Becker's Spine Review

November/December, 2017, Becker's Spine Review

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54 HEALTHCARE NEWS ADVERTISINGINDEX Note: Ad page number(s) given in parentheses ADVERTISER Aesculap. spine.us@aesculap. com / xpstrong.com / (866)229-3002 (pg. 4) Allen Medical Systems Inc. www.allenmedical.com/bs3 (pgs. 40 - 44) Bioventus LLC. www. bioventussurgical.com / (800)637- 4391 (pg. 55) Cerapedics. www.cerapedics.com (pg. 22) Centinel Spine. www. centinelspine.com (pg. 17) ChoiceSpine. Choicespine.com (pg. 21) Haag-Streit USA. hsmicroscopes.com/spine / (855)854- 5810 (pg. 13) Medtronic. www.medtronic.com (pgs. 26 - 29) Mizuho OSI. mizuhosi.com/trios (pg. 56) National Medical Billing Services. nationalascbilling.com / (866)948-7673 (pg. 7) Orthofix. www.orthofix.com / (888)298-5700 (pg. 5) Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc. www.exparel.com / (855)793-9727 (pgs. 9 - 10) Paradigm Spine, LLC. paradigmspine.com (pgs. 2 - 3) Titan Spine. titanspine.com (pg. 47) California Hospital Files for Bankruptcy After Missing Payroll By Ayla Ellison T ulare (Calif.) Regional Medical Center, a 112-bed hospital managed by Tulare-based HealthCare Conglomerate Associ- ates, filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy Saturday. e hospital filed for bankruptcy a few days aer HCCA, which is paid by the local hospital district, said it was done footing the hospital's bills. "HCCA provided substantial revolving funding to the hospital over the years, to a cumulative total of $14 million," Benny Benzeevi, MD, chairman and CEO of HCCA, said at a board meeting Sept. 28, according to the Valley Voice. "But in light of the current destructive political environment, HCCA will not continue to do so." Tensions have flared between HCCA and the hospital district's board since last year, and that battle is partially to blame for a recent credit rating downgrade by Fitch Ratings. On Sept. 29, less than 24 hours aer Dr. Benzeevi declared HCCA would no longer provide financial support for the hospital, several nurses and other staff walked off the job aer not being paid. HCCA said a cash shortage by the hospital district was the reason it was un- able to fund the entire payroll. Tulare Regional Medical Center's bankruptcy petition revealed the hospital has zero cash in its bank accounts. e cash shortage poses a risk to public health and safety, as the hospital does not have the funds to purchase adequate medical supplies and "critical vendors" have dis- continued service to the hospital due to lack of payment, according to bankruptcy documents. Chapter 9 bankruptcy is a bankruptcy proceeding that offers distressed municipalities protection from creditors while a repayment plan is ne- gotiated. n Former ASC Employee Charged With 2nd-Degree Manslaughter after Stealing Morphine, Administering Fatal Injections to ASC Surgical Assistant By Mary Rechtoris A surgical assistant at Mansfield Center-based Connecticut Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Center and a former colleague entered the center after hours and stole morphine for personal use, which even- tually led to the surgical assistant's death last year, ac- cording to NBC Connecticut. Now, the former colleague has been charged with second-degree manslaughter for her role in the surgical assistant's death. Here are five things to know: 1. The two women decided to steal a vile of morphine from the ASC after drinking together on Sept. 8, 2016. The victim had a history of narcotic use, and the former employee Jes- sica Hill, 46, had a previous arrest for larceny and burglary at the center, according to the Hartford Courant. 2. The pair then went to the victim's home and injected the morphine; according to Ms. Hill, they injected them- selves and each other. Ms. Hill spent the night at the victim's home and left the next morning. The victim was found and pronounced dead later that day. 3. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner rule the death a homicide and found the cause of death was acute intox- ication, resulting from mixing alcohol and narcotics. 4. After police searched Ms. Hill's cell phone records, they found Ms. Hill and the victim corresponded about "happy pills." The records did not find any details about specific substances or their intention to obtain some, ac- cording to the warrant. 5. Ms. Hill's appeared before the Superior Court in Dan- ielson, Conn., on Oct. 11. n

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