- KFF Health News Original Stories 3
- Top Trump Health Official Takes Swipes At ACA, Single-Payer In Enemy Territory
- No Gaps In Understanding: Here's Your Primer On Medigap Coverage
- How Soon Is Soon Enough To Learn You Have Alzheimer's?
- Political Cartoon: 'All It's Cracked Up To Be?'
- Administration News 1
- Verma Slams Popular Progressive Rallying Cry Saying 'Medicare For All' Would Become 'Medicare For None'
- Health Law 1
- With About Three Months Until Midterms, Democrats Press Hard On Health Care To Nab Swing Voters
- Government Policy 1
- Administration Failed To Document Parents' Consent In Leaving Children Behind When Being Deported, Official Claims
- Opioid Crisis 1
- Despite Concerted Efforts To Curb Opioid Crisis, Kentucky Overdose Deaths Rise 11.5 Percent In 2017
- Public Health 2
- Lowering Blood Pressure Can Help Stave Off Alzheimer's, 'Breakthrough' Study Finds
- Sperm Counts Have Been Dropping For Decades -- And Companies Are Seizing Opportunity To Ease Men's Concerns
- Health Care Personnel 1
- Health Care Big Wigs No Longer Turning To Universities When They Want To Step Out Of Executive Roles
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Top Trump Health Official Takes Swipes At ACA, Single-Payer In Enemy Territory
After a San Francisco speech focused mostly on Medicare, Seema Verma fielded questions that underscored the administration’s differences with California on other key health care issues. (Chad Terhune, 7/26)
No Gaps In Understanding: Here's Your Primer On Medigap Coverage
Seniors often don’t realize that private insurers are required to offer Medigap policies, or supplemental insurance, only when people first sign up for Medicare. (Judith Graham, 7/26)
How Soon Is Soon Enough To Learn You Have Alzheimer's?
Only about half of people with Alzheimer's symptoms get a diagnosis, partly out of fear of an incurable decline, doctors suspect. But Jose Belardo says facing the future allows him to plan for it. (Alex Smith, KCUR, 7/26)
Political Cartoon: 'All It's Cracked Up To Be?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'All It's Cracked Up To Be?'" by Joel Pett, Lexington Herald-Leader.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
AN ABOUT-FACE
Risk adjustment pause
Just a Midsummer’s Night Dream
Payments will resume.
- Anonymous
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
CMS Administrator Seema Verma said a "Medicare-For-All" system would divert attention away from seniors, and warned that people would be giving up complete control of their care to the government. Verma gave the speech in California, where the issue is a hot-button topic in the gubernatorial election.
The Associated Press:
Trump's Top Medicare Official Slams 'Medicare For All'
The Trump administration's Medicare chief on Wednesday slammed Sen. Bernie Sanders' call for a national health plan, saying "Medicare for All" would undermine care for seniors and become "Medicare for None." The broadside from Medicare and Medicaid administrator Seema Verma came in a San Francisco speech that coincides with a focus on health care in contentious midterm congressional elections. (7/25)
The Hill:
Top Trump Health Official Slams 'Medicare For All'
"Ideas like 'Medicare for all' would only serve to hurt and divert focus from seniors,” Verma said.
Verma said the focus of Medicare should be on seniors and disabled individuals and that expanding the program to cover younger, healthier people will drain the program of funding and deprive seniors of the coverage they need. “By choosing a socialized system, you are giving the government complete control over the decisions pertaining to your care or whether you receive care at all. It would be the furthest thing from patient-centric care,” Verma said. (Weixel, 7/25)
Modern Healthcare:
Verma Will Reject Any Single-Payer State Waivers
Thirty-three of the 57 Democrats who won primaries in swing districts this year expressed support some form of Medicare for all, according to data from the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. Nearly two-thirds of that group use the term in their campaign materials and just over a quarter are running in districts that President Donald Trump won. Verma said the focus of Medicare should be on seniors and disabled individuals, and she is concerned that moving millions more people into the program will cause the program to unravel as its finite funds would dry up. Earlier this year, the White House estimated that the Medicare trust fund will be insolvent by 2026, three years earlier than prior estimates. (Dickson, 7/25)
California Healthline:
Top Trump Health Official Takes Swipes At ACA, Single-Payer In Enemy Territory
Stepping into the land of the Trump resistance, Seema Verma flatly rejected California’s pursuit of single-payer health care as unworkable and dismissed the Affordable Care Act as too flawed to ever succeed. Speaking Wednesday at the Commonwealth Club here, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said she supports granting states flexibility on health care but indicated she would not give California the leeway it would need to spend federal money on a single-payer system. (Terhune, 7/26)
Politico Pro:
Verma: 'Medicare For All' Would Mean 'Medicare For None'
The debate over single payer in California has played a central role in the state's gubernatorial election. Expanding health care to all residents is a key campaign goal for Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the leading candidate. A single payer bill passed the Senate last year but has remained stalled in the Assembly. (Colliver and Cancryn, 7/25)
In other news from CMS —
Modern Healthcare:
CMS Proposes Slashing Clinic Visit Payments As Part Of Site-Neutral Policy
In a massive outpatient payment rule, the CMS on Wednesday proposed expanding its site neutral payment policy to clinic visits, a move that could save the agency hundreds of millions of dollars. Clinic visits, or checkups, are the most common service billed under the outpatient pay rule. The CMS often pays more for the same type of clinic visit in the hospital outpatient setting than in the physician office setting. (Dickson, 7/25)
With About Three Months Until Midterms, Democrats Press Hard On Health Care To Nab Swing Voters
Democrats see the Republicans' failure to repeal and replace the health law at the same time they were chipping away at its protections as a huge vulnerability that candidates can attack. Meanwhile, a new poll shows that the public will hold the Trump administration and the GOP-led Congress responsible for any pain they feel from premiums this year. And, Anthem reports better-than-expected profits.
The Washington Post:
A Year After GOP Measure’s Demise, Democrats See Health Care As A Winning Issue
One year ago, with the flick of his thumb, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) foiled the Republican Party’s quest to undo the Affordable Care Act and fulfill a seven-year promise to remake the health-care system. Now, three months from the midterm elections, health care remains a gaping political vulnerability for the GOP. Although Republicans have been unable to produce an alternative to the law, they have succeed in undoing key provisions that critics say are leading to rising premiums for individual buyers of health insurance. (DeBonis and Goldstein, 7/25)
The Hill:
Poll: Majority Says They Will Hold Trump Accountable For ObamaCare Failings
A majority of the public says they hold the Trump administration and Congress accountable for any problems with ObamaCare because they have made changes to the law, according to a poll released Wednesday. The Kaiser Family Foundation tracking poll found that a majority of those surveyed — 58 percent — said they hold the administration and Republican members of Congress responsible for any problems with the ACA moving forward, since they have made a number of changes to the law. (Hellmann, 7/25)
Reuters:
Insurer Anthem Profit Beats Estimates On Lower Patient Costs
Anthem Inc reported a better-than-expected profit on Wednesday, driven by higher premiums and lower patient medical costs even as fewer people enrolled in its insurance plans. Enrollment fell about 2.2 percent to 39.5 million members at the end of the quarter, hit by a decline in the number of people signing up for Medicaid as well as for its Obamacare plans. (Banerjee and Mathias, 7/25)
And some health law votes came out of Capitol Hill —
The Hill:
House Votes To Delay ObamaCare Health Insurance Tax
The House on Wednesday passed a measure to delay ObamaCare’s health insurance tax for two years and expand Health Savings Accounts, part of a GOP effort to try to lower premiums. The bill, which passed 242-176, is part of a Republican effort to blunt Democratic attacks on the GOP for rising premiums – a key argument in the midterm elections this year. (Sullivan, 7/25)
CQ:
House Passes Bills Targeting Health Savings Accounts
The votes come on the heels of Tuesday's House passage of a bill (HR 184) that would repeal the medical device tax and ahead of the House’s August recess, offering Republicans a health care message to point to when talking with constituents over the next few weeks. Republicans are touting the bills as a way to put Americans in greater control of their health spending as health care costs continue to rise. Health savings accounts, which are paired with high deductible health plans, allow people who maintain them to contribute pre-tax earnings to them each year and save for medical expenses. (McIntire, 7/25)
CQ:
After House Win, Medical Device Industry Pushes For Senate Vote
Industry groups say they’ll continue their hard press to secure a Senate vote to repeal a tax on medical device manufacturers this year. The House voted, 283-132, on Tuesday to repeal the 2.3 percent excise tax on medical device manufacturers levied under the 2010 health care law (PL 111-148, PL 111-152), but the Senate hasn’t indicated any plans to take up the legislation. (McIntire, 7/25)
In defense of its "zero-tolerance" policy separations, Trump administration officials have argued that immigrant parents made the decision to leave their children in America. The new information reported by Politico could undermine that position.
Politico:
Most Deported Migrants Were Not Asked About Leaving Children Behind, Trump Official Says
Homeland Security officials may have neglected to give a choice to as many as three-quarters of all migrant parents removed from the United States about leaving their children behind, contradicting repeated public assurances from Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen. The Trump administration failed to document consent in most such cases, an administration official told POLITICO. That lapse increased the number of departed parents whom officials must now find and contact about whether they wish to be reunited with their children, and, if so, figure out the logistics of how to bring them together. The revelation threatens to delay reunifications one day ahead of a court-ordered deadline to return most migrant children to their parents. (Hesson, Rayasam and Diamond, 7/25)
In other news —
Reuters:
Reunited Family's Next Challenge: Fighting For U.S. Asylum
Maria Marroquin Perdomo fretted as she waited with her 11-year-old son, Abisai, in the New Orleans International Airport. A day earlier, the mother and son had been reunited in Texas after being separated by U.S. immigration officials for more than a month, an ordeal that followed a harrowing journey from Honduras. Now they awaited another reunion: With the father Abisai had not seen in person since he was an infant. (Thevenot and Elliott, 7/25)
Arizona Republic:
Southwest Key Migrant Facilities See Sex Abuse, Harassment Allegations
Employees at two Arizona facilities housing migrant children separated from their parents at the border have been accused of inappropriate contact with minors on at least two occasions since 2015, including an incident that led to a conviction for sexual abuse, police records show. The reports were made at Southwest Key's Glendale and Tucson facilities and predate the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" policy that led to the separation of families that illegally crossed the U.S.-Mexico border. (Philip, 7/25)
Despite Concerted Efforts To Curb Opioid Crisis, Kentucky Overdose Deaths Rise 11.5 Percent In 2017
"We are in a crisis state," Republican Gov. Matt Bevin said. "While we are putting money at it and while we are drawing attention to it, until we start to truly address this and look at underlying causes of these things and what is leading to this it is not going to be addressed." Meanwhile, Medicare is pushing a new rule to reimburse hospitals more for non-opioid pain management drugs.
The Associated Press:
Kentucky Drug Overdose Deaths Jump 11.5 Percent In 2017
Since 2011, a year when Kentucky was flooded with 371 million doses of opioid painkillers, state officials have cracked down on pain clinics, sued pharmaceutical companies and limited how many pills doctors can prescribe. The result is nearly 100 million fewer opioid prescriptions in 2017 — and an 11.5 percent increase in drug overdose deaths. (Beam, 7/25)
Politico Pro:
Medicare Rule Pushes Higher Payment For Non-Opioid Painkillers
CMS is proposing new changes to payment policies for hospital outpatient departments and ambulatory surgical centers in 2019 to address the opioid crisis. Medicare would pay more for non-opioid pain management drugs used in surgical procedures at ambulatory surgery centers. (Karlin-Smith, 7/25)
And in other news on the national drug crisis —
The Associated Press:
With Rare Candor, Lovato Chronicled Her Recovery And Relapse
While most celebrities tend to hide their struggles with drugs and battles with depression, Demi Lovato not only acknowledged her issues, she’s shared them with the world. Lovato has been an open book since she announced in 2010 that she was checking into a rehabilitation center to deal with an eating disorder, self-mutilation and other issues. Over the next eight years, she became a role model and bona fide pop star, releasing multi-platinum songs and albums that range from playful to serious with lyrical content about her battles with drugs and alcohol. (Fekadu, 7/25)
The Associated Press:
EMT Pleads Guilty To Stealing Opioids, Replacing With Saline
A southern Missouri paramedic has pleaded guilty to stealing opioids and filling the empty vials with saline solution. The Springfield News-Leader reports that 30-year-old Zachary McCleary pleaded guilty Monday to tampering with a consumer product. Prosecutors say 18 patients in Barton County alone reported getting salt water instead of painkillers because of McCleary's actions. (7/25)
Kansas City Star:
Jackson County Files Federal Suit Against Opioid Industry
Jackson County has joined the parade of local governments suing a slew of large companies connected to the opioid industry. The county, represented by William Lee Dameron of Williams Dierks Dameron LLC, filed suit Wednesday in federal court, accusing opioid manufacturers, drug distributors and pharmacies of creating a “public health epidemic” by using deceptive marketing and evading regulations on selling controlled substances. (Marso and Ryan, 7/25)
Nashville Tennessean:
Where District 61 Candidates Stand On Addressing Tennessee's Opioid Crisis
As Tennesseans have grappled with the opioid crisis, Williamson County residents haven't sat unaffected. According to the latest data from the Tennessee Department of Health, 26 people in Williamson County died from a drug overdose in 2016. Of those who died, 19 suffered from an opioid overdose. (West, 7/25)
Lowering Blood Pressure Can Help Stave Off Alzheimer's, 'Breakthrough' Study Finds
This would be the first time a single change could result in lowering people's chances at getting the disease.
The Associated Press:
Study: Lowering Blood Pressure Helps Prevent Mental Decline
Lowering blood pressure more than usually recommended not only helps prevent heart problems, it also cuts the risk of mental decline that often leads to Alzheimer's disease, a major study finds. It's the first time a single step has been clearly shown to help prevent a dreaded condition that has had people trying crossword puzzles, diet supplements and a host of other things in hope of keeping their mind sharp. (7/25)
The Wall Street Journal:
Aggressive Blood Pressure Treatment Reduces Cognitive Risk, Study Says
The study showed that using common medications to reduce systolic blood pressure to below 120 reduced the risk of mild cognitive impairment by about 19% compared with lowering to less than 140—the standard target until a few years ago. Mild cognitive impairment is a slight but noticeable decline in memory and other thinking skills and is considered a potential precursor to dementia. It increases a patient’s risk of Alzheimer’s disease, the dementia-causing disorder that affects about 5.7 million Americans. (Loftus, 7/25)
The Washington Post:
A Healthier Heart May Mean A Healthier Mind, New Study Shows
The findings, which are expected to be published later this year, could provide a relatively easy way to lower the rate of Alzheimer’s dementia, which in the United States is 10 percent of people 65 and older. “For many years now, we’ve observed that people with lower blood pressure, even if it’s achieved through medication, have a lower risk for developing dementia,” said Jeff Williamson, professor of internal medicine and epidemiology and chief of geriatric medicine at Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, N.C., who presented the study. “Now, for the first time in history, we have something to say if you lower your blood pressure you can lower your risk for mild cognitive impairment and dementia.” (Bahrampour, 7/25)
Los Angeles Times:
Another Reason To Keep Your Blood Pressure Down: It Can Lower Your Risk Of Dementia
Systolic blood pressure is the amount of pressure in a person’s arteries during the contraction of her heart muscle. Because it is the highest pressure to which the blood vessels are subjected, systolic blood pressure is thought to have the most detrimental impact on the delicate capillaries that nourish the brain as well as the kidneys, heart and liver. In large populations, lowering that reading to 120 already has been found to reduce rates of cardiovascular disease and kidney failure. (Healy, 7/25)
Bloomberg:
Lowering Your Blood Pressure Could Stave Off Dementia
For the first time in history, researchers have found medicine that can reduce the risk of memory loss and dementia in your golden years. Even better, most forms of the treatment are available in safe, inexpensive generic formulations. The twist? These drugs have been around for decades, since they’re widely used to lower blood pressure and ward off heart disease. (Cortez, 7/25)
Meanwhile, in other news —
The Associated Press:
Ultrasound Jiggles Open Brain Barrier, A Step To Better Care
A handful of Alzheimer’s patients signed up for a bold experiment: They let scientists beam sound waves into the brain to temporarily jiggle an opening in its protective shield. The so-called blood-brain barrier prevents germs and other damaging substances from leaching in through the bloodstream — but it can block drugs for Alzheimer’s, brain tumors and other neurologic diseases, too. Canadian researchers on Wednesday reported early hints that technology called focused ultrasound can safely poke holes in that barrier — holes that quickly sealed back up — a step toward one day using the non-invasive device to push brain treatments through. (Neergaard, 7/25)
Where there's a potential health crisis, there comes a way to make money from it. Companies are popping up with at-home sperm tests, sperm health scores and sperm cryobanking services. In other public health news: Zika's destructive power, physician-assisted suicide, brain injuries in soldiers, eating disorders, and more.
The New York Times:
Men Are Panicking About Their Sperm Count
Dr. Paul Turek was on his way to speak to employees at a cryptocurrency investment firm one recent afternoon about a growing anxiety for the men in the office: what’s going on with their sperm? Is there enough? Is the existing supply satisfactory? Are we men enough? “They’re worried, right?” Dr. Turek said. “And we’re O.K. with the worry.” (Bowles, 7/25)
Stat:
Zika's Destructive Power Might Be Turned Against Tumors, Scientists Say
As the world discovered in 2016, the seemingly benign Zika virus is capable of inflicting life-altering damage when it finds its way into the developing brains of fetuses. Now scientists hope to harness that horrible potential as a weapon to fight cancer. Several research groups are exploring whether Zika viruses could be unleashed on cancers, effectively wiping out the dangerous cells of a brain or central nervous system cancer. One group, at Nemours Children’s Hospital in Orlando, published findings of early-stage work Wednesday in the journal PLOS One. (Branswell, 7/25)
The Washington Post:
Physician-Assisted-Suicide Opponent J.J. Hanson Chose To Live Out His Last Days
There was a time — several months after J.J. Hanson was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer, but several years before he died from it — when, he once said, he might have considered ending it all. The husband and father said in 2015 that the previous year, he learned that he had a Grade 4 brain tumor called glioblastoma multiforme and was given four months to live. He had been fighting the cancer, but now, sick in bed and worried about becoming a burden to his family, he was lost in his thoughts. (Bever, 7/25)
NPR:
Brain Injuries And Shoulder-Launched Assault Weapons
Chris Ferrari was just 18 the first time he balanced a rocket launcher on his right shoulder and aimed it at a practice target. "Your adrenaline's going and you're trying to focus on getting that round to hit, and then you go to squeeze that trigger and, you know." Boom! (Hamilton, 7/25)
The Wall Street Journal:
How Virtual Reality Is Being Used To Treat Eating Disorders
Shortly after the young woman walks into Howard Gurr’s psychology practice, she is taken to a beach and encouraged to relax. She is helped to feel calm and let go of her worries. Dr. Gurr then changes course, bringing his patient to a restaurant or other place that is a source of anxiety. Dr. Gurr doesn’t change offices every day. He’s a therapist who is using virtual-reality scenery to tackle the anxieties and body-image issues of patients with eating disorders like anorexia, bulimia and binge eating. (Colville, 7/25)
Iowa Public Radio:
Sharp Increase In Gun Suicides Signals Growing Public Health Crisis
The conversation around gun violence in the U.S. usually focuses on homicides, urban crime and mass shootings. But the overwhelming majority of gun deaths in America don't involve bad guys with guns. They're caused by people deliberately harming themselves. (Mann, 7/26)
The Washington Post:
Pregnant Women Took Generic Viagra In A Clinical Drug Trial. Eleven Babies Died.
Dutch doctors were trying to answer a simple question about a popular drug: Could the active ingredient in Viagra be used to help a particular group of at-risk babies often born tiny and premature with slim chances of survival? The study had already been conducted in New Zealand and Australia, according to Amsterdam Universitair Medische Centra (University Medical Center), which headed the latest trial. The Dutch component involved some 183 pregnant women who suffered from fetal growth restriction, where an underdeveloped placenta can’t get enough oxygen or nutrients to a gestating baby. (Wootson, 7/25)
The Washington Post:
Happy Birthday, Louise Brown! 40 Years After The First IVF Baby, 8 Million More And Counting
“I would hope that within a very few years … instead of this being a seven-day wonder this will become a fairly commonplace affair.” Those prescient words were spoken by Robert Edwards, a 52-year-old Cambridge physician on July 25, 1978, when he announced the wondrous birth of baby girl who was the first to be conceived outside the body. Louise Joy Brown, born healthy and screaming at 5 pounds 12 ounces, made headlines around the world and gave new hope to infertile couples everywhere. Scientists “hailed it as a momentous medical achievement,” according to the New York Daily News. “The jubilation was tempered, however, by warnings over the morality and ethics of producing human life in the laboratory.” (Cha, 7/25)
Health Care Big Wigs No Longer Turning To Universities When They Want To Step Out Of Executive Roles
Instead, these high-profile names are heading to Google companies. In other news, former HHS Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell reflects on her time in office, the health law and more in Politico's Pulse Check.
Stat:
Powerful People In Health Care Are Finding A New Landing Pad: Google
It used to be that big-name health care officials and executives on their way out of power would take a cozy perch at a university. Now? More and more of them are landing at Google companies. Dr. Toby Cosgrove, the longtime president and CEO of Cleveland Clinic, is the latest health care bigwig to pick Google as a landing pad. He’ll become an executive adviser to Google Cloud’s team working on health care and life sciences, the company announced recently. (Robbins, 7/26)
Politico:
Pulse Check: Sylvia Mathews Burwell
Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the former HHS secretary and current American University president, reflects on her work in the Obama administration, the fate of the Affordable Care Act and her new challenges in higher ed. (7/25)
Iowa, which has nearly 40 percent fewer psychiatrists per capita than average, is revamping its mental health care. “There’s a lot of energy and focus on this. It’s exciting,” said Tyler VanMilligen, one of the new psychiatric residents. News about hospitals comes out of New Orleans, Washington, D.C., California and Texas, as well.
Des Moines Register:
Des Moines Hospitals Counter Psychiatrist Shortage By Training Their Own
Before now, University of Iowa Hospitals in Iowa City had the only psychiatry training program in the state — and it could not keep up with demand. The result has been a worsening shortage of psychiatrists, forcing many Iowa patients to wait weeks or even months for an appointment. Several Iowa hospitals have closed their mental health units in recent years, citing a lack of qualified staff, including psychiatrists. Experts say the main problem used to be that few young doctors wanted to be psychiatrists. That’s no longer true. The past several years have seen a surge of medical school graduates wanting to join the specialty — but there aren’t nearly enough psychiatric training programs to take them. (Leys, 7/25)
New Orleans Times-Picayune:
Public Forum On Charity Hospital Will Have A Big Piece Missing
Greater New Orleans residents on Wednesday evening (July 25) will get their initial look at a first-of-its-kind economic development district proposed for the central business district that will be centered around the abandoned Charity Hospital. A meeting being organized by the Greater New Orleans Foundation, which is leading the public engagement effort for the "Spirit of Charity Innovation District," will hold a community workshop to help residents envision what the district will look like. Design Jones LLC is assisting GNOF with a strategic plan for the district, and is helping gather public input for what it will look like. (Litten, 7/25)
Modern Healthcare:
Ascension To Close Washington, D.C., Hospital
Ascension will close its 283-bed hospital in Washington D.C. by the end of the year as it looks to replace its acute-care services with more ambulatory services, the nation's largest Catholic health system announced Wednesday. St. Louis-based Ascension said Providence Health System, which includes the hospital and a network of ambulatory sites in D.C. and Maryland, will focus on telehealth, primary and urgent care, home care, community-based behavioral care and senior care as well as population health. (Kacik, 7/25)
California Healthline:
Community Frets As Buyer For Cherished Rural Hospital Slips From View
Confusion is growing in the remote Surprise Valley region of northeastern California as locals wonder whether a Denver entrepreneur will make good on his pledge to save their bankrupt rural hospital. Surprise Valley Community Hospital, located in Cedarville, Calif., was featured in a June 6 California Healthline story illustrating the plight of strapped rural hospitals and controversial efforts by some to stay solvent through laboratory billing for patients never treated on-site. (Ostrov, 7/25)
Dallas Morning News:
As Trial Nears, Dallas Hospital Owner Admits Bribing Doctors For High-Volume, Lucrative Surgeries
With trial just three months away, prosecutors have added another big name to their growing witness list in the alleged $200 million health care fraud involving Forest Park Medical Center — a hospital once hailed as a successful new industry model. Alan Andrew Beauchamp, a Forest Park co-founder who managed the hospital, has agreed to plead guilty in the case. He says in the plea documents that he recruited high-volume specialty doctors and paid them millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks to perform their surgeries at the now-defunct Dallas hospital. (Krause, 7/24)
Media outlets report on news from Oklahoma, Texas, Minnesota, California, Wyoming, Ohio, Massachusetts and Florida.
The Associated Press:
Oklahoma Pharmacy Board Fires Director Amid Probe Into Texts
The Oklahoma Board of Pharmacy fired its executive director Wednesday after state investigators confirmed she is the target of a bribery probe involving text messages exchanged with a top lawyer involved in writing the state's new medical marijuana rules. The board unanimously voted to fire Chelsea Church following a closed-door meeting in Oklahoma City. The special meeting was called after the online news agency Nondoc reported on a series of text messages in which Church appears to offer Department of Health attorney Julia Ezell a higher paying job at the agency in exchange for medical marijuana rules favorable to pharmacists. (7/25)
Texas Standard:
Rural Texas Is Struggling To Keep Doctors. Sam Houston State University Wants To Change That By Opening A Medical School.
Texas has almost a dozen medical schools, but it also has a rural healthcare worker shortage. The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board is set to vote Thursday on whether to approve another medical school. (Hart, 7/25)
MPR:
Health Dept: Chemical In Drinking Water Has Dropped To Safe Levels In Five Communities
A handful of communities identified by an environmental watchdog have reduced their levels of a dangerous chemical in their drinking water supply, according to the Minnesota Department of Health. Using data from 2010-2015, the D.C.-based Environmental Working Group found trichloroethylene (TCE) in the drinking water supplies of 15 Minnesota communities, though only five exceeded the state limit of 0.4 parts per billion during that time. (Richert, 7/25)
The New York Times:
50 More Women Sue U.S.C. As Accusations Of Gynecologist’s Abuse Pile Up
The scandal surrounding the three-decade tenure of Dr. George Tyndall, a former gynecologist at the University of Southern California, continued to grow this week as more than 50 additional women sued the university, saying it had failed to protect them from sexual abuse and harassment by Dr. Tyndall. The lawsuits, filed on Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court against both Dr. Tyndall and U.S.C., claim that the university concealed years of complaints against Dr. Tyndall’s “sexually charged and deviant comments and behavior” and “allowed him many years of unfettered sexual access to young female students.” (Zaveri, 7/25)
Dallas Morning News:
UTD Reaches Coveted State Research Designation, Unlocking Millions In Funding
One day doctors might analyze the heart with a better predictive tool that helps them decide the best treatment for patients sooner thanks to cardiovascular research now being done at the University of Texas at Dallas. And maybe that work could lead to better coronary stents that help patients avoid more surgery down the line, said Heather Hayenga, an assistant professor who is leading the research. (Ayala, 7/25)
Wyoming Public Radio:
Mountain West Could Benefit From A Nation-Wide Three-Digit Suicide Hotline
The House just passed a bill to create a 9-1-1 type service nationwide for suicide prevention. This change could be especially important for our region, which has some of the highest suicide rates in the country. (Budner, 7/25)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Kidney Dialysis Proposal, Not Yet On The Ballot, Faces First Court Challenge
The Ohio Renal Association is asking the state Supreme Court to shut down a ballot proposal that would cap how much for-profit dialysis companies can charge patients. The association wants a court order or judgement invalidating the entire initiative petition. (Hancock, 7/25)
Boston Globe:
Noting 2016 Deaths, House OK’s Bill To Require Contractors To Disclose Workplace Safety Violations
Nearly two years after two workers drowned in a flooded trench at a South End construction site, state lawmakers are moving forward with a bill that would require companies seeking large government contracts to disclose workplace safety violations. ...The measure would require any company offering goods or services worth more than $50,000 to state or local governments to disclose if it had received a citation, notice, decision, or civil judgment from the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration in the previous four years. (Halper, 7/26)
The Star Tribune:
Former Minnesota Health Official Sues Agency, Claiming Retaliation
A former top administrator at the Minnesota Department of Health alleges she was wrongfully fired last year in retaliation for raising concerns about a hostile work environment. Nancy A. Omondi, a former director of the department’s health regulation division, said she repeatedly attempted to notify senior leaders at the agency of a pattern of harassment, bullying and discrimination at the division she oversaw, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Ramsey County District Court. In response, Omondi said, she was verbally berated, reprimanded and ultimately terminated last November from her position at the health department. (Serres, 7/25)
Health News Florida:
Requirement For Mental Health Disclosure In Schools Raises Concerns
A requirement in the school safety bill passed after the Parkland shooting is raising privacy concerns. The law requires new students who are initially registering in a district to disclose any referrals to mental health services. (Ochoa, 7/25)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Ohio Report Ties Poverty, Race And Geography To Lifelong Success
Ohio children who are not ready for kindergarten have a hard time catching up over the years, with their scores in third grade reading and eighth grade math continuing to lag, according to a study released Wednesday. The report, by the education advocacy organization Groundwork Ohio, found poverty is often tied to insufficient kindergarten readiness. (Hancock, 7/25)
Houston Chronicle:
Iconic Memorial Hermann Medical Plaza Changes Hands
LaSalle Investment Management has added a fourth property to its Houston portfolio with the purchase of the prized Memorial Hermann Medical Plaza adjacent to the Texas Medical Center. The seller, a partnership of Mischer Healthcare, Memorial Hermann Health System and other private investors, opened the 28-story medical office building at 6400 Fannin at North MacGregor in 2007. (Feser, 7/26)
Texas Tribune:
Marijuana Legalization In Texas? Advocates See Reasons For Optimistic
The state almost certainly won’t be the next one to legalize recreational marijuana use. But there are signs that both the public opinion and political calculus on pot are shifting in Texas, with advocates hopeful that those shifts could yield significant progress during next year’s legislative session. (Samuels, 7/26)
Different Takes: Lessons On Work Requirements, Disability And Association Health Plans
Opinion writers express views on the health law and how to improve health care and lower costs.
The Washington Post:
Trump’s Work Requirements Have Been Successful Before — Under Bill Clinton
No, the Trump administration did not declare victory in the war on poverty, as recent media coverage and a chorus of mocking pundits have suggested. Instead, the White House, subsequently bolstered by the recommendations of its Council of Economic Advisers, moved to expand the sort of dignity-enhancing work requirements for welfare recipients that was pioneered — with bipartisan support and to wide acclaim — during the Clinton administration. Trump’s executive order gave secretaries in the appropriate departments 90 days to review existing programs and recommend changes. In 1996, President Bill Clinton and a Republican-controlled Congress collaborated on the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act. The law aimed to reduce dependency by requiring non-disabled working-age recipients to find a job within 24 months of starting to receive cash welfare payments. President Trump is taking a page from that welfare-reform playbook, seeking ways to add or strengthen work requirements for noncash benefits such as Medicaid, housing assistance and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, also known as food stamps. (Ron Haskins, 7/25)
The Wall Street Journal:
ObamaCare Is Robbing Medicaid’s Sickest Patients
ObamaCare made it more difficult for health insurers to turn a profit on individual plans, since it prohibited them from charging consumers more based on their medical risks. But the law also created a huge growth opportunity for insurers: Medicaid. Over the past decade, federal and state spending on Medicaid has nearly doubled to $570 billion—roughly as much as the revenues of United Health, CVS, Anthem, Aetna and Humana put together. California alone will spend nearly $100 billion on Medicaid this year. (Allysia Finley, 7/25)
The Hill:
Buyer Beware Of Association Health Plans
Business groups that have long advocated for association health plans (AHPs) just learned a valuable lesson: Beware of politicians bearing gifts. Recently, the Trump administration finalized a U.S. Department of Labor rule that will allow groups of businesses to band together to buy insurance across state lines. President Trump claimed this rule would save small businesses “massive amounts of money” and lead to better health coverage for small firms. Now that the rule is final, however, some longtime supporters of association health plans are disappointed.The National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB) said it won’t be making an AHP available to its more than 300,000 members, reportedly because it feels the plans would require too much financial investment for too little return. (John Arensmeyer, 7/25)
New England Journal of Medicine:
The Republican War On Obamacare — What Has It Achieved?
For nearly a decade, Republicans have opposed the Affordable Care Act (ACA). They have fought Obamacare in Congress, the courts, and the states and, since 2017, from the White House. Given the scope, intensity, and duration of this campaign, it is worth considering what it has achieved. ...The ACA is stuck in purgatory, beyond comprehensive repeal but subject to a war of attrition that jeopardizes its gains. Such a campaign poses risks for Republicans. The politics of health care have fundamentally changed. Tens of millions of Americans are ACA beneficiaries; taking away their coverage and consumer protections is difficult. And as the party in power, Republicans are now responsible for Obamacare’s problems, which the Trump administration’s policies may worsen. (Jonathan Oberlander, 7/25)
The New York Times:
Don’t Let Politics Come Between Me And My Patients
CHICAGO — For nearly five decades, the Title X family planning program has provided much needed funding for reproductive health care for millions of uninsured and underinsured people, covering basic services from cancer screenings to contraception to treatment for sexually transmitted infections. Now, the Trump administration is proposing a so-called domestic gag rule that would strictly limit how clinics that get this funding can refer patients for safe, legal abortions. Under the proposal, clinics will face a choice: either adhere to unacceptable restrictions on how they practice medicine or be cut off from funding that allows them to provide for millions of patients. As a board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist, I can attest that this proposal is bad medicine; as a medical ethicist, I can also affirm it is an assault on both the patient-provider relationship and the autonomy of patients and health care providers. (Julie Chor, 7/25)
The Hill:
The Decay Of Medicare Part D
The Trump administration recently floated ideas to cut the cost of drugs for those enrolled in Medicare. Among these was a proposal to shift some physician-administered drugs from Medicare’s Part B (which pays more for drugs that cost more, even if cheaper options exist), to its Part D (where price reductions for drugs can be negotiated, by steering patients to cost-effective alternatives). Part D’s payment structure has helped reduce the cost of Medicare’s prescription drug benefit well below the levels projected when it was established in 2003. Yet a reinsurance provision in the design of Part D is gradually eliminating incentives to control the program’s drug costs. (Chris Pope, 7/25)
New England Journal of Medicine:
Self-Insured Employers — The Payment-Reform Wild Card
Broad delivery-system restructuring requires changing the dominant method of health care payment. But many commercial health plans have been slow to adopt alternative payment models, largely because their biggest customers — self-insured employers — haven’t demanded it. (Robert E. Mechanic and Robert S. Galvin, 7/26)
Stat:
Paying For Therapies That Cure: Innovative Solutions Needed
The idea that we can give — over a course of days or weeks — a profoundly transformative medicine has radical implications for how we pay for therapies and create incentives for a new generation of cures. ...At the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting, it became clearer than ever that we are already living in in the “tomorrow” of biomedical research. We must now create the tomorrow of health care financing to account for these innovations.(Robert W. Dubois, 7/25)
Opinion writers express views on these and other health topics.
Stat:
Physicians Aren't 'Burning Out.' They're Suffering From Moral Injury
Physicians on the front lines of health care today are sometimes described as going to battle. It’s an apt metaphor. Physicians, like combat soldiers, often face a profound and unrecognized threat to their well-being: moral injury. Moral injury is frequently mischaracterized. In combat veterans it is diagnosed as post-traumatic stress; among physicians it’s portrayed as burnout. But without understanding the critical difference between burnout and moral injury, the wounds will never heal and physicians and patients alike will continue to suffer the consequences. (Simon G. Talbot and Wendy Dean, 7/26)
Bloomberg:
Biogen’s Results Leave The Alzheimer’s Puzzle Unsolved
It’s hard not to cheer when a drug is shown to have a very real potential to help patients with Alzheimer’s disease — a common, devastating, and currently uncurable condition. But some restraint is needed when reacting to the results released late Wednesday for the treatment being developed by Biogen Inc. and Eisai Co. The drug, BAN2401, was shown to significantly slow cognitive decline after 18 months of treatment at a high dose — depending on how you measure it. Regardless of the qualifier, this is absolutely a promising outcome and the data is better than I, a skeptic on Alzheimer’s studies, expected in some respects. But there’s much more testing to be done before anyone can be sure about this result, and it will take a long time. (Max Nisen, 7/25)
Bloomberg:
Women Act Rationally, And Somehow That Was Newsworthy
The other day The New York Times and a few other outlets ran with a story that was unusual, maybe even unprecedented, for highlighting a social science study that failed to show any sort of irrationality or self-delusion in its subjects. There were no signs that mysterious, unconscious cues were wreaking havoc on people’s decision making. The study, a survey of women who had recently had eggs frozen, revealed decisions that were well-informed, reasonable and rational. The women were single for the most part, and wanted to increase their odds of getting pregnant if they found a suitable co-parent in the future. Stories about people acting reasonably don’t often make headlines, but the appeal here was that the research countered a stereotype often attached to women with careers: that they’re postponing having families so they can advance up the corporate ladder. And why not use science to contrast reality with stereotypes? (Faye Flam, 7/25)
USA Today:
Tennessee's Opioid Regulations Precipitated My Husband's Death
There have recently been a few minor stories about the closing of Comprehensive Pain Specialists clinics across the region due to financial issues and a federal criminal investigation. Some have even mentioned that around 50,000 pain patients are now without a pain management doctor. If this were 50,000 cancer patients not receiving treatment in the weeks to come, it would be headline news. People would be up in arms over that denial of care. If you, or somebody you love, have not been directly impacted by long-term chronic pain, then you are very fortunate. But keep in mind that we are all just one car accident away from that condition. (Meredith Lawrence, 7/25)
The Washington Post:
Reunifying The Families Trump Tore Asunder Will Take A Long, Long Time
Having torn migrant children from their families with no idea how they would be reunited — and almost no record-keeping that would facilitate reunions — the Trump administration is now laboring heroically to repair what it has broken. By “heroically,” we mean only that lower-ranking officials — most of them blameless in the mess created by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who proclaimed the “zero tolerance” policy that sundered families, and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, who oversaw the policy’s enforcement — are racing to meet a court-ordered deadline to reunify more than 2,500 children with their parents by Thursday. Hundreds of bureaucrats have spent weeks trying to match separated children with their parents, hamstrung by the absence of data that was either never recorded or inadvertently destroyed. The fact that Mr. Sessions, Ms. Nielsen and the lieutenants who serve them never anticipated this eventuality speaks to their callousness. (7/25)
WBUR:
On Drug Prices, Trump Is (Finally) On To Something
Now, the administration has announced that the Food and Drug Administration will consider a procedure under which, if a drug maker hikes the price of a generic drug — and there’s no ready substitute on the domestic market — the FDA would allow foreign substitutes into the country. ...Because they often lack adequate substitutes to compete with them in the market, many generics have soared in price of late. (Rich Barlow, 7/26)
Real Clear Health:
FDA's Anti-Smoking Strategy Puts Lives At Risk
July 28th marks the one year anniversary of the FDA’s landmark announcement to embark on what it called a “new comprehensive plan for tobacco and nicotine regulation” that “places nicotine, and the issue of addiction, at the center of the agency’s tobacco regulation efforts.” (Jeff Stier, 7/26)