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Ralliers express concerns over Ellis-St Peter s merger
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Ellis-St. Peter’s merger pushed back | The Daily Gazette
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SCHENECTADY Ellis Medicine and St. Peter’s Health Partners are pursuing shared services and other partnerships but their planned merger is on hold for now.
Ellis President and CEO Paul Milton said Thursday he hopes and believes the merger will be completed, perhaps in 2023, but Ellis will be collaborating with SPHP in the interim as the Schenectady-based organization tries to recover from the crippling financial impact of the COVID pandemic.
Ellis Medicine’s revenue plunged from $455 million in 2019 to $402 million in 2020, and it incurred a $33 million loss for 2020.
But the need to merge into a larger organization was apparent before 2020, Milton said: Ellis is just too small to be viable on its own for the long term in the healthcare industry as it now exists.
Rally set to demand openness in Ellis Medicine merger talks | The Daily Gazette
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SCHENECTADY Unhappy about the lack of updates on negotiations for a potential merger of Ellis Medicine and worried about the cuts that may result, community activists are planning a protest rally.
The Schenectady Coalition for Healthcare Access said Monday it will lead a march on July 25 from City Hall to Veterans Park, where it will hold a 12:30 p.m. rally centered on the theme “Don’t Take Away Our Services.”
In October, Ellis Medicine and St. Peter’s Health Partners announced a proposal for St. Peter’s to absorb Ellis but said months of discussions and multiple layers of regulatory approval were necessary before any such action could happen.
Publication date:
Abstract
Based on mortality estimates for 32 causes of death that are amenable to health care, the US health care system did not perform as well as other high-income countries, scoring 88.7 out of 100 on the 2016 age-standardized Healthcare Access and Quality (HAQ) index.
Objective
To compare US age-specific HAQ scores with those of high-income countries with universal health insurance coverage and compare scores among US states with varying insurance coverage.
Design, Setting, and Participants
This cross-sectional study used 2016 Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factor study results for cause-specific mortality with adjustments for behavioral and environmental risks to estimate the age-specific HAQ indices. The US national age-specific HAQ scores were compared with high-income peers (Canada, western Europe, high-income Asia Pacific countries, and Australasia) in 1990, 2000, 2010, and 2016, and the 2016 scores among US states were also a
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