• Medical Properties Trust report sparks SEC inquiry possibility

    A recent report from Birmingham, Ala.-based Medical Properties Trust, the largest hospital landlord in the U.S., touched on the possibility of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission activity and government investigations regarding some of MPT's assets and tenants.
  • NP arrested for prescribing thousands of pills while unemployed

    A nurse practitioner is accused of writing fake prescriptions for thousands of oxycodone pills while unemployed, TribLive reported March. 4.
  • 6 patients accuse Sutter Health technician of sexual assault

    Six women who received ultrasounds between 2020 and 2022 at Sutter Health's Memorial Hospital in Los Banos, Calif., allege an ultrasound technician sexually assaulted them. Despite complaints and two police investigations, the technician remained employed, according to The San Francisco Chronicle.
  • Tips on strengthening vendor risk management for healthcare compliance

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  • Connecticut awarded $5M prejudgment remedy from defunct nursing school

    Connecticut Attorney General William Tong announced March 4 that the state has been granted a $5 million prejudgment remedy in its lawsuit against the owners of Stone Academy, after its abrupt closure without warning in February 2023.
  • Steward Florida hospitals hit with lawsuits

    As Dallas-based Steward Health Care's financial troubles rage on at its hospitals in states like Massachusetts and Utah, the health system is now facing lawsuits pertaining to some of its Florida hospitals, Florida Today reported March 3.
  • 6 workers assaulted at New York hospital: Police

    Police said they have arrested a man following the assault of six workers at New York City-based Richmond University Medical Center.
  • Boston federal hearing set over for-profit companies in healthcare

    A federal hearing is being held in Boston on April 3 to look into for-profit companies' roles in the U.S. healthcare system amid Dallas-based Steward Health Care's ongoing financial troubles in states like Massachusetts. 
  • TikTokers stealing clinicians' identities to promote supplements

    Dozens of TikTok accounts are using social media photos from real physicians, nurses and dental clinicians to promote a range of supplements and unchecked health claims — with few people policing them, Forbes reported March 4.
  • Judge dismisses NYU Langone's trademark lawsuit against Northwell

    A federal judge on March 1 dismissed a trademark lawsuit brought by New York City-based NYU Langone Health System and NYU Langone Hospitals against New Hyde Park, N.Y.-based Northwell Health regarding the use of the color purple and other elements in Northwell's marketing and advertisements, according to court documents shared with Becker's. 
  • Delayed ED care led to Mercy patient's death, lawsuit claims

    The family of a man who died at Mercy Hospital Springfield (Mo.) filed a lawsuit against the hospital Feb. 29, claiming delayed care and negligence contributed to his death, NBC affiliate KYTV reported. 
  • 10 recent hospital lawsuits, settlements

    From a Wisconsin judge denying a temporary injunction to delay the close of two Hospital Sisters Health System-owned hospitals to a Waterbury Hospital alleging she was fired for her age, here are 10 lawsuits, settlements and legal developments Becker's has reported since Feb. 22: 
  • Pharmacy CEO sentenced for lying about $40M fraud scheme

    The former CEO and president of a compounding pharmacy in Florida was sentenced to six months in prison for lying to federal agents during a healthcare fraud scheme investigation. 
  • For $1.5M, CVS settles Ohio understaffing cases

    On Feb. 29, Ohio and CVS settled 27 pending cases that alleged the pharmacy chain understaffed its stores, leading to prescription delays and dispensing errors. 
  • Washington physician pleads guilty to medical supply scheme

    A physician pleaded guilty to accepting kickbacks in a fraudulent telemarketing and medical supply scheme, the Justice Department said Feb. 28. 
  • Alabama law would shield physicians from prosecution over IVF procedures

    Physicians in Alabama could be shielded from criminal or civil liability for performing in vitro fertilization procedures after the state's legislature passed a bill Feb. 29, The Washington Post reported.
  • Owners of shuttered St. Louis nursing home fined $56K

    The owners of St. Louis-based Northview Village nursing home, which closed without warning in December, have been fined $56,310, by CMS the St. Louis Dispatch reported Feb. 29.
  • New York system files lawsuit against state AG over hospital birthing center closure

    Albany, N.Y.-based St. Peter's Health Partners and its Troy, N.Y.-based Samaritan Hospital filed a lawsuit on Feb. 28 against New York state Attorney General Letitia James's office seeking relief from the court regarding the office's investigation into the hospital's planned closure of its Burdett Birth Center. 
  • Lawsuit alleges Texas system hiring physicians as professors to dodge malpractice claims

    What began as a medical malpractice lawsuit against a Texas urologist has evolved into a broader accusation, The Texas Tribune reported Feb. 23. 
  • Trinity Health affiliates sue anesthesia provider over noncompetes

    Two affiliate hospitals of Livonia, Mich.-based Trinity Health filed lawsuits Feb. 26 against North American Partners in Anesthesia, alleging the group's noncompete clauses stifle competition and violate antitrust laws. 
  • Owner of 4 pharmacies convicted in $2.3M fraud case

    An Ohio man who owned four pharmacies was convicted Feb. 27 for dispensing a gastroenterology generic drug without prescriptions and overcharging Medicaid, the Justice Department said. 

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