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- Oregon’s anti-consolidation bill tested by physician contract switch-up
- Mass General Brigham, Dana-Farber to coordinate on split: Boston Globe
- How AI-enabled early detection is redefining preventive care
- Medical device maker Stryker hit with cyberattack
- New York university to launch dental school
- Aetna to pay $118M to resolve Medicare Advantage upcoding allegations
- Fraud lawsuits against Erlanger can proceed, judge rules
- Medical debt linked to deferred dental care: Study
- FDA launches single adverse event platform
- Riverside Health taps new system finance leader, hospital president
- Medicare beneficiaries may pay more amid insurer acquisitions of PBMs: Study
- Medicare beneficiaries may pay more amid insurer acquisitions of PBMs: Study
- Virginia Mason Franciscan exec heads to Providence
- IU Health bets on ‘big, one-time endeavors’ for the future
- IU Health bets on ‘big, one-time endeavors’ for the future
- Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist taps hospital president
- ADHA targets professional autonomy in new strategic plan: 5 notes
- Duke University Health System files CON for $6.4M ASC
- Ohio dental practice to permanently close
- 3 health systems outsourcing RCM functions
- A flurry of noncompete updates in Q1
- Specialty1 Partners continues 2026 growth with new joint venture
- The CMS loophole shrinking ASC access: Inside ASCA advocacy
- CMS imposes equipment supplier moratorium; 3 sentenced to prison in fraud cases
- Guidelight names chief growth officer
- ‘A delta in opportunity’: The savings independent ASCs are leaving on the table
- Despite insurers' expense pains, Tenet Healthcare is securing healthy commercial rates through 2027
- Nebraska Medicine’s $99.3M center to expand behavioral health services
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- Dental industry headed for consolidation shift amid DSO financial woes: 4 notes
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- University of Minnesota dental clinic closes over financial challenges
- Study Links State Taxes to COVID Lockdown Decisions
- Hospital expenses grew twice as fast as prices in 2025: 4 AHA findings
- Aetna to pay $117.7M to settle Medicare Advantage upcoding allegations: DOJ
- Connecticut fines debt collector $100K for calls to hospital emergency line
- ADA names Dr. Nader Nadershahi as executive director
- Connecticut health system strikes RCM partnership
- Stryker hit by international cyberattack linked to pro-Iran group
- AHA: Hospitals' total expenses rose by 7.5% in 2025
- AstraZeneca recruits Joshua Jackson, Philadelphia Flyers’ Gritty to cancer screening push
- As Lilly flourishes in Q4, peer projections signal looming sector slowdown in 2026
- FDA May Allow Some Flavored Vapes Aimed at Adults
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- Joint Economic Committee report: Medicare Advantage overpayments drive up Part B premiums
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- Lowering Parents' Stress Can Reduce Risk Of Childhood Obesity
- Multilingualism Might Not Aid Brain Aging, Researcher Argues
- 15-Year Study Shows Sharp Rise in Depression Among U.S. College Students
- Repealing Motorcycle Helmet Laws Leads to More Severe Crashes, Millions in Added Treatment Costs
- Why Childhood Cavities May Predict Adult Heart Disease
- Physical Therapy Costs Vary Widely In U.S., Study Finds
- J&J's Joaquin Duato joins $30M CEO pay club with 30% compensation boost for 2025
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- Primary Care Is in Trouble. So Doctors Band Together To Boost Their Market Power.
- Skyhawk taps Teva alum to steer commercial path, while Santhera names new CCO to grow DMD sales
- Driving the news at HIMSS26: Verily, Samsung ink collaboration; Meditech's latest AI solutions
- Minnesota to give $5M in restitution to patients of shuttered dental office
- Colorado hospitals, advocates launch youth mental health coalition
- Pennsylvania hospital CFO on life after bankruptcy: ‘You’ve got to hold the line’
- Medicare allegedly paid $15M+ for ED services tied to non-ED sites: Report
- Climate warming could increase anxiety, depression: Study
- Sutter Health boosts operating margin to 2.6% in 2025
- Remarks at the Institute of International Bankers 2026 Annual Washington Conference
- Fostering Regulatory Harmony Between the SEC and CFTC
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- Here's where hospital markets are the most concentrated
- A look at how CVS is leaning on 'agentic twins' in developing consumer tech
- Bancos, primera línea de batalla contra los fraudes financieros a adultos mayores
- Inside Grand Mental Health’s tech-enabled crisis response model
- Sandoz to set up standalone biosimilars unit as it eyes upcoming 'golden decade' of patent losses
- Indiana syringe services face ID requirement, restrictions
- AbbVie's Robert Michael earns hefty pay bump to $32.5M in 2nd year as CEO
- NYU Stern report calls for private equity reforms to safeguard quality of care
- Remarks at the International Bar Association’s 24th Annual International Conference on Private Investment Funds
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- Philips unveils Rembra CT for acute and high-demand imaging environments
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Hospital management? Beckers Hospital Review has one hard-hitting op-ed about that.
For healthcare freedom fans, it raises a tough question. Which is more important for healthcare freedom: constitutional principles, or a seat at the table? (That's the progressive substitute for inalienable rights.)
These authors insist upon nurses having a seat in the hospital C-suite, and they cite plenty of hard fact along the way.
Citations at the link.
The Value of Nurses on Boards Is No Longer Debatable
Christina Dempsey, DNP, MBA, RN , CNOR, CENP, FAAN Board of Directors, Children’s Mercy
Alejandro Quiroga, MD, MBA President and Chief Executive Officer, Children’s Mercy
February 18th, 2026Michael Porter defined value as outcomes divided by cost1. Healthcare embraced the equation quickly but applied it unevenly. For decades, nurses have been treated primarily as a cost to be managed rather than as the people and capability that make outcomes possible. They are bundled into room charges, excluded from RVUs, and discussed more often as labor expense than as strategic assets. Yet nurses remain the largest segment of the healthcare workforce and the primary drivers of inpatient care, safety, and patient experience.2
For years, nurse leaders have asked how to assign value to nursing. The more urgent question today is simpler and more uncomfortable: how can healthcare be governed without nurses at the table?
Boards exist to steward trust, oversee risk, and ensure long-term viability. That responsibility becomes compromised when boards govern abstractions rather than the work itself. A healthcare board without nursing expertise is not balanced; it is incomplete. Most hospital and state healthcare association boards currently lack nurses as voting members of the board. Even when Chief Nursing Officers (CNOs) and Registered Nurse (RN) executives are present, formal governance power remains concentrated among Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) and other executive leaders. Representation without governing and voting authority creates an uneven table. The 2025 National Governance Report by the American Hospital Association states that the actual number of clinicians on hospital boards has decreased from 29% in 2014 to 26% in 2024. Physicians still make up most clinicians on hospital boards, but their proportion fell from 20% in 2014 to 16% in 2024. Nurses make up only 5% of clinicians on hospital boards and this is unchanged from 2014.3 This is not about representation. It is about whether governance reflects how care is actually delivered.
The breakdown becomes most visible around measurement. Leadership often says it wants better data on nursing. Nurses often resist being measured. The reason is not technical or ideological. It is trust. Trust that is visible and mutual.
Historically, healthcare made nurses’ work harder while removing the supports that once made the job doable. Unit clerks disappeared. Transport and ancillary roles thinned. Tasks that were never designed as nursing work were pushed onto nurses simply because someone had to absorb them. At the same time, patient acuity increased, technology proliferated, and documentation demands expanded relentlessly. Time-motion and EHR studies consistently show that nurses now spend roughly a third of their shift documenting care.4 That time does not replace patient care; it stacks on top of it.
This accumulation created a job that is no longer realistically finishable. The pandemic did not cause this. It exposed it.
In that context, resistance to measurement is rational. When visibility has historically preceded cuts rather than improvement, measurement feels like threat, not learning. The dominance of staffing ratios reflects this reality. Ratios are not what nurses want. They are the only measure nurses trust. They are blunt, incomplete, and insufficient—but they are defensible in a low-trust system. Ratios are not a solution; they are a symptom.
This is not a nursing failure or a leadership failure. It is a relationship failure, and therefore a governance failure. Measurement without trust is experienced as control. Measurement with trust becomes learning. And healthcare will not get better data, better workflows, or better outcomes until trust is addressed first.
That is precisely why nurses on boards matter.
As a nurse with more than four decades of experience across clinical care, administration, academia, and industry, I have focused this chapter of my career on bringing the nursing lens into governance. When I joined the Board of Directors at Children’s Mercy in Kansas City, MO, I was the only nurse and one of only a small number of clinicians. The response from nursing leaders was immediate. They did not experience it as symbolic. They experienced it as practical. For the first time, they believed decisions affecting their work would be shaped by someone who understood the realities they lived every day.
From the board side, the shift was equally tangible. Discussions about quality, safety, experience, and workforce sustainability became more grounded. Metrics were interrogated differently. Risks surfaced earlier. Strategy became more executable because it was anchored in how care actually happens, rather than how it is assumed to happen.
From a CEO perspective, this is not optional. Governing healthcare without nursing expertise is no longer defensible. A nurse on the board makes one governance question unavoidable: who was part of this decision? That question matters because the tradeoffs facing healthcare today are real and consequential. When nurses are part of governance, decisions become rounder and more credible. Consequences are anticipated rather than explained after the fact. And because nurses trust nurses, decisions shaped with nursing input land differently inside the organization.
The evidence supports what experience makes obvious. Higher patient-to-nurse ratios are associated with increased mortality, higher failure-to-rescue rates, and greater nurse burnout.5 Stronger nursing work environments are associated with better patient outcomes and improved retention.6 Missed nursing care is consistently linked to adverse outcomes.7,8 If boards care about outcomes, they must govern the conditions under which those outcomes are produced. One of the key tenets of high reliability is deference to expertise. Highly reliable organizations value expertise over authority and governance must reflect this principle.9
The important point is this: this is fixable. The AHA postulates that fewer clinicians on hospital boards may be the result of the difficulty in recruitment of clinical expertise outside of their own organizations.3 However, a large number of clinicians and nurse leaders specifically are in academia, self-employment, industry, and retirement. Perhaps recruitment needs to expand to these areas. But the first step is not a new metric, a new dashboard, or another performance initiative. The first step is trust. Trust is what allows transparency. Transparency allows learning. Learning allows redesign. Without trust, every attempt to “measure nursing better” will be interpreted as preparation for further extraction.
Boards helped create the conditions that made nursing work undoable. Boards therefore have a responsibility to help redesign it. That work cannot be done without nurses as full participants in governance.
This is now the baseline for competent healthcare governance.
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