In the News
Another merger is creating N.J.’s 4th largest hospital chain
Published by Susan K. Livio on NJ.com. TRENTON — Cooper University Health announced Thursday it plans to acquire three Catholic hospitals in central and south Jersey, creating the fourth largest healthcare chain in a state in which mergers have become routine business. Cooper Board Chairman George Norcross said the planned acquisition will create a $2 billion…Read More…
“My Father Was Robbed of a ‘Good Death'”
Lynn McVey of New Jersey Innovation Institute, a member of NJHCQI’s Leadership Council, explains the importance of keeping the patient involved in making life-altering decisions and how this topic has affected her personally. Read more about Lynn’s story here.Read More…
Medicaid Makes for Strong Babies
New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute’s Senior Fellow, Matthew D’Oria talks about The Medicaid 2.0: Blueprint for the Future and how the plan allows mothers to become more involved in their journey to receiving healthy and adequate care for not only themselves, but their children as well. Read more about his discussion here.Read More…
My father was robbed of a ‘good death’ | Opinion
Published on NJ.com by Lynn McVey. My father, John Rhatigan, lived 92 years. The 6-foot-four Irishman and devout Catholic could spin a yarn and leave any audience mesmerized. He served in the Marines during World War II, worked at NY Telephone Company for 39 years, married, bought and paid off a modest suburban house in…Read More…
Linda Schwimmer and Healthcare Advocates Rally at State House in Light of ACA Repeal Defeat
President and CEO of New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute, Linda Schwimmer, joins other healthcare advocates at the New Jersey State House August 1st to rally for a bipartisan solution in light of the recent Affordable Care Act Repeal failure. View the video below! http://www.njtvonline.org/news/video/new-jersey-healthcare-advocates-rally-preserve-aca/Read More…
Health Advocates and Activists Rally in Recognition of ACA Repeal Defeat
Call on the Administration to End Actions That Destabilize the Market Trenton – Health care advocates, including provider organizations, unions, and consumer groups, stood united at the Statehouse today to applaud last week’s defeat of three GOP proposals to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The groups called on President Trump to support the…Read More…
Grant money kicks off ‘Live Healthy Cumberland County’
Published on NJ.com. BRIDGETON — Community leaders and public officials kicked off “Live Healthy Cumberland County” with support from the New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute (NJHCQI) and a $550,000 partnership grant from United Health Foundation. The effort aims to reduce chronic disease by increasing the number of healthy food items available at 27 local corner…Read More…
Health care advocate: new GOP bill ‘even more problematic’
Published on NJTV News. Despite revisions, the nonpartisan New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute finds serious gaps in the new version of Trumpcare. Its President and CEO Linda Schwimmer talks with Chief Political Correspondent Michael Aron. Aron: Linda, is this new Senate GOP health care bill any better than the one that Mitch McConnell presented…Read More…
Youth Teams Will Put Poor Communities In Touch With Better Health
Originally published on www.njspotlight.com by Lilo H. Stainton. A team of 15 dedicated high school students in Bridgeton, Cumberland County, spent last summer getting paid to build their leadership skills, connect low-income families to nutritious, free food, and improve the health and welfare of their struggling South Jersey city. The project — fueled in part…Read More…
How the GOP health bills could make N.J. look like Alabama
Published by Don Sapatkin on Philly.com. For New Jersey, the GOP health-care proposals in Washington could mean more than budgetary chaos and a million people going without insurance. The state could wind up with a higher share of uninsured residents than places like Alabama and Mississippi. The main reason: New Jersey long has worked to make coverage accessible…Read More…