Healthcare in Oregon

Oregon Healthcare Intel

Wednesday, May 20, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on healthcare developments in Oregon. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on oregon healthcare headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Oregon Healthcare Headlines

1 story

1.1

North Central Public Health District supports Oregon communities with free STD testing and licens...

North Central Public Health District is an Oregon three-county, free, walk-in local health department that offers free STD testing and helps with restaurant, food truck, and temporary booth restaurant licensing while focusing on preventing disease, injury, and disability.

Why It Matters

This gives Oregon healthcare professionals a no-cost access point for preventive sexual health services and a community partner for food-service licensing issues that can affect patients and local health settings.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

How MIPS cost-category math actually works.

The MIPS cost performance category is calculated retrospectively by CMS using attributed Medicare claims; clinicians cannot directly affect what is attributed. The two attribution methods (TPCC and MSPB) capture different beneficiary cohorts. Practices that try to "manage" cost without understanding which patients are attributed to which clinician typically waste effort.

Why It Matters

Cost is now 30% of the MIPS final score — the largest single category. Misunderstanding attribution is the leading cause of unfavorable payment adjustments in the next cycle.

2.2

340B recertification: the most-missed deadline in pharmacy compliance.

Covered entities must annually recertify their 340B eligibility through HRSA. Missing the recertification window pushes the entity to inactive status, which means immediate loss of 340B pricing and potentially diversion violations on previously dispensed drugs. Reinstatement requires a new application.

Why It Matters

The discount value of 340B pricing for a covered entity often exceeds six figures annually. Letting the recertification lapse for paperwork reasons is one of the most expensive administrative errors in the regulation.

2.3

The bloodborne-pathogens plan that fails on inspection.

OSHA inspections of healthcare facilities most commonly find three violations: an Exposure Control Plan that has not been reviewed annually (date-stamped review required), engineering controls that have not been re-evaluated when new devices are introduced, and post-exposure protocols that do not match the actual reporting workflow.

Why It Matters

Each citation carries per-violation penalties, and willful or repeat designations multiply them. Re-evaluation paperwork is the cheapest control to maintain.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 20, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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