DEADLINE: Medicaid IMPACT Revalidations Due to Receive Medicaid Reimbursement; IHA Resources: Infection Prevention News You Can Use; Updated CPR Guidelines for Choking Response, Opioid-Related Emergencies
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Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Today's Top Stories

  • Medicaid IMPACT Revalidations Due to Receive Medicaid Reimbursement
  • IHA Resources: Infection Prevention News You Can Use
  • Updated CPR Guidelines for Choking, Opioid-Related Emergencies
  • Briefly Noted
  • Leading the News

Medicaid IMPACT Revalidations Due to Receive Medicaid Reimbursement
The Illinois Dept. of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) is currently conducting IMPACT Medicaid provider revalidations. Providers in the October cohort must complete IMPACT revalidations by this Friday, Oct. 31, in order to receive Medicaid reimbursement. IHA urges all providers to check their revalidation cycle due date—including physicians and physician groups affiliated with your hospitals—and to check for any incomplete revalidations. NOTE: If a physician providing services at your hospital does not revalidate, your hospital will not receive payment for services provided by that physician. 

 

If you are in this revalidation cycle and do not submit your revalidation information by Oct. 31 you will be disenrolled from the IMPACT system and cannot receive retroactive enrollment. To check your revalidation due date, search the basic information page of your IMPACT enrollment. HFS has provided IHA with step-by-step instructions to check the status and due date of servicing providers that you can access here. The IMPACT Provider Revalidation website includes step-by-step instructions, a frequently asked questions document and a townhall webinar recording.

 

IHA Resources: Infection Prevention News You Can Use
Last week, during International Infection Prevention Week, IHA shined a light on infection prevention and the important role that infection preventionists play in protecting patients and the community from healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), outbreaks, and other infectious diseases. Click here to access the final Infection Prevention News You Can Use newsletter focused on patient education and ways to integrate patients, family members, and caregivers into infection prevention and control activities to prevent HAIs, decrease length of stay, and improve health outcomes. 

 

We encourage you to share the "Infection Prevention News You Can Use newsletters with other healthcare professionals to raise awareness of infection prevention practices.

  • Emerging Pathogens
  • Quality Improvement and Infection Prevention
  • Antimicrobial Resistance
  • Environmental Cleaning
  • Patient Education

IHA would like to thank our members for their dedication to their infection prevention programs. Thank you for all you do to keep your patients, colleagues, family members and community safe. If you have questions or if there are opportunities for IHA to support your efforts, we encourage you to contact InfectionPrevention@team-iha.org.

 

Updated CPR Guidelines for Choking, Opioid-Related Emergencies
The “2025 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Emergency Cardiovascular Care (ECC),” published last week in Circulation, is the first full revision of lifesaving resuscitation guidance since 2020. A press release from the American Heart Association (AHA) said the updates include new guidance on choking in adults, children and infants. The guidelines also provide a new algorithm for treating individuals with suspected opioid overdose—including providing public access instruction on when to use naloxone.

 

Updates on umbilical cord clamping and CPR recommendations for infants and children in cardiac arrest are also among resuscitation guidelines included in three chapters—Neonatal Resuscitation, Pediatric Basic Life Support and Pediatric Advanced Life Support—that were co-led by experts from AHA and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). The 2025 update is the first time pediatric- and neonatal-focused CPR and ECC guidelines were developed through an equal partnership between AHA and AAP.

 

Illinois Respiratory Disease Surveillance Data

 

The Infectious Respiratory Disease Surveillance Dashboard from the Illinois Dept. of Public Health (IDPH) provides the latest data on hospital visits, seasonal trends, lab test positivity and demographic data. IDPH also tracks COVID-19, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus information through the Illinois Wastewater Surveillance System dashboard.

 

Briefly Noted

 

Hormel Foods has recalled nearly 5 million pounds of frozen chicken citing complaints from customers who found metal pieces in their frozen chicken breasts and thighs. The company said the product is only sold to foodservice customers and cannot be purchased directly by consumers. No illnesses or injuries have been reported in association with this recall.

 

Leading the News

 

Letters: Preserving the 340B program in Illinois is about protecting patients who need it

Chicago Tribune

Every Illinoisan deserves access to affordable quality health care close to home, including medication. That’s why I fully support legislation in Springfield that protects the federal 340B drug discount program — a program that helps hospitals and federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) stretch endemically scarce resources for vulnerable patients and communities. This program is even more important today than it was last spring, as hospitals and FQHCs face extreme distress from federal Medicaid cuts and drastic changes to the hospital assessment program in HR1.

 

Letter: 340B helps South Side

Chicago Tribune

A recent commentary (“Stop letting Chicago’s hospital aid flow to wealthy suburbs,” Oct. 24) suggesting that only small community hospitals deserve support from the 340B drug pricing program overlooks the critical role academic health systems like University of Chicago Medicine play in serving vulnerable populations. This is precisely the type of health care provider and patient population the 340B program was designed to support.

 

The profound shift ahead for health system C-suites

Becker’s Hospital Review

Hospital leaders are bracing for another wave of consolidation that could eclipse the sweeping changes spurred by the Affordable Care Act more than a decade ago. This time, the forces at play are more intertwined: lingering post-pandemic financial strain, rising labor and supply costs, and the accelerating need for investment in technology and innovation.

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