The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed important legislation to repeal the state’s Certificate…
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CFIF Thanks Legislative Champions of Certificate of Need (CON) Reform in Tennessee

The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed important legislation to repeal the state’s Certificate of Need (CON) requirements for acute care hospitals and other critical healthcare services. Pending Governor Bill Lee’s signature, the bill paves the way for more choices and better-quality care for patients across the state.

CON laws compel hospitals and other healthcare providers to demonstrate a “need” for and to receive special government permission to build new facilities and offer certain new healthcare services. Not only is that approval process governed by a government board unaccountable to voters, but incumbent providers also get a say in whether new facilities are permitted to open or new services can be offered by competitors in their geographic footprint.

Simply…[more]

April 23, 2026 • 10:49 AM
Feds Turn Doctors Into Clerks
By Betsy McCaughey
Wednesday, July 26 2017
"The doctor will see you now." It's a common phrase, but it's no longer true. Even in the examining room, you're unlikely to make more than fleeting eye contact with your doctor. That's because federal laws and regulations have turned doctors into robotic clerks. Your doctor has to stay glued to the computer screen, clicking boxes, following prompts and posing questions the federal government wants asked, never mind your reasons for being there. The biggest loser is you, the patient. But help is on the way. The Trump administration has started rolling back these regulations. Fortunately…
 
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Notable Quote   
 
"Regulators no longer have to worry that Spirit Airlines might upset the air-travel market by merging with the wrong competitor.The now-defunct airline made poor business decisions and had to cope with tough circumstances.But if its demise were an Agatha Christie mystery, the fingerprints of Joe Biden's antitrust officials would be all over the crime scene.These zealots fought a proposed deal between…[more]
 
 
— Rich Lowry, Editor-in-Chief of National Review
 
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