Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Lessons Learned from Health Reform: Then and Now

The Clinton Administration failed to pass health reform legislation in the 1990s, but the process provided lessons that helped the Obama Administration craft a successful game plan for passage of the Affordable Care Act.

Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has declared the Affordable Care Act constitutional, it may be time tocompare the "now" of the Obama Administration's health reform with the "then" of the effort during the Clinton Administration in 1994.

The latter failed while the former finally succeeded. But it's not really that simple.

What the Clinton Administration ��of which I was a part���tried to do with health reform may not have succeeded legislatively, but it taught us a lot of lessons that informed the Obama Administration's efforts 25 years later.

Lesson #1 � How you do it is as important as what you do

The Clinton Health Care Reform Task Force was primarily a closed process, although there were more than 600 people who participated on a daily basis in the Old Executive Office building, and ultimately we met with all the key interest groups. However, the Clinton White House controlled the process, leaving Republicans and even some of their Democratic Congressional supporters completely out of the loop.

In contrast, the Obama White House delegated the process of developing legislation to Congress from the beginning. Obama was determined not to make the Clinton mistake of cutting Congress out of the development of a bill. He was criticized heavily at times for not pushing harder on Congress, but the success of the bill came mainly because it belonged to the Democrats in Congress.

Lesson #2 � Get support from your key opponents early in the game

The Clinton White House met with hundreds of interest groups, but there were very few formal "bargains" struck with key potential opponents in advance of the release of the bill language to Congress.

The Obama team focused on getting buy-in from key interest groups early on, such as hospitals, doctors, pharmaceutical companies, patient advocacy groups, seniors, labor, nurses, etc. For example, the pharmaceutical companies did not want the government to be able to negotiate for drug prices or allow importation of drugs from Canada and Europe at cheaper rates. Other interest groups had similar interactions in exchange for their support.

Lesson #3 � Piecemeal reform won't work. It must be comprehensive.

Early on, the Clinton Task Force considered just covering children as a starting point, but arguments in favor of a comprehensive approach won out. The policy people believed strongly that doing health reform in pieces could not solve the complex problems of one-seventh of the economy.

Some of Obama's staff also counseled against pushing for comprehensive reform, but those who had worked on the Clinton effort knew how hard it would be to get anything through Congress in pieces.

Lesson #4� Be careful how much change you introduce

As for the two plans, how much health system change did they assume? The Clinton plan was much more centrally and federally controlled, and it relied heavily on managed care.

"We got managed care," says Chris Jennings, who was one of Clinton's top health-care staffers. "But we didn't get the things that would protect us from managed care. We got the Wild West version of it."

The Obama plan delegated many powers to the states, too many some felt (e.g. the essential benefits). But the Obama plan relied heavily on the insurance industry, which displeased his many single-payer and progressive supporters who really wanted a "Medicare for All" approach.

Ironically, even though the Obama plan delegated more to the states and kept the status quo of the insurance industry, it was still called a "government takeover."

Lesson #5 � Talk about health reform early and often. Sophisticated communication is critical.

Here is where both the Clintons and Obama made the same mistake. They both assumed that people were paying attention, cared about the issue, and that they didn't need a big budget to communicate the results. And they were wrong.

We tried to bring communication experts into the White House in 1994 to help devise a savvy strategy for communicating the Clinton plan. But there was suspicion about using any slick communication/marketing consultants and the effort failed. By the time the Clinton bill got to Congress it was widely misunderstood and opposed.

Even though the media and the Obama Administration talked and wrote pretty constantly about the Affordable Care Act throughout 2009 and 2010, the main points never seemed to sink in. The opposition to the ACA from the right wing was loud and simplistic � it built on and surpassed the Harry and Louise message. The ACA became "Obamacare" and hatred for Obama sucked the life out of any positive messages. Lies and distortions circulated on the internet in a constant stream of emails and Facebook postings. Social media made it much easier to communicate an anti-health reform message than was possible in the 1990s.

Although we have made a significant progress toward universal coverage in the U.S., there is still a lot to do to protect the ACA from its attackers. I hope what we have learned this time is that we must constantly reinforce the messages of health reform. There will be no rest for weary health reformers now!

Monday, July 16, 2012

Romney: Obama's Health Care Mandate Is A Tax

Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney spent his July Fourth holiday marching in a New Hampshire parade, and backtracking statements a top adviser made about the individual mandate in the Obama health care law.

There was something for almost everybody in Wolfeboro's Independence Day parade: a local brass band, bonnet-wearing Daughters of the American Revolution, a Zumba instructor shimmying across the bed of a pickup truck, and even a Jimmy Durante impersonator, complete with prosthetic nose.

Romney, who has a house on Lake Winnipesaukee, was decidedly at ease as he marched down Wolfeboro's main street. He was joined by his wife, Ann, a pack of supporters wearing blue T-shirts and also about 20 family members, most of whom traveled the parade route in antique trolley cars. By and large, they and their family's patriarch got a warm welcome in this very Republican small town.

"We love Mitt. He's going to be great for America," says Jeff Bichard, who lives in Wolfeboro and manages a fleet of trucks for a lighting company.

Bichard is convinced Romney will invigorate the economy, and he plans to work hard to help Romney carry the state, where recent polls show the former Massachusetts governor and President Obama in a near dead heat.

"I am picking up a sign for my house," Bichard adds. "I am going to put it on my front lawn, and I'm going to get a T-shirt and I've got it on my hat. We love Mitt."

But love was by no means the only emotion at this parade. Pat Jones, a 70-year-old former postmaster, shaded her eyes and shook her head as she watched one Romney after another wave and smile from their wooden trolleys.

"Would you ask Mitt how much a loaf of bread costs, how much a gallon of gas is and how much heating oil is?" Jones asks. "He is so removed from all of this. His world is so different from the common man."

Her husband, John Paul Jones, was quick to utter the epithet that has dogged Romney for years: "He's a flip-flopper."

That's a message Democrats will be selling, and Romney gave them some fresh ammunition.

"The majority of the [Supreme] Court said it's a tax, and therefore it is a tax. They have spoken. There is no way around that. You can try and say you wished they had decided another way, but they didn't," Romney told CBS News regarding the requirement that all Americans have insurance.

The individual mandate is at the core of Obama's health insurance overhaul. It's also the linchpin of the health law Romney passed as Massachusetts governor.

Earlier this week, a top Romney adviser said Romney viewed the mandate in the federal health law the same way he saw it in the Massachusetts law, as a fee or a fine, and not a tax. Romney's remarks to CBS directly contradicted that. Romney's new stance made him sound more like the GOP leaders in Congress.

"The American people know that President Obama has broken the pledge he made; he said he wouldn't raise taxes on middle-income Americans," Romney said.

That's an accusation Romney may soon hear turned against him. But on this day, the fighting words were mostly left unsaid.

When Romney spoke at a brief rally in Wolfeboro, he never mentioned the president. He even took pains to compliment the behavior of Obama supporters he met during the parade.

"They were courteous and respectful and said, 'Good luck to you' and 'Happy Fourth of July.' This is a time for us to come together as a people," Romney said.

Romney also said he hopes to make America more like America. And while it's hard to know precisely what that means, it's a hard point to argue with on Independence Day.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

VA program to bring specialty care to veterans in rural areas

WASHINGTON – A new initiative from the Department of Veterans Affairs seeks to bring better care to veterans in remote parts of the country. Specialty Care Access Network-Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (SCAN-ECHO) will deploy video conferencing equipment to rural and underserved locations.

“We are committed to providing increased access to high-quality healthcare to Veterans regardless of where they live,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “Through SCAN-ECHO, patients in rural areas with complex medical conditions are now able to receive specialty care treatment from their local VA physician.”

SCAN-ECHO is modeled after an outreach program developed by the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center’s Project ECHO, say VA officials. It allows specialty care teams in areas such as diabetes, pain management, and hepatitis C to use videoconferencing equipment to connect with Veterans’ local primary care providers and Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACT).

During a scheduled SCAN-ECHO clinic, the PCP presents a patient’s case, and the specialty care team recommends a treatment plan. Formal clinical education is also provided.

To date, 35 teams in 14 different specialties have been formed as of May, with 150 sessions held and a total of 690 consults completed, officials say.

Shinseki has said that one VA's top three priorities is increasing access to care and services for veterans wherever they live. VA is expanding this access in a three-pronged effort that includes facilities, programs and technology.

This year, the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) established a collaborative agreement with the Project ECHO program to educate and provide training materials to VHA staff. ECHO staff will also be available for consultation as VHA’s program continues to expand and new centers are added, officials say.

VA operates one of the nation’s largest integrated health care systems in the country.  With a healthcare budget of about $50 billion, VA expects to provide care to 6.1 million patients during 920,000 hospitalizations and nearly 80 million outpatient visits this year.  VA’s healthcare network includes 152 major medical centers and more than 800 community-based outpatient clinics.

Eleven VA medical facilities currently serve as SCAN-ECHO Centers:

VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Conn.VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, Penn.Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center, Richmond, Va.Salem VA Medical Center, Salem, Va.Louis Stokes VA Medical Center, Cleveland, OhioVA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, Mich.New Mexico VA Healthcare System, Albuquerque, N.M.VA Eastern Colorado Healthcare System, Denver, Colo.Portland VA Medical Center, Portland, Ore.San Francisco VA Medical CenterVeterans Integrated Service Network (VISN) 22 (services split between VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System and VA San Diego Healthcare System).

These centers are piloting the original model as developed by Project ECHO and adapting it to the VHA, officials note. The program is currently being evaluated to ensure that veterans are experiencing improved access to care prior to a system wide expansion.

Project ECHO is funded in part by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a philanthropic organization dedicated to improving health and health care for Americans.

KLAS: More providers forming enterprise imaging strategies

OREM, UT – A new report from KLAS finds most healthcare providers have begun putting into place an enterprise strategy for imaging, with the goal of getting "the right image to the right place at the right time."

The study, "Enterprise Imaging 2012: Provider's Strategies and Insights," reveals that vendor-neutral archives (VNA) and PACS enterprise archive solutions are emerging as the top two preferred approaches for most providers.

GE and Philips were the vendors mentioned most often overall in the study as strategic enterprise imaging partners, according to KLAS, and every GE and Philips customer interviewed considered their vendor to be part of their go-forward imaging strategy – especially those going for a PACS enterprise archive centric strategy. Fuji, while not cited as often as the other two, also seems to have a strong PACS enterprise archive offering.

Agfa and Merge were the most-often cited vendors for a VNA-centric strategy, according to KLAS, which reports that Agfa customers using the IMPAX Data Center (IDC) remain committed, despite early indications that a lukewarm PACS experience will affect the IDC experience. Merge has many of the needed pieces, the study adds, but providers are still waiting for integration; Merge customers are looking forward to what they will be able to do with Merge's iConnect platform.

Acuo and TeraMedica are the primary non-PACS players in the VNA space. In most cases, early trends suggest that TeraMedica customers are pleased with the value of the system and hint toward favorable enterprise DICOM management, according to the report, which found that several providers were also leveraging TeraMedica's ability to store other clinical content in its native format.

Acuo clients say their vendor's core strength is in image distribution and data migration. Their increasing number of vendor partnerships and growing mindshare in the VNA space suggest that Acuo is a viable archive option for those who do not want to rely solely on a PACS archive.

Of the providers interviewed by KLAS, 27 percent indicate that a VNA would be central to their enterprise imaging.

"Image storage is a necessity, no matter what option is chosen," said Ben Brown, imaging research director at KLAS and author of the report. "As providers start to bring in more studies and the studies themselves increase in size, the need for storage will increase. In addition, as a provider explained, images will need to be managed as well as stored."

Carestream, Cerner, Dell, DR Systems, EMC, McKesson, ScImage, Sectra and Siemens are also mentioned in the report.

Panasonic introduces medical-grade 3D monitor for surgery

SECAUCUS, NJ – Panasonic, a provider of professional healthcare display and monitor solutions, today announced a new 3D medical-grade 32” class monitor.

The new monitor, the EJ-MDA32U-K, is fully compliant with medical equipment standards, delivers 2D and 3D image quality and can display multiple images from various sources at once, according to Panasonic officials.

These combined features, paired with Panasonic’s renowned reliability, make the new monitor ideal for use in the surgical bubble, they said in a press release.

“To improve patient outcomes, there is an ever increasing reliance on technology in the surgical suite,” said Scott Thie, director of Healthcare, Panasonic System Communications Company of North America. “Although this technology has many benefits, it can also create a cluttered environment."

The EJ-MDA32U-K helps to improve the surgical experience by having a large screen, HD image that can be clearly viewed by all clinicians, while also providing flexibility that helps to reduce clutter, according to Thie. “By allowing up to three images to be displayed on the screen at once – from multiple input sources – and by delivering high quality 3D and 2D HD images, we offer a single device that addresses multiple needs in the surgical suite,” he said.

 [See also: Panasonic introduces 3D videoconferencing.]

Saturday, July 14, 2012

State Legislatures Stay Busy On Abortion Laws

Enlarge Steve Helber/AP

Virginia Senate Republican Leader Thomas Norment, of James City, (left), and State Sen. Stephen Newman, of Lynchburg, listen to a Feb. debate on a bill requiring an ultrasound before an abortion. The bill was later amended to remove a requirement for transvaginal ultrasound.

Steve Helber/AP

Virginia Senate Republican Leader Thomas Norment, of James City, (left), and State Sen. Stephen Newman, of Lynchburg, listen to a Feb. debate on a bill requiring an ultrasound before an abortion. The bill was later amended to remove a requirement for transvaginal ultrasound.

2011 was a banner year for state laws restricting abortion. And 2012 looks like runner-up.

That's the central finding of the midyear report from the Guttmacher Institute, the reproductive policy research group that keeps track of such things.

There were 39 laws restricting abortion enacted in the first half of 2012. While that's less than half the 80 put in place during the first half of last year, the number of laws already on the books for 2012 is higher than any other year before 2011.

Among the popular targets this year are:

  Restrictions on medication abortions (passed by three states); Banning abortion prior to fetal viability (also passed by three states); and, Limiting coverage of abortion by insurance policies participating in health exchanges that will sell policies under the new health law starting in 2014 (passed by four states).

And while some bills that got a lot of attention didn't pass �- such as ones to ban abortion beginning when a fetal heartbeat can be detected in Ohio, or one requiring a transvaginal ultrasound in Virginia � remarkably similar ones did make it through in other states with far less fanfare.

It seems a new law inLouisiana that requires abortion providers to make the fetal heartbeat audible to women seeking an abortion necessitates a transvaginal ultrasound for many first trimester procedures. One in Oklahoma requires that women be given the opportunity to hear a fetal heartbeat before the procedure.

Guttmacher researchers suggest a few reasons for the slightly slower pace. "Election year sessions tend to be shorter, and focus more and bread-and butter issues, as opposed to social issues," they wrote. "In addition, mirroring the situation nationally, legislatures in states such as New Hampshire and Indiana appear to be in near-total gridlock, seeming able to tackle only 'essential' issue relating to spending and basic state services."

NAACP boos for Romney only the beginning

Presidential candidate Mitt Romney appears amused during 15 seconds of booing that followed his comment that he would "eliminate every non-essential expensive program I can find ... that includes ObamaCare ..." Romney made the comment Wednesday during his speech at the NAACP National Convention.

Mitt Romney received some boos this week during his appearance before the NAACP. Boos were loudest when he spoke of his desire to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Given that the President won 94 percent of the African-American vote, it's not surprising that NAACP members don't welcome rhetorical attacks on the president's signature domestic policy achievement, especially when a Republican candidate expressly deploys the sobriquet "ObamaCare."

Still, that audience had particular reasons for concern regarding health care and health reform. Health care and health outcome disparities have long been a civil rights concern. Moreover, the politics of race and ethnicity have historically cast long shadows over health reform.

Minority communities desperately need ACA

Twenty-one percent of African-Americans are uninsured, compared with 11 percent among non-Hispanic whites. Swathes of black America from Chicago's south side to the Mississippi delta have much to gain from ACA. Expanded delivery of health services provides an important source of employment within these same communities. Twenty-seven percent of African-Americans receive Medicaid. Quite correctly, millions of African-Americans regard proposed measures such as the bloc granting of Medicaid or the House Republican budget as serious threats to programs that they themselves, or a neighbor, or a relative, rely upon every day to meet basic needs.

Arguments for "repeal and replace" raise other unfortunate resonances within the African-American community, too. Many conservative governors have announced that they will not participate in the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion, and that they will not establish a state health insurance exchange.

South Carolina is one of these states. As an Obama campaign volunteer in 2007, one of my first assignments was to help test a new computerized phone system. For reasons that remain baffling, I was assigned a long list of African-American voters in rural South Carolina. I talked with many people who wanted to discuss health care. Many had low incomes, were in relatively poor health, and needed real help.

One older gentleman told me about the multiple chronic conditions both he and his wife were struggling with. He told me about their hefty medical bills. He was on board for Obama. Having grown up under Jim Crow, he couldn't quite believe an African-American was a serious candidate for the presidency. But also, with simple honesty, he asked, "If Senator Obama wins, will he help me?" The man had stacks of bills he couldn't pay.

His question was a punch in the gut, because I had some inkling of the tough fight required to bring him that help. I stammered something about how Obama ��if he were elected president � would fight every day for people like him. Inside, I worried that this man's enthusiasm would turn out to be misplaced.

Painful messages for those already hurting

When health reform passed, a promise was kept to that man and many others, Yet in all likelihood he is still waiting for real help. Indeed things have gotten worse. South Carolina has imposed or proposed punishing cuts in dental and vision care, adult day care and personal care services, hospice, even meals on wheels. Following the Supreme Court decision, Governor Haley declared that the state will not participate in expanded Medicaid coverage made possible under health reform, issuing a statement saying:

We are not going to jam more South Carolinians into a broken program, a program that stifles innovation, discourages personal responsibility, and encourages fraud, abuse and overuse of services � and that, by the way, costs us billions of dollars.

Based on the financial numbers, this makes little sense. The federal government is offering to pay roughly 95 percent of the costs. When one considers matters such as uncompensated care, South Carolina apparently saves money by embracing health reform. There is an unmistakably nasty undertone that goes beyond money to insinuations that people on Medicaid are irresponsible welfare recipients who waste public resources.

Texas Governor Rick Perry wrote an even tougher letter to HHS Secretary Sebelius:

[P] lease relay this message to the President: I oppose both the expansion of Medicaid as provided in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the creation of a so-called "state" insurance exchange, because both represent brazen intrusions into the sovereignty of our state.

I stand proudly with the growing chorus of governors who reject the PPACA power grab. Thank God and our nation's founders that we have the right to do so.

Whatever the finer points of fiscal federalism, one could hardly craft a message more alienating to African-Americans than the rejection of an African-American president's signature achievement based on a rhetoric of states' rights. Fifty years ago, governors in these same states opposed Medicare and Medicaid. They (rightly) feared that these programs would magnify the federal government's power to desegregate medical facilities. It took about seven years for southern states to fully participate in Medicaid.

Obviously, times have changed. These conservative governors are not racist supporters of Jim Crow. Still, when they reject favorable deals to operate programs of such significance to low-income minority communities, they doubly damage their party's brand in minority communities. First, they alienate surprising numbers of people who specifically need or value these services. These politicians earn wider enmity by calling to mind some ugly memories. Romney has political problems within the African-American community that have nothing to do with health reform. This is a problem, nonetheless. There were deeper reasons for the booing.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Experts to Senate: Healthcare reform won't be easy

WASHINGTON – Witnesses at separate hearings held Wednesday by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee and the Senate Finance Committee said healthcare reform is  necessary and can't be achieved without spending money up front. The experts also recommended providing broader risk pools and establishing comparative effectiveness.

The new stimulus package provides incentives for doctors and hospitals to adopt healthcare IT and provides funding for comparative effectiveness research.

The Congressional Budget Office's new Director, Doug Elmendorf, said increasing health insurance pools – a concept contained in President Barack Obama's plan to expand healthcare coverage – will not work without mandating coverage.  Without mandating, only the sick will purchase insurance, jacking the price for those who aren't sick and driving away those who only marginally wanted to purchase it in the first place.

It will take time to make a change and investment up front, Elmendorf said.

"It's a big ship that's not moving that fast, but it's very big and very hard to turn," he said. "No doubt, if you started shifting incentives, the faster the ship will turn."

Many believe, along with President Obama, that healthcare IT will lay a foundation for change in the U.S. healthcare system and a venue for improving quality of care, cutting costs and saving lives. Healthcare IT will also allow the government to pay providers based on performance.

Cathy Schoen, senior vice president of The Commonwealth Fund, told the Senate HELP Committee that changes will require new leadership and collaboration across public and private sectors.

"Effective payment reforms will require time to develop and implement and flexibility to innovate as the nation learns," she said – a notion backed by the CBO. "Information systems require investment and time to yield maximum returns through adoption and use."

"Yet, wide public concern and stress on businesses and public sectors make it increasingly clear that we cannot afford to maintain the status quo. Each year we wait, the problems grow worse," Schoen said.

Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), on the Senate HELP Committee, said, "It’s not enough to fight for affordable coverage, we must fight for real coverage. Health insurance shouldn’t be a vehicle for punishing the sick and rewarding the healthy. It shouldn’t be a hammer that beats healthcare costs down by arbitrarily denying care to those who need it."

Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said healthcare is the next big objective. "We need fundamental reform in cost, quality and coverage. We need to address all three objectives at the same time. They are interconnected," he said.

Republicans agree that reform is urgent and necessary, but differ on the means needed to get there. Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), disturbed by the lack of debate over the stimulus package, urged caution. "I have heard some folks say it is our moral responsibility to provide healthcare coverage for all. We have an equal if not greater moral responsibility to do so in a fiscally sustainable manner," he said.

Grassley said he is wary of spending money up front to reap savings in the future. "The President has an opportunity as he walks this razor’s edge between a broken healthcare system and fiscal catastrophe," he said.

Obama has called a gathering of stakeholders and a bipartisan mix of lawmakers to meet next week and begin the difficult work of smoothing out differences. The Obama administration had plans for healthcare reform prepared prior to the election, and the Senate Finance Committee has held hearings on the issue since last summer. Last fall, key Democratic congressional leaders said they were "ready to roll" on healthcare reform, and they will take the cue from Obama's guidelines.

 

 

 

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Two Harvard Medical professors critique our current system and offer a better vision

From PNHP -

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Even with its dazzling technical advances and sophisticated medicines, health care increasingly frustrates Americans. Patients must contend with a system that won�t pay for some treatments, long waiting lists, rushed visits with doctors, copious paperwork and � of course � the ever-soaring cost of medical coverage and medications. Many doctors and nurses feel trapped in a structure they say sometimes prevents them from providing adequate care to their patients. One couple, both researchers at Harvard Medical School and both internists practicing at Cambridge Hospital in Massachusetts, are leaders in the movement among medical professionals to reform health care in America.

Dr. Steffie Woolhandler and Dr. David Himmelstein lead a campaign by doctors to reform health care which they see as needlessly expensive and corrupt. Together they founded Physicians for a National Health Program in 1987 which aims for a system where everyone is covered. They decry the soaring costs of health care � and how that hurts poor people who are uninsured � and many in the middle class who are under-insured. The doctors pull no punches in describing what they see as enormous waste in health care expenditures.

A National Public Radio program produced by David Freudberg, host of �Humankind,� Human Media / The Network Inc.

Visit www.humanmedia.org.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Dropping Legal Barriers Doesn't Guarantee Interstate Insurance Sales

Jim Burress/WABE, Atlanta

Small business owner Brian Mayfield has been eager for less expensive health insurance options. It looks like he'll have to wait a little longer.

Starting next week, any health insurer licensed in Georgia can sell policies it offers in other states to Georgians. That includes policies that don't meet minimum standards for coverage in Georgia.

They'll be OK for sale under a new state law that aims to increase competition and lower prices for health insurance in the state.

The idea appeals to Brian Mayfield who runs a small company in the Atlanta suburb of Woodstock that repairs and refurbishes cash registers and related equipment. Business at his firm is good, but not good enough for Mayfield to offer employees health insurance.

But it doesn't look like Mayfield, or any other Georgian, will be able to take advantage of the new law. While its cross-state insurance provision is scheduled to go into effect next week, not one insurance company has taken the state up on its offer to sell here.

 

Some have national ambitions for the idea behind the Georgia experiment. Interstate sales of insurance is a key part of the Republican effort to "repeal and replace" the 2010 health care overhaul. Republicans such as House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, Joe Barton from Texas, Phil Gingrey from Georgia, and even presidential candidate Mitt Romney, have touted it as a way to reduce consumer costs for health insurance.

As Heard On Morning Edition heard on Morning Edition

June 25, 2012

Georgia To Allow Cross-State Health Insurance Sales [5 min 7 sec] Add to Playlist Download  

In Georgia, state representative Matt Ramsey sponsored the legislation, bringing this national Republican concept to Georgia. Ramsey speculates that no insurer has signed up because they are paralyzed by the Supreme Court's pending ruling on the Affordable Care Act.

"Rightfully, everyone's kind of preserving the status quo until they see what direction our nation's health insurance marketplace is going to go."

It's not like insurers don't want the business, he says.

To find out why no company has signed on, NPR asked Georgia's biggest health insurers: Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Humana, United Healthcare and Kaiser Permanente. All declined to comment.

Georgetown University professor Mila Kofman says insurers' lack of action is a good thing for consumers. She says cheap plans are cheap for a reason � they don't offer good services. Insurance premiums are expensive because health care is expensive.

"I'm a little surprised, but frankly, it's a big relief," she says, "When you think about health insurance premiums, really the only way that out-of-state companies could sell products that are cheap is if they cut corners � if the product doesn't cover what the Georgia regulated products cover."

That doesn't bother Ramsey, who says, "If an individual wants to buy a more bare-bones policy because that's all they can afford [or] that's all they need, that's a heck of a lot better than not buying insurance."

Ramsey predicts that if the Supreme Court throws out the Affordable Care Act, insurers will jump at the chance to sell more policies here.

In the meantime, the only thing Georgia has to offer is a new law � and no takers.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Single Payer Amendment Narrowly Defeated in Mass.

From Benjamin Day, Executive Director of Mass-Care –

This Tuesday, after an hour and a half floor debate, the Massachusetts Senate narrowly voted down a single payer amendment to a broader cost control bill, on a 15 to 22 vote. The amendment would have instructed the state to, every year, measure our actual health care spending against what we would be spending under a comprehensive single payer plan, and if this ‘single payer benchmark’ by fiscal year 2015 proved more cost-effective than our current system, the state would be instructed to draft a single payer implementation plan for approval by the legislature.

Amendments opposed by Senate leadership rarely receive this level of support, so please thank the courageous Senators who voted ‘yes’ on Amendment #125. Just as important, a broad range of grassroots organizations made calls and asked their members to call their Senators to support this effort – it was an unprecedented mobilization for single payer, with less than a week’s notice from the time the Senate introduced their bill.

Click here to visit Mass-Care’s web-site where you can download the language of the amendment, see a complete list of Senators voting for and against, and video footage of every Senator who spoke to the amendment. I find it incredibly uplifting that we have come so close to setting Massachusetts on a path towards single payer health reform – we are just a few votes away! Let’s keep organizing this year!

House approves FDA bill, medical devices to see new regs

WASHINGTON – Lawmakers found themselves in the unfamiliar territory of bipartisanship last night, when the House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly in favor of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Reform Act. 

Approved by a 387-5 House vote, the bill sets forth several policy reforms pertaining to drugs and medical devices. The legislation will increase the so-called user fees drug and medical device companies pay to the FDA and should expedite the review process for these devices and improve transparency of their clearance process. Lawmakers are expected to have a final draft of the legislation by early July. 

The bill – which some observers call a watered-down version of last week’s Senate-approved legislation – is projected to reduce the federal deficit by an estimated $370 million over the next decade according to the Congressional Budget Office. Eyeing such savings, lawmakers from both sides of the aisle have overlooked – if only for a brief moment – ideological differences that have often stymied the legislative progress in recent years. 

“Our bipartisan reform package is the culmination of more than a year of work and negotiations between House Democrats and Republicans,” Rep. Fred Upton (R-MI) wrote this month in the Holland (Mich.) Sentinel. 

"The FDA Reform Act contains important metrics that will hold the FDA accountable for its performance, will help provide new therapies to our nation’s children, significantly improve scientific exchange at FDA’s advisory committees and ensure transparency and public input in the development of FDA’s guidance documents,” Upton added in an Energy and Commerce Committee press release earlier this month.

Several of the bill’s highlights:

Reauthorizes part of the Pediatric Medical Device Safety and Improvement Act of 2007, which will provide grants to non-profit groups promoting pediatric medical device development.Approves a five-year price tag of an estimated $6.4 billion in user fees, with $609 million of the pot coming from medical device user fees companies will pay to the FDA; the fees will be used to improve and extradite the medical device review process, so they can be available to patients sooner. Expedites the approval process of certain prescription drugs by easing on some restrictions.  Reauthorizes the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) and Pediatric Research Equity Act (PREA), both which aim to improve safety and efficacy of prescription drug treatments for children.  Addresses national prescription drug shortages by adjusting requirements when seen fit and would involve providing the public with a list of prescription drugs in short supply. 

Sunday, July 8, 2012

No Matter What the Supremes Say, We’re Still SiCKO After All These Years

Come on to Philadelphia on June 30th, if you want to know the low down on what the high court of the land says about health reform. Some real people who serve as the world�s highest profile examples of the dysfunctional healthcare system in the United States, filmmaker Michael Moore, and health insurance industry whistleblower Wendell Potter will converge for an evening of comment and conversation just as the political frenzy over the Supreme Court ruling is announced on the individual mandate for Americans to purchase health insurance that is part of the law passed in 2010.

When the Supreme Court rules, the nation will either continue on the pathway to implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (or if you like, and depending on the political flavor, Obamacare/Romneycare) or it will be back to the legislative drawing board to discard and revamp the mess.

The politicos are salivating, and their media friends are right there with them. They can hardly wait to claim their ground even as real people continue to suffer illness, bankruptcy, and death trying to survive illness and injury while the medical-financial-industrial complex grows more bloated and profit-driven every day in America.

But I doubt there really will be much talk about what any of it means to real patients and their families. Except in Philadelphia on June 30th, as eight subjects from Michael Moore�s 2007 documentary, SiCKO, about the broken U.S. healthcare system, Moore himself, and Potter take the stage.

SiCKO turns five at the same time the nation will be buzzing about the political implications of whatever the Supreme Court decides. Those of us who appeared in the film and had our stories recounted for the whole world to see have a perspective that mirrors what families are facing all across the country. Moore selected each of our stories from the tens of thousands he received not because we were so unique but just the opposite � we are representative of thousands and even millions of real Americans just trying to live our lives without interference from insurance company underwriters, utilization review teams, and medical debt collection agencies hired by our doctors and our clinics and hospitals. We told the truth in SiCKO, and we�ll tell the truth again in Philadelphia after the Supreme Court decision.

Michael will be able to offer his own special commentary on the Supremes, and Wendell will give us a view from the dark side � he�ll tell us what the insurance industry insiders are probably thinking and doing in response to the high court�s decisions. It will be an evening of incredible intensity and education.

The SiCKOs so hoped we�d be part of some film archives by now. After the initial rush of our film�s opening and watching ourselves fade back into lives of often quiet desperation and continuation of the struggles that made us perfect fodder for Moore’s work, we stayed in touch with one another as part of a sort of blended family. And we invite you to join that family of Americans who don�t care much what healthcare policy does for one political candidate or another � we care what healthcare policy does for our kids, our grandkids, our parents, our neighbors, our friends and each other.

Join us in Philly (click on the link for more information). Reggie and Billy, 9/11 first responders, Julie Pierce, Dawnelle Keys, Lee Einer, Adrian Campbell Montgomery, Larry and Donna Smith. Still SiCKO. And we�re going to come together to support the work advancing healthcare justice in Vermont and with Healthcare-Now, one of the nation�s great grassroots organizations pushing for expanded and improved Medicare for all.

We�re still SiCKO after all these years, and if we�re going to change that, we�d better claim what we�re up against and get on with the work of making patients the �deciders� and not nine robed judges who will lift their corporate masters no matter which way they have ruled. On the one hand, if the mandate is thrown out, the Romney-ites will go insane with jubilation about the joy to be found in a free-market healthcare system and letting those who have the money get the healthcare needed. On the other hand, if the mandate is upheld, Obama fans will have given the healthcare corporations the hugest bail-out imaginable. For the medical-financial-industrial complex it�s a heads-I-win, tails-you-lose scenario of the highest order.

What say you? What say the patients? What say the families? What say the SiCKOs and our fearless filmmaker, Michael Moore, and his unlikely friend, Wendell Potter? Come on down or up to Philly and let�s get down to the business of real people. See you soon.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Why Has the Press Failed Us In Reporting on Health Care Reform?

An Open Letter to Bill Keller, Executive Editor, New York Times, and Clark Hoyt, Public Editor, New York Times

by Benjamin Day–

Dear Bill Keller and Clark Hoyt,

For the first time in the span of a generation, national health care reform is back on the horizon, and I’m writing to you to step back for a moment into the history of the Times’s reporting on health care reform. Last year I began a research project with two researchers from Harvard Medical School, Drs. David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler, to look at the history of major state health reforms such as TennCare, the Oregon Health Plan, MinnesotaCare, and many others. A sweeping health reform bill had been passed into law in Massachusetts in 2006 that was being hailed as a unique, first-of-its-kind bipartisan strategy to achieve universal or near-universal health coverage without raising taxes or adding new regulations on the health care industry. We initially set out to find how unique the Massachusetts health reform law really was compared to previous state efforts, and to see if by analyzing the outcomes of those earlier reform efforts we could learn some lessons about what to expect in Massachusetts.

What we found surprised us, and a summary write up of our findings was published in the International Journal of Health Services. We found that, aside from the “individual mandate” in Massachusetts requiring many of the uninsured to purchase their own private health plan or face tax penalties, many reforms in other states – indeed, even in our own state in the recent past – were almost identical to the Mass plan in their goals and structure. They also all failed to achieve their stated goals of reducing the uninsured population in their respective states and/or of controlling rising health care costs. The most ambitious of these, TennCare in 1994 and a large Medicaid expansion in Massachusetts also in the mid-1990s, were able to reduce the uninsured in their respective states for a period of several years. However, the financing of these plans all proved unsustainable over time, enrollment was often capped or benefits eroded, and a few short years after passage every state found itself back where it started: with high and rising health care costs and a large and growing uninsured population. We titled our article “State Health Reform Flatlines.

What we found even more surprising than this history of failed reform efforts, though, was media coverage of the legislation. Articles by our most respected news organizations hailed state reform after state reform as pioneering, likely to serve as models for the nation, and designed to control costs and extend health coverage to the uninsured. No reasonable reader of the news available at the time these laws were passed would expect that they might fail entirely to reduce the uninsured over time, or that they might not succeed in controlling costs at all.

Florida in April 1993 launched the first of what would be many “managed competition” plans for controlling costs and extending health coverage, a scheme that would serve as virtually the only cost control component of Bill Clinton’s proposed health reform bill of 1994. The New York Times wrote “The Florida Legislature approved a sweeping overhaul of the state’s overburdened health-care system early today, making Florida the first state in the nation to combine free market competition and government regulation in a way similar to the Clinton Administration’s plans for controlling soaring medical costs… Florida’s plan, which will try to cover most people eventually and at the same time to control health costs, is taking place on a larger scale than anything seen elsewhere.” Managed competition did not control costs in Florida or anywhere else, nor was the uninsured population reduced.

Exactly one year previous in April of 1992 Minnesota passed its “HealthRight” plan – later renamed “MinnesotaCare.” USA Today wrote of it: “Minnesota is about to embark on a plan to solve the health-insurance crisis that could hold lessons for other states and the nation… HealthRight… will begin signing up families with children in the fall and will be fully open to Minnesota’s estimated 370,000 eligible uninsured by 1994.” The Associated Press wire coverage of the law repeated state estimates that almost 40 percent of those uninsured should be covered by 1997, and quoted the head of the National Conference of State Legislatures calling the bill “the first complete reform proposal in the United States.” MinnesotaCare did not reduce the percentage of uninsured in Minnesota even in the short-term.

A few other quotes should be enough to convey the sense that there is a recurring problem in the news we receive on health reform in America. A Vermont bill also passed in 1992 elicited this opening description in the New York Times: “Gov. Howard Dean, the only governor who is a physician, signed a law Monday in Bennington that sets in motion a plan to give Vermont universal health care by 1995.” The Oregon Health Plan of 1992, which attempted to reduce benefits for Medicaid beneficiaries in order to expand coverage to the uninsured, was described in a Washington Post article as “The most far-reaching health care reform in the nation.” The New York Times began its coverage by stating that “The Clinton Administration today approved Oregon’s proposal to guarantee health services for poor people by rationing care.” Neither Vermont’s reform nor Oregon’s reduced the percentage of uninsured in the state, and the poor in Oregon were not covered.

These are selective quotes: the broader coverage has often provided good descriptions of what the laws are intended to accomplish. Moreover, they have included extremely effective reporting on the politics of the health reform process – particularly when the process is contentious, or where well-organized groups have mobilized opposition. However, in the United States we have a long history of reforms that have survived the political process only to fail economically, and it is clear in retrospect that the media sources – both local and national – with large market share have not done their due-diligence in reporting on the economic viability of health reform efforts. I believe this would be borne out by analyzing coverage of many other significant reforms in Washington, Tennessee, Massachusetts, Hawaii, Maine, California, Utah, and nationally.

This becomes particularly clear by comparing coverage of health care reform with medical reporting in virtually any paper. The Christian Science Monitor on April 8, for example, carried a story that is typical of this approach to health politics reporting entitled “Healthcare battle brewing: political groups gear up: A public insurance alternative is likely to be the most contentious of the reform proposals.” The story states that the Obama administration hopes to introduce a Medicare-like public buy-in plan available to individuals and businesses as an alternative to private health coverage. It goes on to cite the Heritage Foundation’s opposition to the plan, the support of groups such as MoveOn.Org and Democracy for America, and public polling from Harvard Professor Robert Blendon. The article follows a “he-said/she-said” format, with the Heritage Foundation contending that such a plan would not allow private insurance to compete on a level playing field, advocates urging that it will bring down costs and hold the private insurance industry accountable, and the CEO of Families USA urging that both sides attempt to find a common ground.

What is missing from this narrative of contending arguments is a discussion of evidence about the likely impacts of a public plan option. There have been forms of public-private health insurance competition implemented under Medicare for a number of years, and there are many other countries that allow competition between public and private health insurers. Peer-reviewed studies of public-private competition are not hard to find, nor are experts with varying opinions. Compare the CSM discussion with almost any medical news story in the New York Times Health Section on the same day: there is a report on a new study by two Stanford professors assessing the impact of George W. Bush’s AIDS Relief program in Africa; two studies about the impact of light exercise for heart failure patients; three reports on the role of “brown fat” in burning calories; and others. In short, medical reporting and the coverage of public disagreements revolve around evidence, there are standards for credible sources, and it is common to read about the limitations of available evidence. Although I am personally an advocate and an organizer coming from a single-payer health care perspective, what strikes me most after reading hundreds of news reports on health reform is the lack of academic perspectives, held to academic standards, concerned with basic questions of the economic efficacy and sustainability of health policy proposals.

At the state level this has often been exacerbated by bi-partisan legislation. Many of the reforms that have failed to achieve or even approach their stated goals have been passed with support from the Democrats and Republicans holding one or both legislative houses or the governor’s office. This has a particularly chilling effect on politics-based health reform coverage. Reporting on the Oregon Health Plan, for example, focused almost exclusively on the attempt to ration services for Medicaid enrollees – would this plan harm the disabled or the poor, was it just? – while the basic question of whether the law, even taking rationing for granted, would succeed in reducing the uninsured in the state, went unasked. In Tennessee, similarly, the spectacle of almost one million Medicaid enrollees being moved into managed care plans occluded the basic question of whether the proposal to extend coverage to another half a million uninsured residents was economically viable, or if it would succeed in reducing the state’s uninsured over time – these latter goals being the entire point of moving Medicaid recipients into managed care plans in the first place.

This shortcoming has also been exacerbated by the subject material. Increasing access to health care is what makes health reform morally compelling for most people, but financing and cost controls are what make efforts to expand access sustainable or unsustainable. These are topics not well-suited to personal interest stories, and they are often bewilderingly complex. In Massachusetts alone, residents have been promised universal health care or dramatic reductions in the uninsured at least four times in the last twenty years. A few years after each reform passes, the dry logic of costs and financing has left residents back where they started, and yet when the politics of health reform begin again we are provided with very little information in the public sphere to sort out the snake-oil from the genuine, sustainable reform proposals.

I write to you not because I believe the New York Times is particularly at-fault in leaving its reading public unprepared to determine the viability of different health reform proposals, but because the scope of the Times’s coverage has meant that it has reported on a wide range of state and national efforts, which gives us a good window on the history of health reform coverage in the United States. This year, many national commentators are measuring the ongoing process of health policy development against the failed Health Security Act of the Clinton era. This has led many advocates to be particularly concerned with crafting politically viable proposals. I believe this makes the burden on reporters to effectively assess whether the proposals are likely to achieve their stated goals sustainably all the more important.

I would urge the Times not to report health policy disputes in a he-said/she-said format divorced from evidence-based standards. Reporters should challenge interviewees to source their economic claims, include those sources in their write-ups, and not shy away from evaluating the quality of evidence offered from different perspectives. Furthermore, we have learned time and again that where there is political harmony, there is not necessarily economic rationality. The burden of evidence-based evaluation of health policy cannot stop at the borders of political skirmishes.

I thank you for your consideration of this open letter,

Sincerely,

Benjamin Day
Executive Director
Mass-Care: The Massachusetts Campaign for Single Payer Health Care

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

6,000 Nurses Bring Robin Hood to Chicago

From National Nurses United –

More than 6,000 nurses and activists gathered at Daley Plaza in Chicago Friday to rock out with musician Tom Morello and call for a tax on financial speculation � a Robin Hood tax. This small sales tax on Wall Street trades could raise up to $350 billion a year in the U.S., money that American communities desperately need.

It’s time for Wall Street to start paying what all the rest of us pay,� Karen Higgins, RN, told a cheering crowd, many wearing red nurse scrubs and green Robin Hood caps. Higgins, who works as a registered nurse in Boston, is co-president of National Nurses United, the country�s largest registered nurses� union, which organized the rally.

As nurses, they see how the economy is hurting families and communities across the country. They understand the suffering Americans face every day � in healthcare, foreclosure, jobs, and education.

I’ve been a nurse for 38 years and I have never seen our communities in such disarray and in such suffering as I have in the last couple of years,� said Deborah Burger, RN, and NNU co-president. They got us into this mess and they have the money to bail us out.

Indeed they do — almost a quarter of the nation�s GDP � close to $4 trillion � sits in corporate coffers, the largest cash hoard in U.S. history.

We are here to protest all the people that are taking all the money out of our economy,� said Jean Ross, RN, and co-president of NNU. �We the 99 percent know what it�s about. We set an alarm. We work for a living. We don’t sit by a swimming pool and wait for our dividends to come in.

More than 100 organizations of community, environmental, labor, and health groups from around the world endorsed the event.

RoseAnn DeMoro, NNU�s executive director, thanked everyone for being there and gave a special shout-out to Occupy protesters.

�To all the community groups, the political groups, the non-profit groups that came out to support us — bless you,� DeMoro said. �It�s your voices that are going to make a difference in this country.

Also speaking at the rally was Tom Hayden, student activist during Chicago’s 1968 protests.

The rally ended with a performance by music legend Morello, who played with bands Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, and is also known for his acoustic music as The Nightwatchman.

It�s an honor to be here today in my hometown of Chicago with the nurses union. I want to thank them for standing up for free speech, for standing up for economic justice, and standing up for me,� he said.

Morello�s reference was to a standoff between the nurses and the City of Chicago over a permit to assemble in Daley Plaza. The city changed the permit last week that would move the rally away from downtown Chicago. After nurses and the community protested, the city caved and allowed the rally to go on at the plaza as planned.

Before the rally, nurses attended an international panel discussion on global austerity and ways to fight back, including the Robin Hood tax.

It�s so important we have a strong Robin Hood tax campaign,� said J�rn Kalinski, Oxfam Germany director of lobbying and campaigns. �We need America to come around on this issue.

In addition to Kalinski, other speakers included:

Mi Jung Han, RN, Vice President, Korean Health and Medical Workers Union (South Korea), David Hillman, Coordinator, Stamp Out Poverty (UK), Rosa Pavanelli, President, Funzione Pubblica CGIL (Italy) and Vice President, European Federation of Public Service Unions (EPSU), Linda Silas, RN, President, Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (Canada), and Brenda Cristina Morales, RN, Regional Coordinator, Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de Salud deGuatemala (SNTSG) (Guatemala) made presentations.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Telehealth pilot helps patients with kidney disease

PARIS – A remote telehealth pilot has shown promise for patients living with chronic kidney disease (CKD), yielding positive trial results in both patient satisfaction and patient support.

The pilot was also awarded the Innovation Prize this month in the telemedicine category at Hit Paris, France’s annual health IT tradeshow.

In a collaborative effort among Grenoble University Hospital, Calydial dialysis centers of France and AGDUC health center in France, patients living with CKD were selected to take part in a trial using remote patient monitoring technology provided by Canadian-based telecommunications provider, TELUS and Orange, the French communications company.

Patients in their homes were given e-tablets, connectivity and software to monitor their vital signs, manage their medication and treatment protocols and provide feedback to their care team. Early positive results have demonstrated the potential to replicate this solution across other institutions and for other chronically ill patients.

The pilot uses a network-centric, multi-function application that allows patients with conditions that require daily monitoring to coordinate with their healthcare providers from home. Patients and caregivers are able to access the application through a secure wireless network.

Kasra Moozar, vice president, TELUS Health Solutions explained that TELUS, has “ more than 10,000 patients using its remote patient monitoring technology to manage their chronic condition from the safety and comfort of their own home." Moozar said that the technology allows them to turn “information into better health outcomes for citizens."

"Telemedicine has the power to transform the way that healthcare is delivered, said Thierry Zylberberg, executive vice president, Orange Healthcare. “These telemedicine solutions can have a positive impact on care quality for chronic disease patients and care delivery for healthcare providers."

Monday, July 2, 2012

10 of the largest data breaches in 2012 ... so far

We're six months into 2012, and numerous headlines have showcased some large health data breaches. Whether it's outright theft, the actions of a disgruntled employee or overall carelessness, 2012 is already chock-full of noteworthy breaches. And according to recent research, the problem is only growing. 

Here are 10 of the largest data breaches in 2012... so far. 

1.Utah Department of Health. On March 30, approximately 780,000 Medicaid patients and recipients of the Children's Health Insurance Plan in Utah had personal information stolen after a hacker from Eastern Europe accessed the Utah Department of Technology Service's server. Initially, the number of those affected stood at 24,000, yet, according to UDOH, that number grew to 780,000, with Social Security numbers stolen from approximately 280,000 individuals and less-sensitive personal data stolen from approximately 500,000 others. The reason the hacker was able to access this information? Ultimately, it was due to a weak password.

2.Emory Healthcare. On April 18, Emory Healthcare in Atlanta announced a data breach after the organization misplaced 10 backup disks, which contained information for more than 315,000 patients. The 10 disks held information on surgical patients treated between 1990 and 2007 at Emory University Hospital Midtown and the Emory Clinic Ambulatory Surgery Center. Of the 315,000 patient files, approximately 228,000 included Social Security numbers, with other sensitive information at risk including names, dates of surgery, diagnoses, and procedure codes.

3.South Carolina Department of Health. An employee of the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services was arrested on April 19 after he compiled data on more than 228,000 people and sent it to a private email account. Approximately 22,600 people had their Medicaid ID numbers taken, which were linked to their Social Security numbers. Others had names, addresses, phone numbers, and birth dates stolen as a result of the act. The former employee, Christopher Lykes Jr., was charged with five counts of violating medical confidentiality laws and one count of disclosure of confidential information. 

[See also: 12 steps for surviving a privacy breach investigation.]

4.Howard University Hospital. Toward the end of March, Howard University Hospital in Washington D.C. notified approximately 34,503 patients of a potential disclosure of their PHI that supposedly occurred in late January. A laptop, which was password protected, was stolen from a contractor's vehicle, yet, according to the hospital, no evidence suggested any patient files were accessed. The records stolen did contain Social Security numbers for many of the patients affected. Today, the hospital requires all laptops issued to Howard University Health Sciences employees to be encrypted.

5.St. Joseph Health System. In February, St. Joseph Health System, in California, alerted approximately 31,800 patients of a possible security breach at three of their organizations throughout the state. According to the system, security settings were "incorrect," which allowed for the potential breach. Information accessed didn't include Social Security numbers, addresses, or financial data, yet patients' names and medical data were vulnerable. The records at risk were mostly for inpatients who received care from February through August of 2011. The data, the organization said, would have been available through Internet search engines from early 2011 to February 2012. 

Continued on the next page

Join Us for an Online Seniors Health Town Hall

This past Thursday, officials from the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services held a town hall meeting to discuss how the health care law is helping women and families across the country. On Monday June 11, we will turn our attention to America�s seniors when we host a Seniors Health Town Hall.

The event will be streamed live from the White House�from 10 am to 11:30 am ET.

Similar to our Women�s Health Town Hall, this event will be an interactive, open dialogue about how the health care law, the Affordable Care Act, is improving the health and quality of life for the nation�s senior citizens by strengthening the Medicare program:

It makes preventive services available for free. This includes mammograms, colonoscopies, and an annual wellness visit where seniors can spend more time with their doctor.It makes prescription drugs cheaper. Seniors who hit the donut hole get a 50 percent discount on their prescription drugs and the donut hole will be closed completely in the years ahead. It cracks down on waste, fraud and abuse.

Submit questions using the Twitter hashtag #SeniorsHealth or on the HealthCareGov Facebook page.

Participants in the Town Hall include:

Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of Health and Human ServicesCecilia Mu�oz, Director of the White House Domestic Policy CouncilKathy Greenlee, Assistant Secretary for Aging, HHSJonathan Blum, Deputy Administrator and Director for the Center of Medicare at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, HHSSandy Markwood, Chief Executive, National Association of Area Agencies on AgingJim Firman, President and Chief Executive, National Council on Aging and Chair, Leadership Council of Aging OrganizationsLouise Chang, MD, Senior Medical Editor, WebMD

The Town Hall will begin at 10 a.m., Monday, June 11, 2012.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Health Care Costs To Exceed A Record $20,000 Per Year For Families

Health care costs for a family of four covered by workplace health insurance will exceed $20,000 for the first time ever this year — $20,728 to be precise — according to a new study released Tuesday. That’s $1,335 more than in 2011.

A family of four will pay $5,114 in premiums for a preferred provider organization plan, a common type of health insurance, along with $3,470 in out-of-pocket costs like co-payments for doctor visits and prescription drugs, according to the report issued by Milliman, a firm that consults with companies on employee benefits. The remainder of the expenses will be paid by employers, though money spent on health care and other fringe benefits is money not spent on higher wages.

Relentless increases in health care costs, which the federal government says rose to $2.6 trillion in 2011, are squeezing employers, workers, families and government budgets every year.

Almost 50 million Americans had no health insurance as of the 2010 census, more people are going without medical care they need because of cost, employees are being asked to shoulder a greater share of the burden for health care costs while seeing their benefits scaled back, and more companies are dropping coverage for workers. Meanwhile, the United States falls behind other industrialized nations on measures of health care quality, in spite of all this spending.

Family health care costs grew by 6.9 percent between 2011 and 2012, slower than in previous years, but Milliman suggests there’s little comfort in that.

“The rate of increase is not as high as in the past but total dollar increase was still a record,” the report says. “The dollar amount of the increase overshadows any relief consumers might derive from the slowing percentage increase.” The health care reform law enacted by President Barack Obama in 2010 “has had only a limited effect” on health care costs, the report continues.

Spending on physician services will reach $6,647 and spending on hospital stays will rise to $6,531, making them the two biggest components of a typical family’s annual health care expenses, the report says.

Health care costs varied among the 14 metropolitan areas that Milliman analyzed. Miami and New York City are the most expensive, with costs about 20 percent higher than the national average. The report says that Phoenix, Atlanta and Seattle were the only three cities where annual costs are projected to be less than $20,000 this year.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Beacons lead healthcare quality 'revolution'

"We are really at a tipping point here; providers and patients alike have come to realize that the modernization of healthcare is long overdue and that we all have a role in its broad adoption."

So said Jason Kunzman, project officer for the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, as he moderated the "Beacon Communities: Leveraging Health IT to Fuel the Quality Revolution" education event at the recent HIMSS 2012 Virtual Conference and Expo. 

The session featured presentations by officials from two Beacon Communities: Southeastern Minnesota (SE MN) Beacon Community and the Keystone Beacon Community of central Pennsylvania. They grappled with the "tipping point" referenced by Kunzman: how has health IT been fueling the quality revolution? Especially, how has it benefited these spotlighted health systems?

Southeastern Minnesota Beacon Community

Chris Chute, MD,, a principal investigator for the SE MN Beacon Community, discussed the IT running through the Beacon system. 

The unique peer-to-peer HIE integrated throughout the community has been central to the community's infrastructure, he said. "This is distinct from most health information exchanges where the health information is the central hub and people subscribe to it. What's different about Southeastern Minnesota Beacon is that we have open-source software – the ONC-provided NwHIN-connect software – that is deployed in each and every provider," Chute said. 

This diversion from a hub-and-spoke model ensures communication and engagement across providers, and the leveraging of a national model: "When we talk about provision of care in Southeastern Minnesota, we are really talking about an integrated network," he said, "and Beacon is the integrating element where all care providers are coordinating and engaged."

Along that strain, the community's public health providers utilize the Public Health Documentation System (PH-Doc) "that is an electronic medical record of public health services," Chute added. PH-Doc integrates information from public health services into the HIE network to outline "community views of ideal health information."

Running parallel to SE MN Beacon's HIE is a comprehensive CDR, said Lacey Hart, program manager for the SE MN Beacon Program. The depository allows for the tracking of clinical and population metrics in the area. To that end, researchers are able to monitor the community workflow and analyze where impacts are being seen. 

Hart stressed data gaps, too, as a key aspect of area metrics highlighted by the advanced repository. "We looked at our data early on - before the repository - and now the data repository is really an excellent way to hone in on where the data gaps exist."

One timely example: SE MN Beacon has been monitoring asthma and diabetes trends, and outlining the clinical measures used to counter the disease. Using the CDR, however, researchers snagged a data hole; "…One of the things we were missing was the patient data," said Hart. Using metrics from the CDR, the Beacon team developed patient centric data gathering tools. The data exchange is now integrated with information on patient lifestyles

Keystone Beacon Community

Like its sibling in Minnesota, the Keystone Beacon Community of Central-PA is using IT to drive care improvements. 

Geisinger Health System, a Pennsylvania-based health services organization, heads the Keystone HIE. The exchange connects 13 member facilities throughout the area. 

The HIE began as a pilot system with three organizations, said Geisinger Health System IT Director and Keystone HIE Director Jim Younkin. It's now linked between 34 organizations. "The services that are being provided through Keystone Beacon include the EHRs being connected," he said. "EHRs now have the ability to publish and consume documents directly from the health information exchange." 

The HIE includes patient and provider portal applications, and supports three distinct models of health exchange: the "pull model," the "send model," and the "push model," said Younkin. 

"We started with the pull model, which is really just using the portal to do a look-up of information," he said. It hinges on "the idea of having a centralized data repository for access by members of the community."

The direct mode allows messaging between site clinicians and patients. 

The push model will be rolled out this month, said Younkin: it allows clinicians "to subscribe to a patient through the health exchange, and then as activity occurs for that patient we can deliver alerts and notifications to those clinicians to inform them of certain activities."

With these various models and the portal applications supported by the Keystone HIE, Younkin says care capability is expanding in central Pennsylvania. 

Similarly, IT has been catalyzing patient provision in the SE MN Beacon Community through HIE and CDR technology. 

IT critical to achieving quality

The communities highlighted in the HIMSS virtual education event only strengthen the case for IT's critical place in fueling the quality revolution, said Kunzman. It's the essential ingredient, he said, in driving providers over that "tipping point" and in the right direction. 

"We are at the end of year two in a three-year journey. Our Beacon Community grantees have made great achievements," said Kunzman. "They've enhanced the role that safety-net providers play in the overall continuum of care, Beacon communities and technology vendors have formed new collaborations in order to introduce efficiency in bringing the most important functionalities to market…"

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

VA awards $4.9M contract to support open source tech

WASHINGTON – The Department of Veterans Affairs has awarded Ray Group International of Tampa, Fla., a $4.9 million contract to support the open source community that is contributing software code to the VA and Defense Department integrated electronic health record system.

RGI, a service-disabled veteran-owned small business that provides software engineering support services, will perform operations to continue the development and establishment of the Open Source Electronic Health Record Agent (OSEHRA) over the next six months, according to a June 21 announcement  in Federal Business Opportunities.

[See also: VA a good model for EHR systems and implementation]

With the contract in place, OSEHRA will be able to recruit necessary staff and deploy accounting capability and other business systems to ultimately make the OSEHRA software development community operationally self-sufficient, according to the notice. RGI will provide project management, analysis, configuration management and testing services. 

OSEHRA will enable federal agencies, industry and academia to contribute software code to create applications and tools for the iEHR, to improve and modernize VA's VistA electronic health record system, and eventually to certify code through testing.

DOD recently said thatit has contributed the software code of the theater version of its AHLTA clinical information system into the open source community. OSEHRA started with the VistA code.

[See also: VA and DoD interoperability program needs better management, GAO says]

The custodial agent for the open source community must approve software code for integration into the evolving VistA code base and interoperability of complimentary software.

Xerox to build health insurance marketplace in Florida

DALLAS – Florida Health Choices, a corporation established by the state to improve access to care, has selected Xerox to administer its insurance marketplace.

According to Xerox officials, the program is designed to give small business and eligible individuals more flexibility in finding affordable health insurance and other services. The nine-year contract is valued at $68 million.

With partner CHOICE Administrators Exchange Solutions, Xerox will provide a cloud-based Web portal and online plan selection tool to give consumers and employers more information when making health insurance selections. The solution preserves the benefits of employer-sponsored insurance and eases the administrative burden for small businesses, officials said.

“We’re designing and supporting programs that increase access to health coverage for consumers,” said Will Saunders, group president, Government Healthcare Solutions, Xerox. “The solution we create in Florida will serve citizens and small business owners and help position the state as a leader in establishing a competitive and voluntary health insurance marketplace for small employers.”

Xerox will also provide eligibility determination and enrollment management services for the program, and operate a customer contact center to share information on marketplace offerings. These services will help Florida Health Choices handle the massive amounts of information involved with the marketplace quickly, efficiently and securely.

“We need a partner who can get a fully functional marketplace setup that is designed to serve Floridians now and into the future – delivering on both our short and long-term goals,” said Aaron Bean, chairman, board of directors, Florida Health Choices. “We’re confident Xerox will support us in establishing our marketplace quickly, while helping us to increase healthcare access to small business employees – one of our key priorities.”

Monday, June 25, 2012

Cerner revenues up 18 percent in 4th quarter

KANSAS CITY, MO – The economy may be in crisis, but Cerner Corp. has a rosy outlook. The Kansas City-based healthcare IT company posted a better-than-expected fourth quarter result on Tuesday, with revenues up 18 percent.

Executives credited the company's broad global client base for its success.

"The large size and geographic diversity of our client base and the deep strategic relationships with those clients contributed to our ability to deliver solid results in a difficult environment," said Cerner founder and CEO Neal Patterson.

"We are pleased with our fourth quarter and full-year 2008 results, which reflect good execution in a challenging economic environment," Patterson said. "We delivered solid bookings, revenue and earnings and record levels of cash flow."

"We are cautiously optimistic that we will continue to generate solid results," he said, adding that Cerner is well positioned to take advantage of the Obama administration's focus on healthcare IT as a necessary piece of healthcare reform.

Sean Weil, an analyst with Piper Jaffrey, concurs that Cerner is well positioned for the stimulus package making its way through Congress.

"Cerner is one of a handful of companies that can benefit from both the hospital and physician stimulus incentives," he said in an analysis issued Wednesday.

In addition, Weiland said Cerner's size and scale likely afford it the capital it needs to execute.

Cerner's bookings in the fourth quarter of 2008 were $404.9 million, near the record level of $406.6 million recorded in the fourth quarter of 2007. Fourth quarter revenue increased 18 percent, to $465.7 million, over the same period a year ago.

Net earnings were $71.5 million compared with fourth quarter 2007 net earnings of $41.3 million.

Other fourth-quarter highlights:

Cash collections of $441 million and record operating cash flow of $98 million.Days sales outstanding of 92 days compared to 93 days in the third quarter of 2008 and 90 days during the same quarter last year.Total revenue backlog of $3.5 billion, up 7 percent over the same quarter a year ago. This is composed of $2.9 billion of contract backlog and $0.6 billion of support and maintenance backlog.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Why Has the Press Failed Us In Reporting on Health Care Reform?

An Open Letter to Bill Keller, Executive Editor, New York Times, and Clark Hoyt, Public Editor, New York Times

by Benjamin Day–

Dear Bill Keller and Clark Hoyt,

For the first time in the span of a generation, national health care reform is back on the horizon, and I’m writing to you to step back for a moment into the history of the Times’s reporting on health care reform. Last year I began a research project with two researchers from Harvard Medical School, Drs. David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler, to look at the history of major state health reforms such as TennCare, the Oregon Health Plan, MinnesotaCare, and many others. A sweeping health reform bill had been passed into law in Massachusetts in 2006 that was being hailed as a unique, first-of-its-kind bipartisan strategy to achieve universal or near-universal health coverage without raising taxes or adding new regulations on the health care industry. We initially set out to find how unique the Massachusetts health reform law really was compared to previous state efforts, and to see if by analyzing the outcomes of those earlier reform efforts we could learn some lessons about what to expect in Massachusetts.

What we found surprised us, and a summary write up of our findings was published in the International Journal of Health Services. We found that, aside from the “individual mandate” in Massachusetts requiring many of the uninsured to purchase their own private health plan or face tax penalties, many reforms in other states – indeed, even in our own state in the recent past – were almost identical to the Mass plan in their goals and structure. They also all failed to achieve their stated goals of reducing the uninsured population in their respective states and/or of controlling rising health care costs. The most ambitious of these, TennCare in 1994 and a large Medicaid expansion in Massachusetts also in the mid-1990s, were able to reduce the uninsured in their respective states for a period of several years. However, the financing of these plans all proved unsustainable over time, enrollment was often capped or benefits eroded, and a few short years after passage every state found itself back where it started: with high and rising health care costs and a large and growing uninsured population. We titled our article “State Health Reform Flatlines.

What we found even more surprising than this history of failed reform efforts, though, was media coverage of the legislation. Articles by our most respected news organizations hailed state reform after state reform as pioneering, likely to serve as models for the nation, and designed to control costs and extend health coverage to the uninsured. No reasonable reader of the news available at the time these laws were passed would expect that they might fail entirely to reduce the uninsured over time, or that they might not succeed in controlling costs at all.

Florida in April 1993 launched the first of what would be many “managed competition” plans for controlling costs and extending health coverage, a scheme that would serve as virtually the only cost control component of Bill Clinton’s proposed health reform bill of 1994. The New York Times wrote “The Florida Legislature approved a sweeping overhaul of the state’s overburdened health-care system early today, making Florida the first state in the nation to combine free market competition and government regulation in a way similar to the Clinton Administration’s plans for controlling soaring medical costs… Florida’s plan, which will try to cover most people eventually and at the same time to control health costs, is taking place on a larger scale than anything seen elsewhere.” Managed competition did not control costs in Florida or anywhere else, nor was the uninsured population reduced.

Exactly one year previous in April of 1992 Minnesota passed its “HealthRight” plan – later renamed “MinnesotaCare.” USA Today wrote of it: “Minnesota is about to embark on a plan to solve the health-insurance crisis that could hold lessons for other states and the nation… HealthRight… will begin signing up families with children in the fall and will be fully open to Minnesota’s estimated 370,000 eligible uninsured by 1994.” The Associated Press wire coverage of the law repeated state estimates that almost 40 percent of those uninsured should be covered by 1997, and quoted the head of the National Conference of State Legislatures calling the bill “the first complete reform proposal in the United States.” MinnesotaCare did not reduce the percentage of uninsured in Minnesota even in the short-term.

A few other quotes should be enough to convey the sense that there is a recurring problem in the news we receive on health reform in America. A Vermont bill also passed in 1992 elicited this opening description in the New York Times: “Gov. Howard Dean, the only governor who is a physician, signed a law Monday in Bennington that sets in motion a plan to give Vermont universal health care by 1995.” The Oregon Health Plan of 1992, which attempted to reduce benefits for Medicaid beneficiaries in order to expand coverage to the uninsured, was described in a Washington Post article as “The most far-reaching health care reform in the nation.” The New York Times began its coverage by stating that “The Clinton Administration today approved Oregon’s proposal to guarantee health services for poor people by rationing care.” Neither Vermont’s reform nor Oregon’s reduced the percentage of uninsured in the state, and the poor in Oregon were not covered.

These are selective quotes: the broader coverage has often provided good descriptions of what the laws are intended to accomplish. Moreover, they have included extremely effective reporting on the politics of the health reform process – particularly when the process is contentious, or where well-organized groups have mobilized opposition. However, in the United States we have a long history of reforms that have survived the political process only to fail economically, and it is clear in retrospect that the media sources – both local and national – with large market share have not done their due-diligence in reporting on the economic viability of health reform efforts. I believe this would be borne out by analyzing coverage of many other significant reforms in Washington, Tennessee, Massachusetts, Hawaii, Maine, California, Utah, and nationally.

This becomes particularly clear by comparing coverage of health care reform with medical reporting in virtually any paper. The Christian Science Monitor on April 8, for example, carried a story that is typical of this approach to health politics reporting entitled “Healthcare battle brewing: political groups gear up: A public insurance alternative is likely to be the most contentious of the reform proposals.” The story states that the Obama administration hopes to introduce a Medicare-like public buy-in plan available to individuals and businesses as an alternative to private health coverage. It goes on to cite the Heritage Foundation’s opposition to the plan, the support of groups such as MoveOn.Org and Democracy for America, and public polling from Harvard Professor Robert Blendon. The article follows a “he-said/she-said” format, with the Heritage Foundation contending that such a plan would not allow private insurance to compete on a level playing field, advocates urging that it will bring down costs and hold the private insurance industry accountable, and the CEO of Families USA urging that both sides attempt to find a common ground.

What is missing from this narrative of contending arguments is a discussion of evidence about the likely impacts of a public plan option. There have been forms of public-private health insurance competition implemented under Medicare for a number of years, and there are many other countries that allow competition between public and private health insurers. Peer-reviewed studies of public-private competition are not hard to find, nor are experts with varying opinions. Compare the CSM discussion with almost any medical news story in the New York Times Health Section on the same day: there is a report on a new study by two Stanford professors assessing the impact of George W. Bush’s AIDS Relief program in Africa; two studies about the impact of light exercise for heart failure patients; three reports on the role of “brown fat” in burning calories; and others. In short, medical reporting and the coverage of public disagreements revolve around evidence, there are standards for credible sources, and it is common to read about the limitations of available evidence. Although I am personally an advocate and an organizer coming from a single-payer health care perspective, what strikes me most after reading hundreds of news reports on health reform is the lack of academic perspectives, held to academic standards, concerned with basic questions of the economic efficacy and sustainability of health policy proposals.

At the state level this has often been exacerbated by bi-partisan legislation. Many of the reforms that have failed to achieve or even approach their stated goals have been passed with support from the Democrats and Republicans holding one or both legislative houses or the governor’s office. This has a particularly chilling effect on politics-based health reform coverage. Reporting on the Oregon Health Plan, for example, focused almost exclusively on the attempt to ration services for Medicaid enrollees – would this plan harm the disabled or the poor, was it just? – while the basic question of whether the law, even taking rationing for granted, would succeed in reducing the uninsured in the state, went unasked. In Tennessee, similarly, the spectacle of almost one million Medicaid enrollees being moved into managed care plans occluded the basic question of whether the proposal to extend coverage to another half a million uninsured residents was economically viable, or if it would succeed in reducing the state’s uninsured over time – these latter goals being the entire point of moving Medicaid recipients into managed care plans in the first place.

This shortcoming has also been exacerbated by the subject material. Increasing access to health care is what makes health reform morally compelling for most people, but financing and cost controls are what make efforts to expand access sustainable or unsustainable. These are topics not well-suited to personal interest stories, and they are often bewilderingly complex. In Massachusetts alone, residents have been promised universal health care or dramatic reductions in the uninsured at least four times in the last twenty years. A few years after each reform passes, the dry logic of costs and financing has left residents back where they started, and yet when the politics of health reform begin again we are provided with very little information in the public sphere to sort out the snake-oil from the genuine, sustainable reform proposals.

I write to you not because I believe the New York Times is particularly at-fault in leaving its reading public unprepared to determine the viability of different health reform proposals, but because the scope of the Times’s coverage has meant that it has reported on a wide range of state and national efforts, which gives us a good window on the history of health reform coverage in the United States. This year, many national commentators are measuring the ongoing process of health policy development against the failed Health Security Act of the Clinton era. This has led many advocates to be particularly concerned with crafting politically viable proposals. I believe this makes the burden on reporters to effectively assess whether the proposals are likely to achieve their stated goals sustainably all the more important.

I would urge the Times not to report health policy disputes in a he-said/she-said format divorced from evidence-based standards. Reporters should challenge interviewees to source their economic claims, include those sources in their write-ups, and not shy away from evaluating the quality of evidence offered from different perspectives. Furthermore, we have learned time and again that where there is political harmony, there is not necessarily economic rationality. The burden of evidence-based evaluation of health policy cannot stop at the borders of political skirmishes.

I thank you for your consideration of this open letter,

Sincerely,

Benjamin Day
Executive Director
Mass-Care: The Massachusetts Campaign for Single Payer Health Care