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Health Law Highlights

Wade’s Health Law Highlights for May 6, 2025

Artificial Intelligence

  • Houston Methodist is teaming up with Ambience Healthcare to integrate AI into emergency departments and inpatient care settings to address documentation and workflow challenges. The technology will capture provider-patient conversations, gather details for admissions and documentation, extract information from charts, and understand specific coding needs of each care setting. Emergency department clinicians report high burnout levels and complete approximately 4,000 mouse clicks during busy shifts, while the new AI aims to reduce this “click mileage” by eliminating copy-pasting documentation. Dr. Jordan Dale, chief medical information officer at Houston Methodist, stated they are committed to finding new ways to relieve clinicians with AI technology that enhances the patient-provider experience.
  • The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) uses AI to automatically analyze all CT scans for cardiac risk, identifying patients with coronary artery calcification who might otherwise go undetected. The system calculates an Agatston score through convolutional neural networks, categorizes patients into risk tiers, and sends automated notifications to high-risk patients and their physicians, evaluating approximately 450 scans monthly with 5-10 high-risk cases identified. UTMB also employs AI for rapid stroke and pulmonary embolism detection, with algorithms that notify care teams within seconds of imaging, and uses AI to assist with inpatient admission decisions by analyzing electronic health records.

Data Breach

  • Ascension Health has announced having some of its patients’ data potentially exfiltrated following a December attack that compromised a former business partner’s third-party software. Patient information from care sites in Alabama, Indiana, Michigan, Tennessee, and Texas was inadvertently shared with the breached business partner, including names, birthdates, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, Social Security numbers, race, gender, and clinical details. Ascension says their own systems, networks, and electronic health records were not involved in this incident. This disclosure follows a previous Black Basta ransomware attack reported months ago that affected 5.6 million individuals and disrupted Ascension’s electronic health records system and some hospital emergency care operations.

Food as Medicine

  • Food as medicine encompasses nutritional interventions to prevent or treat disease through programs like medically tailored meals and produce prescriptions. Medicare Advantage offers food as medicine through supplemental benefits, special benefits for chronically ill enrollees, and the Value-Based Insurance Design Model, while Medicaid provides coverage through Section 1115 waivers and other authorities. There is uncertainty about future federal funding for food as medicine initiatives. Private funding faces challenges as employer health plans must classify food interventions as qualified medical expenses, requiring physician documentation and third-party verification.

Fraud & Abuse

Geriatrics

Medicare Beneficiaries

  • Medicare requirements follow patients regardless of a provider’s cash-based practice model, with three provider categories determining Medicare billing obligations. Participating providers enroll in Medicare and accept assignment on all claims, billing Medicare directly for covered services. Non-participating providers enroll in Medicare but choose which claims to accept assignment on, must submit all claims to Medicare, and face limitations on what they can charge beneficiaries. Opt-out providers must file an affidavit valid for two years, enter specific contracts with Medicare beneficiaries, and can charge patients without Medicare limitations, though certain provider types cannot opt out of Medicare.

Provider Networks

  • Network rental agreements in healthcare allow payers to access each other’s provider networks and fee schedules, which can circumvent negotiated contracts and subject providers to unfavorable rates. These arrangements may violate antitrust laws as horizontal price-fixing schemes under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, with courts applying the per se rule to find them unreasonably restrictive of trade. In January 2025, AIDS Health Foundation won over $10 million in damages after an arbitrator ruled that a network rental agreement between Prime Therapeutics and Express Scripts constituted illegal price-fixing, while a similar class action by Osterhaus Pharmacy against Express Scripts is proceeding after surviving a motion to dismiss in February 2025. Oklahoma has proposed legislation (SB789) to prohibit pharmacy benefit managers from making their provider networks available to other PBMs, potentially effective November 2025.

Staffing

Texas Medicaid

  • The Texas Health and Human Services Commission denied Cook Children’s Health Plan a renewed Medicaid contract in March 2024, putting healthcare for 125,000 members at risk starting September, including 10,000 children with complex medical needs. The decision could force families to switch to one of four national for-profit plans, potentially disrupting established care relationships and eliminating local community-based coordination that has served Fort Worth families for 25 years. Cook Children’s has filed legal action against the commission after their protest was denied, while state lawmakers have introduced bills to change how Medicaid contracts are awarded to protect local healthcare management. The contract termination could impact 400 Fort Worth employees, 1,455 primary care providers, and 2,550 specialists, causing 75.6% insurance plan turnover in Tarrant County.