Hospitals bleeding money?

Dirty money concept.For the second time this month, financial experts are predicting a tough year ahead for the non-profit hospital industry.  First, Standard & Poor’s rating services analyst said profit ratios will be down in 2013 (link here)  Now, Moody’s Investors Service is saying expenses outpaced revenue last year as patient revenue slipped by half a percent (found here).  What’s more, both reports say that efficiencies in hospital business were actualized last year and won’t produce any more savings in the future.  In other words, hospitals got lean and can’t get leaner.

Add to that the paralyzing fear many hospital CEOs are feeling over the effects of the Affordable Care Act, reduced payments from many insurance companies (such as Blue Cross/Blue Shield), and reduced government dollars for patients who are readmitted.  Combine them all, and it might seem that some hospital administrators are facing a vampire, a werewolf, and a mummy in a dark graveyard.

Well, maybe not.  As S&P’s analyst also reports, hospital revenue has been buoyed by their investment income.  Savings is paying what patients are not.  Moody’s also reports that revenue from patients is still up, not down.   Nobody’s growing broke, and hospitals keep seeing more and more patients.

Perhaps the best thermometer of hospital financial wellness was alluded to the Chief Health Care Officer of the Association of American Medical Colleges.  JoAnne Conroy, MD, asked if hospitals would just stop advertising (link here).   She cites the New York Times report that advertising by hospitals is 20 percent higher this year than in 2010.  Hospitals have spent more than $717 million in advertising just in the first half of 2013.  That’s a raise of 7 percent per year that hospitals gave to their ad firms, not their nurses.  Conroy estimates that each hospital spends between $1-$6 million each year in ads.   We know that some of those ads, including some Twin Cities billboards, are often written off as “charity care.”

This comes at a time when Minnesota hospitals have to start being more transparent and reporting their staffing levels to the state and to the consumer.   For those hospitals that maintain safe and effective staffing, that’s a great selling point, and it’s free.  In fact, if hospitals were to re-invest their marketing dollars into their programs, the results in patient outcomes would sell themselves.

Position on Medical Marijuana

PSNA has now posted its Position Statement titled “Patients’ Safe Access to Therapeutic Marijuana.” History has documented the use of marijuana (cannabis) in medical settings since 28th century BCE China, and it was first introduced to the Western world in the early 19th century (Johnson, 2013).  It was quickly adopted by health care professionals to treat various problems such as nausea, chronic pain and psychological disorders, and it was widely accepted in the United States until the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 (Johnson, 2013).  Since that time, it has undergone a complicated past of federal regulation regarding its use recreationally and medicinally. PSNA members can access the Statement here.

Scrubbing In Premieres October 24 on MTV

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nurses_420Update! MTV’s travel nurse reality show has gone from the working title Nurse Nation to its official title, Scrubbing In.

(Click here to check out the trailer!)

MTV is billing the new show as a “docu-series,” and has announced that Scrubbing In premieres October 24 on MTV, at 9 p.m. Central.

A couple other things have changed and more details have emerged since Travel Nursing Blogs originally covered the show back in August (click here to read that original post), but for the most part, the show is shaping up as expected.

According to MTV, Scrubbing In will be set in an understaffed Orange County, California hospital, with the nurses working a 12-week contract — and working overtime to explore their new city.

The cast is split between vets and newbies. For cast members Tyrice, Chris, Fernando, and Adrian, this is not their first travel nursing rodeo. But Chelsey, Michelle, Crystal, Nikki, and Heather “are looking for a change from their nursing jobs in Pittsburgh, PA” and are on this journey — their first with travel nursing — together.

Some of the show’s content appears to be very true to what travel nurses encounter, such as the everyday challenges of hospital work and the intense, important job of nursing. Also mentioned in the show bio, and relevant to many other travel nurses, is being out of your comfort zone, working to make new friends (and keep the old), dating while on assignment, and feeling the need to constantly prove oneself to the perm staff.

As far as these on-the-job elements go, it seems this show could be one that travel nurses relate to. But, then there’s the after-hours world that will be portrayed by MTV, which is something many travel nurses are nervous about.

The show’s bio concludes, “But it’s not all work and no play — this group loves to blow off some steam during their days off. It’s a lot for these twenty-something’s to take on but this dynamic, fearless and fun-loving group of young nurses are determined to have it all — a rewarding career and personal life.”

Will you be watching when Scrubbing In premieres October 24 on MTV?