Are Minnesota Hospitals Above the Law?

Hospitals Blatantly Disregard Minnesota Law

Patients, nurses, healthcare workers, and Minnesota citizens won a hard-fought victory in the 2013 legislative session when Governor Dayton signed into law the Staffing Plan Disclosure Act.  The purpose of the Act was to increase hospital transparency and study the effects of nurse staffing on patient outcomes.  Unfortunately, Minnesota hospitals have all but thumbed their nose at the state law, openly flaunting the demands of legislators and citizens alike.

Minnesota Department of Health Cites Lack of Hospital Cooperation

In order to study nurse staffing under the law, the Minnesota Department of Health convened a workgroup consisting of nurses, hospital administrators, and other key stakeholders.  To limit the burden of the study on Minnesota hospitals, the workgroup agreed that study data would be requested from only a small sample of state facilities, and that smaller, critical access hospitals would be excluded.  Furthermore, the workgroup agreed that the information to be requested would consist of data already collected or readily available to hospitals, further limiting any potential burden on hospitals selected for the study.  Minnesota hospitals, as represented in the MDH workgroup, agreed to these limitations and study parameters.

Regrettably, of 40 hospitals selected for inclusion in the legally mandated Staffing Plan Disclosure Act study, only one provided the required data.  This egregious disregard for Minnesota law is unacceptable.

Minnesota Department of Health Finds Strong Evidence in Favor of Increased Nurse Staffing

Despite the complete lack of cooperation from Minnesota hospitals, MDH went ahead with the study in the form of an extensive literature review.  According to the Department, “[Our] review of the extensive literature found strong evidence linking lower nurse staffing levels to higher rates of patient mortality, failure to rescue and falls in the hospital. There is also strong evidence that other care process outcomes such as drug administration errors, missed nursing care and patient length of stay are linked to lower nurse staffing levels.”

Nurse Staffing in Minnesota Hospitals is Getting Worse

Despite decades of robust research associating ideal nurse staffing with optimum patient outcomes and care, nurse staffing in this state is getting worse.  Minnesota Nurses Association nurses self-report unsafe nurse staffing through a Concern for Safe Staffing Form, which is shared with first line supervisors and the Association.

In 2014, Minnesota nurses documented 2,148 instances of unsafe staffing with the potential to substantively impact patient care.  Even one such instance would be concerning—but even scarier is that the reported rate of unsafe staffing has doubled over the past three years.  Minnesota hospitals are not getting safer, they’re getting worse.  This level of unsafe staffing is simply unacceptable for a state seen as a leader in healthcare.

Minnesota Hospitals are Becoming More Unsafe

In 2013, 80% of Minnesota hospitals reported preventable adverse events, representing over 96% of all Minnesota hospital beds.  These events can include pressure ulcers, objects retained during surgery, completing the wrong surgery or operating on the wrong body part, medication errors, and many others.  They are often referred to as “never events,” since they are so preventable that they should never occur.  Unfortunately, over the past ten years, Minnesota patients experienced 2,200 preventable never events, and in 2014, Minnesota patients suffered 258 never events—99 of which resulted in death or serious disability.  Proper nurse staffing is the best way to prevent such adverse events.

Other studies and government agencies have found the quality of care in Minnesota hospitals is declining.  Minnesota’s overall healthcare quality score fell 11 percent, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), and Minnesota now ranks 15th on watchdog group Leapfrog’s Hospital Quality Safety Score, falling from top 10 status.  In fact, only 30% of Minnesota hospitals received an “A” grade—down from 43% two years ago.  It goes without saying, however, that every Minnesotan deserves “A” quality care.

Another way to measure proper nurse staffing is through the percentage of patients who are readmitted to a hospital within 30 days of their initial hospital visit.  Oftentimes, these readmissions are linked to care that nurses simply were not able to provide due to the lack of a limit on the number of patients a nurse can care for at one time.

In fact, hospitals can be penalized for these readmissions, costing them more money in the long run due to unsafe staffing.  In 2014, 36 Minnesota hospitals were penalized by the Center for Medicare Services for high volumes of readmissions, with an average penalty of 0.4% of all Medicare payments.  Alarmingly, the average penalty has doubled in the past year, showing that hospitals are getting worse at providing safe nurse staffing.  Again, as the research indicates, nursing care is instrumental to proper quality care for patients, and has been shown to reduce readmission rates.  Setting a standard for the maximum number of patients a nurse must care for at one time would go a long way to reducing readmission rates and halting the slide in hospital quality of care.

Specific Examples

     1.  Sanford Bemidji Medical Center

Sanford Bemidji Clinic is one of 36 hospitals in the state which receives Medicare readmission penalties. Sanford-Bemidji reported 2 preventable adverse events resulting in serious disability last year.

Sanford-Bemidji has the dubious distinction of having the one of the highest rates of nurse-reported unsafe staffing incidents, with 188 such incidents potentially impacting patient care just last year.  Indeed, according to the Leapfrog Group’s hospital safety scorecard, Sanford-Bemidji received one of the lowest safety grades in the state last year, a “C.”  Average is not good enough for Minnesota hospitals.  In fact, Sanford scored well below the state average in areas including treatment of collapsed lungs, serious breathing problems, and accidental cuts and tears.

Sanford’s surgical safety scores are even more concerning.  Sanford again scored well below the state average in use of antibiotics before surgery, use of the correct antibiotics, removal of the catheter after surgery, steps to prevent blood clots, the rate of urinary tract infections during ICU stays, and surgical site infections after colon surgery.

Sanford’s score in physicians specially trained to care for ICU patients is 6 times lower than the state average.  Sanford declined to report other measures relating to nurse staffing and care, as well as use of standard safety procedures.

Sanford-Bemidji Medical Center is below state averages in all areas of consumer assessments.  This includes whether a patient would recommend the hospital, whether staff gave patients information, whether the room was clean and quiet at night, whether pain was well controlled, whether staff explained procedures, whether they understood their care when they left their hospital, and whether doctors and nurses communicated well.  Notably, Sanford scored 23% lower than the state average on whether “patients always received help as soon as they wanted.”  These assessment scores indicate poor nurse staffing.

Consumer reports rates Sanford 33 out of 42 ranked hospitals in the state, and gives Sanford a 52 out of a possible 100 for its safety score. CR rates the hospital’s infection avoidance as “worst.”  Consumer reports also gives the hospital below average scores for communication regarding hospital discharge and the worst score for communication about drug information.  Both scores can be attributable to improper nurse staffing.

Unlike 140 other Minnesota hospitals, Sanford Bemidji declined to report its quality data to the non-profit Minnesota Community Measurement.

     2.  United Hospital of St. Paul

In 2014, United Hospital nurses reported 271 incidences of unsafe staffing with the potential to harm patient care.  This may be a factor in the 13 preventable adverse events suffered by United patients in the past year, 6 of which led to serious disability.

United Hospital grades out at a “B” for patient safety and quality, according to the Leapfrog Group.  United is well below the national average in measures of care including serious breathing problems, death from treatable complications, use of antibiotics before surgery, blood or urinary infections during ICU stays, and dangerous objects left in a patient’s body.  United declined to report data which measures appropriate staffing.

Patients at United report that they received help when needed at a rate lower than the state average, a typical function of sub-optimal nurse staffing.  United also scored lower than state and national averages in indicators such as nurse and physician communication, pain management, appropriate explanation of medications, cleanliness of rooms and bathrooms, quiet zones at night, and overall hospital score.

United Hospital ranked 28 out of 42 hospitals in Consumer Report’s MN hospital rankings.  It received a 55 out of 100 for a safety score, and scored poorly in avoiding infections, avoiding death, and communication about hospital discharge.  All are issues which can be attributable to improper nurse staffing.

The Necessary Response is Clear

Because Minnesota’s hospitals are becoming less safe, because they refuse to cooperate with the legislature, the Minnesota Department of Health and the law, because they are cutting corners with nurse staffing, and because the quality of care they provide is getting worse, we need to enact a solution to the problem: a safe staffing law.  Such a law would limit the number of patients a nurse can care for at one time, ensuring that each patient receives the nursing care she needs and deserves.  As the evidence indicates, and as the hospitals evidently don’t want you to know, this will result in better quality care, better patient outcomes, lowered patient mortality, and fewer never events.  In the long run, a limit on the number of patients a nurse can care for at one time will even save hospitals money; there will be lower readmission penalties and less non-reimbursed care for hospital-acquired infections.  A safe staffing bill isn’t just the right thing to do—it’s the smart thing to do.

VFW Scholarship

The Nursing Foundation of Pennsylvania (NFP), a supporting organization of the Pennsylvania State Nurses Association (PSNA), is accepting applications for the 2015 Jack E. Barger, Sr., Memorial Nursing Scholarship Fund. This scholarship fund, administered on behalf of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), was established by the Department of Pennsylvania VFW in memory of the late Jack E. Barger, Sr., Department Commander, who died while in office. Six $1,000 scholarships are being awarded to nursing students who meet the following criteria:

  • Recipient must be at least one of the following:
    1. Active duty service member,
    2. U.S. veteran, or
    3. Child/spouse of a veteran or active duty service member.
  • Recipient must be a resident of Pennsylvania.
  • Recipient must be an undergraduate student.
  • Recipient is required to attend the local VFW district meeting to accept award.

Selection of scholarship recipients is made by a lottery drawing. Scholarships will be presented at a local VFW district meeting. To apply, visit www.theNFP.org for complete details and the application. Applications must be received by April 30, 2015. Questions can be directed to NFP Communications Coordinator Jennifer Neidig at jneidig@psna.org or 717-798-8942.

To learn more about the NFP and our scholarship opportunities, visit www.theNFP.org. The NFP is organized and operated to support the Pennsylvania State Nurses Association’s (PSNA) efforts to enhance nursing and healthcare.

# # #

The NFP ensures nurses for tomorrow. The official registration and financial information of the NFP may be obtained from the Pennsylvania Department of State by calling toll-free within Pennsylvania, 800-732-0999.  Registration does not imply endorsement (www.theNFP.org).

The Pennsylvania State Nurses Association (PSNA) is the non-profit voice for nurses in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Representing more than 215,000 nurses, the Association works to be essential in advancing, promoting and supporting the profession of nursing to improve health for all in the Commonwealth. PSNA is a constituent member of the American Nurses Association (www.psna.org).

Settlement Ends Kaiser-RN Dispute: 18,000 RNs Win Stronger Patient Care Voice, Workplace Protections

With a settlement that is likely to elevate RN standards across the nation, California Nurses Association/National Nurses announced a major tentative contract agreement for 18,000 California RNs who work at Kaiser Permanente hospitals and clinics. The deal will give the RNs a stronger voice on patient care, and breakthrough improvements in workplace protections.

The agreement also provides significant economic gains and additional retirement security.

While the pact must still be ratified by the RNs, who will hold membership meetings beginning next Wednesday, CNA is cancelling a strike that had been scheduled for Jan. 21 – 22. The agreement affects registered nurses and nurse practitioners who work in 86 Kaiser Permanente hospitals and clinics in Northern and Central California, from Santa Rosa to Fresno.

CNA/NNU Executive Director RoseAnn DeMoro paid tribute to the “unity of the Kaiser RNs and their devotion to assuring the highest level of quality care for patients as well as protections for the nurses who deliver that care.”

“We look forward to a new chapter in our interactions with Kaiser,” DeMoro added. “We especially appreciate the commitment of Kaiser’s leadership to addressing our concerns, including working through the complicated problems associated with the changes in health care delivery, some of them related to the Affordable Care Act, and the attention it has paid in this contract to the health and safety of its registered nurses as well as patients.” 

A key to the settlement was the agreement by Kaiser to establish a new committee of direct care RNs and NPs who will work with management to address the concerns RNs have about care standards in Kaiser facilities.

“This is a great day for Kaiser patients and nurses,” said Zenei Cortez, RN, chair of the Kaiser RN bargaining team and a co-president of CNA. “We have an agreement that will strengthen the ability of Kaiser RNs to provide the optimal level of care our patients deserve, while establishing additional security for nurses. I am so proud of the Kaiser RNs and NPs who worked so hard for so long for this day.”

“This agreement is a great achievement,” added Diane McClure, a Sacramento Kaiser RN and nurse negotiator. “We are especially excited about the expanded opportunity for new RN grads and trainees in Kaiser and the protections this agreement offers for RNs and our families.”

Among other major components of the agreement:

  • Kaiser will hire hundreds of RNs which the nurses say should substantially improve the quality of care for hospitalized patients, as well as signaling a renewed commitment to RN training and employment opportunities for new RN graduates at a time many hospitals have frozen RN hires.
  • Groundbreaking workplace protections for nurses from workplace violence to infectious diseases like Ebola to needle stick injuries. 
  • Substantial economic gains for RNs and NPs, many of them the sole source of income for their families or extended families. Over the three years of the agreement, all the nurses will receive 14 percent pay increases through across the board hikes and lump sum payments.
  • Additional long-term retirement security for Kaiser RNs and NPs through maintenance of a secure pension plan plus a substantial increase in employer contributions to the nurses’ 401k pension plans for the 87 percent of Kaiser RNs with those plans.
  • Annual paid release time, the first in the nation, for 25 RNs every year to participate in NNU’s disaster relief program, the Registered Nurse Response Network, which has dispatched hundreds of RNs to provide basic medical services following U.S. and global disasters from Hurricane Katrina to the Haiti earthquake to Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines. 

CNA said it also committed to helping National Union of Healthcare Worker Kaiser workers, including mental health clinicians, achieve a contract agreement as well.

 

Ask a Travel Nurse: How do I transition from LPN to Travel RN?

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travel nurse asks question

Ask a Travel Nurse: How do I transition from LPN to Travel RN?

Ask a Travel Nurse Question:

I’m an LPN transitioning to RN, and Travel Nursing has always been a dream of mine. My question is: How do I transition from LPN to Travel RN? Should I take on an ER RN position for experience before attempting to try Travel Nursing?

Ask a Travel Nurse Answer:

The easy answer is you will HAVE to take a position for at least a year before attempting to travel.

Even though you are transitioning from being an LPN, that, and being an RN, are two different worlds and are looked upon as such by the people who will be hiring you, the hospitals.

Plus, you need to gain experience in the specialty in which you wish to travel. ER would certainly be a good choice as you will likely find an ER in every facility in which you wish to work.

I also wanted to let you know that while a year of experience used to be the norm for taking a travel assignment, these days, 18 months to two years is what most facilities are currently requiring (which may change by the time you wish to travel).

For now, get in the hospital, at the bedside, in the specialty in which you would like to travel. Become proficient in your skills like IV starts, and NG and Foley insertions. If you do choose ER, even though it is not required by all EDs, I would at least get your ACLS card and possibly your PALS card. If you wish to work in trauma centers, maybe your TNCC. Anything that will show that you have a bit more education.

I hope this helps.

David

david@travelnursesbible.com

State Health Rankings

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map of US state health rankingsSince 1990, America’s Health Rankings have provided a state-by-state assessment of health in the United States. Recently the annual report for 2014 was released, allowing you to check out health reports by state regarding issues such as smoking, obesity, premature death, immunization, diabetes, and even aspects like poverty and graduation rates. Each state’s info can be broken down further by gender, age, education, income, race/ethnicity, and urbanicity. In addition to the general report, there is a specifically crafted senior report.

As a traveling healthcare professional, you may be headed to serve a population you would like to learn more about. This type of report featuring state health rankings can be very enlightening to Travel Nurses and Allied Health Professionals.

In the overall state health rankings the top 10 were:

1. Hawaii

2. Vermont

3. Massachusetts

4. Connecticut

5. Utah

6. Minnesota

7. New Hampshire

8. Colorado

9. North Dakota

10. Nebraska

 

And the bottom 10 were:

50. Mississippi

49. Arkansas

48. Louisiana

47. Kentucky

46. Oklahoma

45. Tennessee

44. West Virginia

43. Alabama

42. South Carolina

41. Indiana

The state health rankings provided through America’s Health Rankings are made possible through a partnership between the United Health Foundation, the American Public Health Association, and the Partnership for Prevention.

According to their website, America’s Health Rankings is the “longest running annual assessment of the nation’s health on a state-by-state basis.” They also say that the purpose of these state health rankings is to “stimulate action by individuals, elected officials, health care professionals, public health professionals, employers, educators, and communities to improve the health of the US population.”

The hope is that the report will encourage an important conversation about health in each state, which will ultimately lead to a group effort that improves health nationwide. Many states actually incorporate the findings when reviewing their own goals, programs, and strategies.

Click here to check out the state health rankings in full.

As a Traveler, what have you learned by serving patients in multiple states? Share you experiences in the comments.

Study Disputes Perception That New Beneficiaries Are Fueling Medicare Advantage Growth

The majority of people who signed up for Medicare Advantage plans in recent years were switching out of the traditional Medicare program, according to a recent study. The findings contradict the popular belief that growth in Medicare Advantage has been fueled primarily by people who choose it when they first become eligible for Medicare.

The private Medicare Advantage plans are an alternative to traditional Medicare, and often provide additional services such as gym memberships or vision and dental benefits not included in the regular program. But they also generally require beneficiaries to stay within the plan’s network of doctors, hospitals and other providers. The federal government pays the plans to help cover the cost of benefits.

“The prevailing thought was that baby boomers were enrolling in Medicare Advantage plans at a higher rate because they were more familiar with managed care and it was what they experienced in employer plans,” says Gretchen Jacobson, associate director of the Program on Medicare Policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation and lead author of the study, which was published in the January issue of Health Affairs. (KHN is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)

For the study, researchers tracked Medicare claims data between 2006 and 2011. Each year more than half of Medicare Advantage enrollees switched in from the traditional Medicare program. The number was 52 percent in 2011, a slightly lower number than the previous year.

Overall, 30 percent of Medicare beneficiaries are in Medicare Advantage plans. Beneficiaries can switch types of plans during open enrollment each fall.

Beneficiaries in their mid- to late-60s made up the largest share of those who switched from traditional Medicare to Medicare Advantage, the study found.

“Younger Medicare beneficiaries may have fewer health conditions, so they may be more willing to restrict their provider network in a trade-off for having extra benefits,” says Jacobson.

The health law reduced funding for Medicare Advantage between 2012 and 2016, leading to predictions by some that increased cost sharing and eroding benefits would lead to declining enrollment.

So far that hasn’t happened.

“Given that enrollment has continued to grow and there haven’t been major changes in premiums or availability of plans, many project that growth will continue,” says Jacobson.

Please contact Kaiser Health News to send comments or ideas for future topics for the Insuring Your Health column.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

The White House Community College Initiative an Investment in our Future

National Nurses United supports the White House’s new community college initiative – a move that would open doors for a new generation of registered nurses.

“Millions of young women have long counted on our community colleges as their means to obtain an associate degree in nursing. These programs are essential for nurses, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds or underreported communities to achieve their dreams in providing quality care for patients, and their communities, as well as securing economic opportunity for themselves and their families,” said NNU Executive Director RoseAnn DeMoro.

Under the proposed deal, the federal government would cover 75 percent of the cost with the states paying for the rest.

“Yet the ADN degree has come under increasing attack by the corporatized healthcare industry,” DeMoro said, noting the growing numbers of hospitals seeking to restrict hiring and advancement to RNs with four-year degrees.

Reducing the cost of education and lessening students’ loans will expand opportunities and ultimately incomes, especially for women and communities of color, she said.

Everyone benefits from an overall nursing workforce that more closely resembles the population in racial, as well as socio-economic diversity.

Ultimately, NNU said the U.S. should move toward improving access to education at all levels, such as making all higher education tuition free. One way to achieve that would be enactment of a small fee on Wall Street transactions of stocks, bonds, derivatives and other financial instruments, the Robin Hood Tax, which could be used in part to pay for equal access to education for all.

“With this initiative, the White House is planting the seeds for a better educated workforce, a better economy, and a better America,” DeMoro said. “Congress should welcome this proposal and work with the President to bring it to fruition.”

Limited Insurance Choices Frustrate Patients In Rural California

When Dennie Wright went to sign up for Affordable Care Act insurance last year, it wasn’t a hard decision. His insurance agent told him he had only one insurer – Anthem Blue Cross – that he could buy from on the exchange, Covered California.

Wright lives in a modest house overlooking a pasture in Indian Valley. It’s a tiny alpine community at the northern end of the Sierra Mountains, close to the border with Nevada. He lives in one of more than 200 zip codes where Blue Shield of California has stopped selling individual insurance policies.

“That was new to us, you know, Covered California. Anthem Blue Cross was the insurance carrier. Then of course, three months later I have a heart attack,” says Wright.

More than once, he was flown across the state line to Reno for care. Wright and his wife, Kathy, now have piles of medical bills and insurance paperwork. Anthem Blue Cross covers emergencies when they happen out-of-state but not routine doctor care in another state.

But Wright says traveling to doctors within California is not as safe or as convenient for him as going to Reno.

He continues to see the Nevada doctors who put a defibrillator in his chest and saved his life. Anthem Blue Cross will pay for some of the bills, but the Wrights still don’t know if everything will be covered.

There are other insurance options for Wright, but not through Covered California. Although he didn’t need a subsidy, he was left in the same position as people in his area who do need financial help to buy insurance. They cannot take their business to a competitor, because the exchange is the only place customers can use federal subsidies to help them buy health insurance. And for those people, Anthem is the only option.

“I mean, you should have some choices, especially if you’re going to have one that’s not going to cover you in the places you choose to go,” Wright says.

Covered California Executive Director Peter Lee offered a different impression of choices in the marketplace last July.

“In every corner of the state, consumers will have at least two plans to choose from, and in most areas, where most of the Californians live, they can choose between five or six plans,” said Lee during an event to announce the marketplace’s 2015 plans and premium rates.

But in twenty-two counties in Northern California, there are zip codes where there is only one choice of insurer. There are areas near Monterey and Santa Cruz on California’s Central Coast that also have only one carrier.

Blue Shield of California said it had to stop selling exchange plans in areas where it couldn’t ensure an adequate network of doctors.

Covered California estimates that statewide, there are 28,896 Covered California customers who have only one choice of insurance carrier, slightly more than 2 percent of the total exchange membership as of November 2014.

Lee says now, the exchange is working to increase the range of choices in places where there are none. But he says the situation existed long before the exchange.

“The challenges of northern, rural counties have been there for a long time and are still a challenge that we’re trying to address head-on,” says Lee.

Lee says the exchange is encouraging existing plans to expand to areas where there are enough doctors. And it’s looking to bring new carriers in for 2016.

“We aren’t the solution to all the problems that have always been there in terms of challenges in rural communities, and that’s something we’re certainly looking at how to improve access and choice, and we’ll continue doing that,” says Lee.

Covered California should help increase the number of insurers, says consumer advocate Anthony Wright from Health Access. And he says policy makers should also lean on insurers and providers to participate in that market.

“Some of this is a combination of putting pressure on the insurers, and some of this is trying to do work to actually increase the number of providers on the ground in these areas, whether through more training, [or] incentives to be in some of these more rural areas,” says Anthony Wright.

Wright, the advocate, says more insurers in the marketplace makes it more likely people can get the care they need.

“At one level, we’re trying to make a functioning market, but it still means that consumers are at the mercy of the market.”

This year, people who want more choice than what Covered California offers must venture into the broader health insurance market if they can afford it.

This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, Capital Public Radio and Kaiser Health News.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

Burwell Calls For Congress To Work With Her On Health Issues

Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell Thursday called on Congress to look beyond the Affordable Care Act to find compromise on health care.

In remarks at the New America Foundation, Burwell cited several areas – including opioid abuse, Ebola, medical research and innovation – where Republicans and Democrats have sponsored legislation to work together to solve problems in the nation’s health care system.

As she has before, Burwell defended the health overhaul and urged Congress to “move beyond the back and forth of the Affordable Care Act and focus on the substance of access, affordability and quality.”  She makes no apologies for the law, which Republicans have voted numerous times to repeal in full or in part. That effort is expected to be part of the discussions this week at Republican lawmakers’ retreats.

But those disagreements should not stop Congress from also focusing on “other critical areas in health care where our common interests give us ample opportunities for common good – improving the quality of the care we receive while spending our dollars more wisely, reducing substance use disorders and overdose deaths, strengthening global health security, reaffirming American leadership in research, innovation and science, and building an innovation economy,” Burwell said.

In a statement, Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., the new chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, welcomed Burwell’s remarks and said he looked forward to working with her.

“We have plenty we disagree on, but we also have plenty of issues that are important to millions of Americans upon which we should be able to get results, including, for example, getting life-saving drugs, treatments and devices through the FDA to patients faster; remodeling the health care delivery system; and improving global health security,” he said.

While repealing or replacing the health law is an avowed target for many in the GOP, Republicans are likely more eager to work with the administration on legislation to extend funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and to overhaul the way Medicare pays physicians, known as the sustainable growth rate, Burwell said.

“I think those fall into the category of things where I think there will be bipartisan support,” she said. “I think those are very clearly legislative issues that Congress will take the lead in terms of timetable and focus. … I see both of those in that category of greater possibility for working together.”

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.