Thursday, February 28, 2013

Payment Can Be Elusive For Medicare Beneficiaries In Personal Injury Cases

More From Shots - Health News HealthNew York Medical School Widens Nontraditional Path For AdmissionsHealthWhat Happened To The Aid Meant To Rebuild Haiti?HealthHow Guinea Pigs Could Help Autistic ChildrenHealthScientists Sift For Clues On SARS-Like Virus

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The Biggest Myth in Obama-GOP Showdown is the “Fiscal Cliff” Itself

As negotiations continue between the White House and House Speaker John Boehner, leading economist Dean Baker joins to discuss the myths about the so-called fiscal cliff. With little more than two weeks before the deadline, President Obama insists on an immediate increase in the top two income-tax rates as a condition for further negotiations on changes to spending and entitlement programs. But Boehner said Washington�s “spending problem” is the biggest roadblock to reaching a deal, and has urged the White House to identify more spending cuts. “This idea that if we do not get a deal by the end of the year we will see the economy collapse and go into recession, that is totally dishonest,” says Baker, the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. “The basis for this is that we don�t have a deal all year � the fact that you do not have a deal December 31 does not mean that you do not get a deal by December 31, 2013.”

New Report: Health Care Law Saves Money for Consumers

Today, 11 million Americans buy health insurance on their own, without the help of an employer, Medicare or Medicaid. Too often, these people pay more money but get fewer benefits than people who have insurance through their employer. What�s more, people in the individual market have higher out-of-pocket costs, including larger deductibles and copays, and a lower likelihood of having prescription drug coverage.

And yet, these individuals are the ones who have been lucky enough not to have been turned away because insurance companies have denied them coverage because of health status or a pre-existing condition. The new health care law has already prohibited discriminating against children because of a pre-existing condition and prohibits the practice with respect to all Americans beginning in 2014.

A new study released today shows that the Affordable Care Act will help people in the individual health insurance market even more. In 2014, individual health insurance is likely to be more generous and more similar to employer-based coverage. And this means Americans will save money. The study compared how much people in the individual market would have saved in out-of-pocket spending alone, had the Affordable Care Act already been implemented.

It found that if adults in the individual market during 2001-08 had benefits similar to those provided under the Affordable Care Act, they would have seen:

An average annual savings of $280 in annual out-of-pocket spending for medical care and drugs,Average out-of-pocket savings of $589 for those 55-64 and $535 for those 26-64 with low incomes, respectively, andNear elimination of out-of-pocket expenses over $6,000 for all adults and a reduced likelihood of those expenses over $4,000.

This study highlights just one way the Affordable Care Act will save Americans money, and ensure they get high-quality health care.

How will this happen? Under the Affordable Care Act, there will be a new marketplace�known as Affordable Insurance Exchanges�for individuals to buy health insurance. Exchanges allow consumers to easily compare and purchase affordable, high quality health insurance and require insurance plans to compete on a level playing field. That kind of competition drives costs down for consumers. Additionally, eligible Americans purchasing coverage through Exchanges will have essential health benefits, an annual out-of-pocket limit on coverage, and access to premium tax credits � a benefit not taken into account under this study.

The Affordable Care Act makes other important changes to make the health insurance market work better for Americans. Changes include:

Getting rid of lifetime limits and phasing out annual dollar limits on most benefits,Setting a minimum medical loss ratio or 80/20 rule for insurers, generally requiring rebates if less than 80 percent of premiums are spent on health care and quality, andLowering out-of-pocket spending limits even further for low-income Americans.

For other ways the Affordable Care Act benefits Americans, visit this page.

The article, �Individual Insurance Benefits to be Available under Health Reform Would Have Cut Out-Of-Pocket Spending in 2001 - 08� is available at: http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/early/2012/05/11/hlthaff.2011.1206

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

How the Insurer Knows You Just Stocked Up on Ice Cream and Beer

Your company already knows whether you have been taking your meds, getting your teeth cleaned and going for regular medical checkups. Now some employers or their insurance companies are tracking what staffers eat, where they shop and how much weight they are putting on�and taking action to keep them in line.

The goal, say employers, is to lower health-care and insurance costs while also helping workers. Last month, 1,600 employees at four U.S. workplaces, including the City of Houston, strapped on armbands that track exercise habits, calories burned and vital signs, part of a diabetes-prevention program run by insurer Cigna. Some diabetic AT&T employees also use mobile monitors; in September, AT&T also started selling to employers its blood-pressure cuffs and other devices to track wearers 24/7.

But companies also have started scrutinizing employees’ other behavior more discreetly. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina recently began buying spending data on more than 3 million people in its employer group plans. If someone, say, purchases plus-size clothing, the health plan could flag him for potential obesity�and then call or send mailings offering weight-loss solutions.

Marketing firms have sold this data to retailers and credit-card companies for years, and health plans have recently discovered they can use it to augment claims data. “Everybody is using these databases to sell you stuff,” says Daryl Wansink, director of health economics for the Blue Cross unit. “We happen to be trying to sell you something that can get you healthier.”

Some critics worry that the methods cross the line between protective and invasive�and could lead to job discrimination. “It’s a slippery-slope deal,” says Dr. Deborah Peel, founder of Patient Privacy Rights, which advocates for medical-data confidentiality. She worries employers could conceivably make other conclusions about people who load up the cart with butter and sugar.

Analytics firms and health insurers say they obey medical-privacy regulations, and employers never see the staff’s personal health profiles but only an aggregate picture of their health needs and expected costs. And if the targeted approach feels too intrusive, employees can ask to be placed on the wellness program’s do-not-call list.

For their part, companies say tracking employees’ medical data saves money because they use it to make people healthier�and sometimes reward them in other ways, too.

Johnson & Johnson, for example, pays employees $500 to submit their biometrics and other health information; J&J then offers eligible employees an additional $250 if they get pregnancy counseling, enroll in a disease-management program or get their colonoscopy on time. The “tailored and targeted messages” paired with the monetary incentives are a “great way to bring people to participate in the program,” says Dr. Fikry Isaac, the company’s vice president of global health services.

With companies under more pressure than ever to reduce health-care spending, the so-called advanced analytics industry provides an opportunity to zero in on errant employees and alter their behavior. “As an employer, I want you on that medication that you need to be on,” says Julie Stone, a Towers Watson TW +0.09% benefits consultant.

Baucus Battered By Voters For Health Care Stand

Sen. Max Baucus got some not-so friendly advice from his Montana constituents last week as he works to reform the health care system: You’re doing it all wrong.

Baucus, the chair of the Finance Committee and the leader of reform efforts in the Senate, scheduled 20 town hall meetings with constituents across the state to talk about the future of health care. The Senate was out of session, but Baucus, a Democrat, didn’t personally attend. Instead, he sent staff and a video-recorded message.

“I really want to hear from all of you,” Baucus said on the video, according to local media. “You’re my employers. You’re my bosses. You’re the people I work for. I’m just the hired hand. I want to hear what you want to see in any legislation we pass in Washington, D.C.”

He got what he asked for.

Five separate accounts of the meetings, published in four different local papers, show Montana voters were downright hostile to Baucus’ reform proposal. Baucus has been a staunch opponent of single-payer health care, a system in which the government would provide universal coverage.

Baucus has kept single-payer advocates out of negotiations and has yet to endorse a compromise proposal by Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) that would give Americans the option of buying into a publicly run plan that would compete with private insurers.

That stance put his staffers up against a wall, facing angry constituents fed up by what they viewed as a lack of courage in Washington.

“Majority wants single-payer health care,” headlined an account in the Helena Independent Record.

At several of the events, Montanans’ ire was directed at Baucus chief of staff Jon Selib, who defended the employer-based coverage system that he estimated covers 150 million Americans.

“A lot of people like that,” Selib said.

When the time came for questions, [self-employed consultant Steve] McArthur stood up and asked a simple question. Looking across a standing-room-only crowd of about 275, he asked how many were happy with their employer-based health insurance.

Fewer than 10 people raised their hands.

“The [argument] is bogus,” McArthur said. “It’s not working for 95 percent of us.”

In fact, any mention of single-payer health care insurance brought raucous cheers and clapping. Any other solution to health care reform – including Baucus’ “balanced” plan that would create a mix of public and private plans – was received more coolly.

Continue reading…

Monday, February 25, 2013

Abortion-Rights Advocates Pin Hopes On Defense Bill

More From Shots - Health News HealthPediatricians Urged To Treat Ear Infections More CautiouslyHealthHow 'Crunch Time' Between School And Sleep Shapes Kids' HealthHealthAncient Chompers Were Healthier Than OursHealthContagion On The Couch: CDC App Poses Fun Disease Puzzles

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Ashley-Care: Gaining Peace of Mind by Getting Coverage Through a Parent’s Health Plan

Ashley Matthews, recent graduate of the University of Miami School of Law, considers herself very aware of what is going on the world. But she admits, �Because I am so young, health care never entered my universe.� That is, until she got into a car accident one evening. That�s when she realized she didn�t have health insurance.

As she recalls: �I�m laying on the hospital bed � my shoes were knocked off my feet, my tooth is chipped and my knee is bleeding and I thought about the fact that I had just graduated from undergrad [and] I had no health care insurance because I wasn�t on my parents� plan and this is right before the Affordable Care Act.� Although the doctor wanted her to stay in the hospital for treatment, Ashley and her friends quickly left because she would not be able to afford the care without health insurance. �The threat of the bills was enough to send me running from the hospital,� she says.

Because of the Affordable Care Act, Ashley was later able to be added to her parents� insurance. More than 3 million young adults have been able to gain health insurance through their parents� health plans until they turn age 26 as a result of the new health care law. �When I found out that I could stay on my parents� insurance, it was like a blessing,� she says.

Ashley, who now has a job and health insurance through her employer, says she wants other young adults to find out about the protections afforded by the health care law because �you never know what�s going to happen in life. � You never know when that one accident will change your life � You�re one diagnosis away from being destitute.�

��The Affordable Care Act has meant stability to me and it�s meant peace of mind� Ashley says. �I would want everyone to please just take advantage of the opportunities that have been created by the Affordable Care Act.�

To learn more about young adult coverage and other benefits of the health care law, visit here.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

In British Emergency Room, 'There's No Card To Show; There Are No Bills'

More From Shots - Health News HealthContagion On The Couch: CDC App Poses Fun Disease PuzzlesHealthParents, Just Say No To Sharing Tales Of Drug Use With KidsHealthTreating HIV Patients Protects Whole CommunityHealthFeds Set New Rules For Controversial Bird Flu Research

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Morning-After Pills Don't Cause Abortion, Studies Say

More From Shots - Health News HealthTreating HIV Patients Protects Whole CommunityHealthFeds Set New Rules For Controversial Bird Flu ResearchHealthFlu Vaccine Has Been Feeble For Elderly This SeasonHealthMorning-After Pills Don't Cause Abortion, Studies Say

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Why The Hospital Wants The Pharmacist To Be Your Coach

More From Shots - Health News HealthMoney Replaces Willpower In Programs Promoting Weight LossHealthWhy The Hospital Wants The Pharmacist To Be Your CoachHealthHow The Sequester Could Affect Health CareHealthBritish Man Dies From SARS-Like Virus In U.K. Hospital

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Labor Campaign Pushes Healthcare as a Human Right

As most American progressives know, nearly every industrialized country in the world has a government-funded health care program�except the US. Not as many of us know, however, that in nearly all of those countries, organized labor was a central player in fighting for and defending those systems.

The unionists gathered over the weekend at the Labor Campaign for Single-Payer conference in Chicago argue that if universal health care is ever to be achieved in the US, labor must play a key role in pushing for it�which many have plans to do, particularly on the state level, in the near future.

The LCSP was founded in 2009 by a broad group of union activists, including Mark Dudzic, a former union local president, and longtime labor organizer and rabble-rouser Jerry Tucker. Tucker, who died late last year and was commemorated Friday by the campaign, was a stalwart organizer at the rank-and-file level, having little interest in the shifts of power in labor�s upper echelons. That spirit clearly still animates the campaign; attendees seemed to see the hopes for single-payer to come not from on high, but through organizing at labor�s grassroots.

Campaign activists, like many on the left, acknowledged the Affordable Care Act�s positive outcomes like some expanded coverage and the expansion of Medicaid while arguing it does not go nearly far enough in its reforms. Dudzic, the national coordinator of the campaign, says that labor and the progressive movement face a pivotal choice after the ACA has been cemented as the law of the land.

�We�re in a new strategic position,� Dudzic says. �We can either circle the wagons around what�s already been accomplished�which anybody who�s been around for the last 30 years would know is a strategy destined for failure�or we can continue to move forward to real health care justice.

�We want to challenge labor to keep moving.�

Many activists are looking to Vermont as an example to follow. The Green Mountain State saw a successful campaign for single-payer that began in 2008. The fight was led by labor�not by a traditional union, but by the Vermont Workers Center, a community-based worker rights organization, who assembled a broad coalition including many unions that successfully pushed single-payer legislation around a �health care is a human right� framework.

Leslie Matthews, a member of the VWC, says that while full implementation of single-payer is several years away in the state, the laws have already had significant impact. When the University of Vermont�s Fletcher Allen hospital decided their dialysis services were no longer profitable, they looked to a $26 million bid to a for-profit company to privatize them. Alongside the Vermont Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals, the VWC mobilized against this move, saying it was incompatible with the state�s single-payer legislation like H. 202 and Act 48 and demanded the state�s Department of Banking, Insurance, Securities and Health Care Administration reject the offer. They did.

�Our activists pointed to the law and said, �Health care is a public good. Privatizing these services is in conflict with this concept,�� Matthews says. �That was influential in convincing them to disallow the sale.�

Vermont is a small state, but the example of its success could be huge. VWC staff and activists have traveled the country talking to other activists about their campaign.

�We�re hopeful that we can lead the way,� Matthews says. �The chances of our success are greatly improved by other states following our lead.�

Activists from other states at the conference are looking to do just that. Unionists from Maine, Oregon, and California mentioned the possibility of launching similar campaigns.

Matt Schlobohm, executive director of the Maine AFL-CIO, says a single-payer push will soon begin in his state, taking cues from Vermont. The Maine AFL-CIO has hosted Vermont activists several times to hear lessons from that campaign, and plans to frame their campaign in similar terms.

�A human rights framework reframes the debate,� he says. �It connects with people, and poses the entire conversation as a values conversation.�

Schlobohm wants to see a campaign based on deep education and mobilization of union members and other single-payer supporters, rather than centering solely around a piece of legislation.

�Vermont has built a successful model of organizing based on one on one conversations, collecting people�s stories and using them to put a broken healthcare system on trial,� he says. By running a similar campaign, Maine can �build sufficient power to change the parameters of what�s possible.�

Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis, who led her union out on strike in September with a broad community-labor coalition at its back, spoke Friday night, saying labor has an �absolute moral obligation� to push for single-payer.

Lewis recalled the organizing with parents, community groups, clergy, and other unions, including the CTU and Lewis�s Caucus of Rank-and-File Educators, did in the years leading up to the strike that helped lead to a contract that included both gains for teachers and steps towards educational justice for students. It is not difficult to imagine health care workers unions pushing for similar coalitions to advance single-payer, as some nurses unions have done.

�They have their coalitions,� Lewis said of the forces allied against public health care. �We need to build ours.�

While most hopes remain at the state level, there will likely be some national legislative rumblings around single-payer in 2013. Rep. John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI), who spoke at the conference, first proposed HB 676, �Medicare for All,� in 2003 to the House of Representatives, and plans on holding hearings on it this year. The bill has served as an important organizing tool around single-payer for unions. Single-payer activists have used the bill to begin conversations with their fellow union members and local leadership; nearly 600 national unions and union locals have endorsed it.

Unions� interest in single-payer does not spring solely from altruistic principles; it�s in their self-interest. Unions are facing crises in bargaining as they try to convince employers to cover health care costs that are continuing to rise and showing no signs of slowing. Because health plans are provided by employers rather than the government, employers bear the cost of them�meaning negotiated gains in workers� health care are necessarily coming at the expense of other contract items like wages. A single-payer system could potentially produce a big wage increase for workers: as companies are freed from astronomically expensive health plans and no longer able to claim poverty as a result of providing insurance, workers could demand their employers pay them the difference.

Most public health care programs in the industrialized world were passed at the height of the Keynesian consensus, when such services were expected and demanded of governments. Making the case for such programs today, at a time of voracious austerity and rabid right-wing pushback, like the �death panels� talk during the debates over the ACA, will prove difficult, but Dudzic and others think the example of states like Vermont show it can be done�with the help of labor and others.

�In the US, health care is not a right, it�s a business�the biggest, most profitable business in the history of capitalism,� Dudzic says. �Those are the kinds of entrenched interests you�re up against. That�s why we are building a powerful social movement to take them on.�

Friday, February 15, 2013

HealthMap Vaccine Finder: Helping Adults Find the Vaccines They Need

When we talk about vaccines, most people think of �flu� or �childhood immunizations.� But there are actually a number of vaccines available to protect adults from serious infectious diseases and their long-term consequences. Adult vaccines can prevent diseases such as shingles, pneumonia and whooping cough. The HPV vaccine can prevent cervical cancer. And the hepatitis B vaccine also prevents the liver cancer that can develop as a result of chronic hepatitis B infection.

In the past many Americans faced financial barriers to immunization, but thanks to the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans now have free access to the vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices without co-payments or other cost-sharing requirements when those services are delivered by an in-network provider.

Despite the numerous benefits of vaccination, too many adults are not getting the protection that they need.� So, starting this month, it will be even easier for adults to find where to get vaccinated. Now, you can just go online and enter an address or zip code and HealthMap Vaccine Finder will locate nearby immunization providers (including health clinics and pharmacies) that offer the vaccinations routinely recommended for adults. In addition to telling people where to get the flu vaccine, the HealthMap Vaccine Finder will now tell consumers where to find providers of 10 other vaccines, including:

Hepatitis AHepatitis BHerpes Zoster (Shingles)HPV (Human Papillomavirus)MMR (Measles, Mumps, Rubella)Varicella (Chickenpox)Td (Tetanus and Diphtheria)Tdap (Tetanus, Diphtheria, and Pertusis)MeningococcalPneumococcalhttp://wcdapps.hhs.gov/Badges/Handlers/Badge.ashx?js=0&widgetname=vaccinefinderw199

The new HealthMap Vaccine Finder is an expansion of the Flu Vaccine Finder, and lists more than 50,000 providers across the country that offer flu vaccinations, searchable by vaccine delivery type (nasal spray, shot, etc.) and location. To find out where to get vaccinated in your area, go to vaccines.gov!

HealthMap Vaccine Finder: Helping Adults Find the Vaccines They Need

When we talk about vaccines, most people think of �flu� or �childhood immunizations.� But there are actually a number of vaccines available to protect adults from serious infectious diseases and their long-term consequences. Adult vaccines can prevent diseases such as shingles, pneumonia and whooping cough. The HPV vaccine can prevent cervical cancer. And the hepatitis B vaccine also prevents the liver cancer that can develop as a result of chronic hepatitis B infection.

In the past many Americans faced financial barriers to immunization, but thanks to the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans now have free access to the vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices without co-payments or other cost-sharing requirements when those services are delivered by an in-network provider.

Despite the numerous benefits of vaccination, too many adults are not getting the protection that they need.� So, starting this month, it will be even easier for adults to find where to get vaccinated. Now, you can just go online and enter an address or zip code and HealthMap Vaccine Finder will locate nearby immunization providers (including health clinics and pharmacies) that offer the vaccinations routinely recommended for adults. In addition to telling people where to get the flu vaccine, the HealthMap Vaccine Finder will now tell consumers where to find providers of 10 other vaccines, including:

Hepatitis AHepatitis BHerpes Zoster (Shingles)HPV (Human Papillomavirus)MMR (Measles, Mumps, Rubella)Varicella (Chickenpox)Td (Tetanus and Diphtheria)Tdap (Tetanus, Diphtheria, and Pertusis)MeningococcalPneumococcalhttp://wcdapps.hhs.gov/Badges/Handlers/Badge.ashx?js=0&widgetname=vaccinefinderw199

The new HealthMap Vaccine Finder is an expansion of the Flu Vaccine Finder, and lists more than 50,000 providers across the country that offer flu vaccinations, searchable by vaccine delivery type (nasal spray, shot, etc.) and location. To find out where to get vaccinated in your area, go to vaccines.gov!

Thursday, February 14, 2013

HealthMap Vaccine Finder: Helping Adults Find the Vaccines They Need

When we talk about vaccines, most people think of �flu� or �childhood immunizations.� But there are actually a number of vaccines available to protect adults from serious infectious diseases and their long-term consequences. Adult vaccines can prevent diseases such as shingles, pneumonia and whooping cough. The HPV vaccine can prevent cervical cancer. And the hepatitis B vaccine also prevents the liver cancer that can develop as a result of chronic hepatitis B infection.

In the past many Americans faced financial barriers to immunization, but thanks to the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans now have free access to the vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices without co-payments or other cost-sharing requirements when those services are delivered by an in-network provider.

Despite the numerous benefits of vaccination, too many adults are not getting the protection that they need.� So, starting this month, it will be even easier for adults to find where to get vaccinated. Now, you can just go online and enter an address or zip code and HealthMap Vaccine Finder will locate nearby immunization providers (including health clinics and pharmacies) that offer the vaccinations routinely recommended for adults. In addition to telling people where to get the flu vaccine, the HealthMap Vaccine Finder will now tell consumers where to find providers of 10 other vaccines, including:

Hepatitis AHepatitis BHerpes Zoster (Shingles)HPV (Human Papillomavirus)MMR (Measles, Mumps, Rubella)Varicella (Chickenpox)Td (Tetanus and Diphtheria)Tdap (Tetanus, Diphtheria, and Pertusis)MeningococcalPneumococcalhttp://wcdapps.hhs.gov/Badges/Handlers/Badge.ashx?js=0&widgetname=vaccinefinderw199

The new HealthMap Vaccine Finder is an expansion of the Flu Vaccine Finder, and lists more than 50,000 providers across the country that offer flu vaccinations, searchable by vaccine delivery type (nasal spray, shot, etc.) and location. To find out where to get vaccinated in your area, go to vaccines.gov!

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Payment Can Be Elusive For Medicare Beneficiaries In Personal Injury Cases

More From Shots - Health News HealthWorld's Most Popular Painkiller Raises Heart Attack RiskHealthFolic Acid For Pregnant Mothers Cuts Kids' Autism RiskHealthHospital Observation Units Fill Gaps, But Patients May Foot The BillHealthAttacks On Health Workers Put Fight To End Polio Under Fire

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Progress Continues in Setting up Health Insurance Marketplaces

Ten months from today, Americans in every state can begin to choose health insurance in new state marketplaces where they will have access to affordable coverage.� Many will have never had health insurance, or had been forced to make the decision to go without insurance after losing a job or becoming sick.� It is a groundbreaking time for health care in our country.

Today, we�re announcing that six states who applied early have made enough progress setting up their own marketplaces or Exchanges that we are ready to conditionally approve their plans�meaning they are on track to meet all Exchange deadlines.� These early applicant, early approval states include: Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, Oregon, and Washington.�

We are excited to be reviewing applications from other states making progress in building their Exchange.� We will make many more announcements like this in the weeks and months to come and expect that the majority of states will play an active role operating their Exchanges.

Some states have requested additional information to help guide their work implementing the health care law.� We value the hard work states are undertaking and to ensure that states have all the information they need to move forward, today we are providing more information that will answer some questions states have been asking.� You can read the letter I sent to Governors here.

This letter follows information we have provided to states in the past month to help them build their Exchanges, expand and improve their Medicaid programs, and make health care coverage more affordable for every American.� It answers frequently asked questions by state officials, summarizing previous guidance and offering new information.�

For example, we explain how Exchanges and Medicaid administrative costs will be funded and how we will continue exploring opportunities to provide States additional support for the administrative costs of eligibility changes.� We clarify in our new guidance that states have the flexibility in Medicaid and the Children�s Health Insurance Program to provide premium assistance for Exchange plans as well as to adopt �bridge plans� that offer coverage through both Medicaid and Exchanges � keeping individuals and families together when they cross the line between Exchanges and Medicaid.� And, while the law does not create an option for enhanced match for a partial or phased-in Medicaid expansion to 133 percent of poverty, we will consider waivers at the regular matching rate now and, in 2017 when the 100 percent federal funding for the expansion group is slightly reduced, broad-based State Innovation Waivers.�

We hope states will take advantage of the substantial resources available to help them insure more of their residents. As an independent report highlighted, �Accounting for factors that reduce costs, states as a whole are likely to see net savings from the Medicaid expansion.�

Today�s approval for these six early states and our continued effort to give states the guidance and tools they need to move forward, ensures that starting in October 2013, consumers in all states can begin filling out applications for private health insurance in affordable, quality plans. ��And our work with states will continue.� If states decide they want to play a larger role in running the new marketplace in their state in 2015, 2016 and beyond, we will work with them so they can have the opportunity to take on that role. �We are excited about the progress we�re announcing today, and we will continue to work side-by-side with states as they implement the critical reforms to our health care system that our citizens need and deserve.���

Monday, February 11, 2013

After Supreme Court Ruling, Health Law Will Cover Fewer And Cost Less

More From Shots - Health News HealthNeed A Price For A Hip Operation? Good Luck With ThatHealthU.S. Fertility Rates Fall To All-Time LowHealthHow Parents Can Learn To Tame A Testy TeenagerHealthWhy Even Radiologists Can Miss A Gorilla Hiding In Plain Sight

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New Gains Seen in Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care for Young Adults

The Affordable Care Act, the health care law signed by President Obama in 2010, has resulted in substantial increases in health insurance coverage for young adults, according to a new report published by Health Affairs.

The report posted online and scheduled for Health Affairs� January issue, also shows that the law has led to significant reductions in the number of young adults who delayed or did not get needed care because of cost. The report provides proof that the health care law resulted in increased access to health care for young adults.

These gains have come due to the law�s provision that allows young adults to remain on their parents� family plan until their 26th birthday, even if they move away from home or graduate from school. This policy took effect September 23, 2010, helping more than 3 million young adults gain health coverage.

For young adults like Justin Metcalf, who has a rare genetic lung disease, getting coverage means more security and the freedom to take the time to graduate school or choose the job that�s best for him without worrying whether it comes with health insurance.

Among the report�s findings:

Coverage for young adults was up 6.7 percentage points from September 2010 to September 2011.Coverage gains have been significant across all racial and ethnic groups, married and unmarried young adults, and working and non-working individuals.Coverage increases were significant for both men and women, although much larger for men, who had much lower coverage rates before the Affordable Care Act.There were significant reductions in the number of young adults who delayed receiving care and in those who did not receive care because of cost.

This report is the latest to document how the health care law is helping millions of Americans gain access to affordable health care coverage and security they need and deserve.

And beginning in 2014, Americans will have even better coverage options with the creation of new health insurance marketplaces or Exchanges, in which individuals and small-business owners will have the opportunity to choose from a range of quality, affordable health plans to find one that fits their needs and budget.

The report can be found at http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/early/2012/12/13/hlthaff.2012.0552

For more information about the Affordable Care Act and young adults, please see http://www.healthcare.gov/news/factsheets/2011/08/young-adults.html and http://www.aspe.hhs.gov/aspe/gaininginsurance/rb.shtml

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Health Care Spending In America, In Two Graphs

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Countdown to Affordable Health Insurance

January is the perfect month for looking forward to new and great things around the corner.

I�m feeling that way about the new Health Insurance Marketplace. Anticipation is building, and this month we start an important countdown, first to October 1, 2013, when open enrollment begins, and continuing on to January 1, 2014, the start of new health insurance coverage for millions of Americans. In October, many of you�ll be able to shop for health insurance that meets your needs at the new Marketplace at HealthCare.gov.

This is an historic time for those Americans who never had health insurance, who had to go without insurance after losing a job or becoming sick, or who had been turned down because of a pre-existing condition. Because of these new marketplaces established under the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans will have new access to affordable health insurance coverage.

Over the last two years we�ve worked closely with states to begin building their health insurance marketplaces, also known as Exchanges, so that families and small-business owners will be able to get accurate information to make apples-to-apples comparisons of private insurance plans and, get financial help to make coverage more affordable if they�re eligible.

That is why we are so excited about launching the newly rebuilt HealthCare.gov website, where you�ll be able to buy insurance from qualified private health plans and check if you are eligible for financial assistance � all in one place, with a single application. Many individuals and families will be eligible for a new kind of tax credit to help lower their premium costs.�If your state is running its own Marketplace, HealthCare.gov will make sure you get to the right place.

The Marketplace will offer much more than any health insurance website you�ve used before. Insurers will compete for your business on a level playing field, with no hidden costs or misleading fine print.

It�s not too soon to check out HealthCare.gov for new information about the Marketplace and tips for things you can do now to prepare for enrollment.� And, make sure to sign up for emails or text message updates, so you don�t miss a thing when it�s time to enroll.

There is still work to be done to make sure the insurance market works for families and small businesses. But, for millions of Americans, the time for having the affordable, quality health care coverage, security, and peace of mind they need and deserve is finally within sight.

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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Hundreds rally for single-payer healthcare in Oregon

Hundreds of people from all over Oregon rallied in Salem on the first day of the legislative session to call attention to what they claim is a broken health care system and call on lawmakers to enact reforms.

An estimated 1,000 protesters, many brandishing signs and wearing red �Health Care Is a Human Right� T-shirts, packed the Capitol steps to hear a dozen speakers tell horror stories of out-of-control medical costs and urge support for a single-payer health care bill.

Ten buses � including two from the mid-valley � delivered people from as far away as La Grande and Bandon, Ashland and Prineville for the lunchtime rally, organized by Health Care for All Oregon.

Rep. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, got a hearty cheer as he took the stage to talk about his plans to reintroduce the Affordable Health Care for All Oregon Act, which foundered in the 2011 session.

This time, he said, the notion of a comprehensive taxpayer-supported health care system for all Oregonians has broader support, with 19 co-sponsors already on board, compared to 11 last time.

But he also predicted that a statewide ballot measure would ultimately be required to enact a single-payer system in Oregon. Using emotionally charged language, he exhorted the audience to work toward passing an initiative in the 2016 election.

�Brothers and sisters,� Dembrow said, �the real work here is not going to be done inside this building. It�s going to be done outside this building, in all parts of Oregon, by all of you.�

Two of his co-sponsors, Reps. Jennifer Williamson of Portland and Dave Gomberg of Lincoln City, also spoke in support of the bill.

Monday�s rally had a festive air, with musicians performing protest songs, a 10-foot-tall puppet dubbed Big Nurse, and activists wearing open-backed hospital gowns that exposed padded foam derrierres to illustrate what private insurance just won�t cover.

The crowd, roughly six times the size of a similar gathering two years ago to support Dembrow�s previous single-payer bill, chanted and sang, cheered and shouted for a parade of speakers lamenting the ills of private heath insurance.

Wes Brain of Ashland recounted his daughter�s nine-year struggle with leukemia � and with a succession of insurance companies that didn�t want to pay for her care.

He recently marked the fourth anniversary of her death � and began his own battle against cancer. Unlike his daughter, Brain has no insurance.

�The bills are coming in,� he said, �and I just don�t have the money to pay them.�

The Rev. Joel Miller, pastor of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Corvallis, spoke of his personal conversion from a free market capitalist whose parents ran a small business to a single payer advocate who sees how runaway health care costs are crippling the economy. Now that he�s an employer himself, he said, his eyes have been opened to the shortcomings of a system that ties health care access to employment.

�The system of coverage I�m working with is expensive, inefficient and flat-out immoral,� he said. �My employees live in terror of losing their health coverage. We all live in terror.�

Between speakers, event organizer Jess Hoffman of Health Care for All Oregon urged attendees to meet personally with their local legislators and lobby for single-payer health care.

�We really want to make sure we capture the energy of this moment today,� she said, �so we can use it for the rest of the movement.�

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Many Medicaid Patients Could Face Higher Fees

Millions of low-income people could be required to pay more for health care under a proposed federal policy that would give states more freedom to impose co-payments and other charges on Medicaid patients.

Hoping to persuade states to expand Medicaid, the Obama administration said state Medicaid officials could charge higher co-payments and premiums for doctors� services, prescription drugs and certain types of hospital care, including the �nonemergency use� of emergency rooms. State officials have long asked for more leeway to impose such charges.

The 2010 health care law extended Medicaid to many childless adults and others who were previously ineligible. The Supreme Court said the expansion of Medicaid was an option for states, not a requirement as Congress had intended. The administration has been trying to persuade states to take the option, emphasizing that they can reconfigure Medicaid to hold down their costs and �promote the most effective use of services.�

In the proposed rule published Tuesday in the Federal Register, the administration said it was simplifying a complex, confusing array of standards that limit states� ability to charge Medicaid beneficiaries. Under the proposal, a family of three with annual income of $30,000 could be required to pay $1,500 in premiums and co-payments.

As if to emphasize the latitude given to states, the administration used this heading for part of the new rule: �Higher Cost Sharing Permitted for Individuals With Incomes Above 100 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level� (that is, $19,090 for a family of three).

Barbara K. Tomar, director of federal affairs at the American College of Emergency Physicians, said the administration had not adequately defined the �nonemergency services� for which low-income people could be required to pay. In many cases, she said, patients legitimately believe they need emergency care, but the final diagnosis does not bear that out.

�This is just a way to reduce payments to physicians and hospitals� from the government, Ms. Tomar said.

With patients paying more, the federal government and states would pay less than they otherwise would. Medicaid covers 60 million people, and at least 11 million more are expected to qualify under the 2010 law. The federal government pays more than half of Medicaid costs and will pay a much larger share for those who become eligible under the law.

In the proposed rule, the administration said it had discovered several potential problems in its efforts to carry out the law.

First, it said, it has not found a reliable, comprehensive and up-to-date source of information about whether people have employer-sponsored health insurance. The government needs such information to decide whether low- and middle-income people can obtain federal subsidies for private insurance.

The subsidies can be used to buy coverage in competitive marketplaces known as insurance exchanges. Under the law, people can start enrolling in October for coverage that starts in January 2014, when most Americans will be required to have health insurance. People who have access to affordable coverage from employers will generally be ineligible for subsidies.

In applying for subsidies, people must report any employer-sponsored insurance they have. But the administration said it could be difficult to verify this information because the main sources of data reflect only �whether an individual is employed and with which employer, and not whether the employer provides health insurance.�

Since passage of the health care law, the administration has often said that people seeking insurance would use a single streamlined application for Medicaid and the subsidies for private coverage. Moreover, the state Medicaid agency and the exchange are supposed to share data and issue a �combined eligibility notice� for all types of assistance.

But the administration said this requirement would be delayed to Jan. 1, 2015, because more time was needed to establish electronic links between Medicaid and the exchanges.

Leonardo D. Cuello, who represents Medicaid beneficiaries as a lawyer at the National Health Law Program, expressed concern.

�Under the proposed rule,� Mr. Cuello said, �many people will be funneled into health insurance exchanges even though they have special needs that are better met in Medicaid. And if you asked the right questions, you would find out that they are eligible for Medicaid.�

The federal government will have the primary responsibility for running exchanges in more than half the states. About 20 states are expected to expand Medicaid; governors in other states are opposed or uncommitted.

The proposed rule allows hospitals to decide, �on the basis of preliminary information,� whether a person is eligible for Medicaid. States must provide immediate temporary coverage to people who appear eligible.

Kenneth E. Raske, president of the Greater New York Hospital Association, said this could be a boon to low-income people. �Currently,� he said, �only children and pregnant women are presumed eligible for inpatient admissions under Medicaid in New York.�

The public has until Feb. 13 to comment on the proposed rule. Comments can be submitted at www.regulations.gov.

Celebrating Healthier Patients and Stronger Communities

Today we are celebrating the work of the National Health Service Corps in communities across the country.� This year�s theme is �Healthier Patients, Stronger Communities,� and that theme is reflected in the work that our NHSC providers do every day.

The National Health Service Corps helps improve access to health care in communities that need it most. �It provides financial support for doctors, nurses and other health care providers as well as students training for a career in primary care.� This financial support in the form of loan repayment and scholarships allows clinicians who are passionate about serving in our communities the ability to pursue jobs in primary care disciplines without the burden of overwhelming debt.�

Now, thanks to investments made by the Obama Administration there are close to 10,000 National Health Service Corps �doctors, dentists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, mental and behavioral health specialists, and other health providers treating more than 10.4 million people throughout the country.� In fact, the number of providers serving in the NHSC has nearly tripled from 3,600 since the start of the Obama Administration. �And, while Corps members commit to working for at least two years in high need areas, more than 82 percent decide to stay beyond their initial commitment, helping ensure more Americans get the care they need.

I am also excited to announce that this year, the health care law has invested almost $230 million in the NHSC through 4,600 loan repayment and scholarship awards to clinicians and students who are committed to working where they are needed most.

Today, we celebrate Corps Community Day to honor the important work of National Health Service Corps members who are bringing their talents to communities that need health care providers.� To those of you who are serving in the Corps or will serve, I want to say thank you. Thank you for the work you do each and every day to ensure that Americans get the primary care they need and deserve to lead healthy lives.

For stories from National Health Service Corps clinicians, please visit: http://nhsc.hrsa.gov/corpsexperience/memberstories/index.html� or http://nhsc.hrsa.gov/corpsexperience/40clinicians/index.html

Monday, February 4, 2013

Lesson Learned: A Curb On Drugmakers' Gifts To Medical Students

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Friday, February 1, 2013

White House Tries Again To Find Compromise On Contraception

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Nurses Union Will Keep Fighting for Medicare for All

Now that the Supreme Court has upheld the Affordable Care Act, former insurance company executive Wendell Potter�s appeal to single payer advocates to �bury the hatchet,� recently published in The Nation, is both misdirected and shortsighted.

Potter argues that insurance industry pirates will exploit left critiques of the ACA to subvert implementation of the law. He calls on proponents of more comprehensive reform to forgive and forget, embracing the massive concessions made by the Obama administration and its liberal allies.

But there are some gaping holes in this thinking.

First, the insurers hardly need to rely on the single-payer movement to sabotage elements of the law they don�t like. They have office towers full of high-priced lawyers who are adept at identifying loopholes in the much-touted consumer protection provisions, like the bans on pre-existing condition exclusions or dropping coverage when patients get sick, or limiting how much money can be siphoned off for profits and paperwork.

Second, let�s not have illusions about the history of the ACA.

Before he was elected, President Obama, an advocate of single-payer when he was in the Senate, called on progressives to push him. Instead, most of the liberals reduced themselves to cheerleading while all the pressure came from the right.

So when the healthcare bill was introduced, the President, with the active encouragement of groups like Health Care for America Now, blocked single payer from consideration. Persuading people through consent, rather than coercion, to accept inadequate solutions for societal needs has long been a key feature of the neoliberal agenda. It’s one reason so many people vote against their own interests.

To get any hearing from Sen. Max Baucus, who was running the Senate side of the debate, nurses, doctors, and single-payer healthcare activists had to get arrested in a Senate Finance Committee hearing. On the House side, Democrats who proposed single payer amendments endured heavy-handed threats from then-White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel. Meanwhile, then-Press Secretary Robert Gibbs publicly attacked the �professional left� who will only �be satisfied when we have Canadian healthcare and we�ve eliminated the Pentagon.�

It should not come as a surprise that negotiating with your supporters before engaging political opposition, and lecturing, hectoring and seeking to silence healthcare activists who have worked for years for real reform, Obama and the Democrats ended up with a weaker bill. That bill lacked the public option HCAN and other liberals had claimed would be their bottom line, while HCAN and other liberals embraced the individual mandate � the brainchild of the right-wing Heritage Foundation � as high principle.

Even with its positive elements � yes, it does have some � the Affordable Care Act uses public money to pad insurance profits (the subsidies to buy private insurance), prevents the government from using its clout to limit price gouging by the pharmaceutical giants, does little to effectively control rising healthcare costs for individuals and families that have made medical bankruptcies and self-rationing of care a national disgrace, and falls far short of the goal of universal coverage.

We can, as Michael Moore has said, acknowledge that the Supreme Court decision was a defeat for the opponents of any reform of our healthcare system without pretending that our nation�s health care crisis is over.

For three weeks in June and July, the California Nurses Association/National Nurses United sponsored a tour that drew about 1,000 people to free basic health screenings and another 2,000 to town hall meetings in big cities and rural communities across California. We heard a lot of stories like this one, from Carolyn Travao of Fresno:

I worked for Aetna health insurance for 15 years. When I took early retirement, I thought my Cobra would be manageable. Then they sent me a bill in January for $1,300 a month and I couldn�t pay it.

Soon after,

I had a heart attack. I knew I didn�t have health insurance. I have a mortgage. I had a 401(k) that I knew would get wiped out, so I didn�t go to the hospital. I stayed at home for 16 hours, suffering chest pains, praying that I would die because my son would be left homeless and I do have insurance to pay off my mortgage so if I die he would at least have a home. I couldn�t take the pain any longer and I kept passing out, and he kept saying “Mom, you�re going to die.”

�OK,” I said, “take me to emergency.” So we went to emergency. But when I got home, my bill was $135,000. I have $13,000 left in my 401k. I don�t think I can even start [paying]. I never thought I would lay there and want to die. But I would have rather died knowing that my son would be left homeless with no job.

Since the ACA�s cost control mechanisms for insurance companies are so weak � for example permitting insurers to charge far more based on age and where you live � and hospitals will still largely have free reign to impose un-payable bills, will Carolyn and millions like her really have guaranteed healthcare under the ACA?

Sadly, nurses who have seen far too many patients like Carolyn know the answer all too well. That is why nurses and our organization will never stop fighting for guaranteed healthcare based on a single standard of quality care for all that is not based on ability to pay and is not premised on protecting the profits of healthcare corporations that long ago wrote off patients like Carolyn Travao.

Unlike Wendell Potter and many of the liberals, nurses see the ACA as a floor, not a ceiling. It�s time now for those who say they recognize its limitations and believe in genuinely universal healthcare to join us in pushing for an improved and expanded Medicare for all.

Nurses respect the president. But they love their patients far too much not to go the distance for their patients� health and survival.