- KFF Health News Original Stories 6
- Half The Time, Nursing Homes Scrutinized On Safety By Medicare Are Still Treacherous
- Do-It-Yourself Detox Can Be 'Freddy Krueger' Scary — And Usually Fails
- Amount Of Opioids Prescribed In U.S. Has Been Falling Since 2010
- Trump's Surgeon General Pick Built Name Fighting HIV And Opioids In Indiana
- Obamacare Inspires Unlikely Political Action In California's Red Region
- Podcast: What The Health? Why Is This Stuff So Complicated?
- Political Cartoon: 'Queue Up?'
- Health Law 5
- McConnell Concedes Bill Might Not Pass, But Reaffirms Need To Shore Up Individual Markets
- Small Town Hall In Kansas Reflects Troubled Mood Of Country Over GOP's Health Plan
- Cruz's New Diplomatic Demeanor In Health Care Negotiations Welcomed By Colleagues
- An Unlikely Duo: How Trump And Paul Are Teaming Up And Undermining GOP Leadership
- For A Party That Hates Obamacare, Republicans' Current Bill Looks A Whole Lot Like It
- Marketplace 2
- Blue Cross And Blue Shield Of Georgia Seeks Stiff Premium Increases For 2018
- Tired Of Waiting For State Payments, Aetna Plans To Quit Illinois Medicaid Managed Care Program
- Administration News 1
- Georgia’s Public Health Commissioner Tapped To Replace Frieden As CDC Director
- Public Health 4
- Opana ER Maker To Withdraw Controversial Opioid Following Rare FDA Request
- Amount Of Opioids Prescribed In U.S. Is Falling, But That's Where The Good News Ends
- N.Y. Hospital Offers To Treat British Baby At Center Of Life-Support Battle In Europe
- It's Becoming Harder To Treat Gonorrhea With Antibiotics As Bacteria Evolves
- State Watch 2
- S.C. Hospital To Pay Largest-Ever Settlement For Improper Treatment Of Emergency Psychiatric Patients
- State Highlights: Inmates Allege Va. Failed To Provide Hep C Treatment; Pushback Expected Over Ore. Abortion Coverage Law
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Half The Time, Nursing Homes Scrutinized On Safety By Medicare Are Still Treacherous
Of the 528 nursing homes that graduated from special focus status before 2014 and are still operating, more than half — 52 percent — have harmed patients or operated in a way that put patients in serious jeopardy within the past three years, a KHN analysis finds. (Jordan Rau, 7/6)
Do-It-Yourself Detox Can Be 'Freddy Krueger' Scary — And Usually Fails
Treatment for opioid addiction can be expensive and difficult to coordinate. That might make some people tempted to think they can overcome the addiction on their own. This rarely works. (Elana Gordon, WHYY, 7/7)
Amount Of Opioids Prescribed In U.S. Has Been Falling Since 2010
Report by CDC researchers finds a steady fall in opioid use in recent years, but the rates are still three times higher than in 1999. (Vickie Connor, 7/6)
Trump's Surgeon General Pick Built Name Fighting HIV And Opioids In Indiana
Dr. Jerome Adams is the health commissioner in Indiana, the home state of Vice President Mike Pence. (Emily Forman, Side Effects Public Media, 7/7)
Obamacare Inspires Unlikely Political Action In California's Red Region
In a county where cows outnumber people and most voters supported Donald Trump, a coalition of health clinics is driven to defend the health law. (April Dembosky, KQED, 7/7)
Podcast: What The Health? Why Is This Stuff So Complicated?
Julie Rovner of Kaiser Health News, Joanne Kenen of Politico, Margot Sanger-Katz of The New York Times and Paige Winfield Cunningham of The Washington Post discuss the state of the Senate’s effort to replace Obamacare. (7/6)
Political Cartoon: 'Queue Up?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Queue Up?'" by Signe Wilkinson .
Here's today's health policy haiku:
A PHARMA COMEBACK STORY
Fat pill fails Pharma.
FDA approves new tack.
Get back on your bike.
- Ernest R. Smith
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:
McConnell Concedes Bill Might Not Pass, But Reaffirms Need To Shore Up Individual Markets
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he will have a new bill ready for the returning lawmakers, but that if they can't reach an agreement "no action is not an alternative" that's acceptable.
The Associated Press:
GOP Leader Says He'll Rework Health Bill, But Offers Plan B
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he plans to produce a fresh bill in about a week scuttling and replacing much of President Barack Obama's health care law. But he's also acknowledging a Plan B if that effort continues to flounder. (Schreiner and Fram, 7/7)
USA Today:
McConnell: If GOP Health Bill Dies, Bipartisan Fix Will Be Needed
“No action is not an alternative,” McConnell said. “We’ve got the insurance markets imploding all over the country, including in this state.” Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., jumped on the Republican leader's comments, saying McConnell "opened the door to bipartisan solutions." (Collins, 7/6)
The Washington Post:
McConnell Says GOP Must Shore Up ACA Insurance Markets If Senate Bill Dies
His suggestion that he and his colleagues might instead try to bolster the insurance exchanges created under the ACA is at odds with Republican talking points that they are beyond repair. The marketplaces were built for people who do not have access to affordable coverage through a job, and at last count slightly more than 10 million Americans had health plans purchased through the exchanges. More than 8 in 10 customers bought their plans with federal subsidies the law provides. (Eilperin and Goldstein, 7/6)
Politico:
McConnell: If We Can't Repeal Obamacare, We'll Fix It
A bill to strengthen the insurance markets would presumably need Democratic support to get 60 votes to overcome a filibuster. McConnell in the past has warned fractious GOP lawmakers that if the Republican-only repeal effort failed, he would be forced to work with top Democrat Chuck Schumer on legislation that conservatives would likely oppose much more than the GOP repeal bill. He repeated that after a White House meeting with the president last week. (Haberkorn, 7/6)
The Associated Press:
McConnell, Paul Talk Health Care -- Just Not With Each Other
As Republican efforts to get rid of former President Barack Obama's health care law stall in the U.S. Senate, Kentucky's two senators are traveling the state to talk about it. They just aren't talking to each other. U.S. Sen. Rand Paul has emerged as one of the biggest obstacles to passing the Republican answer to the Affordable Care Act, adding another wrinkle in his complex relationship with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. (Beam and Schreiner, 7/7)
The Hill:
McConnell Signals Doubts About ObamaCare Vote
Republican have faced a wave of pressure over the July Fourth recess to oppose the legislation. They are set to return to Washington on Monday without an agreement on the path forward. (Carney, 7/6)
Small Town Hall In Kansas Reflects Troubled Mood Of Country Over GOP's Health Plan
On Thursday night, Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) did what many Republicans have avoided this recess: face head on his constituents' tough questions on health care. The concerns he heard are ones that echo across the country, and demonstrate how hard it will be to get the legislation passed.
The Associated Press:
Sen. Moran Gets Tough Health Care Questions In Trump Country
Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran faced tough questions Thursday at a town hall meeting in his home county packed with critics of Republican efforts to overhaul health care, showing that even a tiny town deep in Trump territory in a Republican state isn't isolated from the political discontent in Washington. (Hanna, 7/6)
The New York Times:
Unlikely Holdout Underscores Challenge For Senate Health Bill
Cheryl Hofstetter Duffy began by telling Senator Jerry Moran that she was a breast cancer survivor. Then she asked why the debate over the Affordable Care Act was focused on repealing and replacing the law, rather than simply making it better. When she finished, the crowd jammed into a community center on Thursday applauded. Mr. Moran, a Kansas Republican who came out last week against the Senate leadership’s repeal bill, picked up on the sentiment, lamenting that both parties were locked in opposition over health care, with Republicans pursuing repeal and Democrats saying, he said, “Not one inch are we giving.” “And so the rhetoric puts us into the corners of the ring,” he said, “and never a meeting of the minds.” (Kaplan, 7/6)
The Wall Street Journal:
GOP Senator Urged To Oppose Health Bill At Town Hall
At Mr. Moran’s town-hall meeting, no one spoke out in support of the Republican bill, though one voter sharply criticized the 2010 law, calling it “socialized medicine.” Mr. Moran said that rather than continue to push a flawed bill, GOP leaders should pursue negotiations with Democrats, including public hearings and amendments from both sides. He spoke repeatedly about fixing or repairing the law, saying it has “benefited some people.” For Mr. Moran, the first GOP senator to sponsor legislation repealing the ACA after its passage in 2010, his stance marked a stark shift. (Hackman, 7/6)
The Washington Post:
A Town Hall In Kansas Shows Republican Struggles With Health-Care Bill
Moran, the only Republican senator holding unscreened town halls on health care this week, revealed just how much his party is struggling to pass a bill — and even how to talk about it. The people who crowded in and around Palco’s community center aimed to prove that there was no demand for a repeal of the ACA, even in the reddest parts of a deep red state. (Weigel, 7/6)
Politico:
Moran Feels Surprising Squeeze On Obamacare Repeal
The Urban Institute says about 120,000 residents in Kansas would lose coverage under the Senate Republican plan, which disproportionately hits the state’s older and more rural population, according to David Jordan, executive director of the Alliance for a Healthy Kansas. (Kim, 7/7)
A look at how other senators are faring at home —
Politico:
McCaskill Finds Obamacare Fans In Trump Country
Claire McCaskill took a quick poll Thursday in the middle of her seventh town hall in two days, asking constituents to raise their hands if they supported the Senate GOP’s Obamacare repeal plan. Two hands rose among the crowd of about five dozen in this deep-red county. When McCaskill asked the same question earlier Thursday at a public meeting in Moberly, another rural Missouri town where President Donald Trump won overwhelmingly, no one raised their hands. (Schor, 7/6)
The CT Mirror:
Himes Tells Town Hall Meeting Trump Is Playing To Public’s Fears
A fundamental battle between hope and fear is playing out in Washington, D.C., right now, U.S. Rep. Jim Himes says – and President Donald J. Trump has chosen fear as his political tool... Though he began the night expressing hope in the fight against Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, fear worked its way to the forefront later in the evening as several successive speakers asked questions about crisis in government. (Constable and Werth, 7/7)
Montana Public Radio:
Montana Health Leaders Speak Out Against GOP Health Care Bill
Leaders of Montana doctors, nurses and hospital groups today spoke out against the health care bill being proposed by Senate Republicans. ... The head of the Montana Hospital Association also said the bill would be bad for health care in the state, because it would reduce the number of people with health coverage. A representative of the state's biggest physician's organization said, thanks to the Medicaid expansion, they're now seeing people who had been unable to afford care, and those people would be left without coverage if the Senate bill passes. (Whitney, 7/6)
Chattanooga (Tenn.) Times Free Press:
Sen. Bob Corker Addresses Concerns Over Health Care Reform
Standing in front of the Council for Alcohol & Drug Abuse Services on Spears Avenue, Corker spotted four pro-Obamacare signs — and two people. ... Eric Reese, 37, told the senator that his conservative colleagues in Washington were going to put together a plan that is simply too harsh for the poor and the deathly ill. To that, Corker offered a rebuttal. "There is no attempt to do away with the pre-existing condition issue (in place under the Affordable Care Act)," he said. "There is an attempt right now to build up the subsidy level so that people who are lower income can actually purchase health care." (Jett, 7/7)
Denver Post:
Disability-Rights Advocates Protest Outside Cory Gardner's Denver Office Again
Protesters who last week staged a 57-hour sit-in at Sen. Cory Gardner’s Denver office returned to the general vicinity Thursday with hundreds of allies, saying they would continue to make their voices heard until the Republican commits to a “no” vote on the Senate health care bill. The activists, clutching water bottles and sporting yellow T-shirts, gathered in the morning under pop-up canopies on the lawn outside Gardner’s office. They represented ADAPT, a Colorado-based national disability-rights organization, and more than a dozen other groups. (Baumann, 7/6)
Cruz's New Diplomatic Demeanor In Health Care Negotiations Welcomed By Colleagues
Sen. Ted Cruz's name used to be synonymous with firebrand tactics to disrupt the health law. Now his fellow Republican senators are more likely to describe him as a constructive compromiser. That doesn't mean he's not facing heat with his constituents, though.
Roll Call:
Cruz Walks Health Care Tightrope, With Eye on 2018
Cruz has been engaged with 12 other colleagues in closed-door discussions on the legislation to repeal parts of the health care law. The senator who once spoke of the pressure to compromise is now welcomed by his colleagues for his willingness to do so. The quieter, behind-the-scenes style is a change for Cruz, according to his fellow lawmakers. Four GOP senators used the same word to describe his role: constructive. “It is welcomed,” said South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who was open about the disdain senators felt for Cruz. (Bowman, 7/6)
NPR:
'Shame On Ted': Health Care Protests Greet Ted Cruz In Texas
At an event Wednesday night, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz was met by about 150 protesters who oppose the Senate's efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. On a hot evening, they stood outside a hotel in McKinney, a north Dallas suburb, shouting "shame on Ted" and "save Medicaid." (Goodwyn and Kelly, 7/6)
The Associated Press:
Cruz Faces Hecklers, Calls Senate Health Plan 'Precarious'
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz held a lengthy but civil debate with a small group of hecklers defending former President Barack Obama's health care law in his home state's capital Thursday night — even as he expressed doubts about whether the Republican plan to repeal and replace it will pass the Senate. (Weissert, 7/6)
Texas Tribune:
Back Home In Texas, Cruz Confronts Health Care Politics
In the town halls and a flurry of media appearances this week across Texas, Cruz has been pitching his Consumer Freedom Amendment, which would allow insurers to continue selling plans that meet Obamacare requirements but also plans that do not comply with the law. The amendment has the backing of the White House and influential conservative groups, but it appears to be an open question — at best — whether some of his fellow Republicans in the Senate, especially the more moderate ones, could vote for it. (Svitek and Wilson, 7/6)
The Hill:
Cruz Faces ObamaCare Repeal Pushback During Veterans Event
[One] attendee asked him if he would call "ObamaCare" the "Affordable Care Act," but the Texas senator said he wouldn't because he doesn't "believe in deceptive speech." "It is widely off by a large factor," he said. "If you look at what is happening with ObamaCare now people are hurting under it." Another attendee accused Cruz of stalling during a long story about his healthcare debate with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on CNN, asking him: "You're filibustering. How are you going to improve healthcare?" Cruz also told an attendee that "death panels" "wasn't my term," after the GOP senator was asked if he remembered the phase. (Carney, 7/6)
The Washington Post:
Cruz Calls For ‘Clean Repeal’ Of ACA If Senate Talks Fall Apart — Aligning Him With Trump, Not McConnell
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) said Thursday that he agrees with President Trump: If Republican senators are unable to pass a bill to repeal and replace key parts of the Affordable Care Act, the Senate should vote on a narrower bill to simply repeal the law and work on a replacement later. “If we cannot bring the conference together and agree on repeal legislation, then I think President Trump’s absolutely right that we should pass a clean repeal,” Cruz told reporters. (Sullivan, 7/6)
The Hill:
Schumer Calls Cruz Healthcare Amendment A 'Hoax'
Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Thursday called Sen. Ted Cruz's (R-Texas) amendment to the GOP healthcare plan “a hoax” that would increase the cost of healthcare. “Make no mistake, the Cruz amendment is a hoax. Under the guise of lowering premiums, it makes healthcare more expensive because deductibles and copayments would be so onerous that many Americans would pay much more out of their pockets than they pay today,” Schumer said in a statement. (Shelbourne, 7/6)
An Unlikely Duo: How Trump And Paul Are Teaming Up And Undermining GOP Leadership
Former rivals, President Donald Trump and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), are presenting a somewhat unified front on health care efforts that don't always align with the stance of Republican leaders on Capitol Hill.
Politico:
Rand And Donald’s Wild Health Care Ride
After a bitter rivalry during the 2016 presidential campaign, Sen. Rand Paul and President Donald Trump just can’t quit each other. And they are teaming up to confound everyone in Washington on the GOP’s attempts to repeal Obamacare. After Paul dubbed candidate Trump an “orange-faced windbag” and Trump questioned whether candidate Paul had a “properly functioning brain,” the two have begun to build a strong relationship. Trump has expended major energy courting Paul and they’ve developed what Paul calls a “good rapport.” They’ve played golf and chat regularly on the phone. (Everett and Dawsey, 7/7)
Meanwhile, one senator blames the fact that no one believed Trump was going to win on why the Republican efforts are a mess —
USA Today:
Sen. Pat Toomey On Health Care Delay: I Didn't Think Trump Would Win Presidency
Republicans are struggling to pass a bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act and one GOP Senator has a possible explanation for the holdup — albeit not a new one. "I didn't expect Donald Trump to win. I think most of my colleagues didn't. So we didn't expect to be in this situation," Pat Toomey, R-Pa., said Wednesday. Toomey's blunt answer came during a televised town hall in response to a question from an ABC news anchor about why the health bill has not passed given how vehemently Republicans have opposed the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. (Miller, 7/6)
The Washington Post:
One Reason The GOP Health Bill Is A Mess: No One Thought Trump Would Win
Toomey, now playing a critical role in negotiations over the GOP health-care bill, spent most of last year criticizing Trump’s personal behavior and the fights he picked on social media. Toomey did not announce his support for Trump’s candidacy until polls closed in Pennsylvania on Nov. 8, fully aware that no Republican presidential candidate had won his state since 1988 — and assuming that Trump would continue the streak. (Kane, 7/6)
For A Party That Hates Obamacare, Republicans' Current Bill Looks A Whole Lot Like It
Republicans are finding out they need to keep a lot of the provisions from the Affordable Care Act. Meanwhile, some senators say they may be weeks away from a vote.
Politico:
How The Senate Health Bill Became ‘Obamacare Lite’
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell famously promised to rip out Obamacare “root and branch,” a sentiment echoed by Republicans on the campaign trail for seven years. But Obamacare is proving harder to eradicate than kudzu, and Republicans may be stuck with major parts of Barack Obama’s legacy. (Demko, 7/6)
The Hill:
Conservatives Revolt Over Talk Of Keeping ObamaCare Tax
Conservative groups are warning GOP senators against keeping an ObamaCare tax on investment income in their healthcare bill, an idea that has gained some traction among lawmakers. GOP lawmakers have floated keeping ObamaCare’s 3.8-percent net investment income tax (NIIT) to help pay for more generous healthcare subsidies for low-income people. Democrats criticized an earlier version of the Senate’s ObamaCare repeal bill for eliminating the tax because it generally applies to high earners. (Jagoda, 7/7)
Los Angeles Times:
Republicans Are In Charge. So Why Can't They Deliver On Healthcare?
For the better part of a decade, “repeal and replace” has been Republican gospel, a political talking point and policy manifesto. Other issues that long served as the glue holding together the disparate GOP coalition — free trade, a deep and abiding suspicion of Russia, “traditional family values” — have loosened their grip on the party and its voters. (Barabak, 7/6)
The Hill:
Senate Republicans Say They're Weeks Away From Healthcare Vote
Republican senators are downplaying the chances of a quick vote next week on their ObamaCare replacement bill amid divisions in the party over what the legislation should look like. "We're still several weeks away from a vote, I think,” Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) said at an event Wednesday. (Sullivan, 7/6)
And in other news related to the Republicans' health care efforts —
The Hill:
Chaffetz Slams House GOP: You Still Can’t Point To A Single Thing We’ve Done On Healthcare
Former GOP Rep. Jason Chaffetz (Utah) said members of Congress are frustrated with Republican leadership for not living up to promises to voters and passing a healthcare bill. He said on Fox News that the GOP did not follow through on its promises to pass the healthcare bill despite having control over the House, Senate and the presidency. He said lawmakers promised to have a plan for repealing and replacing ObamaCare on Trump’s desk by the time he took office in January, but there is still no bill seven months later. (Eberhardt, 7/6)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
What Does Sen. Rob Portman Want? Can He Get To 'Yes' On Health Care?
Sen. Rob Portman is back in Ohio, promoting treatment for opioid abuse during this week's congressional break -- and being confronted by critics who fear he'll help slice health care benefits in a vote later this summer. Health care, and specifically the Obamacare repeal-and-replace proposals, is dogging the second-term Ohio Republican unlike any other bill he has had to vote on. (Koff, 7/6)
Kaiser Health News:
Podcast: What The Health? Why Is This Stuff So Complicated?
Julie Rovner of Kaiser Health News, Joanne Kenen of Politico, Margot Sanger-Katz of The New York Times and Paige Winfield Cunningham of The Washington Post discuss the latest on the Senate’s effort to “repeal and replace” the Affordable Care Act, and why it is so difficult to make popular changes, such as requiring insurers to cover people with preexisting health conditions. (7/6)
Bloomberg:
Don’t Expect Health Coverage If You Survive A Gunshot Wound
Among gunshot survivors, 51-year-old House Majority Whip Steve Scalise is an outlier. Such victims are more likely to be low-earning black men between the ages of 15 and 24. Scalise, who is white, does share one fundamental characteristic with these younger men: Being shot means he now has a pre-existing condition in the eyes of health insurers. For most people, that status could mean more financial suffering under a Republican rollback of the Affordable Care Act. (Woolley, 7/6)
Blue Cross And Blue Shield Of Georgia Seeks Stiff Premium Increases For 2018
The premium hikes for the company's policies will range from more than 25 percent to 55.7 percent. Blue Cross is the only insurer in 96 of Georgia’s 159 counties.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Citing Uncertainty, Blue Cross Seeks Big Rate Increases In Georgia
In a blow to consumers insured on the state’s Obamacare exchange plan, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia has proposed to raise rates an average of 40.6 percent in 2018. Blue Cross said that if policy in Washington weakens the exchange, it may even pull out of the Georgia Obamacare market. The insurance company is the only one left that insures residents in every county in the state under the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. (Hart, 7/6)
Georgia Health News:
Blue Cross, Other Insurers Seeking Big Premium Hikes
Georgia’s largest health insurer is requesting an average premium increase of 40 percent for individual coverage in the Affordable Care Act insurance exchange next year. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia is the only health insurer scheduled to deliver a product in all 159 Georgia counties in the exchanges, which are designed to offer coverage to people who don’t get job-based or government health plans. (Miller, 7/6)
Tired Of Waiting For State Payments, Aetna Plans To Quit Illinois Medicaid Managed Care Program
The insurer says the state owes it nearly $700 million but it hopes an accommodation can be reached.
Modern Healthcare:
Aetna Threatens To Exit Illinois Medicaid Over Budget Crisis
Aetna Better Health, which the state of Illinois owes at least $698 million, has had enough.The subsidiary of the national insurance giant has given the state notice that it plans to terminate its Medicaid contracts, Aetna spokesman T.J. Crawford wrote today in an email. (Schorsch, 7/6)
Chicago Tribune:
Insurer Threatens To Pull Out Of Illinois' Medicaid Program Amid Budget Woes
A major insurer is threatening to leave the state's Medicaid managed care program if Illinois can't figure out how to pay it — a move that could force 235,000 Illinois residents to get new coverage. Aetna Better Health of Illinois President Laurie Brubaker said in a court filing last week that the state owes the insurer $698 million. (Schencker, 7/6)
Georgia’s Public Health Commissioner Tapped To Replace Frieden As CDC Director
Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald may prove to be a controversial pick. In 2014 during the West African Ebola crisis, Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal stated that water destroys Ebola viruses and attributed the false notion to Fitzgerald.
Stat:
Brenda Fitzgerald Is Expected To Be Named New CDC Director
Georgia’s public health commissioner, an obstetrician-gynecologist and two-time Republican candidate for Congress, is expected to be named the next director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, according to multiple reports. Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald will replace Dr. Tom Frieden, who served as CDC director for eight years before stepping down in January. (Branswell, 7/6)
The Washington Post:
Trump Administration To Name Georgia Health Official As New CDC Director
Fitzgerald, 70, an obstetrician-gynecologist who has headed that state's public health department since 2011, will succeed Tom Frieden. He stepped down in January after serving for eight years, longer than any director since the 1970s. Anne Schuchat, a veteran CDC official, has been serving as acting director. (Sun, 7/6)
Opana ER Maker To Withdraw Controversial Opioid Following Rare FDA Request
Pharmaceutical company Endo will voluntarily pull the painkiller, which is about twice as powerful as OxyContin, based on Food and Drug Administration concerns that the drug was too easy to abuse. Other news on the opioid public health crisis comes out of North Carolina, Tennessee and Pennsylvania.
Stat:
Endo Gives In To FDA Demand And Agrees To Yank Its Opioid Painkiller
In the end, the executive team at Endo International blinked. The drug maker has voluntarily agreed to withdraw its Opana ER opioid painkiller in response to an unusual request last month from the Food and Drug Administration over concerns the pill is too easily abused. (Silverman, 7/6)
CNN:
Opioid Opana ER To Be Pulled By Pharmaceutical Company
The company said in a statement posted on its website it still believes in the efficacy and safety of Opana ER, or oxymorphone hydrochloride. The FDA said the request was the first time it had asked that an opioid pain medication be pulled because of "the public health consequences of abuse." (Almasy, 7/6)
North Carolina Health News:
Cooper Presents NC Opioid Action Plan, Slams Federal Health Care Bill
North Carolina leaders unveiled a multi-part plan last week to combat the rise in opioid overdoses and substance abuse across the state. Gov. Roy Cooper called it “flexible” and said it would be updated frequently with new statistics and solutions. The plan calls for everyone to work together, from federal and state lawmakers to law enforcement, local health departments, pharmacists, physicians, businesses, philanthropic groups and community activists. (Knopf, 7/6)
Nashville Tennessean:
Mt. Juliet Police Supply Officers With Opioid Overdose Kits
The Mt. Juliet Police Department has equipped officers with opioid overdose kits to administer to people or fellow officers. The department purchased 90 kits for individual officers, two kits for K-9 units and two wall-mount kits for just over $6,300, Lt. Tyler Chandler said. (Humbles, 7/6)
Kaiser Health News:
Do-It-Yourself Detox Can Be ‘Freddy Krueger’ Scary — And Usually Fails
By the time Elvis Rosado was 25, he was addicted to opioids and serving time in jail for selling drugs to support his habit.“I was like, ‘I have to kick this, I have to break this,’ ” he said. For Rosado, who lives in Philadelphia, drugs had become a way to disassociate from “the reality that was life.” He’d wake up physically needing the drugs to function. (Gordon, 7/7)
Amount Of Opioids Prescribed In U.S. Is Falling, But That's Where The Good News Ends
Scientists say there are still "too many people getting medicine at too high a level and for too long."
The New York Times:
Opioid Prescriptions Fall After 2010 Peak, C.D.C. Report Finds
The amount of opioid painkillers prescribed in the United States peaked in 2010, a new federal analysis has found, with prescriptions for higher, more dangerous doses dropping most sharply — by 41 percent — since then. But the analysis, by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also found that the prescribing rate in 2015 remained three times as high as in 1999, when the nation’s problem with opioid addiction was just getting started. (Goodnough, 7/6)
The Associated Press:
Opioid Prescribing Is Falling In The US, But Not Everywhere
Overall opioid prescription rates have been falling in recent years, but the powerful drugs have become more plentiful in more than than 1 in 5 U.S. counties, a report released Thursday finds. The amount of opioids prescribed fell 18 percent between 2010 and 2015. But researchers found local differences, with opioid prescribing six times higher in some counties than others. (Stobbe, 7/6)
The Washington Post:
Opioid Prescriptions Dropped For The First Time In The Modern Drug Crisis
Anne Schuchat, the CDC’s acting director, expressed tempered optimism about the first national decline in opioid prescriptions that the CDC has reported since the crisis began in the late 1990s. She said the prescription rate is still triple the level it was in 1999 and four times what it is in some European countries. Even at the reduced prescribing rate, she said, enough opioids were ordered in 2015 to keep every American medicated round-the-clock for three weeks. (Bernstein, 7/6)
NPR:
Doctors Are Prescribing Fewer Opioids But Rates Remain High, CDC Says
"The bottom line is that too many [people] are still getting too much for too long," says Anne Schuchat, the CDC's acting director. "And that is driving our problem with drug overdoses and drug overdose deaths in the country." (Stein, 7/6)
Los Angeles Times:
In Rural America, Opioid Prescriptions Continue To Flow, New CDC Report Shows
The CDC’s comprehensive report offers a mixed picture of progress in a national effort to reduce the availability of the prescription painkillers, which have been implicated in roughly half of the nation’s 33,000 opioid-related overdose deaths last year. (Healy, 7/6)
The Baltimore Sun:
CDC Finds Uneven Progress On Reducing Reliance On Addictive Opioids
Fewer opioid painkillers are being prescribed to patients in half of U.S. counties, including most in Maryland, in recent years, but the amount remains three times what it was in 1999, according to new figures released Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC and other public health officials have sought to curb prescriptions of these potent, but addictive painkillers because they are seen as a key contributor to the nationwide overdose epidemic. Users become hooked on them and later turn to cheaper and more deadly street drugs such as heroin. (Cohn, 7/6)
Kaiser Health News:
Amount Of Opioids Prescribed In U.S. Has Been Falling Since 2010
Ryan Hampton was sitting at his computer at work when he began sweating, feeling sick and unable to concentrate. He went to the bathroom, splashed water on his face and called his friend for help.That was the day he realized he was addicted to opioids. Hampton, now 36 and living in Los Angeles, said the prescription for his pain medication had run out and he didn’t realize he would face withdrawal problems. (Connor, 7/6)
N.Y. Hospital Offers To Treat British Baby At Center Of Life-Support Battle In Europe
New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center says it would admit Charlie Gard, an 11-month-old infant with a rare and fatal genetic disease, if allowed by law and if he can be transferred safely. European courts ruled that the baby could be removed from life support against the wishes of his parents.
Stat:
New York Hospital Offers To Admit Charlie Gard, Baby At Center Of Life-And-Death Legal Fight
New York hospital said on Thursday that it has agreed to admit and treat the British baby at the center of a life-and-death debate after European courts ruled that he could be removed from life support against the wishes of his parents. New-York Presbyterian Hospital and Columbia University Irving Medical Center said in a statement that it would admit and evaluate Charlie Gard, 10 months old, who suffers from an extremely rare genetic disease called mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome. (Begley, 7/6)
The New York Times:
New York Hospital Offers To Treat British Baby With Rare Disease
A leading academic medical center in New York City has offered to treat Charlie Gard, an 11-month-old infant in Britain who was born with a rare and fatal genetic disease. European courts have ruled that he should be taken off life support, as there are no effective treatments for his condition. His parents were denied permission to bring him to the United States for experimental therapy. (Rabin, 7/6)
CNN:
Charlie Gard: Could This Case Happen In The US?
A beautiful boy born 11 months ago is dying in London. The world watches as his parents battle to keep their child alive. Courts will not allow the hospital to release the baby, Charlie Gard, into the parents' custody so they can travel to try an experimental treatment. Across the ocean, many people are appalled or confused, and wondering: Could a similar situation happen in the United States? (Scutti, 7/6)
It's Becoming Harder To Treat Gonorrhea With Antibiotics As Bacteria Evolves
Today's other public health stories cover cancer death rates in rural areas, dementia, tobacco use in movies, mental health of the homeless and traveler stress.
CNN:
This STD Is Becoming 'Smarter' And Harder To Treat
Gonorrhea is becoming harder and in some cases impossible to treat with antibiotics, the World Health Organization said. "The bacteria that cause gonorrhea are particularly smart. Every time we use a new class of antibiotics to treat the infection, the bacteria evolve to resist them," said Teodora Wi, a human reproduction specialist at the WHO, in a news release. (Chavez, 7/7)
The Washington Post:
Deaths From Cancer Higher In Rural America, CDC Finds
Despite decreases in cancer death rates nationwide, a new report shows they are higher in rural America than in urban areas of the United States. The report released Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that rural areas had higher rates of new cases as well as of deaths from cancers related to tobacco use, such as lung and laryngeal cancers, and those that can be prevented by screening, such as colorectal and cervical cancers. (Sun, 7/6)
Philly.com:
'Mom, I Didn't Steal Your Dentures': Coping When Dementia Turns To Delusion
Many people think of dementia solely as a condition that causes memory loss. That’s one reason family caregivers may be so surprised and upset when older relatives start having major psychiatric symptoms such as hallucinations, delusions or paranoia, even though they are common features of dementia. (Burling, 7/6)
San Jose Mercury News:
Tobacco Use In Youth-Rated Films Has Increased According To UCSF Study
The number of PG-13 films with actors smoking jumped from 564 in 2010 to 809 in 2016, according to the report. Nearly half of all films that depicted smoking were designed as kid-friendly or youth-rated, according to the report from the University of California, San Francisco and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control Prevention as well as other groups. (Brassil, 7/6)
Stat:
This Writing Group Gives The Homeless An Outlet For Their Pain
In Justin Devlin’s stories, his pain is the villain. He is the superhero in a wheelchair, kicking his illness to the curb, sentencing his constant pain to a lifetime behind bars. Writing “takes me away from the physical pain and the emotional pain. It gives me an escape,” said Devlin, who has a progressive genetic condition that limits his mobility. (Thielking, 7/7)
Boston Globe:
Something New Is About To Take Off At Airports: Full-Service Gyms
The first outpost of a company called Roam Fitness is the newest vestige of the hospitality industry’s response to growing demand from stressed-out travelers tired of sitting endlessly on airplanes, in cabs, and through business lunches, and of having little recourse to work out beyond the dusty treadmills in hotels’ tiny “fitness centers.” This includes a growing number of yoga rooms in airports, free day passes for hotel guests to neighboring full-service gyms — even hotel rooms equipped with private exercise bikes and weights. (Marcus, 7/7)
AnMed Health, a not-for-profit hospital system, agrees to pay $1.3 million to settle a federal lawsuit charging that the facility did not provide required treatment for patients with unstable psychiatric conditions in its emergency departments. Elsewhere, hospital news from Maryland, Texas and New York makes headlines.
Modern Healthcare:
S.C. Hospital To Pay $1.3 Million For Not Properly Treating Emergency Psych Patients
AnMed Health in South Carolina has agreed to pay the largest-ever settlement in a case brought under the federal law requiring hospitals to stabilize and treat patients in emergency situations. The not-for-profit, three-hospital AnMed system will pay nearly $1.3 million to settle federal allegations that in 2012 and 2013 it held patients with unstable psychiatric conditions in its emergency department without providing appropriate psychiatric treatment in 36 incidents. AnMed, based in Anderson, S.C., serves upstate South Carolina and northeast Georgia. (Meyer, 7/5)
The Baltimore Sun:
Maryland Hospital Association CEO Headed To California
Carmela Coyle, the longtime president and CEO of the Maryland Hospital Association, is stepping down from the post in the fall to head the California Hospital Association. Coyle has served in her current position for nine years. The executive committee of the Maryland association said it will begin a national search for her replacement. (McDaniels, 7/6)
Houston Chronicle:
Charles Stokes Named CEO Of Memorial Hermann Health System
Charles "Chuck" Stokes has been appointed president and CEO of the Memorial Hermann Health System, two weeks after he was promoted to the interim job following an abrupt shake-up atop the largest hospital network in the Houston area. (Ackerman, 7/6)
Modern Healthcare:
Memorial Hermann Names Stokes As President And CEO
Charles Stokes is no longer the "interim" president and CEO of Memorial Hermann Health System, after the board on Thursday officially named him to the top job. He replaces Dr. Benjamin Chu, who abruptly retired two weeks ago to pursue a role crafting health and public policy. (Weinstock, 7/6)
The Associated Press:
Governor Launches Probe Into Hospital’s Handling Of Gunman
Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Thursday launched an investigation into a hospital’s handling of a man who sought psychiatric care just days before he fatally ambushed a New York Police Department officer sitting in a mobile command post. “Under tragic circumstances such as these, it is critical to ensure all proper procedures and safeguards were taken,” Cuomo said Thursday in a statement. (7/6)
Media outlets report on news from Virginia, Oregon, Missouri, Washington, Minnesota, Illinois, California, North Carolina, Georgia, Texas and New Hampshire.
Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Virginia Department Of Corrections Faces Lawsuit For Allegedly Failing To Treat Inmates Who Have Hepatitis C
An inmate backed by pro-bono lawyers and a civil rights group is suing the Virginia Department of Corrections for allegedly failing to treat prisoners who have hepatitis C... The lawsuit specifically names Harold Clarke and Mark Amonette, the director and chief medical director, respectively, of the Department of Corrections. (O'Connor, 7/6)
The Associated Press:
Lawsuits Expected Over Oregon's Abortion Funding Bill
A sweeping new bill passed by Oregon lawmakers will force taxpayers to assume some of the costs of abortions, even though many oppose the procedure, anti-abortion campaigners said Thursday as a legal expert predicted the measure will draw lawsuits. (7/6)
The Associated Press:
Missouri Gov. Greitens Expands Call For Abortion Legislation
Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens has broadened his call for new abortion restrictions in the state and wants to ensure they would survive any potential court challenge, his spokesman said Thursday. (7/6)
The Associated Press:
Inslee Signs Bill Creating New Agency For Children, Families
Gov. Jay Inslee has signed a measure that creates a new agency to deliver services to vulnerable children and families. The Department of Children, Youth and Families — created under the bill signed Thursday by Inslee — will oversee several services now offered through the state Department of Social and Health Services and the Department of Early Learning, starting in July 2018. Starting in July 2019, programs offered by the Juvenile Rehabilitation office and the Office of Juvenile Justice in DSHS will also move to the new department. (7/6)
Minnesota Public Radio:
For Parents, Uncertainty And Fear After Blue Cross-Children's Talks Fail
Parents of Children's Minnesota patients are trying to figure out how they are affected by the end of a contract between the medical system and the state's biggest health insurer. Children's terminated the contract Wednesday with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota. (Cox, 7/6)
Chicago Sun Times:
Exclusive: County Board President Lists 925 For Layoffs If No Soda Tax
Tit for tat? Or a case of unintended consequences? Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart’s office just got a letter from Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle listing 925 positions designated for layoffs — if a judge doesn’t allow a countywide sweet beverage tax to take effect by August. (Sneed, 7/6)
Sacramento Bee:
Frances Gracechild, Advocate For Disabled And Elderly People, Will Be Honored At A Memorial Service In Sacramento
For the past 36 years, Gracechild led Resources for Independent Living in Sacramento, which assists people with disabilities in obtaining housing, technology, personal care and other help to live comfortable and productive lives. Outside of the office, she led protests, spoke at public meetings and pushed for legislation to benefit folks with little political clout. (Hubert, 7/6)
North Carolina Health News:
Dental Students Get A Lesson In Empathy
Since 1970, third-year dental students at UNC Chapel Hill have spent eight weeks in the summer going out into communities around the state and treating patients, many from low-income families, as part of the Dentistry in Service to Communities program. Forty-five years into this practice, the School of Dentistry’s Lewis Lampiris realized something was wrong. (Asmelash, 7/6)
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
5 Doctors Got Kickbacks To Refer Hospice Patients, Lawsuit Alleged
In the latest case, Compassionate Care Hospice Group agreed to pay $2.4 million to resolve allegations that its subsidiary, Compassionate Care of Atlanta, paid kickbacks to five physicians to get them to refer patients and certify them as eligible for hospice services. The company then billed Medicare and Medicaid for those patients, the lawsuit alleged. (Norder, 7/6)
The Associated Press:
Another California Doctor Suspected Of Child Sex Abuse
Another California doctor has been arrested on suspicion of sexually abusing children, some of whom were his patients, authorities said Thursday. Dr. Benjamin Shettell was booked on suspicion of sexually abusing eight minors ranging from 6 to 17, Redding police said in a statement. (7/6)
Austin American-Statesman:
Austin Crime Lab: Rape Kit Evidence Not Compromised, Expert Says
Officials from the Austin Police Department, Capital Area Private Defender Service, Travis County District Attorney’s Office and Bruce Budowle, a University of North Texas Health Science Center professor and consultant, toured the facility on Monday. They shared their findings, including pictures of the moldy boxes, with the Travis County Commissioners Court during a special meeting Thursday. (Goldenstein, 7/6)
Georgia Health News:
New Grants Help Local Organizations In Work With Rural Patients
Healthcare Georgia Foundation has announced grants totaling $770,000 to 11 partnerships in a program aimed at eliminating health disparities and achieving health equity in rural Georgia. The funding represents the first phase of the foundation’s Two Georgias Initiative, designed also to expand access to quality health care in rural Georgia. (Miller, 7/6)
NH Union Leader:
Floating Wheelchairs Boost Beach Accessibility For Disabled
Five state beaches will be equipped with floating wheelchairs, thanks to a partnership between a group of physical therapy students at Franklin Pierce University and SMILE Mass. Third-year student Adrienne Olney said she met Lotte Diomede, who co-founded Small Miracles in Life Exist, during the Abilities Expo in Boston in September of last year. Olney is a doctoral student and on the board of the physical therapy association for Franklin Pierce students. (Haas, 7/7)
Research Roundup: Safety-Net Hospitals, Spending Implications Of BCRA, End-Of-Life Care
Each week, KHN compiles a selection of recently released health policy studies and briefs.
The Commonwealth Fund:
Financial Impact AHCA Medicaid On Safety-Net Hospitals
Safety-net hospitals play a vital role in our health care system, delivering significant care to Medicaid, uninsured, and other vulnerable patients. The American Health Care Act (AHCA) would make changes to Medicaid that would substantially reduce federal funding, resulting in potential adverse effects on safety-net hospitals and the populations they serve. ... Beginning in 2020 the financial status of safety-net hospitals will deteriorate as Medicaid coverage is reduced and the per-capita spending limits proposed in the AHCA grow. By 2026 total margins will drop to 0.5 percent compared with estimates under current law of 2.9 percent—representing an 83 percent reduction in net income for safety-net hospitals. Small rural safety-net hospitals and safety-net hospitals treating the largest proportion of low-income patients would be hurt the most. (Allen Dobson, Joan DaVanzo and Randy Haught, 6/28)
Urban Institute:
State-By-State Coverage And Government Spending Implications Of The Better Care Reconciliation Act
The Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA) was introduced in the Senate on June 22, 2017, and is now under debate. The bill would eliminate much of the Affordable Care Act. In this report, we present state-by-state estimates of the impact of the BCRA on health care coverage and costs. Nationwide, we find that there would be 24.7 million more uninsured people under the BCRA by 2022. Federal funding for Medicaid, premium tax credits, and cost sharing reductions would be $140.4 billion lower under the BCRA in 2022, while state Medicaid spending would increase by $565 million. (Blumberg et al, 6/28)
Health Affairs:
Epidemiology And Patterns Of Care At The End Of Life: Rising Complexity, Shifts In Care Patterns And Sites Of Death
In 2015 an estimated 2.7 million people in the United States (1 percent of the population) died. Although decedents’ illness experience varies substantially, important trends in care at the end of life are evident. To identify the most pressing health care policy issues related to end-of-life care, we present a comprehensive picture of the epidemiology and care patterns of people in the last stage of life. We identify three key trends in end-of-life care: increasing diversity in the primary diagnoses of decedents, increases in multimorbidity and illness complexity among people with terminal illnesses, and shifts in patterns of care at the end of life and in sites of death. (Aldridge and Bradley, 7/5)
Health Affairs:
End-Of-Life Medical Spending In Last Twelve Months Of Life Is Lower Than Previously Reported
Although end-of-life medical spending is often viewed as a major component of aggregate medical expenditure, accurate measures of this type of medical spending are scarce. We used detailed health care data for the period 2009–11 from Denmark, England, France, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands, Taiwan, the United States, and the Canadian province of Quebec to measure the composition and magnitude of medical spending in the three years before death. (French et al., 7/5)
Annals Of Internal Medicine:
Generic Drug Prices And Market Competition
Market competition levels were associated with a change in generic drug prices. Such measurements may be helpful in identifying older prescription drugs at higher risk for price change in the future. (Dave et al., 7/4)
AJMC:
How Do Medicare Advantage Beneficiary Payments Vary With Tenure?
Objectives: To compare how premiums and expected out-of-pocket medical costs (OOPC) vary with the length of time Medicare Advantage (MA) beneficiaries have been enrolled in their plans. ... We found average spending on premiums and OOPC in enrolled plans exceeded such costs in the lowest-cost plan by $697 in 2013. Beneficiaries who remained in their plans for 6 or more years were most at risk of spending these higher amounts, paying $786 more than they would have spent in the lowest-cost plan compared with $552 for beneficiaries in their first year of enrollment. For each year a beneficiary remained in their same plan, their additional spending in excess of the minimum cost choice increased by roughly $50. (Jacobs and Molloy, 6/29)
AJMC:
Patient Ratings Of Veterans Affairs And Affiliated Hospitals
Objectives: Hospital Compare, a website maintained by CMS, allows comparisons of outcomes and processes of care but not of patient satisfaction for hospitals within the Veteran Affairs (VA) Healthcare System. Therefore, we sought to compare online hospital ratings between VA hospitals and their local affiliated hospitals. ... VA hospitals had higher patient ratings than their non-VA affiliated hospitals, a finding not explained by bed size or teaching status. (Heidenreich et al., 6/28)
Viewpoints: Let Free Market Sort Out Health Care; GOP Should Start Again From Scratch
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
USA Today:
Private Sector Has Health Care Cures, If We'd Only Get Out Of Its Way
Who knows what — if anything — Senate Republicans will do about health care reform.
But there is a fundamental truth that is being overlooked in all the hyperbolic rhetoric over Medicaid, mandates, subsidies, accessibility and taxes: Free markets would turn our ailing healthcare system into a dynamic, innovative cornucopia of better and ever more affordable care for all of us. We'll see if Washington can rise to the challenge of starting to remove the formidable obstacles to such a market where patients would be in charge rather than the third party payers of government, big insurers and big employers. (Steve Forbes, 7/7)
The New York Times:
Time For Republicans To Start From Scratch On Health Care
If the halting, messy debate over legislation to overhaul health care has taught us anything so far, it’s that when it comes to health care, Republicans don’t know what they want, much less how to get it. (Peter Suderman, 7/7)
Des Moines Register:
Congress Must Improve, Not Tear Down Health Care
With their sledge hammers pounding Obamacare, [congressional Republicans] cannot move fast enough to strip Americans of health insurance. After yet another break this week to rest up, they plan to return and resume attempts to destroy the law and the benefits it has provided millions of people. Some lawmakers view success as a desperately needed political "win." But Americans will be the losers. (7/6)
The Washington Post:
The Reason Republican Health-Care Plans Are Doomed To Fail
Republicans believe the problem with the health-care system is that Americans are forced to buy too much insurance, in plans that are too prescribed. Their solution is to give consumers more choices for what kinds of plans (including no plan at all) they can buy. ... But the health insurance market has some distinctive properties that mean too many choices can lead the whole market to unravel. This would leave nearly everyone — consumers, insurers and health-care providers — much worse off. (Catherine Rampell, 7/6)
Los Angeles Times:
Ted Cruz Proposes Rescuing Healthy Consumers At The Expense Of The Sick
Sen. Ted Cruz has a litmus test for his Republican Senate colleagues: Do they care more about cutting health insurance premiums than protecting people with preexisting conditions? Granted, Cruz (R-Texas) wouldn’t put it that way. But the amendment he’s seeking to add to the Senate GOP’s bill to “repeal and replace” the Affordable Care Act sets up a choice just that stark. (Jon Healey, 7/6)
National Review:
The GOP’s Health-Care Messaging Needs Serious Work
The current health-care debate is often distilled into a series of binary choices for public consumption: good or bad, healthy or sick, help for the rich or help for the poor. As a result, a growing number of Americans are starting to believe that the GOP’s health-care legislation is a cruel ploy to hurt millions of Americans. This is in large part a messaging failure: Good policy must be sold with good arguments, and Republicans have not articulated their own vision of what the American health-care system should look like. (Juliana Darrow, 7/5)
The New York Times:
Attack Of The Republican Decepticons
Consider, in particular, Republican leaders’ strategy on health care. At this point, everything they say involves either demonstrably dishonest claims about Obamacare or wild misrepresentations of their proposed replacement, which would — surprise — cut taxes for the rich while inflicting harsh punishment on the poor and working class, including millions of Trump supporters. In fact, there’s so much deception that I can’t cover it all. But here are a few low points. (Paul Krugman, 7/7)
Los Angeles Times:
Why We Fight For Universal Healthcare
The battle we fight today should be about expanding coverage to millions more, not deciding how much coverage we should take away from people who already have it. Whether Congressional Republicans are successful in their repeal efforts or not, universal healthcare must be our goal. As President Trump realized all too late, healthcare is really complicated. But our priorities should not be: We must endeavor to provide quality, accessible care to every American. (Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), 7/6)
Modern Healthcare:
Foes Of GOP Repeal Bill Fear Having Public Opinion On Their Side May Not Be Enough
Healthcare industry leaders and patient advocacy groups are facing a sobering reality as Republican senators weigh whether to pass their bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Their staunch opposition to the repeal along with broad public disapproval may not be enough to convince lawmakers to kill the bill. Several public opinion surveys last week found the Senate GOP's Better Care Reconciliation Act extremely unpopular, with weak support even among Republicans. (Harris Meyer, 7/6)
Forbes:
Medicaid Must Be Reformed To Help Truly Needy & Claims of Spike in Uninsured
In the 1990s, there was plenty of teeth-gnashing by welfare reform opponents over changing the funding structure for cash assistance, implementing work requirements, and creating time limits – rhetoric that sounds eerily similar to much of the health reform coverage today. Mostly absent from the welfare discussion was the role that earned income tax credits (EITC) would play in reform. Similarly, in the current health care debates over Medicaid changes there is a lack of any reference to proposed tax credits. (Josh Archambault, 7/6)
Philadelphia Inquirer:
What Politicians Don't Say About How Medicaid Helps Human Trafficking Victims
I am a family medicine physician who has worked in Philadelphia and New York City for the past three years, and I know how the BCRA will affect trafficked people: it will unequivocally harm them. I know this because I run the Institute for Family Health’s PurpLE Clinic (Purpose: Listen and Engage) in New York City, which provides health care for human trafficking survivors. The survivors I work with are of all genders, ethnicities, ages. Some have been without necessary healthcare for years, facing complications from untreated infections, undiagnosed diseases, addictions and complex trauma. And every single survivor is uninsured or on Medicaid. (Anita Ravi, 7/6)
Kansas City Star:
Medicaid Is Vital To The Well-Being Of Our Children
Children make up 70 percent of Kansas’ Medicaid population, and Medicaid is there for them. Through Medicaid, children receive well-child visits, vaccines, early treatment for illnesses and chronic medical conditions, therapies and hospital care when needed, which are so important if kids are going to be ready and able to succeed in school and in life. (Pam Shaw, 7/6)
Boston Globe:
The GOP Health Care Plan Is Bad For Business
The Senate’s revised health care plan is in the midst of hot debate. While the impact on middle- and low-income Americans has rightly received attention, it is important to bring up another economic impact: The bill would have a chilling effect on entrepreneurship. (Nina Dudnik, 7/7)
Cleveland Plain Dealer:
For The Sake Of Small Business, U.S. Senate Must Push Ahead On Health Care Reform
We at NFIB hope Sens. Portman and Brown remember that our small businesses employ more than 2 million Ohioans, serving as the engine that drives the state's economy. Obamacare, as it stands, impedes their ability to grow and add new jobs. (Roger Geiger, 7/6)
The Washington Post:
The Dumbest Criticism Of Single Payer Health Care
Democratic politicians are rapidly embracing single payer health care, and as they do, they’re being met with an utterly bogus criticism. Unfortunately, it’s coming not only from Republicans but also from misinformed members of the media. So before this goes any farther, we need to get a few things straight. (Paul Waldman, 7/6)
And on other health care issues --
Bloomberg:
The World Doesn't Mooch Off U.S. Health-Care Research
At some point, endless discussions of economic theory need to yield to blunt fact -- government health-care systems just seem to do better than the U.S. system. That is understandably a bitter pill for many free-market types to swallow. Faced with the superior performance of universal health-care systems, some supporters of a less regulated system have argued that the U.S. is somehow subsidizing the rest of the world. The most common of these arguments claims that high U.S. prices go to pay for innovation that the rest of the world copies for free. (Noah Smith, 7/6)
Forbes:
On-Demand Services Can Help Seniors Age In Place, But Have Limits
The uberization of senior services is all the rage. You can download an app and order up a home visit from a doctor. You can get home delivered groceries or prepared foods. And, of course, you can get a ride. While these services were designed primarily for the young and overworked, there are real potential benefits for older adults and others with disabilities. The most obvious: They have the potential to deliver critical supports to people with mobility issues. (Howard Gleckman, 7/5)
The Washington Post:
We’re Ceding Ground In The War Against Infant Mortality
In the United States, the fight against infant mortality seemed slow but sure. Indeed, over the past decade, the rate at which babies died before their first birthday fell by 15 percent. But in recent years, progress in reducing overall infant mortality has stagnated. And for African Americans, we’ve actually lost ground, according to a study published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The infant mortality rate for black babies hit 11.6 deaths per 1,000 births in 2012, but that number ticked up slightly higher in 2015 to 11.7. (Robert Gebelhoff, 7/6)