The Federal Trade Commission Sept. 5 voted 3-1 to vacate the noncompete final rule issued last year by the previous administration. The rule banned, as an unfair method of competition, contractual terms prohibiting workers from pursuing certain employment after their contract with an employer ends. The AHA has opposed the rule since it was initially proposed in 2023. In an amicus brief filed in February with the Federation of American Hospitals, the AHA said the rule “could create significant distortions in the health care labor market because the Commission lacks the statutory authority to apply the rule to nonprofit hospitals.” 

The FTC Sept. 4 issued a request for information on noncompete agreements, saying it seeks to “better understand the scope, prevalence, and effects of employer noncompete agreements, as well as to gather information to inform possible future enforcement actions.” 

Headline
An article in the current edition of AHA Trustee Insights highlights how health care professionals across America’s hospitals and health systems — physicians,…
Headline
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration has released an advisory examining innovative solutions to close gaps in behavioral health care…
Headline
House lawmakers March 17 introduced the Physicians and the Healthcare Workforce Act, a bipartisan bill that would exempt foreign-trained health care workers…
Headline
An encore episode of the AHA’s Advancing Health podcast features Duke University’s Anna Tharakan, lead project manager on Closing the Gap on…
Headline
The AHA will host a webinar March 19 at 1 p.m. ET that will explore how leaders are improving retention, physician well-being and coverage…
Perspective
Public
A hospital patient from the 1990s would likely marvel at the pace of progress in health care just a generation later. America’s hospitals and health systems…