MHA Monday Report March 31, 2025

Healthcare Laws Set to Take Effect April 2025

More than 30 healthcare laws signed by Gov. Whitmer from last term are set to take effect on or after April 1. Some of these laws include state level Affordable Care Act codifications, increased …


Feedback Requested for Peer Recovery Coach Funding

The MHA was recently awarded $2.5 million to expand access to hospital-based peer recovery coach services. The funding was appropriated by the Michigan Legislature as part of the state fiscal year 2025 budget to …


MDHHS Seeks Committee Members for MMRC Program and Recommendations Workgroup

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) Maternal Mortality Surveillance Program is seeking professionals and community members to join the Maternal Mortality Review Committee (MMRC) and Recommendations Workgroup. These committees play a …


HHS Renews Ongoing Opioid Crisis PHE

U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced March 18 the renewal of the public health emergency (PHE) declaration addressing the ongoing opioid crisis. This extension, which lasts for 90 days, allows continued federal …


MDHHS Launches New Public Health Dashboard

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) recently launched the Michigan Public Health Dashboard, a tool designed to improve access to key health data and support informed decision-making. This publicly accessible resource assists …


MHA Members Share Strategies for Advancing Person and Family Engagement

Members of the MHA Person & Family Engagement (PFE) Advisory Council will share how integrating the MHA Roadmap to Person and Family Engagement develops and strengthens PFE efforts in their organizations through two upcoming PFE …


How Policy Shapes the Patient Experience: Reflections from a Public Policy Fellow

The Institute for Healthcare Improvement Patient Safety Congress brought together voices from across the healthcare spectrum March 9 – 11, uniting leaders, learners and advocates in a shared goal of delivering safer care to …


Keckley Report

The Fundamental Flaw of the Affordable Care Act

Today marks the 15th anniversary of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). It is the most consequential and controversial health legislation in our country’s history since LBJ’s Social Security Amendments created Medicare and Medicaid in 1965.

When passed March 23, 2010, 41% of adults held a favorable view of the law vs. 44% who were unfavorable. Today, 64% have a favorable view vs. 36% unfavorable (KFF). The 900-page law sought expansion of insurance coverage, reduced health costs and improved quality of care. But its results to date are mixed: coverage increased from 84% to 92% but costs have grown unabated and quality improvements have been significant in some areas and negligible in others.

In retrospect, the ACA is fundamentally flawed because it failed to recognize changes in the healthcare marketplace upon which systemic improvements could be achieved …

The ACA defaulted to a focus on insurance coverage and neglected attention to cost containment and quality improvement. As its implementation unfolded from 2010-2013, insurance coverage drew the lion’s share of attention and political opposition grew. Key amendments i.e. the deletion of mandates (proposed by conservative think-tanks to stabilize risk pools) and the June 2012 Supreme Court decision that delegated Medicaid expansion to states neutered its impact. Would-be systemic reforms became incremental changes comfortable to insiders and non-responsive to outsiders.

The ACA is fundamentally flawed because its Beltway-based collaborators did not accurately assess the environment and assumed incremental improvement to the status quo was enough. They were wrong; the public’s demanding more.

The ACA is an important component in health policy today but its fundamental flaw should be acknowledged.”

Paul Keckley, March 23, 2025


News to Know

  • Registration is open for the highly anticipated MHA Keystone Center Safety & Quality Symposium, scheduled for April 28 and 29, 2025, at the Kellogg Conference Center & Hotel, East Lansing.
  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) is accepting applications for the annual 2026 AHA Foster G. McGaw Prize now through May 6, 2025.

Lauren LaPineMHA in the News

Lauren LaPine, senior director, legislative and public policy, MHA, appeared on the MIRS Monday podcast published March 24 to discuss the state behavioral health system. LaPine spoke about the challenges associated with patients boarding in …

Webinar Explores Connection Between Person and Family Engagement and Performance

The MHA is hosting the webinar Tying Person and Family Engagement (PFE) to Culture and Performance from noon to 1 p.m. Aug. 20. The webinar will provide examples of how peers at hospitals are creating a PFE culture by building policies into operations.

Engaging patients and families in systematic feedback and recommendations to improve quality and safety is associated with better outcomes in quality and the experience of care. The MHA Person & Family Engagement Roadmap features research and tools supported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care that prove the value of person and family engagement.

The webinar also outlines a process for structuring value-based employee competencies that are foundational to delivering patient-centered care, programs that uniformly train and support knowledge and application of PFE principles across the system and examples of how to establish clear expectations of behaviors and actions that support a patient-centered culture.

Registration is free of charge for MHA member organizations. Chief nurse and medical officers, patient experience, safety & quality, social work and human resources professionals are encouraged to register.

Members with questions about the webinar or MHA Person & Family Engagement Roadmap may contact Erin Steward at the MHA.