholder industries: providers, payers, life sciences, government, and nonprofit/community organizations. The respondent pool included 64 health systems, 14 physician groups, 11 hospitals, eight academic medical centers and three federally qualified health centers. Nearly 40% of respondents were directors, department leads or the equivalent, while 29% were C-suite executives and 28% were vice presidents. 

    Most provider and payer respondents indicated that as of today, they could not meet health equity-related regulatory requirements introduced by CMS, the National Committee for Quality Assurance, The Joint Commission and the FDA last year. The new guidelines are multifaceted — asking hospitals to update various processes from data analytics to the C-suite — and the majority of providers say those upgrades are still a work in progress. 

    The three new requirements that the most providers are able to meet today: improved language access (48% can meet this), a designated health equity executive leader (48%) and improved healthcare access (47%). However, the majority of providers are still developing or taking action on a defined plan to ensure future readiness — while a small percentage, 6% or less, report that they have no plan to meet each metric. 

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  • 29 Mar 2024 10:16 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    In March 2024, the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH) identified some cases of measles in Chicago. Illinois had five measles cases in 2023. Those cases were the first in the state since 2019, when the last measles case was identified in Chicago. As of this week, 52 cases have been reported. [CDC]

    The City of Chicago has one of the highest measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccination rates in the nation, meaning that most children and adults in Chicago are vaccinated and protected. Residents are encouraged to review their immunization records or contact their health care provider to make sure they are up to date on MMR vaccine. Immunization records recorded in the Illinois immunization registry, Illinois Comprehensive Automated Immunization Registry Exchange (I-CARE), can be accessed using the Illinois Department of Public Health Vax Verify portal.

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  • 28 Mar 2024 11:58 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    How will Medicare’s new health equity adjustment in the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (HVBP) program, which assigns additional points to hospitals with more dual-eligible patients for providing high-quality care, affect hospital performance and payment adjustments? [JAMA Network]

    In this cross-sectional study of 2676 hospitals participating in the HVBP program, health equity adjustment reclassified 119 of 1206 hospitals (9.9%) from receiving penalties to receiving bonuses. Safety net and high-proportion Black hospitals were significantly more likely to experience increased payment adjustments, as were hospitals located in rural areas and the South. The largest net-positive changes in total payment adjustments were $29.0 million among safety net hospitals and $15.5 million among high-proportion Black hospitals.

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  • 27 Mar 2024 5:38 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    When evolving data provided evidence for a potential causal relationship between vaccine receipt and a specific adverse event, the potential risk associated with the vaccine was quantified, other risk factors for the specific adverse event were identified (eg, age, sex), and the risks vs benefits were assessed.1 On January 13, 2023, the FDA and the CDC issued a joint public communication2 about the identification of a preliminary safety signal within the Vaccine Safety Datalink surveillance system for ischemic stroke within 21 days after receipt of a COVID-19 bivalent mRNA vaccine for individuals 65 years of age and older. This public communication2 also specified that the safety signal indicating a potential increased risk of stroke appeared greater when the COVID-19 bivalent mRNA vaccines (also called boosters) were given concomitantly with either a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine than when given alone. [JAMA Network]

    To further investigate this safety signal, the FDA conducted an analysis and Lu et al3 report the results in this issue of JAMA. The analysis used data from Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 years or older and assessed the risk of stroke after receipt of either brand of COVID-19 bivalent mRNA vaccine alone or when given concomitantly with a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine. Lu et al3 used a self-controlled case series design in which individuals act as their own controls. The temporal association between a transient exposure and an event is evaluated and all time-invariant confounding is eliminated.4 Among more than 5 million recipients of either brand of COVID-19 bivalent mRNA vaccine, the study identified 11 001 (0.20%) with a cerebrovascular outcome (nonhemorrhagic stroke, transient ischemic attack, or hemorrhagic stroke). The study found no increased stroke risk associated with either brand of COVID-19 bivalent mRNA vaccine when administered alone. The results from this large cohort are reassuring and are consistent with those reported from France5 and Israel.6 In addition, no safety signal has been issued by the European Medicines Agency.7

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  • 26 Mar 2024 11:47 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    A House committee approved a plan last week intended to help behavioral health providers better recruit and maintain staff. 

    The legislation from Rep. Lindsey LaPointe, D-Chicago, would create a support grant program to cover providers' expenses related to recruiting, retaining and compensating licensed mental health and substance use disorder professionals. [Health News Illinois]

    Another provision would reimburse costs associated with American Sign Language and foreign language interpretive services at mental health treatment and substance use disorder treatment programs

    LaPointe told members of the House’s Mental Health & Addiction Committee that providers, specifically those serving Medicaid patients, need support.

    “This bill is one tool in the toolbox to attempt to remedy that by creating a grant program for our providers to better recruit and retain the staff that we need to actually provide the support to people all around the state,” she said. 

    The bill currently states recipients could receive up to $200,000 in grant funding for each mental health or substance use disorder professional employed, engaged or contracted.

    Illinois Association for Behavioral Health CEO Jud DeLoss told committee members they are working on an amendment with clarifying language regarding the grant amount. 

    That includes the dollar amount per position, what type of facilities are eligible, a cap on the number of grants an agency could receive and setting a retention period so an agency could not receive funds if an employee only briefly works there.

    Additionally, DeLoss said they recently learned that funding for ALS and foreign language services may be eligible for Medicaid reimbursement, and they intend to transition the bill's language to that instead of state funding.

    There is an incredible need for the legislation, DeLoss said. Along with the opioid and mental health crises that are driving up demand for services, providers simply have a hard time recruiting and maintaining staff.

    “This would give them the option to use those funds in a very flexible manner to meet the needs of their communities and their patients,” he said.

    The committee signed off on the plan along party lines. Rep. Jackie Haas, R-Kankakee, wanted to hear more from the Department of Human Services, which is tasked with overseeing the grant program.

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  • 25 Mar 2024 11:35 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Nearly 108,000 Americans died of drug overdoses in 2022, according to final federal figures released Thursday by the CDC. [CDC]

    Over the last two decades, the number of U.S. overdose deaths has risen almost every year and continued to break annual records -- making it the worst overdose epidemic in American history.

    The official number for 2022 was 107,941, the CDC said, which is about 1% higher than the nearly 107,000 overdose deaths in 2021.

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  • 22 Mar 2024 7:16 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute in Madison released their 2024 county health assessments — but this time, without an ordinal ranking. [Becker's Hospital Review]

    County Health Rankings & Roadmaps is a program of the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. For more than a decade, it ranked counties within each U.S. state ordinally by analyzing more than 90 health factors at the county level. Comprehensive county rankings data was searchable by state, county or ZIP code. 

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    You may be interested in this section, What Shapes Health & Equity?>

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  • 21 Mar 2024 7:39 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Climate change is happening now. Nine of the 10 hottest years on record have occurred in the past decade and were accompanied by extreme heat waves, droughts, wildfires, hurricanes, and severe flooding. Primarily due to greenhouse gases released via combustion of fossil fuels, global average temperatures between 2011 and 2020 increased to 1.1 °C (approximately 1.9 °F) above preindustrial levels and are estimated to increase to 1.5 °C (approximately 2.7 °F) by 2040.1 

    Local manifestations of the warming earth, such as shorter winters, changes in precipitation, and increased frequency of extreme weather events, will cause worldwide changes in pathogens, vectors, and the behavior of animal reservoirs and people. These changes may alter infectious disease epidemiology in the US and internationally as traditionally accepted regions of disease acquisition lose relevance, seasonal associations change, and new pathogens emerge. Awareness of changes in the geographic range, seasonality, and frequency of transmission of infectious diseases because of climate change is important to help clinicians diagnose, treat, and prevent infectious diseases in patients (Table). [JAMA Network]

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  • 20 Mar 2024 5:27 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    About 7% of US adults report having or having had symptoms of long COVID such as fatigue, heart palpitations and/or dizziness. These are three of the 12 symptoms identified as part of the National Institute of Health's RECOVER initiative that can be reliably used to classify someone as having long COVID. [Medscape]


    While there is no standard federally approved treatment for long COVID, physicians can recommend several strategies to their patients to help them recover.

    The good news is that many people experience improvements in their symptoms over time by adopting these strategies, said Andrew Schamess, MD, an internal medicine physician at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and director of its Post-COVID. 

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  • 19 Mar 2024 1:39 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Two out of three very young children in Chicago were exposed to at least trace amounts of lead in their home tap water, a study found, highlighting the need for City Hall to speed up replacements of brain-damaging lead pipes. [Chicago Sun-Times]

    A study by Johns Hopkins and Stanford researchers, published Monday in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics, used artificial intelligence to estimate the extent of exposure of children across the city to water from home faucets containing lead.

    In all, 129,000 children, 68% of those 5 or younger had lead in their home drinking water, the study found.

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