Friday, May 31, 2013

Proton Beam Therapy Sparks Hospital Arms Race

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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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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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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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Class of 2013: Graduate with Peace of Mind

To the Class of 2013:

Congratulations on a well-earned graduation. I know how much hard work it took to get here today.

This is a time when you�re making big decisions about the future. You might be embarking on a new career, transitioning to a different city, and thinking about the start of this next exciting stage in life.

I�m sure the last thing you�re thinking about is health insurance. But unfortunately, the unexpected can happen.

The good news is that now the Affordable Care Act provides protections and benefits that give you greater control of your health care.� The law helps you by:

Making it possible to stay on your parent�s health plan until you turn 26, giving you the flexibility to make choices about your future without worrying about where you�re going to get health insurance.Requiring most insurance plans to cover proven preventive services�like birth control and certain cancer screenings�without you paying a penny.Barring insurers, beginning in 2014, from denying you coverage because of a pre-existing condition, like cancer, asthma, or acne, or making you pay more just because you are a woman.�Creating an online Health Insurance Marketplace, where you can find coverage that meets your needs and budget. You can also find out if you qualify for financial assistance. Sign up now at HealthCare.gov for updates; enrollment begins October 1, 2013.

Bottom line: Because of the Affordable Care Act, you�ll be able to begin this next chapter of your life with the peace of mind and security health insurance provides.

Congratulations on your achievement!

10,000 Signatures for Universal Healthcare

New Yorkers from across the state � including hundreds of doctors, nurses, patients, labor unions, community organizations, faith groups, and seniors � delivered 10,000 signatures supporting a single-payer health care bill sponsored by Assemblyman Richard Gottfried, D-Manhattan, and Sen. Bill Perkins, D-Harlem.

The press conference was coordinated with Healthcare-NOW NYC, Hunger Action Network of New York State, Physicians for a National Health Program (New York Metro chapter), Single Payer New York, and Statewide Senior Action.

“These signatures are a testament to the dedication of New Yorker all across this great state to reach out to members of their communities and help build the grassroots movement it will take to make healthcare a human right in New York,” said Katie Robbins, an organizer with Healthcare-Now.

The New York Health bill (A.5389-a/S.2078-a) �”an act to amend the public health law and the state finance law”� would expand health coverage to all New Yorkers regardless of age, income, or employment status, and would control costs by implementing a single-payer, universal healthcare system, its supporters say.

The bill has 74 co-sponsors in Assembly and 17 in the Senate.

“The affordable care act has made some important improvements in how we organize and pay for health care in this country but it still leaves us and our health care, and our wallets, in the hands of insurance companies�with their premiums, and their administrative costs, and deductibles, and co-pays, and limited network, and denials of payment for the care we need. We can do better and New York can do better,” said Gottfried, chair of the Assembly Health Committee.

“President Obama during [his] campaign said that no American should have to spend their golden years at the mercy of insurance companies, and I agree with that, but I want to know why that is only for golden years. We can get better health care, more affordable health care, more fairly paid for, for every single New Yorker if we enact the New York Health bill to provide universal, publicly sponsored, publicly funded, single-payer health coverage. We want to get this bill to the floor of the Assembly this year for a vote,” he said.

Under the legislation, there would be no premiums, co-payments, or deductibles, and coverage would be publicly funded. Advocates said they would like to see the bill passed in the Assembly, in the Senate, and signed by the governor.

Perkins began his speech with a call and response of “you’re heath is your wealth.”

“We not only want to get [the New York Health bill] passed in the Assembly, we also want to get it passed in the Senate, and most importantly, we want the governor to sign the bill. In fact if we could, we would ask the governor to advocate [and] make sure it gets passed in the Assembly; to advocate [and] make sure it gets passed in the Senate; to be standing there with us so that our wealth, our health, is not compromised,” Perkins said.

New York Hunger Action Network Executive Director Mark Dunlea said health care costs are “one of the three big bills” that send people to emergency food programs.

“When Massachusetts enacted their insurance mandate, many low-income residents found they had less access to health care services. It is immoral that the rich country in the world still refuses to treat health care as a basic human right, even while we spend far more money on health care per capita than countries with universal access,” Dunlea said.

The 10,000 signatures were delivered to the offices of Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Senate Republican Leader Dean Skelos, R-Rockville Centre, Independent Democratic Conference head Sen. Jeff Klein, D- Bronx, and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, D-Manhattan.

10,000 Signatures for Universal Healthcare

New Yorkers from across the state � including hundreds of doctors, nurses, patients, labor unions, community organizations, faith groups, and seniors � delivered 10,000 signatures supporting a single-payer health care bill sponsored by Assemblyman Richard Gottfried, D-Manhattan, and Sen. Bill Perkins, D-Harlem.

The press conference was coordinated with Healthcare-NOW NYC, Hunger Action Network of New York State, Physicians for a National Health Program (New York Metro chapter), Single Payer New York, and Statewide Senior Action.

“These signatures are a testament to the dedication of New Yorker all across this great state to reach out to members of their communities and help build the grassroots movement it will take to make healthcare a human right in New York,” said Katie Robbins, an organizer with Healthcare-Now.

The New York Health bill (A.5389-a/S.2078-a) �”an act to amend the public health law and the state finance law”� would expand health coverage to all New Yorkers regardless of age, income, or employment status, and would control costs by implementing a single-payer, universal healthcare system, its supporters say.

The bill has 74 co-sponsors in Assembly and 17 in the Senate.

“The affordable care act has made some important improvements in how we organize and pay for health care in this country but it still leaves us and our health care, and our wallets, in the hands of insurance companies�with their premiums, and their administrative costs, and deductibles, and co-pays, and limited network, and denials of payment for the care we need. We can do better and New York can do better,” said Gottfried, chair of the Assembly Health Committee.

“President Obama during [his] campaign said that no American should have to spend their golden years at the mercy of insurance companies, and I agree with that, but I want to know why that is only for golden years. We can get better health care, more affordable health care, more fairly paid for, for every single New Yorker if we enact the New York Health bill to provide universal, publicly sponsored, publicly funded, single-payer health coverage. We want to get this bill to the floor of the Assembly this year for a vote,” he said.

Under the legislation, there would be no premiums, co-payments, or deductibles, and coverage would be publicly funded. Advocates said they would like to see the bill passed in the Assembly, in the Senate, and signed by the governor.

Perkins began his speech with a call and response of “you’re heath is your wealth.”

“We not only want to get [the New York Health bill] passed in the Assembly, we also want to get it passed in the Senate, and most importantly, we want the governor to sign the bill. In fact if we could, we would ask the governor to advocate [and] make sure it gets passed in the Assembly; to advocate [and] make sure it gets passed in the Senate; to be standing there with us so that our wealth, our health, is not compromised,” Perkins said.

New York Hunger Action Network Executive Director Mark Dunlea said health care costs are “one of the three big bills” that send people to emergency food programs.

“When Massachusetts enacted their insurance mandate, many low-income residents found they had less access to health care services. It is immoral that the rich country in the world still refuses to treat health care as a basic human right, even while we spend far more money on health care per capita than countries with universal access,” Dunlea said.

The 10,000 signatures were delivered to the offices of Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Senate Republican Leader Dean Skelos, R-Rockville Centre, Independent Democratic Conference head Sen. Jeff Klein, D- Bronx, and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, D-Manhattan.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Latest Health Hurdle: Buying Insurance Without A Bank Account

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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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Angelina Jolie And The Rise Of Preventive Mastectomies

More From Shots - Health News HealthFeds Push For Lower Alcohol Limits For DriversHealthHow A Florida Medical School Cares For Communities In NeedHealthA Sharper Abortion Debate After Gosnell VerdictHealthAngelina Jolie And The Rise Of Preventive Mastectomies

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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 10, 2013

It Came From Norway To Take On A Medical Goliath

More From Shots - Health News HealthJudge Denies Administration's Request To Delay Plan-B RulingHealthKids With Autism Quick To Detect MotionHealthIt Came From Norway To Take On A Medical GoliathHealthHow Can Identical Twins Turn Out So Different?

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Hospital Prices, Revealed! (Sort Of)

More From Planet Money BusinessI Know I'm Supposed To Follow My Passion. But What If I Don't Have A Passion?Health CareHospital Prices, Revealed! (Sort Of)Planet MoneyEpisode 456: Marijuana ArbitrageBusinessA 'Poison Pill' In The Immigration Bill?

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Hospital Prices, Revealed! (Sort Of)

More From Planet Money BusinessI Know I'm Supposed To Follow My Passion. But What If I Don't Have A Passion?Health CareHospital Prices, Revealed! (Sort Of)Planet MoneyEpisode 456: Marijuana ArbitrageBusinessA 'Poison Pill' In The Immigration Bill?

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Wednesday, May 8, 2013

The Unhappy Marriage of Economics and Health Care

America’s health care system is collapsing, and we can blame the Economics profession. Most economists approach health care in the wrong way, viewing it as a commodity like shoes or the laptop on which I write. Instead, health care is an idiosyncratic commodity, subject to uncertainty and “asymmetric information” leading to destructive behavior. Trying to force health care into a box, treating it like other commodities, economists have promoted cost sharing, market competition, and insurance oversight of health care providers that have inflated the administrative burden while denying ever more Americans access.

Health care spending has been rising throughout the world as aging and more affluent populations spend on their health. Nowhere, however, has the cost of health care risen as fast as in the United States where costs soared because of rising administrative expense. Compared with other affluent countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (the OECD), the United States spends over twice as much per person as is spent elsewhere. Before 1971 when Canada enacted its Medicare program, a single-payer government funded health care system, Canada spent a higher share of its national income on health care than did the United States; since then, however, while Canada has controlled costs, spending has soared in the United States so that we now spend over $3000 more per person. That is $12,000 for a family of four that is not available for travel, education, housing, or food.

Elsewhere, increases in health care spending have been associated with improvements in the provision of health care and, therefore, go with increasing life expectancy. In the United States, however, spending has increased because of rising administrative costs and increases in the price of prescription drugs and, therefore, has yielded relatively few benefits in improvements in care. Comparing changes in health-care spending and life expectancy between 1971 and 2008, other affluent OECD members gained a year of life expectancy for every $453 in spending; in the United States, however, life expectancy has increased less and spending has risen sharply more so that each year of increased life expectancy has cost over twice as much as in these other countries. Health care spending in the United States has increased by $1283 for every additional year of life expectancy; had our spending per year of added life increased at only the rate of other countries we would be spending over $4500 less per person, $18,000 saved for the average family of four. Most of the difference in relative expenditures, most of the growing waste in spending in the United States, is due to increasing administrative costs in the provision of private health insurance and in the billing and insurance operations within doctors’ offices and in hospitals. The average physician in the United States now spends four-times as much interacting with insurance companies as does the average physician in Ontario, Canada, over $80,000 per physician compared with a little over $20,000 in Ontario. Prescription drug prices and administrative expenses have been the fastest rising costs in the United States health care system; from 1980 to 2005, administrative costs rose by 1300% while drug prices rose by nearly 2000%. There are now 2.5 million administrative support personnel in the American health care system; more than the number of nurses, and five times the number of physicians. We now have more health-care managers than physicians and surgeons.

Rising costs drive up health insurance premiums so that a family health insurance plan now costs about 40% of the average family wage income, up from 7% in 1960. Rising costs are denying ever more Americans access to health care even while businesses and governments wrestle with rising health care spending that squeezes resources available for other purposes. While other countries have controlled health care costs by restraining administrative expenses and drug prices, ballooning costs in the United States come from policies promoted by economists who have urged governments and providers to control costs by making consumers responsible for more of the costs even while raising administrative costs and ignoring monopolistic pricing of pharmaceuticals. Viewing the injured, sick, and disabled as “consumers,” economists see insurance as the source of rising costs because they are not responsible for the costs of care they receive and, therefore, overuse health care. Rising copayments and deductibles are intended to discourage “consumers” from “abusing” health care, as if the victims of auto accidents or cancer should shop around for cheaper, and competition among insurers while limiting provider services by providing more administrative supervision. Ignoring evidence that Americans are less likely to see doctors and other health providers than are residents of other affluent countries, these economists have blamed the high cost of our health care on insurance which, they assume, leads to wasteful over-practice and the provision of unnecessary health care services. Their solution is greater cost sharing, more regulation of providers, capitation, and even the end to insurance by substituting medical savings accounts for insurance.

For 40 years, many economists’ have promoted increasing cost sharing through higher copayments and deductibles, the replacement of fee-for-service payment systems with capitation where providers are paid a fixed amount for patients as in Health Maintenance Organizations, and competition where multiple insurers offer a variety of plans catered to individual consumer’s interests and in competition with each other. Far from limiting health care cost increases, these practices have produced the worst of all worlds, rising costs along with restrictions on access. Costs have risen because these recommendations have inflated the administrative burden in health care, the costs of the billing and insurance activities within provider offices as well as the cost of the health insurance industry itself. While restricting access, limiting the benefit to Americans of some of the dramatic improvements in health care practice of the last decades, these practices have not bent the cost curve or slowed health care inflation even while denying more and more Americans access to affordable health care.

The failure of price incentives and competition to control health care costs could have been predicted had economists appreciated that health insurance is not a commodity and the sick are not consumers like those shopping for the best pair of sandals or brand of peanut butter. Producers of commodities might try to accommodate consumer wishes because they can profit by selling more. Health insurers, on the contrary, can better increase their profits by selling less, by identifying people likely to need care and driving them away (“lemon dropping”) even while attracting the lucky and healthy (“cherry picking”). Most health care expenditures go to a relatively few people, the unlucky who develop an illness or suffer an accident; insurers, therefore, can dramatically lower their costs by finding those who will be expensive and getting rid of their business; encouraging them to find another insurance plan or even to die.

A form of “adverse selection,” or screening of potential customers by insurance companies, can be profitable for the individual firm but it comes at the cost of raising costs for the community as a whole. As a country, we now spend almost $200 billion administering the health insurance industry and over $800 billion in administering the health care industry, or over a quarter of total spending. Add to this the inefficiency in delivery that comes from a fragmented finance system that inhibits coordination of care, and the inflated prices for prescription drugs, and easily a third of total spending is wasted or going to monopolistic profits.

The waste involved in the current system has a redeeming feature: it provides abundant space for an improved system that could improve access and services even while dramatically lowering costs by eliminating administrative waste. If we lowered administrative costs and drug prices to the Canadian level, we could save nearly $600 billion dollars, more than enough to provide coverage to all of the uninsured while improving access for the millions of underinsured. If we see past the bad recommendations of market-fundamentalists, we can improve health care and save money. An outcome that even economists should favor.

Gerald Friedman Professor of Economics University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Amherst, MA. 01003

Professor Friedman has written extensively on single payer health care and HR 676. His article explaining the economics of single payer is available here:

Dollars and Sense: Funding a National Single-Payer System by Gerald Friedman.

Veterans Have Unusual Choice Thanks To Health Exchanges

More From Shots - Health News HealthOfficials Prepare For Another Flu Pandemic � Just In CaseHealthWhat's In A Flu Name? Hs And Ns Tell A TaleHealthVeterans Have Unusual Choice Thanks To Health ExchangesHealthSaving Newborns: 'Kangaroo Care' Could Go A Long Way

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About Half of Adults Lacked Adequate Health Coverage in 2012

About half of United States adults ages 19 to 64 didn�t have health insurance for at least part of last year or were underinsured, a new report from the Commonwealth Fund says.

The fund, a private nonprofit organization that finances research into health care and health policy issues, conducts the health insurance survey every two years.

One bright spot, the report found, is that the proportion of young adults without health insurance fell significantly over the last two years, probably because of a provision of the Affordable Care Act that allows young adults to stay on their parents� health plans until age 26. The rule took effect in September 2010.

Nearly eight out of 10 (79 percent) young adults reported that they were insured, up from 69 percent in 2010. That marks �an abrupt reversal in a decadelong climb� in the number of uninsured young adults, the report said.

Uninsured rates for other age groups, however, either rose or stayed the same. About half of adults ages 19 to 64 didn�t have health insurance for all of 2012 or were underinsured, meaning that they had insurance but struggled to pay for medical costs anyway.

At the time of the survey, about 30 percent said they were uninsured or were insured but hadn�t been at some point during the year. Another 16 percent had insurance, but had such high out-of-pocket medical costs relative to their income that they were effectively uninsured.

The survey also found that people are increasingly skipping needed health care because they can�t afford it (about 43 percent answered yes to that question). That�s up from 37 percent in 2003, the report noted.

The report found that about two out of every five adults had trouble paying medical bills last year or were paying off medical debt over time, and that many of those struggling with medical debt (42 percent) said they had received a lower credit rating as a result.

The results are based on a telephone survey of 4,432 adults by Princeton Survey Research Associates International from April 25 to August 19, 2012. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2 percentage points.

The report is the last one the fund will conduct before the major provisions of the Affordable Care Act are scheduled to go into effect, in January 2014.

Did you have a gap in insurance coverage last year? Do you expect the health care law to help provide you with coverage?

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

About Half of Adults Lacked Adequate Health Coverage in 2012

About half of United States adults ages 19 to 64 didn�t have health insurance for at least part of last year or were underinsured, a new report from the Commonwealth Fund says.

The fund, a private nonprofit organization that finances research into health care and health policy issues, conducts the health insurance survey every two years.

One bright spot, the report found, is that the proportion of young adults without health insurance fell significantly over the last two years, probably because of a provision of the Affordable Care Act that allows young adults to stay on their parents� health plans until age 26. The rule took effect in September 2010.

Nearly eight out of 10 (79 percent) young adults reported that they were insured, up from 69 percent in 2010. That marks �an abrupt reversal in a decadelong climb� in the number of uninsured young adults, the report said.

Uninsured rates for other age groups, however, either rose or stayed the same. About half of adults ages 19 to 64 didn�t have health insurance for all of 2012 or were underinsured, meaning that they had insurance but struggled to pay for medical costs anyway.

At the time of the survey, about 30 percent said they were uninsured or were insured but hadn�t been at some point during the year. Another 16 percent had insurance, but had such high out-of-pocket medical costs relative to their income that they were effectively uninsured.

The survey also found that people are increasingly skipping needed health care because they can�t afford it (about 43 percent answered yes to that question). That�s up from 37 percent in 2003, the report noted.

The report found that about two out of every five adults had trouble paying medical bills last year or were paying off medical debt over time, and that many of those struggling with medical debt (42 percent) said they had received a lower credit rating as a result.

The results are based on a telephone survey of 4,432 adults by Princeton Survey Research Associates International from April 25 to August 19, 2012. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2 percentage points.

The report is the last one the fund will conduct before the major provisions of the Affordable Care Act are scheduled to go into effect, in January 2014.

Did you have a gap in insurance coverage last year? Do you expect the health care law to help provide you with coverage?

Friday, May 3, 2013

Urologists Recommend Less PSA Testing For Prostate Cancer

More From Shots - Health News HealthFrom Battlefield To Boston: Marine Comforts Bombing SurvivorsHealthUrologists Recommend Less PSA Testing For Prostate CancerHealthPaleo Diet Echoes Physical Culture Movement Of YesteryearNewsOutbreak Of New SARS-Like Virus Kills 5 In Saudi Arabia

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