Resident injured in home fire on New Jersey Avenue

A resident suffered major burns from a house fire at 1723 New Jersey Ave. at 9:07 a.m. Monday, Jan. 28.

According to a spokesman for the Kansas City, Kansas, Fire Department, the resident was taken to the hospital by EMS units.

Another adult and four children also were taken to the hospital for evaluation, the spokesman stated.

When fire crews arrived at the address, they found fire showing from the front and side of the building, according to the spokesman.

Crews attacked the fire and did a primary and secondary search on the residence.

Fifty fire personnel responded to the fire, including 10 suppression units and three EMS units, the spokesman stated.

The cause of the fire is undetermined and under investigation, according to the spokesman.

The damage to the home was estimated at $60,000, the spokesman stated.

TFI Family Services awarded grant from Harley-Davidson Foundation

TFI Family Services Inc. was recently awarded a grant for $2,500 from the Harley-Davidson Foundation.

The Harley-Davidson Foundation, dealers, employees and customers, have a long history of supporting communities and causes. Harley Davidson seeks to support positive social impact for communities, employees and riders, according to a news release.

TFI Family Services plans to use the grant funds for the “Placement Partner Program” (PPP). The goal behind the program is to ensure that the foster parents who receive a new child (or children) into their home have the adequate supplies that are needed for care of the child.

Many times, foster parents pay for extra expenses out of their pocket whenever the financial need exceeds the amount that the state provides. Through the Placement Partner Program, TFI Family Services will be able to help foster parents with these unexpected financial responsibilities that arise on a case by case basis.

PPP fits into the very core of TFI’s mission statement of being “Devoted to the Strength of Family.” By helping foster families with the resources that are needed, they are simultaneously affecting many aspects of the family. PPP will help to supply a needed item to a foster child, thereby removing an added traumatic loss to their already traumatic situation. If a child does not have the medicine they need, the clothes, coats or shoes they need, they will not feel comfortable or safe in their new home – which is essential for a successful fostering experience. If a child is unable to participate in an activity (sports, music, arts) that they are accustomed to participating to, it again adds to the traumatic sense of loss. By making these activities available financially, the involvement in the same activities can be a source of comfort to the child.

A spokesman said TFI Family Services is grateful to organizations like Harley-Davidson that see the need in their communities and take action to address it. It is because of partnerships such as this that they are able to fulfill our mission and continue to provide much needed services to children in foster care, the spokesman stated. Persons who would like to help a foster child, may contact Tina Holt at 785-271-6657 x1194 or email: [email protected].

KU and other hospitals say unfair Medicare rule will cost them hundreds of millions of dollars

by Dan Margolies, Kansas News Service

The University of Kansas Hospital is one of 38 hospitals across the country challenging a rule cutting Medicare rates for outpatient hospital sites to match the lower rates paid to physicians’ offices.

Under the rule, which took effect Jan. 1, Medicare will pay the same rates for medical services regardless of whether they’re provided in a physician’s office or in a hospital department that’s off the main campus of the hospital.

In a lawsuit filed earlier this month in federal court in Washington, D.C., the hospitals claim the rule is unfair because medical services provided in hospital outpatient departments are far more resource-intensive, and therefore more costly, than those provided in independent physicians’ offices.

The suit names Alex Azar II in his capacity as secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

The rule comes after Congress enacted a site-neutral payment policy in 2015. But Congress specifically made an exception for off-campus outpatient hospital departments that were providing services before Congress made the change. The hospitals say Azar didn’t think the change went far enough and overrode the protection Congress intended to provide them.

The rule “is irrational,” the hospitals allege in their lawsuit, “a patent misconstruction” of the law and “a blatant attempt to circumvent the will of Congress …” It says the reductions will cost hospitals $380 million in 2019 and $760 million in 2020, according to Azar’s forecast of the rule’s effect.

“Even prior to this rate cut, plaintiffs were under significant financial strain from steadily increasing costs in the healthcare marketplace and reimbursement cuts from the government and private insurers alike,” the hospitals allege.

The lawsuit mirrors one filed against Azar in December by the American Hospital Association, the Association of American Medical Colleges and three other hospitals. That lawsuit, also filed in the District of Columbia, challenges the Medicare rate cut as executive overreach.

The American Hospital Association says the rule ignores crucial differences between hospital outpatient departments and other sites.

Citing a study it commissioned, it says patients getting care in hospital outpatient departments are more likely to be poorer and have more severe chronic conditions than those treated in independent physicians’ offices. And it notes that hospitals are held to higher regulatory standards because of the complexities of caring for sicker patients.

KU Hospital referred a request for comment about the lawsuit to its Washington, D.C., attorney, who did not respond. But the Kansas Hospital Association, in a comment it filed to the rule, said the cuts “would be excessive and harmful” and would endanger the role off-campus hospital departments “play in their communities.”

Although they didn’t join the lawsuit, other Kansas City-area hospitals, including Truman Medical Centers and Saint Luke’s, also weighed in with comments opposing the rule.

Dan Margolies is a senior reporter and editor at KCUR. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.
See more at https://www.kcur.org/post/ku-and-other-hospitals-say-unfair-medicare-rule-will-cost-them-hundreds-millions-dollars.