With apologies to Kermit the Frog, it’s not easy being a hospital.
The obvious challenges exist. Insufficient payments, physician relations, staffing turnover and payer negotiations.
Now, major new threats have emerged that are not operational or financial in nature but are the direct result of hospitals’ reluctance to engage in forthright communications about complex issues.
Here’s one such challenge. The Texas Standard last month ran a lengthy story on Texas hospitals’ leading the nation. But not on positive metrics like lifesaving surgeries performed, lives saved, or research investment. Rather, leading the nation on price markups. That story got picked up by a number of other media outlets and organizations, including this one that drew the conclusion and eye-watering headline, “Hospital price gouging shows it’s time for physicians to take back their profession.”
Price gouging. Wow. That’s a loaded term typically reserved for opportunistic ne’er-do-wells who capitalize on human tragedy after devastating events, such as hurricanes, wars or terror attacks. Or to describe big Pharma.
How did we get to this moment in time where hospitals are the enemy of the people?
The answer is hospitals have failed to explain the economic forces and business model of health care. Rather than committing to transparency and open communications, hospitals for too long have hidden behind the fact that health care is complicated. It sure is, but if hospitals don’t proactively explain their side of the story, with facts, with clarity and with frequency to the media, to their own employees, to lawmakers, to businesses, to physicians, someone else will.
And, the results will be the permanent label of price gouger, and even more problematic, bad policy and mandates that cause more harm than good.
See what else Groundswell Health is working on in healthcare >>
Hereford Regional Medical Center: Bringing Advanced Heart Care Home
In rural communities, challenges accessing specialty healthcare can mean the difference between early intervention and harmful delay. For Hereford Regional
Building Trust at a Critical Time: How Community Engagement Sustains Rural Hospitals
When a rural hospital earns the trust of its community, that trust becomes one of its most valuable assets —
Groundswell Health and HealthConnect Partner to Strengthen the Future of Rural Hospitals
Across Texas, community hospitals are doing more than providing care — they are sustaining the health, identity, and stability of
The Elements of Design for Effective Content on Complex Issues
When the Texas Organization of Rural and Community Hospitals came to Groundswell Health with a request to produce an
Medicare Advantage Headlines >>
Why Medicare Advantage Plans are Losing More Providers
Medicare Advantage plans’ excessive denials, restrictive provider networks, and contentious contract negotiations continue to increase the number of health systems
Medicare Advantage Has Become Notorious for Prior Authorization Burden
Medicare Advantage plans denied 7.4 percent of medical professionals’ prior authorization requests, or about 3.4 million requests, according to a










