Friday, May 31, 2013

Young Women With Breast Cancer Opting For Mastectomy

More From Shots - Health News Health D.C. Agency Approves 2 High-Tech Cancer CentersHealthSurvivor Of Boston Marathon Bombings Has Long Road AheadHealthYoung Women With Breast Cancer Opting For MastectomyHealth CareProton Beam Therapy Sparks Hospital Arms Race

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Administration Touts Competition In Insurance Exchanges

More From Shots - Health News HealthYoung Women With Breast Cancer Opting For MastectomyHealth CareProton Beam Therapy Sparks Hospital Arms RaceHealthAdministration Touts Competition In Insurance ExchangesHealthHeaded To Mars? Watch Out For Cosmic Rays

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Immigrants Subsidize, Rather Than Drain, Medicare

More From Shots - Health News HealthAdministration Touts Competition In Insurance ExchangesHealthHeaded To Mars? Watch Out For Cosmic RaysHealthJoblessness Shortens Life Expectancy For White WomenHealthImmigrants Subsidize, Rather Than Drain, Medicare

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Bird Flu Shrugs Off Tamiflu In 'Concerning' Development

More From Shots - Health News HealthDisinfect All ICU Patients To Reduce 'Superbug' InfectionsHealthMiddle East Coronavirus Called 'Threat To The Entire World'HealthHealth Law Spared Young Adults From High Hospital BillsHealthBird Flu Shrugs Off Tamiflu In 'Concerning' Development

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

NC Could Save $18.7B by Adopting Single-Payer

North Carolina could save as much as $18.7 billion next year on health-care costs if it changed the way it finances health care.

The catch? That change would require a switch to a single-payer system in which one entity collects all health-care fees and pay related costs, says Gerald Friedman, a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

“We have a system that was broken 10 years ago, and it�s getting worse,� he says. �You can�t fix it unless you change its fundamental basis.”

Friedman spoke Thursday night in Charlotte at the Health Care Justice meeting. That organization wants everyone in the community to have access to health care. It is a chapter of the Physicians for a National Health Program, which supports single-payer national health insurance.

Friedman has drafted financing plans for single-payer health systems for Maryland, Massachusetts and the United States. If adopted, he estimates such a payment model could result in $2 trillion in savings nationwide over the next decade mainly by cutting administrative costs and controlling prescription drug prices.

On Thursday night at the Midwood International and Cultural Center, he touted the need for universal-comprehensive coverage, in which everyone would have access to care. Individuals, businesses and the government stand to benefit, Friedman said.

Universal coverage would minimize billing expenses, avoid wasteful competition among insurers and eliminate adverse selection against people who are sickest, he said.

Friedman estimates that nationwide there is $1.5 trillion in waste annually when it comes to health-care spending. Such spending now accounts for roughly 18 percent of the gross domestic product. And it is expected to rise to 22 percent of the GDP within five years.

In North Carolina, health-care spending has risen more than 400 percent in North Carolina since 1990, Friedman said.

At the same time, per capita income has barely doubled, which puts increased pressure on a family�s income. In 1960, health-care spending accounted for just 7 percent of a family�s take home pay. That rose to 39 percent in 2010.

�More and more money is going to health care,� he said.

The current health-care payment system is unsustainable because it is focused on making profits, Friedman said. That results in waste, fragmented care delivery and significant administrative costs and monopolistic pricing, he added.

For example, he said drug prices are 60 percent higher in the U.S. than elsewhere.

Health insurers will spend nearly $200 billion on administrative costs in 2013, he noted.

Friedman expects the current payment system will collapse. He notes expanded access through federal health-care reform will fall short of providing universal coverage and does not do enough to stem rising health-care costs.

That means health insurance premiums will continue to rise, making it unaffordable for more individuals.

�Right now health-care is a lump-sum tax on individuals, especially sick individuals,� he said.

Good News on Innovation and Health Care

A recent New York Times column, Obamacare�s Other Surprise, by Thomas L. Friedman echoes what we�ve been hearing from health care providers and innovators: Data that support medical decision-making and collaboration, dovetailing with new tools in the Affordable Care Act, are spurring the innovation necessary to deliver improved health care for more people at affordable prices.

Today, we are focused on driving a smarter health care system focused on the quality � not quantity � of care.� The health care law includes many tools to increase transparency, avoid costly mistakes and hospital readmissions, keep patients healthy, and encourage new payment and care delivery models, like Accountable Care Organizations.� Health information technology is a critical underpinning to this larger strategy.�� �

Policies like these are already driving improvements. Prior to the law, nearly one in five Medicare patients discharged from a hospital was readmitted within 30 days, at a cost of over $26 billion every year.� After implementing policies to incentivize better care coordination after a hospital discharge, the 30-day, all-cause readmission rate is estimated to have dropped during 2012 to a low of 18 percent in October, after averaging 19 percent for the previous five years.� This downward trend translates to about 70,000 fewer admissions in 2012.

Insurance companies are also now required to publicly justify their actions if they want to raise rates by 10% or more.� Since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, the proportion of requests for double-digit rate increases fell from 75 percent in 2010 to 14 percent so far in 2013.

Reforms like these have helped slow Medicare and Medicaid spending per beneficiary to historically low rates of growth.

Mobilizing Use of Health Information Technology

Last week, we reached an important milestone in the adoption of health information technology.� More than half of all doctors and other eligible providers and nearly 80 percent of hospitals are using electronic health records (EHRs) to improve care, an increase of at least 200 percent since 2008.

Friedman wrote of Dr. Jennifer Brull, a small-town Kansas family doctor, as an example of how health IT is making a difference in real patients. One of our �physician champions,� Dr. Brull installed alerts in her EHRs to improve the rate of colon cancer screenings for her patients. She found colon cancer early in three patients as a result � so early that they did not need chemotherapy or radiation.

Friedman also cited several companies, like Lumeris of St. Louis, that are using health IT and �mountains� of ��HHS data now in electronic form to improve health outcomes. Mike Long, the CEO of Lumeris, says his company is analyzing hospital, insurance and HHS data and getting the information to physicians in real time. � [W]e wind up delivering better care. �And it�s lower cost,� Long said.

Government Data as Fuel for Innovation

Since the early days of the Administration, we have provided the public with high quality health data.� Making our data more accurate, available and secure brings transparency to a traditionally opaque health care market and allows innovators and entrepreneurs to use it for discovering innovative applications, products, and services to benefit the public.

Earlier this month, the Administration released unprecedented data about what hospitals across the country charge for the 100 most common Medicare inpatient stays, which can vary widely. �For example, average inpatient charges for hospital services in connection with a joint replacement range from $5,300 at a hospital in Ada, Okla., to $223,000 at a hospital in Monterey Park, Calif.

In May, we announced a $1 billion challenge to help jump start innovative projects that test creative ways to deliver high quality medical care and lower costs to people enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid.

There is much work yet to be done to change the habits of the health care system. But by encouraging transparency and market-based innovation around health data, we are playing to America's greatest strength to solve our most pressing problems.

Supreme Court Declines Review Of Planned Parenthood Case

More From The Two-Way The Two-WaySupreme Court Declines Review Of Planned Parenthood CaseEuropeLondon Attack Suspect Leaves Hospital; More Charges FiledAfricaSomali Militants Claim To Have Shot Down U.S. DroneNewsThree Years In A Row, Australia Named Happiest Place By OECD

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Overweight People Are More Apt To Ditch Doctors

More From Shots - Health News HealthFor Many, Affordable Care Act Won't Cover Bariatric SurgeryHealthOverweight People Are More Apt To Ditch DoctorsHealthA Token Gift May Encourage Gift Of LifeHealthHeart Failure Treatment Improves, But Death Rate Remains High

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Overweight People Are More Apt To Ditch Doctors

More From Shots - Health News HealthFor Many, Affordable Care Act Won't Cover Bariatric SurgeryHealthOverweight People Are More Apt To Ditch DoctorsHealthA Token Gift May Encourage Gift Of LifeHealthHeart Failure Treatment Improves, But Death Rate Remains High

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Health Insurance At 'Good Prices' Coming To Calif. Exchange

More From Shots - Health News HealthA Token Gift May Encourage Gift Of LifeHealthHeart Failure Treatment Improves, But Death Rate Remains HighHealthHealth Insurance At 'Good Prices' Coming To Calif. ExchangeHealthWhy You Have To Scratch That Itch

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

The Scramble At Moore Medical Center As The Tornado Hit

More From Shots - Health News HealthBoomer Housemates Have More FunHealthThe Scramble At Moore Medical Center As The Tornado HitHealthA Catch For Insurers That Cut Deductibles For Healthy PeopleHealth CareLatest Health Hurdle: Buying Insurance Without A Bank Account

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Latest Health Hurdle: Buying Insurance Without A Bank Account

More From Shots - Health News Health CareLatest Health Hurdle: Buying Insurance Without A Bank Account HealthADHD In Childhood May Feed Obesity In AdultsHealthIf Your Shrink Is A Bot, How Do You Respond?HealthThe Unsafe Sex: Should The World Invest More In Men's Health?

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

It Came From Norway To Take On A Medical Goliath

More From Shots - Health News HealthParents Get Crib Sheets For Talking With Kids About DrinkingHealthMiddle East Virus Spreads Between Hospitalized PatientsHealthTeens Who Text And Drive Often Take Other RisksHealthCases Of Mysterious Valley Fever Rise In American Southwest

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Dramatically Different Medicare Bills Set Hospitals Thinking

More From Shots - Health News HealthDramatically Different Medicare Bills Set Hospitals ThinkingHealthJudge Denies Administration's Request To Delay Plan-B RulingHealthKids With Autism Quick To Detect MotionHealthIt Came From Norway To Take On A Medical Goliath

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Friday, May 3, 2013

Suicide Rate Climbs For Middle-Aged Americans

More From Shots - Health News NewsOutbreak Of New SARS-Like Virus Kills 5 In Saudi ArabiaHealthWomen's Health Groups Angered By Morning-After Pill MovesHealthColorado Weighs Reopening Psychiatric Hospital For HomelessHealthSuicide Rate Climbs For Middle-Aged Americans

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