Partners, Proposed Purchaser of Care New England in RI, Is Outsourcing High Tech Jobs to India

GoLocalProv News Team

Partners, Proposed Purchaser of Care New England in RI, Is Outsourcing High Tech Jobs to India

Brown University’s President Christina Paxson has warned that if Boston-based mega healthcare giant Partners HealthCARE purchases RI’s financially floundering Care New England (CNE), Rhode Island will see significant job loss.

On Tuesday, the Boston Globe unveiled the Partners is cutting about 100 of the company’s tech workers that their jobs were being outsourced to India to cut costs.

“Many of the employees have worked for Partners for several years, or even decades, and are struggling with the company’s decision. Almost all are coders — people who scour patients’ medical records to pinpoint billable services — and earn upward of $40 an hour. Coders in India earn a fraction of that amount, making overseas coding an attractive way for hospitals to cut costs,” wrote the Boston Globe.

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Paxson wrote on January 12, in a letter to the Brown University community announcing her opposition to the Partners acquisition of CNE:

“I feel strongly that letting this acquisition go forward would be wrong for Rhode Island and for Brown. Doing so is likely to lead to specialty healthcare shifting to Massachusetts, impeding access to healthcare for Rhode Islanders and especially for members of the state’s underserved communities. It also would likely increase the cost of care and reduce the ability of Rhode Islanders — consumers, businesses, healthcare workers and policy-makers — to have a voice in how our healthcare system works. If the focal point of Rhode Island healthcare shifts to Boston, excellent physicians (many of them Brown-trained) could be less likely to choose Rhode Island as a place to practice. In addition, the full economic benefits of a strong local academic health system — one that brings in federal grants, generates spin-off companies and creates new jobs in Rhode Island— would be lost, perhaps forever.”

Governor Gina Raimondo appearing on GoLocal LIVE raised concerns that if the Partner’s deal moves forward Rhode Island could realize significant job loss as the company would push more procedures to Boston.

Partners is the largest private employer in MA
About the outsourcing the Globe writes:

Coders interviewed by the Globe said Partners is not asking them to train the Indian workers. But some said they were required to sign confidentiality agreements, which prohibits talking to the news media, in return for severance pay — which Partners said is standard. Older coders losing their jobs at Partners were offered an early retirement package.

Coders play a critical role. They decipher medical records and doctors’ notes and navigate a labyrinth of alphanumeric codes to determine which services a health care provider can bill for. It’s like putting together a complicated puzzle, while under tremendous pressure to identify codes that will yield the highest payments.

Coders for Partners said they began to work from home about five years ago, a change made primarily to save office space. But some feel that move also hastened their demise.

“We’re anonymous,’’ said one coder, who did not want her name published because of the confidentiality agreement. “We are not staring them in the face when we have a meeting.’’

Partners coders work in Massachusetts and other states. Partners said that after the layoffs are complete, the company and its hospitals will still employ about 250 coders.


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