- KFF Health News Original Stories 7
- Senate Health Bill Still Short On ‘Yays’ But Leaders Vow Vote Next Week
- Millions More Uninsured Could Impact Health Of Those With Insurance, Too
- GOP Seeks To Sweeten Health Savings Account Deals. Will Consumers Bite?
- Opposition To GOP Repeal Bill Inches Up And Intensifies
- Messages From Beyond: Using Technology To Seal Your Legacy
- Medical Transportation Provider Accused Of Disserving L.A.’s Frail Patients
- Medicare’s Financial Outlook Slightly Improved, Trustees Say
- Political Cartoon: 'Wreak Havoc?'
- Health Law 8
- GOP Unveils Tweaked Health Care Bill In Its Attempt To Woo Reluctant Senators
- Road To 50 Votes Paved With Uncertainty, Doubts Despite Changes In Drafts
- New Bill Tries To Lure Conservatives With Option To Sell Cheap, Bare Bone Insurance Plans
- Despite Outcry From Moderates, Governors, Deep Medicaid Cuts Left Mostly Untouched
- Three Obamacare Taxes Left In Place In Revised Version Of Health Bill
- Is Polar Payoff The New Cornhusker Kickback? Change In GOP's Plan Benefits Alaska, And Alaska Only
- Two Republican Senators Offer A Plan B If Leadership's Measure Fails
- Trump: 'The Only Thing More Difficult Than Peace Between Israel And The Palestinians Is Health Care'
- Veterans' Health Care 1
- House Votes Down Proposal To Block Funds For Soldiers Seeking Gender-Related Medical Treatment
- Public Health 2
- Heavy Painkiller Use, Abuse Remains Serious Problem For Medicare Patients, Report Finds
- New Partnership Aims To Make Life Easier For Those With Diabetes
- State Watch 2
- Impact Debated Of Large Nurses Strike At Boston-Area Tufts Medical Center
- State Highlights: Minn. Marks New Measles Case; Three Mass. Hospitals Reach Merger Agreement
- Editorials And Opinions 3
- Perspectives On The Political Landscape: Winners, Losers, Distractions And... Is Bipartisanship Even Possible?
- Critics' Take: The Updated Senate Health Bill Is Still Ugly After Cosmetic Changes; An 'Abomination'
- Viewpoints: Public Health Implications Of Information Security; Who's Looking Out For Nursing Home Residents?
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Senate Health Bill Still Short On ‘Yays’ But Leaders Vow Vote Next Week
At least two Republicans have already said they cannot support the new legislative draft, which means all other GOP senators would have to agree to the bill to pass it. (Julie Rovner, 7/13)
Millions More Uninsured Could Impact Health Of Those With Insurance, Too
The return to high rates of uninsurance expected under GOP plans to repeal and replace Obamacare would mean less access to health care for people with insurance too, researchers say. (Julie Rovner, 7/14)
GOP Seeks To Sweeten Health Savings Account Deals. Will Consumers Bite?
A new study found that fewer than half of people with health savings accounts deposited any money in them in 2016. (Michelle Andrews, 7/14)
Opposition To GOP Repeal Bill Inches Up And Intensifies
Six in 10 Americans say they do not approve of the Senate Republicans’ plan to replace Obamacare, according to a poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation. (Jordan Rau, 7/14)
Messages From Beyond: Using Technology To Seal Your Legacy
From slick videos to digital “time capsules,” folks have new ways to “stay alive” long after they die. (Bruce Horovitz, 7/14)
Medical Transportation Provider Accused Of Disserving L.A.’s Frail Patients
LogistiCare often shows up late, if at all, and compromises patient safety, according to a public interest firm’s lawsuit. The company says the allegations are inaccurate. (Anna Gorman, 7/14)
Medicare’s Financial Outlook Slightly Improved, Trustees Say
The assessment pushes back the date for the hospital insurance trust fund to go bankrupt by one year. It also says Part B premiums next year will be stable. (Phil Galewitz, 7/13)
Political Cartoon: 'Wreak Havoc?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Wreak Havoc?'" by Matt Wuerker, Politico.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
TIME FOR BIPARTISANSHIP YET?
Senate Plan Phase Two
It's still a mean tasting brew.
Next phase red and blue?
- Daniel Kuhn
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.
A NEW LOOK IN CALIFORNIA: We’re excited to announce that California Healthline, which is also produced by KHN, has a brand new look. Check it out, and be sure to sign up for Daily Edition, which sends all the day’s health care news out of California to your inbox every morning.
Summaries Of The News:
GOP Unveils Tweaked Health Care Bill In Its Attempt To Woo Reluctant Senators
Here's a look at some of the overall changes that were made between the two drafts.
The New York Times:
Senate Republicans Unveil New Health Bill, But Divisions Remain
Senate Republican leaders on Thursday unveiled a fresh proposal to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, revising their bill to help hold down insurance costs for consumers while allowing insurers to sell new low-cost, stripped down policies. (Pear and Kaplan, 7/13)
The New York Times:
Republicans Made 4 Key Changes To Their Health Care Bill. Here’s Who They Were Trying To Win Over.
Republican senators have added a set of changes to their bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. These changes are efforts to appease different groups of senators and move the bill closer to a vote. At least 50 of the 52 Republican senators must support the bill for it to pass. (Park, Parlapiano and Sanger-Katz, 7/13)
The Associated Press:
Revised GOP Health Bill Stresses Bare-Bones Private Coverage
The latest changes to the Senate Republican health care bill are geared to increasing access to bare-bones private insurance. There's also an additional $45 billion to help states confronting the opioid epidemic. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., would keep in place Medicaid cuts that GOP governors and Senate moderates have objected to. No Democrats are supporting the plan. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 7/13)
Los Angeles Times:
Divided Senate Republicans Unveil New Version Of Obamacare Repeal Bill
The bill would earmark an additional $70 billion in federal money to help stabilize health insurance markets across the country, funded in part by preserving two Obamacare taxes on wealthy Americans that the previous GOP legislation eliminated. And in an effort to woo several GOP senators from states dependent on Medicaid to address the opioid crisis, McConnell earmarked an additional $45 billion in the bill to confront the epidemic. (Mascaro and Levey, 7/13)
Bloomberg:
Revised Health Bill Has $70 Billion More For Exchanges, Summary Says
The change comes on top of $112 billion provided for the same purpose in an earlier measure by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. That effort stalled two weeks ago due to a lack of support from rival moderate and conservative Republicans. (Litvan and Dennis, 7/13)
Bloomberg:
New GOP Health Bill Leaves Big Problem Untouched: Patient Costs
Republican senators’ latest effort to repeal and replace Obamacare still fails to address a key complaint about the 2010 health law: Patients are using too much of their own money to pay for care. The bill, rolled out anew on Thursday after a raft of Republican defections threatened to sink the original legislation, faces a tough path to becoming law. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell wants a vote next week, but two GOP lawmakers immediately rejected the revised plan, and losing the support of a third Republican could doom the measure. The Congressional Budget Office will release a score of the rewritten legislation as soon as Monday. (Tracer and Edney, 7/14)
Politico:
Richest Americans Gain The Most From The Senate’s Health Care Bill
The latest Congressional Budget Office analysis of the Senate’s revised health care bill won’t be available until next week, but the overarching trend of the three GOP plans analyzed so far is clear — more Americans will be uninsured and the majority of them will be poor. (Frostenson, 7/14)
The Hill:
Senate Republicans Unveil Revised Healthcare Bill
Senate Republicans are now awaiting a new score of the revised legislation from the CBO, which could come early next week. (Sullivan, 7/13)
NPR:
Senate Health Care Bill Revisions Released In Attempt To Appease GOP Critics
Here are some of those big changes that this new version of the bill would make to the original BCRA, and what they would mean. (Kurtzleben, 7/13)
Road To 50 Votes Paved With Uncertainty, Doubts Despite Changes In Drafts
Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine) have already said they won't support the new bill, which leaves Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell no room for error in his quest for 50 votes.
Politico:
Senate Republicans One Vote Away From Obamacare Repeal Failure
Majority Whip John Cornyn acknowledged GOP leaders don’t have the minimum 50 votes right now but insisted, "We're making good progress." He said he and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell were not making "state-specific" promises to wavering senators and were instead merely trying to convince them that the bill is better than Obamacare."We're not through yet," Cornyn said of his and McConnell's work. (Everett and Haberkorn, 7/13)
USA Today:
Senate Health Care Bill: 5 Hurdles Republicans Are Facing To Pass The Bill
Senate Republicans hope their latest proposed bill to replace Obamacare will attract enough votes from the moderate and conservative wings of their party to pass next week. But there are at least five hurdles that could derail efforts to reach consensus. (Kelly, 7/13)
The Washington Post:
Senate Health-Care Bill – Which Senators Are Opposed
Three Republicans opposed to the bill would effectively kill it. (Phillips, Fischer-Baum, Schaul and Uhrmacher, 7/13)
The Washington Post:
Senate Health-Care Bill Changes — Cruz Amendment, Opioid Funding, Alaska Money
The bill makes almost no effort to recruit moderates such as Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who has already stated her objection to the new bill. Those senators have asked for more Medicaid funding, which the CBO projected would be cut by 26 percent over the next decade and 35 percent the decade after. (Soffen, Din and Uhrmacher, 7/13)
The Associated Press:
Trouble For Revised Senate Health Bill; Trump Wants Action
Moderate Sen. Susan Collins of Maine told reporters she had informed McConnell she would be voting against beginning debate on the bill, citing in part cuts in the Medicaid health program for the poor and disabled. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who has repeatedly complained that McConnell's efforts don't amount to a full-blown repeal of Obamacare, also announced he was a "no." That means McConnell cannot lose any other Republican senators. (Werner and Fram, 7/14)
The Washington Post:
Revised Senate Health-Care Bill Still Lacks The Votes To Pass
“The revised Senate health-care bill released today does not include the measures I have been advocating for on behalf of the people of Arizona,” said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) in a statement, adding he planned to offer amendments to change it. (Sullivan, Eilperin and Snell, 7/13)
The Hill:
Moderates Holding Back Support For New Senate Bill
Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), who has been an ally of Portman's during the healthcare talks, said she doesn’t know whether she’ll vote to proceed to the bill after hearing a presentation from Senate Republican leaders at the Capitol. (Bolton, 7/13)
CQ HealthBeat:
New Health Care Draft Does Not Win Over Many Holdouts
McConnell is urging his party’s holdouts, including Rob Portman of Ohio and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, to back the legislation because the majority leader said the bill's sharpest cuts, which go into effect in 2026, would never happen. Portman issued a statement saying he'd review the text and the upcoming CBO analysis, adding that he opposed the previous version because of its Medicaid cuts. (Clason, 7/13)
Bloomberg:
Republican Health Bill Draft May Be Destined For Another Rewrite
Republican Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, who had opposed plans to advance an earlier version of the bill in late June, said Thursday that he will support debating the current bill, although he isn’t ready to give his full backing. Johnson said he expects some of the remaining deficit reduction in the bill to be spent, though he would prefer to shrink the budget gap. (Dennis and Litvan, 7/14)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
New Health Care Bill Meets Old Uncertainty Over Rob Portman's Crucial Vote
Social media pressure continues to build in attempts to influence Sen. Rob Portman on a health care bill that could see a vote soon. That's because the Ohio Republican is one of several senators who has not committed to either side in the heated battle to overhaul or keep the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare. (Koff, 7/14)
KCUR:
Moran Studying Changes To Senate Health Bill, Opponents Urging Him To Stand Firm
U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran’s silence Thursday on the GOP’s revised bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act prompted one Capitol Hill reporter to refer to him as a “mystery man.” Several Republican senators who either opposed or had concerns about an initial draft of the bill commented on changes unveiled Thursday by GOP leaders in an effort to gain votes. But not Moran. In response to repeated emails, a spokesperson in his office said only that the senator was analyzing the changes “to fully understand the impact on Kansas.” (Mclean, 7/14)
McClatchy:
Marco Rubio Will Vote To Proceed On Obamacare Repeal Bill
After the bill was released on Thursday and he huddled with his Republican colleagues, Rubio said his demands were met, and Florida’s junior senator was ready to announce his support... Two Republican senators said Thursday they are not in favor of moving forward with the bill: Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a moderate, and conservative Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul. (Daugherty, 7/13)
Kaiser Health News:
Senate Health Bill Still Short On ‘Yays’ But Leaders Vow Vote Next Week
Democrats remained steadfastly opposed to the measure. “The meat of this bill is exactly the same as it was before, and in some ways, they’ve somehow managed to make it even worse,” said Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.). (Rovner, 7/13)
Meanwhile —
The Associated Press:
GOP Health Care Plan Draws Mixed Reaction From Governors
U.S. governors responded largely along partisan lines Thursday to the latest Republican health care overhaul, although the plan's long-term rollback in Medicaid funding remains a concern among many from both parties. (McDermott, 7/13)
Kaiser Health News:
Opposition To GOP Repeal Bill Inches Up, Intensifies
Public opposition to the Republican effort to replace the Affordable Care Act grew stronger this month, but a core group of Republicans remained in support, according to a poll released Friday. Sixty-one percent of the public said this month they did not like the GOP health care effort, now undergoing a revised push in the Senate. (Rau, 7/14)
New Bill Tries To Lure Conservatives With Option To Sell Cheap, Bare Bone Insurance Plans
The option is part of an amendment by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) that was included in the newly unveiled legislation despite insurers' warning that it will further destabilize the marketplace.
USA Today:
Senate Health Care Bill: Republicans Woo Conservatives In Latest Draft
The draft bill, released on the Senate Budget Committee's website, tries to appeal to conservatives by including a version of an amendment by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, that would allow the sale of deregulated insurance plans as long as Obamacare-compliant plans are also still sold. Cruz confirmed to reporters that his amendment is in the bill and called that "very significant progress." “If this is the bill, I will support it,” Cruz told reporters Thursday afternoon. But Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, who helped craft the original amendment with Cruz, was undecided about how he would vote on the bill because the amendment was changed during negotiations, his spokesman said. (Kelly, Collins and Shesgreen, 7/13)
USA Today:
Sick? You Might Not Like The GOP's Latest Health Bill
The Senate dropped a new version of its beleaguered health bill Thursday, tacking on a Ted Cruz proposal in order to win over conservatives like Ted Cruz. It basically lets people buy cheap, bare-bones insurance plans alongside more robust, Obamacare-compliant plans. That's good news for the healthy, and bad news for the sick: If healthy folks flock to cheaper plans, the other plans covering pre-existing conditions will grow more expensive — destabilizing the market in the process, insurance companies say. (Hafner, 7/13)
Arizona Republic:
Flake Explains His Support For Cruz Amendment On Senate Health Bill
Sen. Jeff Flake has signaled support for an amendment that aims to provide health-care consumers with a greater number of less-expensive choices in insurance. Flake, R-Ariz., revealed his backing of the "Consumer Freedom Option" on Monday with an almost offhand response to Capitol Hill reporters. (Nowicki, 7/13)
The Hill:
Senate GOP May Not Use CBO To Score Cruz Amendment
Senate Republicans may not use the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to score a version of Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-Texas) controversial amendment that was included in the updated Senate healthcare bill. Instead, a member of Senate GOP leadership said analysis from the Trump administration — including the Health and Human Services Department and the White House Office of Management and Budget — might be used instead of the nonpartisan CBO. (Weixel, 7/13)
Despite Outcry From Moderates, Governors, Deep Medicaid Cuts Left Mostly Untouched
The reduction of more than $750 billion to the program over a decade is one of the sticking points for many Republicans opposed to the legislation.
The Hill:
Five Takeaways From The GOP's Healthcare Reboot
The updated legislation left the deep Medicaid cuts from the first version of the bill essentially unchanged, which could be a big problem for moderate GOP senators like Rob Portman (Ohio), Shelley Moore Capito (W.Va.) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska). The legislation would put a cap on federal Medicaid reimbursement for states, dramatically changing the program from an open-ended entitlement. It would end ObamaCare’s increased funding for states to expand Medicaid by 2024, and cut the rate of inflation. Taken together, the bill would cut $772 billion from Medicaid funding over a decade and result in 15 million fewer people enrolled, according to the Congressional Budget Office. (Roubein, Hellmann and Weixel, 7/13)
Politico:
Revised Senate Repeal Bill Keeps Obamacare Taxes, Adds Funding For Poor And Opioid Epidemic
The latest plan does make some minor changes to the Medicaid program that could address the concerns of some senators. For example, it would allow the cap on Medicaid payments to be lifted in the event of a medical emergency, a provision sought by Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, which has been battling the Zika outbreak. (Demko, 7/13)
The Wall Street Journal:
Hospitals Could Gain Under New GOP Health Bill
Among the provisions in the revised version of the Senate Republicans’ health bill is a provision that would restore certain federal funding to some hospitals—but with a catch. Under the Affordable Care Act, hospitals were set to lose out on extra funding known as Medicaid “disproportionate share” payments meant to help cover uninsured patients. The Senate GOP’s early health bill restored the funds, but exclusively to hospitals in states that didn’t expand Medicaid. (Evans, 7/13)
Modern Healthcare:
New Senate Bill Retains Medicaid Cuts, Provides More Money To Stabilize Individual Market
The per-capita cap system is designed to reduce the federal budget for Medicaid. The law would set different caps for different populations through 2024, with some federal spending matching the rate of medical inflation, and some pegged at medical inflation plus one percentage point. Those 20 and younger with chronic medical conditions "that either requires intensive healthcare interventions or meets the criteria for medical complexity" are excluded from the per capita cap. The bill says that in 2020, states must identify all these different categories of people covered on Medicaid or CHIP. (Lee, 7/13)
WBUR:
Former Bush Medicaid Director: Slow Down On Medicaid Overhaul
Two former directors of Medicaid — one who served under a Democrat, the other under a Republican — are asking Congress not to change Medicaid right now. (Chakrabarti, 7/13)
Kaiser Health News:
Transgender Health Care Targeted In Crusade To Undo ACA
Solorah Singleton has been waiting years for breast augmentation. She doesn’t want to jinx it now, but the Philadelphia resident thinks it’s finally within reach. Singleton, 36, was born male but identifies as female. For seven years, she has had regular hormone therapy, never seeing surgery as an option. She previously didn’t have health insurance and didn’t think she could cover the cost of the procedure out-of-pocket. (Luthra, 7/13)
Arizona Republic:
Advocates Warn Of Harm To Ariz. Medicaid Recipients Under Senate Bill
Republicans in the U.S. Senate on Thursday released an updated version of their health-care legislation, which includes a proposal to cut Medicaid funding and roll back Medicaid coverage expansion under "Obamacare." State Reps. Heather Carter, R-Cave Creek, and Michelle Udall, R-Mesa, members of the House Health Committee, spoke out against the measure at a news conference at Phoenix Children's Hospital on Thursday. (Stanford, 7/13)
In other Medicaid news from Colorado —
Denver Post:
Colorado Medicaid System Data Breach Potentially Exposed Private Information Of 822 People
The technology company at the center of an ongoing Medicaid payment fiasco in Colorado now says a system glitch might have inadvertently shared the private health information of 822 people. The problem revealed Thursday comes after months of complaints about DXC Technology’s failure to reimburse doctors, therapists and others who care for needy and disabled Coloradans. (Brown, 7/13)
Three Obamacare Taxes Left In Place In Revised Version Of Health Bill
The move is a departure from earlier plans to repeal the taxes.
NPR:
Who Gains, Who's Left Out In The Latest Senate Health Care Bill
Perhaps the biggest change in the document released Thursday is that it leaves in place the Affordable Care Act taxes on wealthy individuals. It uses that money to reduce the number of people left without insurance coverage by the law's changes. (Grayson, Hurt and Kodjak, 7/13)
CQ Roll Call:
Retooled Senate Health Care Bill Muddles Tax Strategy
The revised Senate health care bill released Thursday does not repeal three taxes created by Obamacare, raising concerns that a tax on investment income paid by the wealthy will continue and create problems for a larger tax overhaul. The new Senate draft does not repeal a 3.8 percent net investment tax and a Medicare payroll surtax, which are aimed at individuals earning more than $200,000 and couples earning more than $250,000. The rewritten health care bill also does not change a provision in the 2010 health care law that prevents insurance companies from writing off the salaries and compensation of highly paid executives. (Ota, 7/13)
The Wall Street Journal:
New Senate Health Bill Aims To Bridge GOP Gaps, But Resistance Remains
The latest version of the bill would preserve a 0.9% payroll tax and a 3.8% tax on investment income. Both taxes apply only to individuals with incomes above $200,000 and married couples making over $250,000. (Armour and Peterson, 7/13)
The Wall Street Journal:
What The Senate’s 3.8% Surtax Means For American Taxpayers
With Senate Republicans planning to retain a 3.8% surtax on investment income in their health-care bill, it is a good time for American taxpayers to know exactly how this tax works. (Saunders, 7/14)
In related news —
The Washington Post:
The GOP’s Under-The-Radar Tax Break For The Upper Middle Class
A new tax break for the upper middle class was offered up Thursday in Senate Republicans' revised version of their bill to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. The legislation would make health insurance premiums more affordable for consumers who buy the kinds of inexpensive policies that are crucial to the GOP health-care agenda. Yet independent analysts caution that the benefits would mainly accrue to affluent households, and the provision might not substantially expand coverage among the uninsured. (Ehrenfreund, 7/13)
CQ Roll Call:
Revised Health Care Bill Still Faces Challenges
The revised Senate health care bill that was rolled out Thursday morning would allow individuals to use tax credits to purchase catastrophic health insurance and would let insurers sell plans on the exchanges that don’t meet Obamacare requirements in certain situations. The move is designed to attract the support of conservatives such as Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, who proposed an amendment that is relatively similar. The bill would create a $70 billion fund to make payments to certain health insurers to help cover high-risk individuals in exchange policies that meet the health care law’s requirements. (McIntire, 7/13)
Kaiser Health News:
GOP Seeks To Sweeten Health Savings Account Deals. Will Consumers Bite?
A growing number of employers are offering workers insurance that links to health savings accounts, and now congressional Republicans want to expand the contribution limits and uses for these tax-exempt funds. But do consumers want them? (Andrews, 7/14)
Is Polar Payoff The New Cornhusker Kickback? Change In GOP's Plan Benefits Alaska, And Alaska Only
Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska is a crucial vote, and a new provision seems to recognize that fact.
Bloomberg:
GOP Health Bill Steers Cash To The Home State Of A Reluctant Senator
Call it the Polar Payoff. Changes made to the Republican legislation to repeal large parts of Obamacare would send hundreds of millions of extra federal dollars to Alaska, whose Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski has been holding off from giving her much-needed vote to the bill. Under formulas in the revised legislation, only Alaska appears to qualify for the extra money. The money comes from the legislation’s $182 billion in funding meant to help stabilize insurance markets and help states provide coverage. Under the formulas, states -- in this case just Alaska -- with disproportionately higher premiums would get extra funds from that account. (Edney, Recht and Litvan, 7/13)
The Associated Press:
Alaska Would Score A Sweet Deal In Proposed Health Care Bill
Among the Republican holdouts needed to pass the bill is one of Alaska's senators, Lisa Murkowski. Her state has unusually high medical costs because much of Alaska is remote, and it relies heavily on Medicaid, which the Republican bill would cut. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 7/14)
Two Republican Senators Offer A Plan B If Leadership's Measure Fails
Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) have been working on a measure that they could sell to Democrats as a "repair" bill.
Politico:
Graham Introduces Repeal Back-Up Plan
A new health care proposal from GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham that would direct much of Obamacare's federal funding directly to the states could offer a starting point for Congress if the Senate GOP effort fails next week, according to a summary of the bill obtained by POLITICO. The bill from Graham is intended to appeal to Republicans as a replacement plan for Obamacare, while he hopes to sell the effort to Democrats as a repair plan. (Everett, 7/13)
The Fiscal Times:
Surprise! There Are Now Two Senate GOP Health Care Bills In Play
The Graham-Cassidy plan would leave some of the Affordable Care Act’s taxes in place, but would take those funds and turn them over to state governments in the form of a block grant, leaving state lawmakers and governors to reform the health insurance system within their own borders. “In a nutshell, we’re keeping the taxes in place on the wealthy, we’re repealing the individual mandate and the employer mandate, and the medical device tax that 75 senators voted to repeal,” Graham said. (Garver, 7/13)
The Hill:
Graham, Cassidy Healthcare Offer Shifts Decisions To States
The new plan released Thursday morning and written by Republican Sens. Lindsey Graham (S.C.) and Bill Cassidy (La.) would block grant about $500 billion of federal spending to the states over 10 years to either repeal, repair or keep their ObamaCare programs. (Hellmann, 7/13)
Trump: 'The Only Thing More Difficult Than Peace Between Israel And The Palestinians Is Health Care'
Despite acknowledging how tough it is going to be to get legislation passed, President Donald Trump voiced optimism that Congress will get it done.
The Hill:
Trump: Achieving Healthcare Harder Than Mideast Peace
President Trump this week lamented the difficulty of passing the Republican healthcare plan though Congress, likening it to the decadeslong Israel-Palestine conflict. “I’d say the only thing more difficult than peace between Israel and the Palestinians is healthcare,” he told reporters aboard Air Force One on Wednesday night en route to France. (Fabian, 7/13)
Boston Globe:
Trump Tweets From Paris About Health Care Bill
President Trump tweeted from Paris Friday morning that he has his “pen in hand” and will be ready to sign the health care bill designed to repeal and replace Obamacare. Republicans Senators are working hard to get their failed ObamaCare replacement approved. I will be at my desk, pen in hand! (Gans, 7/14)
The Associated Press:
Analysis: Trump Will Take Health Care Credit Or Cast Blame
If congressional Republicans succeed in repealing and replacing "Obamacare," expect a big Rose Garden celebration with President Donald Trump taking credit. If they fail? Trump has already indicated he will hold Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell responsible, setting up an intraparty blame game that could be devastating for the GOP. (7/14)
412 Charged In DOJ's Largest-Ever Health Care Fraud Takedown
“Too many trusted medical professionals like doctors, nurses and pharmacists have chosen to violate their oaths and put greed ahead of their patients,” says Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Many of the crimes were related to the opioid epidemic sweeping the country.
The New York Times:
U.S. Charges 412, Including Doctors, In $1.3 Billion Health Fraud
Hundreds of people nationwide, including dozens of doctors, have been charged in health care fraud prosecutions, accused of collectively defrauding the government of $1.3 billion, the Justice Department said on Thursday. (Ruiz, 7/13)
Reuters:
Doctors, Nurses Among Hundreds Charged With Defrauding U.S. Health Programs
A total of 412 people, including almost 115 doctors, nurses and other medical professionals, have been charged in the sweeping enforcement action, the biggest ever by the multi-agency Medicare Strike Force, the Justice Department said in a statement. More than 120 people were accused of illegally prescribing and distributing opioids and other dangerous narcotics, charges that come as about 91 Americans die daily from opioid-related overdoses. (Simpson, 7/13)
The Washington Post:
DOJ Announces Charges Against 400 People For $1.3 Billion In Health-Care Fraud
“One American dies of a drug overdose every 11 minutes and more than 2 million Americans are ensnared in addiction to prescription painkillers,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said at a news conference. “We will continue to find, arrest, prosecute, convict and incarcerate fraudsters and drug dealers wherever they are.” (Horwitz and Merle, 7/13)
The Wall Street Journal:
U.S. Charges More Than 400 With Committing Health Care Fraud
Justice Department officials said the charges were filed in the past few weeks, and the initiative was the “largest health-care fraud takedown operation” in U.S. history, Mr. Sessions said. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, who represents one of the states hardest hit by the opioid epidemic, called the Justice Department action a “great first step” and a sign that the new presidential administration is taking the scourge seriously. (Wilber, 7/13)
Los Angeles Times:
U.S. Charges More Than 400 People In Health Fraud Schemes And Opioid Scams Worth $1.3 Billion
Most of the cases involve false billings of Medicare for pills, equipment and services that were never provided. All told, the cases involve more than $1.3 billion in fraud, officials said. (Tanfani, 7/13)
Bloomberg:
Trump’s First Health-Care Fraud Sweep Targets Doctors, Opioids
Sessions faulted the accused medical professionals of putting greed ahead of patients, turning practices into multimillion dollar criminal enterprises and ultimately sparking broader ills. “Their actions not only enrich themselves often at the expense of taxpayers but also feed addictions and cause addictions to start. The consequences are real: emergency rooms, jail cells, futures lost, and graveyards,” Sessions said. “We will continue to find, arrest, prosecute, convict and incarcerate fraudsters and drug dealers wherever they are.” (Schoenberg and McLaughlin, 7/13)
Stat:
Feds Announce Largest-Ever Crackdown On Opioid-Related Health Care Fraud
The opioid addiction epidemic has attracted fraudsters who “look at this national scourge, and they see an opportunity to profit from their fellow citizen’s suffering and pain,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price. (Armstrong, 7/13)
Pioneer Press:
10 Minnesotans Linked To $1.3 Billion National Health Fraud Bust
Ten Minnesotans were charged as part of a national health care fraud takedown, Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson announced in a news conference Thursday morning. The “largest health care fraud takedown operation in American history,” according to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, involved more than 400 licensed health professionals nationwide and totaled $1.3 billion in false billing. (Chavey, 7/13)
The Star Tribune:
Minnesota AG Charges Three More With Personal Care Attendant Fraud
The Minnesota attorney general’s office charged three more people in connection with operating fraudulent personal care attendant agencies that stole more than $900,000 in tax funds meant to benefit people who need help with their daily living. ... The crackdown is part of a national effort, with the federal Department of Justice on Thursday announcing that 412 people have been charged with $1.3 billion in fraud. (Stahl, 7/13)
Chicago Sun-Times:
Chicago-Area Medical Professionals Charged With Health Care Fraud
The national enforcement action was taken by the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, a joint initiative between the Department of Justice and HHS to prevent and deter health care fraud around the country. Several defendants were from the Chicago area, including Beatta Kabbani, a physical therapist charged in a 13-count indictment with health care fraud and aggravated identity theft, according to the feds. (7/13)
Miami Herald:
Nationwide Medicare Fraud Bust Includes 80 Suspects In South Florida
More than 400 suspects nationwide have been charged with falsely billing $1.3 billion to the taxpayer-funded Medicare program as well as some private insurers, including about 80 defendants in South Florida — the country's epicenter of healthcare fraud, federal authorities said Thursday. Of the total nationwide, more than 100 suspects work as doctors, nurses and other medical professionals, who are charged with conspiracy and related offenses to defraud the massive government health insurance program. (Weaver, 7/13)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
DeKalb Psychologist Charged With Medicaid Fraud In National Crackdown
Three Georgians are among the 412 people nationwide charged in a massive federal investigation into health care fraud totaling approximately $1.3 billion, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services announced Thursday. In Georgia, three people — including a licensed psychologist in DeKalb County — are accused of nearly $1.5 million in fraudulent billing. (Stevens, 7/13)
Ohio Working Quietly To Wiggle Out Of ACA Mandates
Ohio is seeking waivers for the individual and employer mandates in the Affordable Care Act. Meanwhile, Colorado is expected to announce its premium increases today, and residents have been warned to be braced for sharp hikes.
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Ohio Is Trying To Get Out Of Obamacare Requirements
With little fanfare, Ohio is working on a request to President Trump's administration to end the Obamacare requirement that everyone have health insurance, as well as the mandate requiring employers to provide it. Ohio is trying to develop an alternative for its residents and get what's called an innovation waiver, cleveland.com has confirmed. In theory, the alternative would keep a majority of Ohioans covered, yet somehow do it without one of the very cornerstones of the Affordable Care Act. (Koff, 7/14)
Denver Post:
Colorado Officials Expected To Announce Proposed Health Insurance Premium Increases Friday
Colorado’s health insurance system faces a day of reckoning Friday, when the state Division of Insurance is scheduled to release details of the plans proposed for the individual insurance market in 2018. The individual plans are purchased by the 6 or 7 percent of Coloradans who shop for insurance on their own. More than 80 percent of Coloradans receive health coverage either through their employers or through the government. (Ingold, 7/13)
In other marketplace and industry news —
Nashville Tennessean:
With ACA Uncertainty, Consider These Health Insurance Alternatives
The uncertain repeal of the Affordable Care Act makes it hard for consumers to plan ahead for their health insurance needs. But in Tennessee, some consumers can take advantage of nontraditional coverage options. These ACA alternatives include MediShare, underwritten health plans and direct primary care.These types of plans allow consumers to access healthcare outside of ACA insurance, which could insulate consumers from disruption if the law is repealed. (Tolbert, 7/13)
Marketplace:
Health Insurance Comes At A Cost But So Does Not Having It
As the the newly revised Senate health care bill is floundering and Americans still have no clarity on what will happen to health care policy in the U.S., we check in with East Hannon, Connecticut resident Bradley Gawthrop. We last talked with Gawthrop, who at the time was working as a pipe organ builder in Johnson City, Tennessee, when the Affordable Care Act was still being argued over in court. (Ryssal and Hollenhorst, 7/13)
Federal Fund For Fetal Tissue Research Prohibited In HHS Spending Proposal
A House subcommittee’s draft 2018 spending plan bars federal funds from being spent on such research, a win for conservatives who are also taking aim at money for family planning programs. Only a small portion of the NIH budget was spent on fetal tissue research in 2016.
Stat:
NIH Fetal Tissue Research Would Be Barred Under House Panel’s Plan
A House subcommittee’s draft 2018 spending plan would prohibit federal funds from being spent on research that uses fetal tissue, a symbolic win for conservatives who are also taking aim at money for family planning and public health programs around the country. The proposal from the House Appropriations health subcommittee is unlikely to be enacted, and the restriction would impact a tiny portion of the National Institutes of Health’s roughly $33 billion budget — in 2016, the agency spent roughly $103 million on research involving fetal tissue. (Facher, 7/13)
CQ Roll Call:
House HHS Spending Bill Another Win For Anti-Abortion Efforts
Conservatives secured more wins this week with the addition of several anti-abortion provisions ta fiscal 2018 spending bill as well as language in the latest version of the Senate health care bill. The victories could be short-lived, though. The riders in the House Appropriations Committee’s Labor-HHS-Education proposed funding bill may not survive and become law. The full committee is expected to mark up the bill July 19. The fate of the Senate health care language also is not certain. The Senate retained the anti-abortion provisions that were in previous versions of the bill (HR 1628) despite arguments that they don't comply with budget rules. (Raman, 7/14)
House Votes Down Proposal To Block Funds For Soldiers Seeking Gender-Related Medical Treatment
“It’s a hurtful amendment, it’s not needed,” said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla), a noted advocate for LGBT rights who has a transgender son. “I view it as a personal issue, because as a mom I’m impacted, but it’s an issue of fairness for everyone."
McClatchy:
Republicans Fail To Ban Medical Treatments For Transgender Troops
Two dozen House Republicans voted with 190 Democrats to sink the amendment that would prohibit military funds for soldiers seeking medical treatment related to gender transition... Hartzler’s proposal comes in the middle of renewed debate over transgender people serving in the military. (Daugherty and Bergengruen, 7/13)
In other veterans' health care news —
McClatchy:
Burn Pit Veterans Wait For Judge's Decision
Hundreds of veterans and their families who have spent eight years in federal court trying to prove that burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan made U.S. troops sick are worried they’ll hit a legal dead end if a Maryland judge decides the company that ran the smoke-belching disposal sites can’t be sued because it was working on behalf of the government... KBR has asked the judge to dismiss the burn pit case — a collection of more than 60 individual suits filed in multiple jurisdictions by military family members, veterans or former KBR employees — arguing that the federal courts lack jurisdiction to rule on a military decision to use the burn pits, and as a military contractor, it should be shielded from litigation. (Kime, 7/13)
Heavy Painkiller Use, Abuse Remains Serious Problem For Medicare Patients, Report Finds
Doctor shopping -- obtaining large amounts of the drugs prescribed by four or more doctors and filled at four or more pharmacies -- also appears to be a major issue in the program.
ProPublica:
‘Extreme’ Use Of Painkillers And Doctor Shopping Plague Medicare, New Report Says
In Washington, D.C., a Medicare beneficiary filled prescriptions for 2,330 pills of oxycodone, hydromorphone and morphine in a single month last year — written by just one of the 42 health providers who prescribed the person such drugs... These are among the examples cited in a sobering new report released today by the inspector general of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (Ornstein, 7/13)
The Washington Post:
Half A Million Medicare Recipients Were Prescribed Too Many Opioid Drugs Last Year
Nearly 70,000 people on Medicare's drug plan received “extreme” amounts of narcotic painkillers in 2016 and more than 22,000 others appeared to be “doctor shopping” for drugs, patterns that put both groups “at serious risk of opioid misuse or overdose,” a government watchdog reported Thursday. (Bernstein, 7/13)
Stat:
Feds Identify Prescribers Giving Too Many Opioids To Part D Beneficiaries
In the latest bid to stem the opioid epidemic, investigators at the Department of Health and Human Services have identified excessive prescribing patterns in Medicare Part D involving hundreds of doctors and plan to work with law enforcement authorities to curtail the practice. In a new report, the HHS Office of Inspector General found that 401 prescribers last year wrote more than 256,200 prescriptions for nearly 90,000 Part D beneficiaries who were deemed to be at serious risk because they received “extreme” amounts of opioids or appeared to be doctor shopping. (Silverman, 7/13)
In other news on the crisis —
The New York Times:
A Tide Of Opioid-Dependent Newborns Forces Doctors To Rethink Treatment
Just 24 hours old, Jay’la Cy’anne Clay already was having a rough day. Convulsions rocked her tiny body as she lay under warming lights in the nursery of the Baptist Health Richmond hospital. She vomited and made strange, high-pitched cries. The infant was going through opioid withdrawal. (Saint Louis, 7/13)
Los Angeles Times:
The U.S. Should Rethink Its Entire Approach To Painkillers And The People Addicted To Them, Panel Urges
To reverse a still-spiraling American crisis fueled by prescription narcotic drugs, a panel of experts advising the federal government has recommended sweeping changes in the ways that physicians treat pain, their patients cope with pain, and government and private insurers support the care of people living with chronic pain. (Healy, 7/13)
New Partnership Aims To Make Life Easier For Those With Diabetes
Silicon Valley-based Bigfoot and Chicago-based Abbott Laboratories are teaming up on technology intended to help diabetics better monitor insulin intake and glucose levels throughout the day.
Los Angeles Times:
Silicon Valley Firm And Abbott Labs Team Up On System For Managing Diabetes
When Jeffrey Brewer’s son was 15, the boy nearly lost his life because he took too much insulin. The diabetic teen took insulin so he could eat a large bag of chips late at night. But about 20 minutes later, he forgot about that first dose and took another. He spent two days in the hospital, his father said. (Schencker, 7/13)
In other news —
The Washington Post:
‘We’re Losing More People To The Sweets Than To The Streets’: Why Two Black Pastors Are Suing Coca-Cola
William Lamar, the senior pastor at D.C.’s historic Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church, is tired of presiding over funerals for parishioners who died of heart disease, diabetes and stroke. So on Thursday, he and another prominent African American pastor filed suit against Coca-Cola and the American Beverage Association, claiming soda manufacturers knowingly deceived customers about the health risks of sugar-sweetened beverages — at enormous cost to their communities. (Dewey, 7/13)
Impact Debated Of Large Nurses Strike At Boston-Area Tufts Medical Center
The hospital is telling patients that care quality has not suffered as a result of the walkout by its nurses union. But studies indicate that such work stoppages can have negative consequences.
Boston Globe:
In Tufts Nurse Strike, Some Worry About Patient Care
Tufts Medical Center has gone to great lengths to reassure patients during this week’s strike by nurses, but there is some evidence that medical care can suffer when nurses walk the picket line. One of the few studies examining this question found that more patients die and are readmitted to the hospital during nurses’ strikes. (Kowalczyk and Arnett, 7/13)
Boston Globe:
Tufts Medical CEO: Calm Tone, Tough Stance In Nurses Strike
Union leaders say Wagner and other Tufts executives are the ones doing the bullying by denying nurses the compensation and better working conditions they deserve. The strike began after the union and the hospital failed to agree on wages, benefits, and staffing levels for the more than 1,200 unionized nurses at Tufts. (Dayal McCluskey, 7/14)
State Highlights: Minn. Marks New Measles Case; Three Mass. Hospitals Reach Merger Agreement
Media outlets report on news from Minnesota, Massachusetts, Georgia, Missouri, California, Ohio, Michigan, Texas and Florida.
The Star Tribune:
New Measles Case In Minnesota Extends Threat
A new measles case in Minnesota, reported just as the recent outbreak seemed to be winding down, has state health officials on alert because it involved a white adult who had visited public places in Hennepin, Ramsey and Carver counties while infectious and who had circulated among several people known to be unvaccinated. Reported Thursday by the Minnesota Department of Health, the case brings the total for the current measles outbreak to 79. (Olson, 7/13)
Boston Globe:
Beth Israel Deaconess And Lahey Health Sign Final Agreement To Merge
After several months of negotiations, the Beth Israel Deaconess health system, Lahey Health, and three other hospitals said they’ve signed a final agreement to merge. The merger would be the biggest Massachusetts hospital deal in decades. (Dayal McCluskey, 7/13)
WBUR:
Proposed Beth Israel-Lahey Merger Includes 13 Hospitals
A proposed hospital merger, spearheaded by Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Lahey Health, became formal Thursday with the signing of a definitive agreement and a filing with the state's Health Policy Commission. If approved, it would be the largest hospital merger in Massachusetts since Partners HealthCare formed in 1994 — and it would include more hospitals. (Bebinger, 7/13)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Georgia To Pursue $49 Million For School Nurses
In a joint effort with the Georgia Department of Education, the Department of Community Health board voted to approve a nursing services reimbursement program that would draw an estimated $48.6 million in additional federal dollars, assuming no major changes to Medicaid. There were 1,629 nurses and 307 unlicensed health care and clinic workers in Georgia schools last spring. (Tagami, 7/13)
The Associated Press:
Confusion Over How Anti-Abortion Bill Could Affect St. Louis
Missouri lawmakers are at a standstill on broad anti-abortion legislation more than a month after Republican Gov. Eric Greitens called them into a special session to deal with abortion issues. The legislation calls for several new regulations, such as annual state inspections of abortion clinics. But one of the provisions causing the most confusion addresses a St. Louis ordinance that city leaders say is intended to prevent discrimination based on reproductive health decisions, such as pregnancy and abortion. (7/14)
Los Angeles Times:
AIDS Healthcare Foundation Claims Victory As Court Throws Out Lawsuit Over Its Billing Of L.A. County
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation, long at battle with Los Angeles city and county officials over policies and payments, claimed a victory recently when a court dismissed a lawsuit involving charges that the foundation had overbilled L.A. County for HIV/AIDS-related services. (Agrawal, 7/13)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Best Hospitals In US: 8 Georgia Hospitals Among Most Advanced In Tech
And according to Hospitals and Health Networks 19th annual “Most Wired Hospitals and Health Systems” survey, eight Georgia hospitals or health systems (including four in metro Atlanta) rely heavily on digital innovation “to improve population health, capitalize on data analytics, boost patient engagement and introduce new efficiencies" ...The survey, conducted with the help of the American Hospital Association and health care experts, showed 82 percent of the nation’s hospitals and hospital systems use technological analysis tools to help improve quality and reduce costs, both clinically and administratively. (Pirani, 7/13)
Cincinnati Enquirer:
Adults With Congenital Heart Disease Get Care At Cincinnati Children's
Today, [Camille] King is one of more than 1,000 adults being treated at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center for congenital heart disease. Last year, the program became one of the first five in the country to be accredited by the Adult Congenital Heart Association. (Korte, 7/13)
Detroit Free Press:
Beaumont Trumpets, Defends New Pricey Proton Beam Cancer Center
Beaumont Health officials showed off their new $40-million cancer-fighting machine on Thursday — the first of its kind in Michigan and purportedly more advanced and less costly to operate than earlier models of the sometimes controversial technology. The proton beam device is the centerpiece of the new Proton Therapy Center on Beaumont's Royal Oak hospital campus and one of just 25 in the country. (Reindl, 7/13)
Kaiser Health News:
Medical Transportation Provider Accused Of Disserving L.A.’s Frail Patients
Some days, the drivers showed up late to take Julian Myers to and from dialysis. Other days, they didn’t come at all. When that happened, Myers, who has end-stage kidney disease, scrambled to find a ride. “My blood pressure was rising and I’d get anxious,” he recalled. “I was frustrated. It’s a regular appointment. They should be here on time.” (Gorman, 7/14)
Austin American-Statesman:
Lawmakers Propose Reining In Health Costs For Texas Retired Teachers
After failing to temper soaring health care costs for retired teachers, state lawmakers are considering giving retired teachers up to $1,200 more a year and pumping $200 million into their health care over the next two years. Starting in January, many retired teachers, particularly those under the age of 65, will see higher premiums and deductibles grow as much as 10 times what they’re paying now. (Chang, 7/13)
San Jose Mercury News:
Palo Alto Sees 26 Percent Rise In Homeless In County Census
The number of homeless people in Palo Alto has risen 26 percent in two years, according to a countywide census. Claudia Keith, a spokeswoman for the city, said Santa Clara County officials point to rising housing prices and the higher cost of living as likely reasons for the increase. Lee, 7/13)
Kansas City Star:
Assaults On Health Care Workers Spur Calls For Training, Legal Protections
A study by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration found health care workers nationwide are four times more likely to be victims of serious workplace violence than people in private industry as a whole. Of the workplace violence against health care workers, 80 percent came from patients. (Marso, 7/13)
Minnesota Public Radio:
Crisis Connection Hotline Rescued, As Least Temporarily
A mental health hotline that's served Minnesotans for nearly 50 years will keep operating thanks to an eleventh-hour infusion of money. Crisis Connection had been scheduled to shut down Friday evening, but a grant from the state health department means the service will continue linking people suffering mental health emergencies to professional counselors. (Sepic, 7/14)
The Star Tribune:
Minnesota Mental Health Crisis Line Gets Rescued At The Last Minute
In a last-minute move, the agency agreed late Thursday to provide enough funding, $139,000, to keep the crisis hot line open until late September. Canvas Health, the Oakdale-based nonprofit agency that operates the service, had previously announced the hot line would go dark on Friday, citing financial difficulties and a lack of state funding. The planned closing of Crisis Connection concerned state health officials and mental health advocates, because the line is so widely used and remains the only mental health crisis line that serves the entire state. (Serres, 7/13)
Health News Florida:
Federal Judge Dismisses Request To Stop Spraying Pesticide Naled In Miami-Dade County
A federal judge has dismissed a request to stop aerial spraying of the pesticide Naled in Miami-Dade County, describing the plaintiffs' complaint as "poor" and recommending they get a lawyer before pursuing further legal action. Judge Federico Moreno, of the Southern District of Florida, gave the two Miami Beach residents who filed the complaint 60 days to amend it by clarifying why the case belongs in federal court and which laws they contend are being violated. (Stein, 7/13)
Editorial pages examine the political dynamics involved in the debate surrounding the Senate GOP's efforts to pass a health bill.
The New York Times:
Revised Senate Health Bill Tries To Win Votes, But Has Fewer Winners
The revised Senate health bill has a dwindling list of winners and a bigger pool of potential losers. It would still make insurance much less affordable for poorer and older Americans who don’t get coverage through work or Medicare. It would make that insurance less valuable for many people with the most significant health care needs. The biggest beneficiaries of the original bill — the rich — would get less. (Margot Sanger-Katz, 7/13)
Bloomberg:
The Senate's Health-Care Follies Are Years In The Making
That's right. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell new plan is to ask Republicans to suspend reality until after casting their vote: Regardless of what the bill actually says, it means whatever they want it to mean. To state the obvious, this is not exactly a strong position. Conservatives will believe they are being betrayed, while Republicans (and everyone else) who want to preserve Medicaid won't believe the reassurances. McConnell, whether his reputation as a master legislative technician is deserved or not, is no fool. He simply has only a few choices remaining at this point in the game. Playing pretend is one of the last tools left at his disposal. (Jonathan Bernstein, 7/13)
The Washington Post:
Everything Is A Distraction From Something Much, Much Worse
Americans, you need to start paying attention. Like, really paying attention — to the issues that actually matter. Stop getting distracted! (Catherine Rampell, 7/13)
Bloomberg:
How Would A Bipartisan Health Bill Even Be Possible?
Mitch McConnell is once again announcing that the Senate is going to come out with a new health-care bill and try to hold a vote next week. That exhaustion you feel is the same despair that seeps over you when a pair of ill-matched friends announce for the 17th time that they’re getting back together. (Megan McArdle, 7/13)
Cincinnati Enquirer:
Sen. Portman Must Again Summon His Political Courage
This GOP bill offers Portman another opportunity to demonstrate his commitment to what is right, not just politically convenient. Experts say the GOP health care bill and its cuts to Medicaid will undo progress being made by Portman-authored CARA. (Catherine Baxter, 7/13)
Critics' Take: The Updated Senate Health Bill Is Still Ugly After Cosmetic Changes; An 'Abomination'
Opinion writers reacted with tough talk to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's latest health bill tweaks. The Wall Street Journal, however, terms the bill a "net improvement over the Obamacare status quo."
The Washington Post:
The Senate Health-Care Bill Gets A Makeover, But It’s Still Really Ugly
To get to 50 votes to pass their repeal-and-replace health-care plan, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and his Republican colleagues have tweaked their bill to placate holdouts. I found this paper by a couple of my CBPP colleagues to be especially useful right now in sorting out cosmetic changes from actual, substantive improvements. (Jared Bernstein, 7/14)
The New York Times:
A Scary New Senate Health Care Bill
Republican leaders in the Senate have accomplished what seemed impossible a few weeks ago: They have made their proposal to destroy the Affordable Care Act even worse. (7/13)
USA Today:
Senate Health Bill: Don't Throw Momma From The Medicaid Train
In the river of retrograde effects certain to follow if the latest version of the Senate Republican health care bill passes largely intact, none is more surprising than the injury to elderly Medicaid recipients. To state this is not to prioritize poor elderly over other deserving beneficiaries. It is simply to say that nearly two-thirds of Americans in nursing homes are, well, on Medicaid. And while not every American has a loved one who is disabled, or a poor child, or struggling with opioids, or belongs to another beneficiary group, it does seem fair to say that at one time in their life every American had parents. If they live long enough, most will be on Medicaid. (Peter Fromuth, 6/14)
The New York Times:
The Cruelty And Fraudulence Of Mitch McConnell’s Health Bill
A few days ago the tweeter in chief demanded that Congress enact “a beautiful new HealthCare bill” before it goes into recess. But now we’ve seen Mitch McConnell’s latest version of health “reform,” and “beautiful” is hardly the word for it. In fact, it’s surpassingly ugly, intellectually and morally. Previous iterations of Trumpcare were terrible, but this one is, incredibly, even worse. (Paul Krugman, 7/13)
Los Angeles Times:
The New GOP Healthcare Bill Is More Conservative And More Moderate, And Still Plain Bad
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has done something remarkable to the Republican healthcare bill he’s been trying to steer through the Senate: He’s simultaneously made it more conservative and more moderate. But he hasn’t magically transformed it into a good bill that would make healthcare better or more accessible in this country. (7/14)
The Wall Street Journal:
ObamaCare Moment Of Truth
Republican leaders unveiled a revised health-care bill on Thursday, setting up a Senate watershed next week. Few votes will reveal more about the principles and character of this Congress. Months of stations-of-the-cross negotiations between conservative and GOP moderates have pulled the bill towards the political center, and for the most part the new version continues the journey. This leftward shift is Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s bid to meet the demands of still-recalcitrant Republican moderates. The bill remains a net improvement over the Obama Care status quo, but the question now is whether they’ll take yes for an answer. (7/13)
The Washington Post:
The New Senate Health-Care Bill May Be Worse Than The Old One
Senate Republicans released Thursday a new version of their Obamacare repeal-and-replace bill. It is arguably worse than the unpopular bill that preceded it. The Congressional Budget Office projected that the previous iteration would result in 22 million more uninsured in a decade. “Looking at the revised Senate health bill, it’s hard to see how it could meaningfully alter CBO’s projection of how the uninsured will grow,” the Kaiser Family Foundation’s Larry Levitt noted. “The revised Senate bill reinstates taxes on wealthy people, but it mostly does not spend that money on health care for low-income people.” (7/13)
The Washington Post:
The New GOP Health-Care Plan Is Still An Abomination
Senate Republicans are releasing the latest version of their health-care plan today, and there’s a temptation to focus solely on what’s changed from the previous iteration. The changes are important, and we have to understand them. But what we shouldn’t do is allow a relative judgment (maybe it’s better in this way but worse in that way) to distract us from the big picture, because what’s still in the bill from before is even more important than what has changed. (Paul Waldman, 7/13)
The Washington Post:
The Senate Health Bill Would Make The Opioid Epidemic Worse. Here’s How.
Over the past two decades, the number of Americans dying each year from opioid overdoses has quadrupled. In the hardest-hit state, West Virginia, where the overdose death rate is about three times the national average, the crisis has resulted in an overwhelmed foster-care system and a state burial program for the poor that ran through its entire annual budget three months into the year. (Jonathan Gruber and Angela Kilby, 7/13)
Opinion writers offer their thoughts on a range of health issues.
The New England Journal Of Medicine:
Threats To Information Security — Public Health Implications
In health care, information security has classically been regarded as an administrative nuisance, a regulatory hurdle, or a simple privacy matter. But the recent “WannaCry” and “Petya” ransomware attacks have wreaked havoc by disabling organizations worldwide, including parts of England’s National Health Service (NHS) and the Heritage Valley Health System in Pennsylvania. These events are just two examples of a wave of cyberattacks forcing a new conversation about health care information security. With the delivery of health care increasingly dependent on information systems, disruptions to these systems result in disruptions in clinical care that can harm patients. Health care information security has emerged as a public health challenge. (William J. Gordon, Adam Fairhall and Adam Landman, 7/12)
The Des Moines Register:
Feds Fail To Protect Nursing Home Residents
The nation's worst nursing homes have never received enough oversight, and the problem is getting worse. In 1998, federal regulators attempted to crack down on homes that had an established pattern of injuring and, in some cases, killing elderly residents, then briefly cleaning up their act, sometimes by adding temporary workers, to appease state inspectors and maintain their licenses. (7/13)
The New York Times:
An Ancient Cure For Alzheimer’s?
In 2011, Ben Trumble emerged from the Bolivian jungle with a backpack containing hundreds of vials of saliva. He had spent six weeks following indigenous men as they tramped through the wilderness, shooting arrows at wild pigs. The men belonged to the Tsimane people, who live as our ancestors did thousands of years ago — hunting, foraging and farming small plots of land. Dr. Trumble had asked the men to spit into vials a few times a day so that he could map their testosterone levels. In return, he carried their kills and helped them field-dress their meat — a sort of roadie to the hunters. (Pagan Kennedy, 7/14)
RealClear Health:
Digital Health Hope: Telemedicine And Increasing Access To Care
Telemedicine—which can be strictly defined as a remote virtual doctor-patient interaction—is rapidly gaining popularity. When initially developed, telemedicine was designed to allow health care professionals to evaluate, diagnose and treat patients in remote and rural locations using telecommunications technology. Now, many are beginning to utilize telemedicine as a replacement for the traditional doctor visit even when they are located in a city or town with many brick and mortar offices. The push for an increased use of telemedicine by insurers, third party payers, and many global businesses has led its development as a worldwide multi-billion dollar industry. (Kevin Campbell, 7/14)