Saturday, March 30, 2013

Obamacare Won't Affect Most 2012 Taxes, Despite Firm's Claim

More From Shots - Health News HealthIn India, Discrimination Against Women Can Start In The WombHealthSand From Fracking Could Pose Lung Disease Risk To WorkersHealthNumber Of Early Childhood Vaccines Not Linked To AutismHealth CareObamacare Won't Affect Most 2012 Taxes, Despite Firm's Claim

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Employers Try To Spur Healthy Behaviors With Health Plan Rewards

More From Shots - Health News Health'Sponge' Drug Shows Promise For Treating Hepatitis CHealthCatalog Of Gene Markers For Some Cancers Doubles In SizeHealthAllergy Drops Under The Tongue May Be Fine Alternative To ShotsHealth CareEmployers Try To Spur Healthy Behaviors With Health Plan Rewards

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

At Age 3, Affordable Care Act Is No Less Controversial

More From Shots - Health News Health CareAt Age 3, Affordable Care Act Is No Less ControversialHealthDoubts Raised About Cutting Medicare Pay In High-Spending AreasHealthTalk Globally, Go Locally: Cellphones Vs. Clean ToiletsHealthHow A Sleep Disorder Might Point To A Forgotten Future

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

How A Patient's Suicide Changed A Doctor's Approach To Guns

More From Shots - Health News HealthTuberculosis Cases In The U.S. Keep SlidingHealthColorado Doctors Treating Gunshot Victims Differ On Gun PoliticsHealthLittle Kids Know How To Share, But Don't Want ToHealthPediatricians Voice Support For Same-Sex Marriage And Adoption

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Friday, March 15, 2013

Making Insurance Data Transparent and Available

When we first launched HealthCare.gov last July, we said that it�s a website designed to help you take control of your health care � by putting the power of information at your fingertips. You can learn about your new rights and benefits under the Affordable Care Act, and for the first time you can search a nationwide inventory of public and private health insurance options to find coverage that may be right for you, utilizing HealthCare.gov�s Insurance Finder.

Advancing transparency in the health insurance marketplace is a central goal of the Affordable Care Act. Today we are releasing a set of data files containing the current inventory of private insurance plans listed in HealthCare.gov to allow researchers, reporters, and others to use the information to advance consumer understanding of insurance.

Since July 2010, HealthCare.gov�s Insurance Finder has been providing consumers and small businesses with information about insurance plans available in your zip code. Now, large amounts of data underlying the Insurance Finder will be available in downloadable files. You can view the data here.

This data has been collected from issuers of individual and small group insurance in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. The data files we are releasing contain basic information about the issuers (such as their website and contact information) and basic information on the products they have approval to sell within a state (including the type of product and whether that product is currently for sale). The files also contain data on specific health insurance plans (variants of each insurance product that have been made available), including the benefit and cost-sharing structure of each plan sold.

By releasing this data in the form of downloadable files, we�re enabling the public to more fully understand the current health insurance marketplace and opening the door to innovative uses of the data. For example, a researcher could use this information to put together a picture of benefit and cost-sharing options by region or state, in order to better understand what insurance choices are available to consumers by location. We very much look forward to seeing how this open data gets utilized by innovators across the country!

Thursday, March 14, 2013

The first ever National Prevention Strategy

Tomorrow, June 16, we are taking steps forward to move the nation away from a focus on disease and illness to a focus on wellness and prevention.

HHS Secretary Sebelius, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, US Senator Tom Harkin, Melody Barnes, Domestic Policy Adviser and the Director of the Domestic Policy Council at the White House and Surgeon General Regina Benjamin will join with other administration officials to unveil the first ever National Prevention Strategy.

The National Prevention Strategy, called for under the Affordable Care Act, outlines the ways that public and private partners can help Americans stay healthy and fit and improve our nation�s prosperity.

Tune-in to www.hhs.gov/live to watch this event live at 11:00am EDT on June 16th.

Justices Ask: Can Health Law Stand If Mandate Fails?

March 28, 2012

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Linda Dorr (left) and Keli Carender chant along with other demonstrators in front of the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

John Rose/NPR

Linda Dorr (left) and Keli Carender chant along with other demonstrators in front of the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

John Rose/NPR

The historic legal arguments on the Obama health care overhaul came to a close at the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday, with key justices suggesting the court may be prepared to strike down not just the individual mandate but the whole law.

The major arguments of the day were premised on a supposition. Suppose, asked the court, we do strike down the individual mandate � what other parts of the law, if any, should be allowed to stand?

The government contends that most of the law can remain intact, but not the two most popular parts � the provision barring discrimination based on previous medical conditions and the provision making insurance rates more uniform.

In contrast, the challengers, represented by lawyer Paul Clement, told the justices that the whole law should fall.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted that the 2,700-page law contains myriad provisions that are unquestionably "OK" and have not been challenged.

Special CoverageSupreme Court Arguments NPR Special Coverage Of Day 3Add to PlaylistDownload 

 

Wednesday's Arguments:

10 a.m.: Severability

News And Analysis: Court Asks If Law Can Survive Without MandateAudio And Transcript: Wednesday Morning's ArgumentsDay 3 Cheat Sheet: Scalia Unplugged

 

1 p.m.: Medicaid Expansion

News And Analysis: Medicaid Expansion Caps Supreme Court ArgumentsAudio And Transcript: Wednesday Afternoon's Arguments

full coverage

"Why should we say it's a choice between a wrecking operation, which is what you are requesting, or a salvage job?" she asked. "The more conservative approach would be salvage rather than throwing out everything."

Several justices pointed out that the court generally tries to keep as much of a law intact as possible, on the theory that, as Justice Elena Kagan put it, "half a loaf is better than no loaf" at all. But Clement argued that without the mandate and the two provisions that make insurance rates uniform and nondiscriminatory, the law would be a "hollowed-out shell."

Could The Law Be 'Fixed'?

Justice Anthony Kennedy, a key swing vote, pressed Clement for a principle to use as a guide.

Clement replied that the court should ask whether a statute can operate the way Congress intended without the invalidated provision.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor responded, "No statute can do that, because once we chop off a piece of it, by definition, it's not the statute Congress passed." Shouldn't it be up to Congress, not the court, she asked, to "fix" the law if one or more provisions are struck down?

Chief Justice John Roberts noted that deals are made for votes all the time in major bills like this, so that it would be nearly impossible for the court to unwind what the intent of Congress was.

When Clement seemed to founder for a moment on the question of how to determine intent, Justice Antonin Scalia moved in to help, suggesting that Congress can't seem to do much of anything anyway. Wouldn't "legislative inertia" prevent Congress from being able to fix the law if some part of it is struck down, he asked. Clement quickly agreed that would be the case.

Justice Stephen Breyer, holding up a thick copy of the law, pointed to the many provisions that have nothing to do with the individual mandate � provisions to encourage doctors to move to underserved areas, provisions on drug pricing, and even a provision on breast-feeding. These parts of the law, he said, could stand on their own.

Those are "peripheral" provisions, Clement replied, and the court should strike down the whole law.

Justice Samuel Alito asked Clement for his "fallback position." The answer was still: Strike down the whole law.

Another Approach

Making a contrary argument was Edwin Kneedler, the deputy solicitor general, who said that the mandate only implicates two other provisions of the comprehensive law: the provision barring discrimination based on previous medical conditions and the provision making health care rates more uniform.

Scalia said as far as he is concerned, that's "the guts" of the law, and if the court cuts the guts, the whole statute should die.

"There is no way that this court's decision is not going to distort the congressional process," Scalia said. "Whether we strike it all down or leave some of it in place, the congressional process will never be the same." He said it would be better to force Congress to reconsider the issue "in toto."

Kneedler, however, urged the court to follow the conservative course of judicial restraint, leaving Congress to fix the law if the mandate is struck down. But Kennedy countered that the effect would be "the opposite" of restraint.

"We would be exercising the judicial power ... to impose a risk on insurance companies that Congress had never intended," Kennedy said. "By reason of this court, we would have a new regime that Congress did not provide for, did not consider. That, it seems to me, can be argued at least to be a more extreme exercise of judicial power ... than striking the whole."

Kneedler pointed to the many provisions of the law that have already gone into effect as evidence that Congress intended pieces to remain intact even if the mandate and the two connected provisions were struck down. For instance, he noted that 2.5 million young people under age 26 now have coverage under the law.

But Scalia responded that preserving the law without the mandate would "bankrupt the insurance companies, if not the states, unless [the] minimum coverage provision [the individual mandate] comes into effect."

By the end of the argument, it seemed pretty clear that if there are five votes to strike down the individual mandate, there likely are five votes to strike down the entire Obama health care overhaul. Until Wednesday, that had seemed a remote possibility. No appeals court had reached that conclusion. But the current Supreme Court seems to be on the verge of proving itself to be dramatically more conservative than any Supreme Court since the 1930s on matters that pit its power against the power of Congress to regulate economic matters.

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Need A Nurse? You May Have To Wait

More From Shots - Health News HealthRyan Budget Proposal Echoes Obamacare While Rejecting ItHealthCan Kidney Transplants Ease Strain On Gaza's Health System?HealthWhen It Comes To Health Care, Patients Don't Want To Weigh CostsHealthRoller Derby Players Swap Bacteria (And Shoves) On The Track

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Anesthesia Care And Web-Surfing May Not Mix, Nurses Say

More From Shots - Health News HealthHardening Of Human Arteries Turns Out To Be A Very Old StoryHealthNew Voices For The Voiceless: Synthetic Speech Gets An UpgradeHealthDepression And Anxiety Could Be Fukushima's Lasting LegacyHealthAspirin Vs. Melanoma: Study Suggests Headache Pill Prevents Deadly Skin Cancer

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Ralliers: Cover everyone for less

Calling the 83 people who sat on the statehouse lawn Saturday �the core activists� whose job will be to spread the message, David Goering and others urged support for a national single payer health insurance plan.

Goering, medical director of the Health Care Access Clinic, served as master of ceremonies for the two-hour rally under the shade trees on the south lawn of the Statehouse.

Occasionally the crowd was urged to sing along with new lyrics to some 1960s and 1970s protest songs. For example, the Buffalo Springfield song �For What It�s Worth� proclaimed, �It�s time we stop, hey, what�s that sound. Everybody look what�s going down.�

The health insurance reformers sang the same tune, but the words came out, �It�s time we stop, people, how absurd. Fifty million people uninsured.�

Vashti Winterburg of Lawrence, one of the organizers, told the crowd the Congressional Budget Office has estimated a Medicare-like health insurance program for all Americans would save $350 billion a year. �I think this is the deal of the century,� she said.

Richard Heckler, also of Lawrence, said there is a lot of misunderstanding about what HR 676 would do. That�s the bill that would create a single payer system.

�It�s not socialized health care; it may be socialized health insurance,� he said.

One of the sponsors of the event was Physicians for a National Health Program. According to a statement on its Web site, the $350 billion in savings would come from eliminating private insurance companies� paperwork.

�The potential savings on paperwork are enough to provide comprehensive coverage to everyone without paying any more than we already do,� according to the PNHP statement. �Private insurers necessarily waste health dollars on things that have nothing to do with care: overhead, underwriting, billing, sales and marketing departments as well as huge profits and exorbitant executive pay. Doctors and hospitals must maintain costly administrative staffs to deal with the bureaucracy.

Combined, this needless administration consumes one-third (31 percent) of Americans� health dollars.�

Sunday, March 10, 2013

When a Job Disappears, So Does the Health Care

ASHLAND, Ohio � As jobless numbers reach levels not seen in 25 years, another crisis is unfolding for millions of people who lost their health insurance along with their jobs, joining the ranks of the uninsured.

The crisis is on display here. Starla D. Darling, 27, was pregnant when she learned that her insurance coverage was about to end. She rushed to the hospital, took a medication to induce labor and then had an emergency Caesarean section, in the hope that her Blue Cross and Blue Shield plan would pay for the delivery.

Wendy R. Carter, 41, who recently lost her job and her health benefits, is struggling to pay $12,942 in bills for a partial hysterectomy at a local hospital. Her daughter, Betsy A. Carter, 19, has pain in her lower right jaw, where a wisdom tooth is growing in. But she has not seen a dentist because she has no health insurance.

Ms. Darling and Wendy Carter are among 275 people who worked at an Archway cookie factory here in north central Ohio. The company provided excellent health benefits. But the plant shut down abruptly this fall, leaving workers without coverage, like millions of people battered by the worst economic crisis since the Depression.

About 10.3 million Americans were unemployed in November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The number of unemployed has increased by 2.8 million, or 36 percent, since January of this year, and by 4.3 million, or 71 percent, since January 2001.

Most people are covered through the workplace, so when they lose their jobs, they lose their health benefits. On average, for each jobless worker who has lost insurance, at least one child or spouse covered under the same policy has also lost protection, public health experts said.

Expanding access to health insurance, with federal subsidies, was a priority for President-elect Barack Obama and the new Democratic Congress. The increase in the ranks of the uninsured, including middle-class families with strong ties to the work force, adds urgency to their efforts.

�This shows why � no matter how bad the condition of the economy � we can�t delay pursuing comprehensive health care,� said Senator Sherrod Brown, Democrat of Ohio. �There are too many victims who are innocent of anything but working at the wrong place at the wrong time.�

Some parts of the federal safety net are more responsive to economic distress. The number of people on food stamps set a record in September, with 31.6 million people receiving benefits, up by two million in one month.

Nearly 4.4 million people are receiving unemployment insurance benefits, an increase of 60 percent in the past year. But more than half of unemployed workers are not receiving help because they do not qualify or have exhausted their benefits.

About 1.7 million families receive cash under the main federal-state welfare program, little changed from a year earlier. Welfare serves about 4 of 10 eligible families and fewer than one in four poor children.

In a letter dated Oct. 3, Archway told workers that their jobs would be eliminated, and their insurance terminated on Oct. 6, because of �unforeseeable business circumstances.� The company, owned by a private equity firm based in Greenwich, Conn., filed a petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.

Archway workers typically made $13 to $20 an hour. To save money in a tough economy, they are canceling appointments with doctors and dentists, putting off surgery, and going without prescription medicines for themselves and their children.

Archway cited �the challenging economic environment� as a reason for closing.

�We have been operating at a loss due largely to the significant increases in raw material costs, such as flour, butter, sugar and dairy, and the record high fuel costs across the country,� the company said.

At this time of year, the Archway plant would usually be bustling as employees worked overtime to make Christmas cookies. This year the plant is silent. The aromas of cinnamon and licorice are missing. More than 40 trailers sit in the parking lot with nothing to haul.

In the weeks before it filed for bankruptcy protection, Archway apparently fell behind in paying for its employee health plan. In its bankruptcy filing, Archway said it owed more than $700,000 to Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, one of its largest creditors.

Richard D. Jackson, 53, was an oven operator at the bakery for 30 years. Mr. Jackson and his two daughters often used the Archway health plan to pay for doctor�s visits, imaging, surgery and medicines. Now that he has no insurance, he takes his Effexor antidepressant pills every other day, rather than daily, as prescribed.

Another former Archway employee, Jeffrey D. Austen, 50, said he had canceled shoulder surgery scheduled for Oct. 13 at the Cleveland Clinic because he had no way to pay for it.

�I had already lined up an orthopedic surgeon and an anesthesiologist,� Mr. Austen said.

In mid-October, Janet M. Esbenshade, 37, who had been a packer at the Archway plant, began to notice that her vision was blurred. �My eyes were burning, itching and watery,� Ms. Esbenshade said. �Pus was oozing out. If I had had insurance, I would have gone to an eye doctor right away.�

She waited two weeks. The infection became worse. She went to the hospital on Oct. 26. Doctors found that she had keratitis, a painful condition that she may have picked up from an old pair of contact lenses. They prescribed antibiotics, which have cleared up the infection.

Ms. Esbenshade has two daughters, ages 6 and 10, with asthma. She has explained to them why �we are not Christmas shopping this year � unless, by some miracle, Mommy goes back to work and gets a paycheck.�

She said she had told the girls, �I would rather you stay out of the hospital and take your medication than buy you a little toy right now because I think your health is more important.�

In some cases, people who are laid off can maintain their group health benefits under a federal law, the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986, known as Cobra. But that is not an option for former Archway employees because their group health plan no longer exists. And they generally cannot afford to buy insurance on their own.

Wendy Carter�s case is typical. She receives $956 a month in unemployment benefits. Her monthly expenses include her share of the rent ($300), car payments ($300), auto insurance ($75), utilities ($220) and food ($260). That leaves nothing for health insurance.

Ms. Darling, who was pregnant when her insurance ran out, worked at Archway for eight years, and her father, Franklin J. Phillips, worked there for 24 years.

�When I heard that I was losing my insurance,� she said, �I was scared. I remember that the bill for my son�s delivery in 2005 was about $9,000, and I knew I would never be able to pay that by myself.�

So Ms. Darling asked her midwife to induce labor two days before her health insurance expired.

�I was determined that we were getting this baby out, and it was going to be paid for,� said Ms. Darling, who was interviewed at her home here as she cradled the infant in her arms.

As it turned out, the insurance company denied her claim, leaving Ms. Darling with more than $17,000 in medical bills.

The latest official estimate of the number of uninsured, from the Census Bureau, is for 2007, when the economy was in better condition. In that year, the bureau says, 45.7 million people, accounting for 15.3 percent of the population, were uninsured.

M. Harvey Brenner, a professor of public health at the University of North Texas and Johns Hopkins University, said that three decades of research had shown a correlation between the condition of the economy and human health, including life expectancy.

�In recessions, with declines in national income and increases in unemployment,� Mr. Brenner said, �you often see increases in mortality from heart disease, cancer, psychiatric illnesses and other conditions.�

The recession is also taking a toll on hospitals.

�We have seen a significant increase in patients seeking assistance paying their bills,� said Erin M. Al-Mehairi, a spokeswoman for Samaritan Hospital in Ashland. �We�ve had a 40 percent increase in charity care write-offs this year over the 2007 level of $2.7 million.�

In addition, people are using the hospital less. �We�ve seen a huge decrease in M.R.I.�s, CAT scans, stress tests, cardiac catheterization tests, knee and hip replacements and other elective surgery,� Ms. Al-Mehairi said.

This article is from the New York Times.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Finally, A Map Of All The Microbes On Your Body

More From Shots - Health News HealthFlu Risk And Weather: It's Not The Heat, It's The HumidityHealthCould A 'Brain Pacemaker' Someday Treat Severe Anorexia?HealthA Man's Journey From Nepal To Texas Triggers Global TB ScrambleHealthShrimp Trawling Comes With Big Risks

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Infections With 'Nightmare Bacteria' Are On The Rise In U.S. Hospitals

More From Shots - Health News HealthFlu Risk And Weather: It's Not The Heat, It's The HumidityHealthCould A 'Brain Pacemaker' Someday Treat Severe Anorexia?HealthA Man's Journey From Nepal To Texas Triggers Global TB ScrambleHealthShrimp Trawling Comes With Big Risks

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Big 3, UAW Ask for Health Trust Help

The following article is from DetNews.com.

Cash-crunched automakers state need for payment help in their bid for federal financing.

By David Shepardson / Detroit News Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Detroit’s Big Three and the United Auto Workers are pressing the case for low-cost government loans to help automakers make required payments to trust funds to oversee hourly retiree health care starting in 2010.

The need for congressional support for the health care funding isn’t their most immediate concern, but it’s looming. The automakers are asking Congress for as much as $25 billion in “bridge financing” to help with their liquidity crisis, but that money also could be used for funding the health care trust.

Congress could consider that request, which is separate from the $25 billion already approved for low-cost loans for retooling plants to build more fuel-efficient cars, when it returns to work this month.

The topic of the health-care payments was addressed during an hour-long meeting of House Democrats convened by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Monday.

In total, Detroit’s Big Three automakers will make nearly $60 billion in payments to bankroll three trust funds to pay for hourly retiree health care.

In July, General Motors Corp. announced it had won permission from the UAW to push back $1.7 billion in payments owed in 2008 and 2009 to its Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association fund that will cover health care for UAW retirees. GM will make the payments in 2010, when the UAW assumes responsibility for the fund.

That means GM will pay the $1.7 billion, plus accrued interest of 9 percent adding to the $5.3 billion already scheduled for 2010. They will be the first payments as part of a deal to give the UAW about $34 billion in cash and stock to assume $51 billion in GM’s retiree health care liabilities.

The shift to a VEBA to pay for retiree health care is the largest part of the 2007 labor contract that will reduce GM’s annual costs by $3 billion starting in 2010.

But GM faces a liquidity crisis now that analysts say may require outside help for it to survive beyond 2009, or to be able to make the payments to the trust fund.

Chrysler is to make payments totaling $9.8 billion into the fund, including $6.6 billion in 2010. A merged GM-Chrysler could face a staggering bill. Chrysler will also issue a note to the UAW worth $1.2 billion that’s due in 2016.

Ford is to pay between $13.2 billion to $15 billion into its retiree health care trust, based on the company’s future stock value. Ford took a $4.5 billion cash charge toward its retiree health care funding requirements this year, according to its second quarter filing.

UAW legislative director Alan Reuther said the financial ability of automakers to make the payments into the trust fund in 2010 is a concern, and one of the issues that should be addressed by Congress.

“If the federal government does not provide assistance to the Detroit-based auto companies to enable them to survive the economic downturn, hundreds of thousands of jobs at the auto companies and suppliers will be threatened,” UAW President Ron Gettelfinger wrote in an Oct. 27 letter to lawmakers. “The health care and pension benefits for the retirees and their families will be placed in jeopardy.” He noted that the government could be forced to assume a large increase in health care and retiree costs if the Big Three collapsed.

Detroit’s Big Three automakers spent $8.9 billion on health care in 2007, compared with a record $11 billion in 2005.

Automakers have said they think Congress should consider all available options to assist automakers.

About 1 million retirees and spouses receive health care and pensions from Detroit’s Big Three automakers, typically getting less than $20,000 per year.

Harley Shaiken, a professor specializing in labor studies at the University of California-Berkeley, said automakers need help with the impending costs.

“Without assistance, this is going to be a serious problem for automakers,” Shaiken said.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

More Minority Young Adults are Obtaining Health Insurance

Martin Luther King, Jr. once referred to injustices in health as one of �the most shocking and inhumane" forms of inequality. Luckily, health reform is making serious strides in leveling the health care playing field.

In April of last year, we released an Action Plan to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities, and already we are seeing how the Affordable Care Act is helping us move towards our goal of a nation free of disparities in health and health care.

Recently, we reported that 2.5 million additional young adults have gained health coverage because of the health care law. It allows young adults to stay on their parents' insurance plans through age 26. And this week, we announced that of this number, 1.3 million are racial and ethnicity minorities: approximately 736,000 Latinos, 410,000 Blacks, 97,000 Asian Americans, and 29,000 American Indian/Alaska Natives have gained coverage because of the law.

These statistics are more evidence that the health care law is taking the critical steps needed to ensure that more Americans get the health coverage they need and deserve � regardless of race or ethnicity.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Pennsylvania Cuts Medicaid Coverage For Dental Care

More From Shots - Health News HealthHear That? In A Din Of Voices, Our Brains Can Tune Into OneHealthWhy ER Docs In The Big Apple Won't Replace That Painkiller PrescriptionHealthInfections With 'Nightmare Bacteria' Are On The Rise In U.S. HospitalsHealthA Costly Catch-22 In States Forgoing Medicaid Expansion

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For Midwife, 71, Delivering Babies Never Gets Old

March 6, 2013

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Editor's Note: This video contains a scene of childbirth that includes graphic imagery and explicit language.

Credit: John W. Poole/NPR

Increasingly, people are continuing to work past 65. Almost a third of Americans between the ages of 65 and 70 are working, and among those older than 75, about 7 percent are still on the job. In Working Late, a series for Morning Edition, NPR profiles older adults who are still in the workforce.

Sometimes you can't retire even if you want to. For Dian Sparling, a certified nurse midwife in Fort Collins, Colo., there's no one to take over her practice. But at 71, she's finding that staying up all night delivering babies is harder than it used to be.

Sparling founded an obstetrics and gynecology practice called Womancare 31 years ago. During her career, she has delivered around 2,000 babies. Last year, she decided she'd retire from that part of her job, though she continued to see patients in the office. She didn't miss being on call � the person who's awakened in the middle of the night when a patient goes into labor.

"When you're on call, you just can't really plan for anything. You just need to be available, both physically and your heart and soul available, to do midwifery work. And when it's an unknown, I think it's a little bit more draining," Sparling says.

A few months ago, one of the other midwives in her practice had to take an extended medical leave. So Sparling had to go back to being on call.

Enlarge image i

Dian Sparling, a certified nurse midwife in Fort Collins, Colo., recently went back to being on call.

John W. Poole/NPR

Dian Sparling, a certified nurse midwife in Fort Collins, Colo., recently went back to being on call.

John W. Poole/NPR

"It would be horrible if I had to do this and stay up all night and didn't love what I do," she says.

'A Wonder To Behold'

It's just past daybreak at the hospital's birth center, and Sparling has been here since 4 a.m. with patient Amanda Trujillo, who is about to deliver her third baby. It's her second with Sparling as her midwife. The two are comfortable with each other. The atmosphere is relaxed. Sparling tells Trujillo to just be patient a little while longer.

When Sparling leaves Amanda and goes out to the nurses' station in the birth center, her spiky white hair sets her apart from her younger colleagues. Nurse Kathy Clarkson makes a point of telling her she was missed during her brief semi-retirement.

"We're glad that you're back working again, Dian," Clarkson says. "When you retired, we were all crying."

Nurse Julie Christin says that as a midwife, Sparling works more closely with women in labor than do most MDs.

"Physicians rely on us to do a lot of the labor support," Christin says. "But Dian spends a lot of time with her patients when they're in labor. I like that, because then she's involved and can make decisions quicker, and does what the patient wants to do, which is good."

Sparling is "in tune with them emotionally as well as physically," Clarkson says.

And then it's time for Sparling to get back in tune with Trujillo, who's ready to start pushing. Her husband, Isaiah, supports one leg, and delivery nurse Keri Ferguson supports the other.

“ It would be horrible if I had to do this and stay up all night and didn't love what I do.- Certified Nurse Midwife Dian Sparling As Amanda Trujillo works, her husband, Sparling and Ferguson cheer her on and report on the baby's progress. First his head emerges. Then his shoulders. And finally, there is a new little person named Samuel in the world, though at nearly 9 pounds, maybe not so little. "There he is, Amanda," Sparling says. "Reach down here and grab your baby." Samuel is born just before 10 a.m. Sparling has been at the hospital for six hours. And she's jazzed. "People have asked me, 'Does this feeling after a delivery ever get old?' Absolutely not," she says. "It's a wonder to behold, and my adrenaline stops pumping about two hours after a delivery. And then I can go to sleep." But it takes her twice as long to recover from an all-nighter as it used to. Her closest friends worry about her. Sparling is long divorced. Her two sons live back East, so this group of friends are the ones she refers to as her "support people." "We think she should be retired, but she doesn't think she can," says Sparling's friend, Wayne Peak. "She's our age and we're retired and we like to travel and relax a whole bunch, and she's on call and has to stay up in the middle of the night and deliver babies. That's not good." More In This Series Working Late: Older Americans On The Job When A Bad Economy Means Working 'Forever' Working Late: Older Americans On The Job For One Senior, Working Past Retirement Age Is A Workout Working Late: Older Americans On The Job At 85, 'Old-School' Politician Shows No Signs Of Quitting

Another friend, Nancy Grove, says she was not happy when Sparling first told her she was going back to being on call.

"Once I stopped thinking about myself and started thinking a little more about Dian, I really wanted to support her in what she wants to do, needs to do, because she's a very valuable asset in our community," Grove says.

A Line In The Sand

Sparling has reassured her friends that she will not keep delivering babies forever. In a way, she longs for retirement � from deliveries, from the office, from work. But that would mean finding someone to take over her practice and run it the way she believes it should be run. For instance, no patient is turned away because of lack of insurance or inability to pay.

"The truth of the matter is this is not a money-making business," Sparling says. "It makes our salaries. It makes our health care insurance payments for ourselves, it pays for our malpractice insurance, which is required by the state and also by our hospital. We can exist and pay for ourselves, but it doesn't make money."

Sparling says that at 71, she realizes time is not on her side. As much as she loves her work, she wants to pursue the other pleasures of life.

"One of which is travel. There are so many places in the United States and the world that I would love to go," Sparling says. "And one is taking piano lessons. I was given a piano at age 7 by my grandmother, and really never made proper use of it and practice. And you need time to do that."

Sparling has given herself deadlines for retiring before. None have stuck. But she's still trying.

"And now I guess I can draw a line in the sand and say it's going to be [at] 75, I will no longer be seeing patients in the office," she says.

But she acknowledges that maybe a line in the sand isn't the best metaphor. She says, "you know how sand flows."

Share 19Facebook 2Twitter Email Comment More From Working Late: Older Americans On The Job Around the NationFor Midwife, 71, Delivering Babies Never Gets OldAround the NationAt 85, 'Old-School' Politician Shows No Signs Of QuittingAround the NationWhen A Bad Economy Means Working 'Forever'EconomyWorking Late: In Tough Economy, Retirement Gets Pushed Back

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A Mother's Death Tested Reporter's Thinking About End-Of-Life Care

More From Shots - Health News HealthInfections With 'Nightmare Bacteria' Are On The Rise In U.S. HospitalsHealthA Costly Catch-22 In States Forgoing Medicaid ExpansionHealthOften A Health Care Laggard, U.S. Shines In Cancer TreatmentHealthGot A Health Care Puzzle? There Should Be An App!

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Horror Care: How Private Health Care Is Shortening Our Lives

Steven Brill's article in Time Magazine about the cost of private health care is likely to make most of his readers very angry. Angry about the prices we pay, about the lives that are devastated, and about the fact that we're one of the few developed countries without adequate health care for its citizens.

Economists have told us that the profit motive of privatization comes with an "invisible hand" that automatically corrects inequities in the market. It hasn't worked that way for health care. The personal stories recounted below, and some additional facts to complement them, make it clear that an essential human need has been turned into a product that benefits a few people at the expense of many others.

$15,000 for Blood Tests

Brill's article begins with the story of a 42-year-old Ohio man named Sean Recchi, who traveled to MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston for treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He and his wife Stephanie had paid $469 a month, or about 20% of their income, for insurance that covered $2,000 per day of hospital costs. His financial troubles started when MD Anderson told him, "We don't take that kind of discount insurance."

But he had to go to the hospital. His wife recalled that he was "sweating and shaking with chills and pains. He had a large mass in his chest that was..growing. He was panicked."

Stephanie asked her mother to write a check for $48,900.

Sean waited for 90 minutes while the hospital confirmed that the check had cleared. He was also required to advance MD Anderson $7,500 from his credit card. The total cost for the initial treatment and chemotherapy was $83,900, including a $15,000 charge for lab tests for which a Medicare patient would have paid a few hundred dollars, $283 for an x-ray that Medicare categorizes as a $20 charge, and $1.50 for a generic version of a Tylenol pill.

Hospital Boss $1,845,000 — Medicare Boss $170,000

MD Anderson provided this statement in its defense: "The issues related to health care finance are complex…[our] billing and collection practices are similar to those of other major hospitals and academic medical centers." The company made $531 million in profits in 2010, on total revenues of about $2 billion. That 26% profit margin was, in the author's words, "an astounding result for such a service-intensive enterprise."

It's true. A PayUpNow.org analysis of Medical Services providers showed that from 2008 to 2010, Humana had a profit margin of about 5%, United Health Group just under 7%, and WellPoint about 8%.

Last year's salary for Ronald DePinho, the president of MD Anderson, was $1,845,000. That's over twice the compensation paid to the president of the University of Texas medical complex that includes MD Anderson. It's about ten times the compensation of the federal Medicare Administrator in 2010.

Privatization Has Failed Us: The Deadly Facts

Our private health care system has indeed failed us. We have by far the most expensive system in the developed world. The cost of common surgeries is anywhere from three to ten times higher in the U.S. than in Great Britain, Canada, France, or Germany.

Everyone has their hand in the money pot: insurance companies, pharmaceutical firms, physicians, hospitals, equipment suppliers, the AMA. Steven Brill notes that the medical industry has spent $5.36 billion on lobbying in the past 15 years, compared to $1.53 billion spent by the defense/aerospace industry and $1.3 billion spent by oil and gas interests.

As reported by the Census Department, 50 million Americans can't afford the price of health insurance. According to a study by the American Journal of Public Health, nearly 45,000 annual deaths are associated with lack of health insurance. A 2001 survey revealed that, because of cost, forty-two percent of sick Americans skipped doctor's visits and/or medication purchases. Even careseekers with insurance can end up uncovered, as in California, where a survey found that one out of four claims were denied by private insurers, even when treatment was recommended by the patient's physician. The after-effects can be disastrous. A 2007 study at the Harvard Medical School found that 62 percent of US bankruptcies were a result of medical expenses.

Meanwhile, the evidence for incompetence in the private sector is overwhelming. Data from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) shows that since 1997 private insurance costs have risen much faster than Medicare costs. According to the Council for Affordable Health Insurance, medical administrative costs as a percentage of claims are about three times higher for private insurance than for Medicare. A study by researchers at Harvard Medical School and Public Citizen found that health care bureaucracy last year cost the United States $399.4 billion. The U.S. Institute of Medicine reports that the for-profit system wastes $750 billion a year on waste, fraud, and inefficiency. As a percent of GDP, we spend almost twice the OECD average.

Private Health Care Has Shortened Our Lives

When we look beyond industry malfeasance to the effects on human life, we find that Americans are paying the ultimate price. We now have a shorter life expectancy than almost all other developed countries. A National Research Council study placed the United States LAST among 17 high-income countries.

It wasn't always this way. Since 1960 there has been a close parallel between worsening life expectancy and increased health care costs as a percentage of GDP. Most disturbing is our growing infant mortality rate relative to other countries. A UNICEF study places the U.S. 22nd out of 24 OECD countries in "children's health and well-being."

In startling contrast, Americans covered by Medicare INCREASED their life expectancy by 3.5 years from the 1960s to the turn of the century.

Another Horror Story

Janice S., a 64-year-old woman in Connecticut, was rushed to the hospital in what turned out to be heartburn. She was charged $995 for the ambulance ride, $3,000 for the doctors, and $17,000 for the hospital – $21,000 for a three-hour precautionary checkup.

Part of the hospital bill was a special stress test, employing radioactive dye and a CT scan, which cost $7,997.54, about six times more than the hospital's regular stress test. Medicare would have paid the hospital $554 for the special test.

For many of the lab tests, Janice was charged about ten to fifteen times more than the Congress-supervised Medicare rate. The hospital's own filings to the Department of Health and Human Services showed that lab tests in 2010 brought in $293 million from patients, while costing the hospital just $28 million.

When confronted with the details, a hospital spokesperson said, "Those are not our real rates..It's a list we use internally in certain cases, but most people never pay those prices."

And More..

Emilia Gilbert was 62 when she fell at home and bloodied her face, spent six hours (most of it waiting) at the at the Bridgeport, CT Hospital emergency room, and received a bill for over $9,000. She even got charged for bandages and tubing, which are supposed to be part of the $900 emergency room charge. The hospital sued her for the money.

Steve H. went to Mercy Hospital in Oklahoma City for back treatment. He had $45,181 remaining on the $60,000 annual payout limit from his union's health insurance plan. For basic medical and surgical supplies he was billed about $8,000, including charges for a surgical gown, a blanket warmer and a marking pen. The most significant cost was the Medtronic stimulator that was implanted in his back, which cost the hospital $19,000, but cost Steve almost $50,000. His total bill at the institution run by the Sisters of Mercy ended up at nearly $87,000.

Steven D. (a pseudonym) was diagnosed with lung cancer in January 2011. When he died eleven months later, his wife Alice was left with a bill for over $900,000.

Many of the patients, or their family members, interviewed by Mr. Brill took advantage of a growing industry called medical billing advocacy, by which outlandish bill totals can be negotiated downward. The initial hospital bill is apparently an attempt by the hospital to get all they can from a patient. Steven D's $900,000 bill for cancer treatment was dramatically reduced, to about $170,000, but Alice was forced to literally sell the family farm to pay off most of her debt.

Human Need as a Product For Sale

An underlying theme through the Brill article was the vulnerability of patient's spouses or other relatives, who were not in the appropriate state of mind to challenge, or even consider, the excessive costs of treatment. As the wife of a terminally ill patient stated, "Are you kidding? I'm dealing with a husband who had just been told he has Stage IV cancer. That's all I can focus on…You think I looked at the items on the bills? I just looked at the total."

By treating the essential human need of health care as a product, the hospitals and doctors and drug companies and insurance companies and equipment suppliers are lured toward a pot of money, with little regard for the effects of their profit-making on average Americans.

The solution, of course, is Medicare for all. If, that is, the invisible hand of the market ever reaches out to average Americans.

White House Summit In Denial On Regulating Health Care Costs

By Jamie Court for the Huffington Post–

“Prevention” was the word of morning at the White House Western forum on health care reform in downtown LA.

Led by Oprah’s Dr. Oz, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Washington State Governor Chris Gregoire, the assembled “stakeholders” rattled off how prevention pays in health care.

20% of the patients account for 80% of the costs. 75% of the costs spring from four conditions. The most expensive medicine is bad medicine It’s no doubt true, but keeping kids out of McDonalds, treating heart disease preventively, and making sure Grandma takes her medicine isn’t going to get us where we need to go in health care reform.

We need to rein in the charges of the medical-insurance complex. And that’s a subject the politicians, hospitals, insurers, doctors and health care professionals assembled today didn’t want to acknowledge.

Well, it’s true, health care reform boils down to regulation of medical charges, which is hardly popular with the medical establishment. None of the two hours set aside today in largely scripted testimony dealt with the public option to the private market or mandatory health insurance and how to make it affordable.

The kumbaya spirit was encouraging, but the reality is standardization of medical insurance charges and costs is going to determine whether there is enough money in the health care system to cover everyone. The Obama Administration largely listened today, but Schwarzeneggeer was selling three essentials in health care reform: 1) getting all the stakeholders together 2) mandatory health care 3) prevention. Only #3, prevention, will have a positive impact on reform. To please the stakeholders with consensus risks letting their out of control costs remain out of control. Making health insurance mandatory on its own won’t bring costs down, and Americans are losing coverage today because they cannot afford it. Schwarzenegger refused to regulate premiums in his failed 2007-2008 effort and Capitol Hill is not likely to do better.

The California Nurses Association brought nearly one thousand nurses and activists to a rally on the street outside the forum. Their calls for a Medicare For All system weren’t heard in the auditorium, but guests couldn’t miss the message as we entered the auditorium. The testimonials from patients inside were heart breaking, but none of the answers from so-called stakeholders inside were compelling. None of the solutions dealt with how patients who lost coverage would be able to afford it again under an overhaul where the only cost savings come from medical prevention.

At some point the White House is going to need to get tough on health care and insurance charges, in addition to trying to pay for performance through “comparative effectiveness,” which Obama has promoted. A truly public option like Medicare offers the best hope to drive down costs and force the insurers to compete. Recently, Senate health reform architect Senator Max Baucus seemed to suggest the public option was not really needed. In the absence of health care cost standardization and regulation, a genuine public option may be national health care reform’s main saving grace. Let’s just hope Obama isn’t in as much as denial about the need for cost regulation as the assembled potentates today.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Medicare Open Enrollment: Last Chance to Review and Compare Plans

With the holiday season upon us, it�s easy to get busy this time of year. Some pretty important tasks can get left to the last minute. One of those important tasks is ensuring you are in the right health insurance plan in Medicare.� Selecting the right plan is a personal choice, and a lot of thoughtful consideration goes into finding the right match.� But just like the holidays, those key dates come whether or not you are ready.

If you haven�t made up your mind yet about a health or drug plan, now is the time to make your selection.� Medicare Open Enrollment ends on December 7.� To help you sort through your choices, try using the Medicare Plan Finder to review the options in your area. It can help you decide the best mix of benefits and costs that meet your needs and budget.�

If you�re like Helen Rayon from Philadelphia and find yourself in Medicare�s prescription drug coverage gap (�donut hole�), you will continue to save money in 2013 with big discounts on brand-name prescription drugs.� More than 5.6 million people like Helen have saved over $5 billion on prescription drugs in the donut hole since 2010.

In these last few days of Medicare Open Enrollment, take a second to review your options.� If you like your current health care coverage, you don�t need to do anything. But if you�re thinking about making any changes, now is the time to act and cross another item off your to-do list.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

A Critic's Advice For Doctors In Search Of Industry Work

More From Shots - Health News HealthHealth Insurers Brace For Consumer Ratings In Some StatesHealthA Mother's Death Tested Reporter's Thinking About End-Of-Life CareHealthSacrificing Sleep Makes For Run-Down Teens � And ParentsHealthChange In Law May Spur Campus Action On Sexual Assaults

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