MHA Monday Report Oct. 27, 2025

Speech-Language Pathologist Medicaid Coverage and Critical Incident Stress Management Services Legislation Advances

Legislation improving coverage policies for speech-language pathologists and broadening those included under Critical Incident Stress Management services advanced in the Michigan House of Representatives during the week of Oct. 20. House Bill …


CMS Releases Updated Guidance During Federal Government Shutdown

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) recently instructed all Medicare Administrative Contractors to lift the hold and begin processing fee-for-service claims dated Oct. 1 and after. The action follows the hold on …


Webinar to Review MHA 2025-26 Strategic Action Plan

The MHA will host a virtual member forum from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. Nov. 7 to outline the MHA 2025-26 Strategic Action Plan (SAP) approved by the MHA Board of Trustees. The 2025-26 SAP maintains …


MHASC Board Engages in Strategic Planning Retreat

The MHA Service Corporation (MHASC) board met Oct. 21 to discuss healthcare market strategies to identify, diversify and grow solutions for MHA members and clients. The board’s strategic planning retreat focused on creative ideation and …


MHA Hosts Conversation on Strengthening Michigan’s Healthcare Workforce

The MHA convened more than 90 individuals on Oct. 16 for a Healthcare Careers Conversation event. Human resources professionals, clinical leaders, education and workforce partners gathered to explore ideas for growing the healthcare pipeline. As part …


MHA Shares Recent Medicare and Medicaid Enrollment Analysis

The MHA recently updated its analysis of Medicaid and Medicare enrollment based on September 2025 data. The analysis includes program enrollment as a percentage of each county’s total population and the split between fee-for-service and …


Strengthening Health Literacy Through Better Communication

In healthcare, words can be as powerful as medicine. A patient’s ability to understand their diagnosis, treatment options or discharge instructions can directly influence their recovery and long-term health. Yet too often, communication between clinical experts …


Keckley Report

Will Healthcare’s Big Tents Pivot?

“As the federal government shutdown enters its third week, U.S. healthcare is in the crosshairs.

The federal government U.S. spent 27% of its total spending on healthcare last year and projects to spend at least 5.5% more every year through 2035. In that period, it will grow from 18% of the U.S. GDP to 21%. It’s labor intense, capital intense, fragmented, highly regulated and high profile. Its growth is the result of increased demand, clinical and technologic innovations and higher unit prices for hospital care, specialty drugs and insurance premium increases. Thus, when the U.S. economy is doing well, healthcare does even better. And when the U.S. economy slumps, it does well producing job growth and earnings above peer industries.

Healthcare spending is not insulated from broader economic forces requiring messaging by ‘Big Four’ and by each member to be more clear, more accurate and less misleading. The big question each must ask Members and Boards is this: ‘are we prepared to pivot from the status quo to a better system of health might require uncomfortable changes necessary to serve the greater good?

The erosion of public trust and confidence in our political system is instructive. Healthcare can (and must) do better.

That effort is urgently needed. The Big Four should take the lead together!”

Paul Keckley, Oct. 19, 2025


MHA in the News

The Detroit Free Press published an op-ed Oct. 21 from MHA CEO Brian Peters that affirms the commitment of hospitals to patients and shares the actions hospitals are taking to keep costs low for patients. …

Strengthening Health Literacy Through Better Communication

Byline: Gary L. Roth, DO, Chief Medical Officer, MHA

In healthcare, words can be as powerful as medicine. A patient’s ability to understand their diagnosis, treatment options or discharge instructions can directly influence their recovery and long-term health. Yet too often, communication between clinical experts and patients is clouded by medical jargon, complex explanations or information overload. Improving how we talk about health both within hospitals, in the clinic, and across our communities is a matter of safety, trust and access to care.

As October draws to a close, Health Literacy Month serves as a vital reminder that clear communication is a cornerstone of safe, high-quality care throughout Michigan’s healthcare community.

Understanding the Health Literacy Gap

Health literacy refers to a person’s ability to find, understand and use health information to make informed decisions. According to national data, nearly nine in 10 adults struggle to fully comprehend medical information shared by providers, prescription labels or public health materials. This gap leads to serious consequences: missed appointments, medication errors, preventable hospitalizations and poorer overall health outcomes.

Clinicians and health organizations tend to use technical language, while patients experience healthcare through a lens shaped by anxiety, uncertainty and varying levels of understanding. When information isn’t communicated clearly, patients and their family may nod in agreement without truly understanding, leaving them at risk once they leave the clinic or hospital.

Making Health Information Easier to Understand

Effective external communication from providers bridges the gap between the clinical world and the public. It translates complex health information into language that is clear, accurate and compassionate. As digital tools and online platforms become more common in care delivery, hospitals and healthcare systems are also rethinking how to present health information in accessible, user-friendly formats that meet patients where they are. Whether through hospital websites, community health campaigns, or discharge instructions and summaries, the goal should always be the same: ensure patients and families can understand what they need to do and why it matters.

Plain language, visuals and real-world examples can make health information easier to understand. Testing materials with actual patients before publication can also reveal confusing wording or gaps. Improving health literacy should not just be the patient’s job. Health systems, clinicians, communicators and policymakers all have a role to play in making information accessible. Statewide initiatives, including resources from the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services and the Michigan State Medical Society, are helping healthcare professionals strengthen health literacy skills and better support patients and families across care settings. Investing in education for health professionals on plain language communication and effective patient engagement will make a difference.

Strengthening Community Health Through Understanding

When patients understand their care, they are more likely to follow treatment plans, ask informed questions and take ownership of their health. When families are also engaged, they can more effectively support the patient. Effective communication builds trust, and trust builds healthier communities.

Across Michigan, hospitals are taking proactive steps to advance health literacy by simplifying patient materials, redesigning discharge instructions and training staff in clear communication techniques. These efforts reflect MHA members’ shared commitment to building understanding as the foundation of safe, high-quality care.

In healthcare, clear communication isn’t just good practice. It’s good medicine.