Doctors and hospitals tussle over surgery for less-invasive heart valve repair

When big hospitals and their doctors jostle with competitors in smaller and medium-sized facilities over who gets to perform an important and booming kind of surgery, it’s not a pretty sight — nor might it be obvious with which institutions patients ought to side. Phil Galewitz of the independent, nonpartisan Kaiser Health News Service does consumers a service with his reporting on recent bureaucratic brawling in Baltimore before federal regulators charged with determining where surgeons may replace leaky valves without open heart procedures. As Galewitz explains, surgeons and medical device makers for a few years now have worked together to develop a new way to fix defective valves for tens of thousands of patients too frail to undergo open heart operations that, among other things, involve getting their chests cracked open. Surgeons, instead, can snake a catheter through patients’ blood vessels, into their heart, and shove aside the leaking valve, replacing…

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