
A Florida lawsuit filed June 9 is taking aim at Nashville-based Monogram Health, accusing the company of “deceptive hospital visitation practices,” according to local reporting. The complaint targets the Nashville firm that runs in-home and value-based care programs for patients with complex chronic conditions. The filing was first detailed this week in the Nashville Business Journal.
New suit filed in Florida
As reported by Nashville Business Journal, the complaint, filed June 9, alleges deceptive or misleading visitation practices tied to Monogram’s work in Florida hospitals. The Journal’s coverage walks through the claims laid out in the court filing and identifies Monogram as the defendant. The piece is authored by Nikki Ross.
Who Monogram Health is
Monogram Health is a Nashville-headquartered multispecialty provider that delivers in-home care and care-management services to people living with multiple chronic illnesses, per the company’s leadership page. The site lists Michael Uchrin as co-founder and CEO and describes Monogram’s clinical teams, nurses, and social-work supports. Industry coverage has documented the firm’s rapid growth and its role partnering with payers and health systems, including commentary from Uchrin in trade reporting (Home Health Care News).
Legal context
Florida law broadly bans unfair or deceptive trade practices under F.S. 501.204, a statute plaintiffs often invoke when they allege misleading business conduct, and courts frequently look to federal FTC standards when interpreting that rule (Florida Statutes, Ch. 501). If the complaint advances consumer-protection theories, F.S. 501.204 and related case law would likely shape early briefing and disputes over discovery. How quickly the case generates public records will hinge on procedural rulings in the Florida court where the complaint was filed.
What comes next
Cases like this typically start with motions that challenge jurisdiction and the sufficiency of the complaint before any discovery can begin, which is the stage when internal documents and emails may surface. Monogram lists a media contact on its website and shares public information about its services through its contact page. The local coverage is the first detailed write-up in Nashville, and court dockets, along with any company statement, will provide the fuller record needed to evaluate the claims.
Why this matters
The lawsuit lands at a moment when home-based and value-based care is expanding nationwide, a shift that industry coverage says is reshaping how hospitals, payers and private providers interact. For patients and families, the case highlights tensions over access, transparency, and who ultimately steers care decisions when multiple private firms operate inside hospital systems. This story will be updated as additional court filings or company responses become available.








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