Appel Joins WJR Live from Lansing Broadcast

MHA EVP Laura Appel with WJR's Guy Gordon and Lloyd Jackson.
MHA EVP Laura Appel with WJR's Guy Gordon and Lloyd Jackson.
MHA EVP Laura Appel with WJR’s Guy Gordon and Lloyd Jackson.

MHA Executive Vice President Laura Appel appeared on Detroit’s WJR 760 AM’s ‘JR Morning with Guy Gordon, Llyod Jackson and Jamie Edmonds’s “Live from Lansing” broadcast Feb. 26 as part of the station’s annual coverage of legislative and policy issues facing the state the morning after Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s State of the State address. The MHA sponsored the program, with the broadcast hosted at the Courtyard by Marriott Lansing Downtown.

As part of the program lineup, Appel spoke with Gordon and Jackson about the state of hospitals and the many changes they face, including the healthcare workforce, the 340B program and protecting Medicaid from federal funding cuts. Other notable interviewees during the event included Senate Minority Leader Aric Nesbitt (R-Lawton) and Speaker of the House Matt Hall (R-Richland Township).

Relevant healthcare topics included in the State of the State address included expanded attention towards recruiting males to pursue post-secondary education opportunities and increased state support for forgiving patient medical debt.

Additional media stories published during the week of Feb. 24 included an article picked up by both Bridge and MIRS on the challenges of behavioral health transport services for providers in the Upper Peninsula. Lauren LaPine, senior director of Legislative & Public Policy, MHA, was quoted in the article discussing efforts with the Michigan Department of Health & Human Services to implement and fund behavioral health transportation services at hospitals across the state.

“We believe that a patient shouldn’t have to be transported via police transport for behavioral health needs,” said LaPine.

In addition, the MHA received mention in a Feb. 27 article from MIRS recapping a House Health Policy Committee hearing about the 340B program.

Members with questions should contact John Karasinski at the MHA.

MHA Opposes Staffing Ratios on WJR

MHA CEO Brian PetersMHA executives appeared on WJR 760 AM during the weeks of Nov. 25 and Dec. 2 to discuss the association’s opposition to government mandated nurse staffing ratios.

MHA CEO Brian Peters appeared on Focus with Paul W. Smith Nov. 26 while MHA Executive Vice President Laura Appel joined Guy Gordon, Lloyd Jackson and Jamie Edmonds Dec. 4 during the weekly Capital Report segment of WJR’s morning show.

Both Peters and Appel focused on House Bills 4550 – 4552, which would mandate one-size-fits-all nurse staffing ratios for all Michigan hospitals. The bills received a committee hearing Nov. 9 in the House Health Policy Committee and the interviews addressed how these bills remain the MHA’s top priority during the state’s legislative lame-duck session.

Laura AppelIf the bills did become law, Michigan communities would face the loss of important access to healthcare services, as up to 5,100 hospitals beds throughout the state would close.

More information about the proposed legislation is available on the Think it Through website.

Members with any questions regarding media requests should contact John Karasinski at the MHA.

Peters Featured on WJR Live from Lansing Broadcast

MHA CEO Brian Peters on JR' Morning with Guy Gordon, Jamie Edmonds and LLoyd Jackson.
MHA CEO Brian Peters speaks with LLoyd Jackson as part of the WJR Live in Lansing broadcast.
MHA CEO Brian Peters speaks with LLoyd Jackson as part of the WJR Live in Lansing broadcast.

MHA CEO Brian Peters appeared on Detroit’s WJR 760 AM’s JR’ Morning with Guy Gordon, Jamie Edmonds, and Lloyd Jackson’s “Live from Lansing” broadcast Jan. 25 as part of the station’s annual coverage of legislative and policy issues facing the state the morning after Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s State of the State address. The MHA sponsored the program, with the broadcast hosted at the Courtyard by Marriott Lansing Downtown.

As part of the program lineup, Peters spoke with Gordon, Edmonds and Jackson about the state of hospitals and the many challenges they face, including the healthcare workforce, behavioral health and prescription drug affordability. Other notable interviewees during the event included Whitmer; Senate Minority Leader Aric Nesbitt (R-Lawton), House Minority Leader Matt Hall (R-Richland Township), Rep. Matt Koleszar (D-Plymouth) and Sandy Baruah, president and CEO, Detroit Regional Chamber.

The State of the State address the previous evening primarily focused on 2023 policy achievements achieved by the first Democratic Legislature in 40 years and shared several policy proposals focused on lowering costs for Michiganders, improving education and strengthening economic development. One specific item mentioned by Whitmer relevant to hospitals is the intention to make the first two years of community college tuition-free for every high school graduate. Doing so would remove any financial barrier that may prevent students from pursuing healthcare degree, certificate and credentialing programs at community colleges. This policy item has been a solution offered by the MHA since last year to address nursing shortages.

As a sponsor of the event, the MHA developed a 60-second message for airing before and during the broadcast. Members with questions should contact John Karasinski at the MHA.