- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Alaskans Face Tough Choices Because Of High Insurance Costs
- California And Federal Officials Reach Deal On Medicaid Reforms
- A Med School Teaches Science And Data Mining
- It’s Open Enrollment Time: What To Know About Obamacare Costs
- Political Cartoon: 'Belly Laugh'
- Health Law 3
- Health Law's Third Open Enrollment Season Begins
- States Implement Strategies To Reach Uninsured People During Insurance Sign-Up Season
- Why Are The Health Law's Co-Ops Failing?
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Alaskans Face Tough Choices Because Of High Insurance Costs
The highest Obamacare insurance rates in the country are in Alaska. Though most people get a subsidy to help defray the cost, those who don’t are increasingly wondering if they should cancel their health insurance. (Annie Feidt, Alaska Public Radio Network, )
California And Federal Officials Reach Deal On Medicaid Reforms
A "conceptual agreement" worth $6.2 billion comes as a relief to California public hospitals, just as an earlier Medicaid agreement was set to expire. (Anna Gorman, )
A Med School Teaches Science And Data Mining
At NYU medical school, students learn to access huge troves of data to become doctors who understand the health care system, and individual ailments, better. (Julie Rovner, )
It’s Open Enrollment Time: What To Know About Obamacare Costs
KHN's Mary Agnes Carey appeared on PBS NewsHour to talk about open enrollment season to buy health insurance coverage on healthcare.gov and online state marketplaces. ( )
Political Cartoon: 'Belly Laugh'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'Belly Laugh'" by Roy Delgado.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
SILVER OR GOLD?
Well… ‘Tis the season
to shop for health insurance.
What will people choose?
- Anonymous
If you have a health policy haiku to share, please Contact Us and let us know if we can include your name. Haikus follow the format of 5-7-5 syllables. We give extra brownie points if you link back to an original story.
Opinions expressed in haikus and cartoons are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions of KFF Health News or KFF.
Summaries Of The News:
Health Law's Third Open Enrollment Season Begins
Open enrollment for health coverage available on the healthcare.gov and state exchanges kicked off Nov. 1. Though the technology glitches and drama of the first sign-up period appear to be less likely, officials note challenges remain -- namely, the reduced number of plan choices and the costs increases for some premiums.
The Wall Street Journal:
Health Law’s Strains Show
The Affordable Care Act’s third open enrollment season got under way, with a new array of health plans that show how the law’s influence is starting to transform the insurance industry. Sunday’s kickoff appeared to go relatively smoothly, with little evidence of technical glitches at HealthCare.gov as consumers started to shop for coverage that will take effect in 2016. (Wilde Mathews, 11/1)
The Associated Press:
Health Law's 3rd Sign-Up Season Faces Challenges From Prices
The government's insurance website is faster and easier to use, but as a third sign-up season gets underway, President Barack Obama's health care law is approaching limits. Enrollment on the federal and state exchanges began Sunday. While the law's expanded coverage has reduced the uninsured rate to a historic low of about 9 percent, the gains will be harder in 2016. (Johnson and Alonso-Zaldivar, 11/2)
The New York Times:
Many Need To Shop Around On Healthcare.gov As Prices Jump, U.S. Says
In Tennessee, the state insurance commissioner approved a 36 percent rate increase for the largest health insurer in the state’s individual marketplace. In Iowa, the commissioner approved rate increases averaging 29 percent for the state’s dominant insurer. Health insurance consumers logging into HealthCare.gov on Sunday for the first day of the Affordable Care Act’s third open enrollment season may be in for sticker shock, unless they are willing to shop around. Federal officials acknowledged on Friday that many people would need to pick new plans to avoid substantial increases in premiums. (Pear and Goodnough, 10/30)
The Wall Street Journal:
Next Enrollment Season for Affordable Care Act Kicks Off
The Obama administration was expecting a slow sign-up pace Sunday because of the weekend timing but is gearing up for brisker enrollment in the weeks to come. Open enrollment for new and returning customers on the federal marketplace HealthCare.gov and most state-run exchanges runs through Jan. 31. (Armour, 11/1)
The Wall Street Journal:
Businesses, Patients Feel Marketplaces’ Ripple Effect
[T]he ripple effects of change stemming from the law and its signature marketplaces are being felt in almost every corner of the health-care system. Consumers this week start signing up for new coverage on the marketplaces, one of the most high-profile changes the law has brought to the health-care industry. (Wilde Mathews, 11/1)
USA Today:
Federal Health Site Premiums, Number Of Insurers Vary Widely By Area
Consumers shopping on the federal health exchange for 2016 plans will still be able to pick from about five insurance companies, but there will be fewer plans on average to choose from, federal health officials said Friday. About 90% of consumers who return to Healthcare.gov will have plans from three or more insurers to choose from for 2016 coverage, Department of Health and Human Services officials said. (O'Donnell, 10/30)
The Washington Post:
Third Year Of ACA Sign-Up Starts, On Time But With Muted Fanfare
Less overt drama surrounds this third year’s enrollment season, compared with the inaugural season, when HealthCare.gov and some state-run exchanges suffered massive computer defects, as well as last fall, when a pending Supreme Court case threatened to block federal subsidies that help consumers in more than three dozen states buy ACA coverage. Still, big questions linger: Of the estimated 10.5 million uninsured people who are eligible to get coverage on the exchanges, how many can be persuaded to buy health plans? And how many of nearly 10 million existing customers will renew coverage — and at what price? (Goldstein, 11/1)
CBS News:
In Year 3, Many Hit With Obamacare Sticker Shock
Sign-up season started Sunday for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, now in year 3. Premiums are going up an average of 7.5 percent, but they could be much higher depending on where you live. (Duncan, 10/31)
Bloomberg:
Obamacare Premiums Climb, But Insurers Struggle For Profit
Many people shopping for health coverage this weekend on the websites created by Obamacare are going to see double-digit percentage increases in their premiums. That’s still not enough for some insurers. Anthem Inc. says there remain competitors in the government-run marketplace offering premiums that aren’t enough to profitably provide the coverage patients will require. Prices in some areas probably will have to climb in 2017 and even 2018 to reach levels that make sense, according to Chief Financial Officer Wayne Deveydt. Meantime, Anthem will sacrifice market share to keep its plans profitable, he said. (Tracer, 10/30)
Real Clear Health:
Burwell Kicks Off Marketplace Open Enrollment, Touting Healthcare.gov Improvements
Those who do shop for insurance on the marketplaces will mostly see higher premium costs for 2016 compared to prices paid this year. According to HHS, premiums for a benchmark insurance plan will rise by an average of 7.5 percent in the 37 healthcare.gov states. But premium changes vary widely from state to state, and even within states, so in many cases consumers will be hit with much higher increases, while in some cases costs will be lower than this year. Furthermore, rising subsidies will protect many lower income shoppers from these price increases. (Eisenhower, 11/2)
Kaiser Health News:
It’s Open Enrollment Time: What To Know About Obamacare Costs
KHN’s Mary Agnes Carey appeared on PBS NewsHour to talk about the impending open enrollment season to buy health insurance coverage on healthcare.gov and online state marketplaces. Watch the video. (10/30)
States Implement Strategies To Reach Uninsured People During Insurance Sign-Up Season
In addition to detailing state efforts to reach these consumers, news outlets also report on how local market offerings have changed this year.
The San Jose Mercury News:
Covered California Confronts Challenge Of Signing Up Millions Of Remaining Uninsured
As the Affordable Care Act's third open-enrollment season kicks off Sunday, health care experts around the nation will be closely watching whether Covered California gains more traction -- and signups -- than it did in 2015. The Golden State's health care exchange was the country's darling in the first year of Obamacare, getting 1.1 million uninsured people to enroll in private plans in 2014. But that total inched up to only 1.3 million this year. (Seipel, 10/31)
Los Angeles Times:
Officials Launch Bus Tour To Promote California Health Insurance Exchange
The head of California’s health insurance exchange toured Los Angeles by bus Sunday, seeking to publicize the Affordable Care Act’s potential benefits among Southern Californians, many of them Latino, who officials say have failed to take advantage of the law. On the first day of this year’s open-enrollment period for federally subsidized health plans, the tour’s first stop — in East L.A. at the nonprofit care provider AltaMed Health Services — previewed what state officials say will be an overarching strategy as they seek to boost enrollment in the third year of the state-run marketplace, called Covered California. (Jamison, 11/1)
Los Angeles Times:
Officials Push For More Californians To Sign Up For Health Insurance
Residents will have three months during open enrollment to sign up for the exchange. Covered California has 1.3 million consumers, about 90% of whom receive subsidies to help cover their premiums. About 4 million Californians remain uninsured. Of those, officials estimate that 1.4 million would qualify for Medi-Cal, the state's Medicaid program for low-income residents, and 750,000 others would be eligible for subsidies toward private health insurance. (Sewell, 11/31)
The Connecticut Mirror:
Obamacare Signups Begin With Different Outreach Strategy
Officials at Access Health CT, the state's health insurance exchange, plan to base their efforts to reach the uninsured more heavily on reaching "influencers," community leaders who hold sway with those who still haven't gotten coverage and can point them to a place to sign up. (Levin Becker, 11/2)
Politico:
The Texas County Where Only 12 people Signed Up For Obamacare
In rural Borden County, 12 people signed up for Obamacare this year. Livid over the government telling them they must buy something and loath to take anything that looks like a “handout,” the uninsured here are likely to stay that way. As Obamacare’s third open enrollment season began Sunday, this rock-solid conservative community of about 650 people offers a window into the challenges health law advocates face to expand coverage around the country. (Pradhan, 11/2)
The Columbus Post-Dispatch:
Health Insurance Marketplace Enrollment Starts Today
Today begins the three-month open-enrollment period for marketplace coverage in 2016. An estimated 9.4 million to 11.4 million Americans are expected to sign up — and actually pay — for insurance through the marketplaces, which are entering their third year. Hundreds of thousands of uninsured and re-enrolling Ohioans have some important homework awaiting them. (Sutherly, 11/1)
The San Antonio Express News:
PPO Plans Drastically Reduced In HealthCare.gov’s 2016 Lineup
Fewer health plan choices are being offered on the federal exchange, while PPOs, or preferred provider organization plans, for individuals and families have been drastically reduced or even have disappeared in some Texas markets. PPOs historically have been the most popular type of health insurance in Texas because they provide some out-of-network benefits and don’t require referrals to see specialists. (O'Hare, 10/30)
Kaiser Health News:
Alaskans Face Tough Choices Because Of High Insurance Costs
Customers can begin buying plans on HealthCare.gov starting on Nov. 1 and do so through Jan. 31, 2016. Rates for individual health plans went up an average of 7.5 percent nationally. Within that not-too-alarming average are outliers. Some states saw their average rate go down; others saw a big percentage leap from a reasonable starting price. For instance, Boise, Idaho, saw a 30 percent spike in premiums from about $210 to $273 a month. But Alaska is a special case. It has the highest premiums in the country, and it has seen some of the highest percentage increases over the past two years. That makes paying for insurance especially difficult for families like the Ebbessons. (Feidt, 10/30)
The Associated Press:
State Officials Say Free Or Cheap Insurance Still On Table
As the nation enters the third year of coverage under President Barack Obama's health care law, officials in Washington state say there are still hundreds of thousands of people who could be getting free or low-cost insurance. But they won't get that discount if they don't go online and check out Washington Healthplanfinder. (Blankinship, 10/31)
St. Louis Public Radio:
900,000 Uninsured St. Louisans Eligible To Shop On Healthcare.gov; Navigators Gear Up For Enrollment
As the third year of Healthcare.gov gets underway, an estimated 90,000 people in the St. Louis region are still uninsured and eligible to buy health insurance on the federal marketplace, according to the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services. Effort for AIDS counselors like Sade Singleton have spent the past few months leading up to enrollment doing outreach and health literacy presentations throughout the region. Last year, the nonprofit helped about 700 people sign up for health insurance in St. Louis. (Bouscaren, 1/1)
And on the Medicaid expansion front -
Montana Standard:
Officials 'Cautiously Optimistic' Of Federal Approval Of Medicaid Expansion
While still awaiting federal approval of the state's plan to expand Medicaid to tens of thousands of Montanans, health care officials have been busy working to get everything into place under the assumption it'll happen soon. ... Montana has requested the federal government approve a pair of waivers to federal insurance requirements by Sunday to coincide with the start of open enrollment for the Affordable Care Act health insurance marketplace, although there is no approval deadline for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. "We continue to be cautiously optimistic we will receive approval on our plan to bring our tax dollars back from the federal government and extend health insurance coverage to more than 70,000 Montanans," said Tim Crowe, Bullock's communications director. (Benoit, 11/1)
Why Are The Health Law's Co-Ops Failing?
Arizona's co-op plan -- which covers one in three people in that state with health law plans -- won't be allowed to sell plans, leaving more than 59,000 people scrambling to find new health insurance.
PBS NewsHour:
Why Nearly Half Of The Obamacare Co-Ops Have Folded
As open enrollment begins for the health exchanges, one development that's turning into a concern is the collapse of a number of alternative insurance plans known as co-ops. Mary Agnes Carey of Kaiser Health News joins Judy Woodruff to answer real Americans’ questions about shopping for coverage.
The Arizona Republic:
Arizona Health Insurance Co-Op Off The Marketplace
A low-cost health insurance co-op that covers about one in three Arizonans that have an Affordable Care Act marketplace plan won't be allowed to sell health plans Sunday — the opening day consumers can purchase insurance — after the state of Arizona and the federal government took action against the entity. (Alltucker, 10/31)
New Speaker Paul Ryan On The Issues
CNN also reports that although Ryan doesn't want Planned Parenthood to get money from taxpayers, he is doubtful lawmakers can totally deny the organization federal dollars.
The Wall Street Journal:
Where Paul Ryan Stands On The Issues
As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, and the Budget panel before that, Rep. Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) has dealt with some of the most contentious issues not only in the House, but also within the Republican Party, where spending and the reach of government are often flash points. Here’s where he stands on some key issues. ... Voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act and says Republicans should replace it with a plan that has fewer coverage mandates, allows insurance sales across state lines and provides tax credits to help people purchase insurance. ... Mr. Ryan’s most contentious proposal called for overhauling Medicare to allow Americans who turn 65 in the future to choose between private insurance plans with government support for premiums or staying in traditional Medicare, though their costs could rise. (11/1)
CNN:
Paul Ryan Doubtful About Defunding Planned Parenthood
Paul Ryan doesn't believe Planned Parenthood should get one "red cent" from taxpayers -- but he cautioned Sunday against expectations that he'll be able to pull federal funding for the organization now that he's House speaker. (Scott, 11/1)
Merck CEO Embarks On Drug Cost Information Campaign
Merck's Ken Frazier wants to change the perception that pharmaceutical companies charge too much for drugs. Elsewhere, the drug makers AbbVie and Sanofi buy vouchers to get their drugs to market faster, and Valeant sees its value come back to earth after pressures to explain its business practices.
Bloomberg:
Merck CEO Says Drug Price Debate Doesn't Account For R&D Risks
Talking drug prices with President Barack Obama was just the start. Merck & Co.’s chief executive officer says he’s on a campaign to change a perception most Americans have: that pharmaceutical companies charge too much for their drugs. Ken Frazier has been roaming the halls of Washington, a short trip from Merck headquarters in New Jersey, to make the case that the drug industry relies on a few precious years of high prices to fund research before its medications lose their patents. (Koons, 10/30)
The Wall Street Journal:
Drug Makers Buy Pricey Vouchers To Speed Products To Market
There is a new price surge in the pharmaceutical industry—not for medications, instead for a limited number of government-issued vouchers that drug makers, including AbbVie Inc. and Sanofi SA, are buying to speed products to market. Legal provisions enacted in 2007 and 2012 require the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to issue “priority review vouchers” as rewards to developers of drugs for rare pediatric conditions or tropical diseases, such as malaria. Congress intended the vouchers to encourage more research into underfunded diseases. Companies receive them when the FDA approves their drug for sale and can redeem them to speed FDA consideration of a subsequent drug for any disease. (Loftus, 11/1)
Marketplace:
Valeant: How Aggressively Can A Drug Company Sell
After seeing its stock price soar, Valeant Pharmaceuticals of Canada is now under pressure and its shares are down more than 60 percent. Several hedge funds that are principal investors in the high-flying, high-profit company, are fiercely defending it against allegations of improper business and accounting practices. (Hartman, 10/30)
And CVS forecasts lower profits after acquiring Target's pharmacy business --
Reuters:
CVS 2016 Profit Forecast Hurt By Health Care Plans, Target Deal
CVS Health Corp (CVS.N) gave a disappointing profit forecast for 2016, hurt by costs related to the acquisition of Target Corp's pharmacies and as its own pharmacy benefits management business expands in low-margin Medicare and Medicaid plans. The drugstore operator's profit missed analysts' estimates for the first time in six quarters, as its $10-billion Omnicare acquisition failed to offset pressure from lower reimbursement rates and new low-margin generic drugs. (Ramakrishnan, 10/30)
Trump Rolls Out Plan To Reform Veteran's Health Care
One of the changes proposed by Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump includes the ability for eligible vets to see any private doctor or facility that accepts Medicare and receive immediate treatment.
The Washington Post:
Trump Announces Plan To Improve Veterans’ Health Care
Billed as “the Trump Plan” in keeping with the billionaire developer’s habit of naming things after himself, the initiative would allow veterans to get medical care from any doctors or medical facilities that accept Medicare. It also would give veterans education benefits, business loans, job training and placement services to ease their transition from battlefield to civilian life. The plan was cheered by veterans in the crowd, which the campaign estimated at more than 5,000. (Vozzella, 10/31)
The Associated Press:
Trump Releases Plan Aimed At Improving Veterans' Care
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump released a plan on Saturday aimed at overhauling the Department of Veterans Affairs and improving veterans' health care and employment services. Under Trump's plan, eligible veterans would be able to bring their veterans' identification cards to any private doctor or facility that accepts Medicare and be able to receive immediate treatment. The change, he said, would help improve wait times and services by adding competition. (Colvin, 11/1)
NBC News:
Donald Trump Gets Specific On Veteran's Affairs Policy Reform Plan
Donald Trump proposed a series of reforms to the U.S. Department of Veteran's Affairs on Saturday, delving deep into the specifics of his plan for nearly half an hour at a rally in Virginia before releasing the documents online a few hours later. (Vitali, 10/31)
Fox News:
Donald Trump Vows To Take On ‘Corrupt’ Veterans Affairs
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump made a new pitch Saturday to veterans, promising them that he’ll take on the “corrupt” and "incompetent” Department of Veterans Affairs. Trump told a crowd of supporters in front of the U.S.S. Wisconsin in Norfolk, Va., that the department is mismanaged and "not efficient. (Snyder, 10/31)
Veteran health is also a campaign issue for Hillary Clinton, as is her role in shaping the 2010 health law —
The Washington Post's Fact Checker:
Hillary Clinton’s Misleading Claim That ‘Numerous Surveys’ Show Veterans Are Satisfied With VA Medical Care
Several readers asked us to fact-check this claim, which drew sharp backlash from veterans groups and both Republican and Democratic lawmakers. Clinton is referring to the VA scandal that unfolded in 2014 after whistleblowers alleged that dozens of veterans died at the Phoenix VA while waiting for medical care. The VA Office of Inspector General later acknowledged that wait lists may have contributed to the veterans’ deaths. Patient and appointment record falsification and manipulations were then found to be a systemic, years-long problem. (Lee, 11/2)
The Washington Post:
Former Obama Health Adviser Sought To Credit Clinton With ACA Reform Ideas, Per E-Mails
Neera Tanden, a former Obama administration senior adviser on health-care reform, was working to push the impression that many of the health-care ideas proposed by the administration were in fact part of Clinton’s 2008 campaign platform, according to e-mail correspondence released Friday between her and the former secretary of state. (DelReal, 10/30)
Risk Of Dying From Breast Cancer Grows For Black Women
Breast cancer is now as common among black women in the U.S. as it is among white women and black women are 42 percent more likely to die from the disease, according to a report from the American Cancer Society.
PBS NewsHour:
Breast Cancer Now As Common Among Black Women As White, Report Says
Breast cancer is now as common among black women in the U.S. as it is in white women, a new report found, and black women are more likely to die from the disease. Dr. Otis Brawley, the chief medical and scientific officer for the American Cancer Society, joins Hari Sreenivasan from Atlanta to discuss. (10/31)
WBUR:
U.S. Breast Cancer Deaths Falling Steadily — But Black Women Increasingly At Risk
With all the recent controversy over how often women should get mammograms, you might not realize that breast cancer is becoming an ever more-survivable disease. But, alas, that’s not the case among black women in this country. Historically they’ve had the highest risk of dying if they get breast cancer among any ethnic group. And now, data from the American Cancer Society show that African-Americans have nearly caught up with whites over the past three years in their risk of getting breast cancer in the first place. (Knox, 10/30)
Health Care Issues Play A Key Role In Hotly Contested Kentucky Governor's Race
Republican Matt Bevin and Democrat Jack Conway are locked in a tight race, according to polls, to replace Gov. Steve Beshear. The election is viewed as a referendum on the health law, as Kentucky launched its own exchange and Beshear expanded Medicaid by executive order.
The New York Times:
G.O.P. Eyes Kentucky Governorship, But Candidate Is Making The Party Sweat
Yet if the go-it-alone style of Mr. Bevin, 48, is rattling Republicans, Mr. Conway, 46, is not exactly exciting Democrats. Party leaders praise him as smart and steady, but his shy nature makes voters think he is aloof; friends say he is happier talking policy than politicking. His big challenge is to distance himself from President Obama, whose health care law and efforts to regulate the coal industry make him hugely unpopular here. (Stolberg, 10/30)
The Wall Street Journal:
Kentucky Gubernatorial Race May Give GOP An Opening
Though Kentucky has become reliably Republican in federal elections, Democrats have won every governor’s race except one since the 1970s, aligning themselves with an electorate that generally is centrist on economic issues and conservative on social ones. The state’s creation of a health-insurance exchange under the Affordable Care Act has been popular, while polls show a majority of Kentucky voters remain opposed to gay marriage. Registered Democrats outnumber Republicans in the state, 1.7 million to 1.3 million, but the GOP has made gains. (Campo-Flores, 10/30)
The Associated Press:
Kentucky Governor's Race Headlines Off-Year State Elections
Kentucky has drawn interest not only for having an open gubernatorial seat but for being one of only a few states in the country where political power is divided. Democrats control statewide offices and the state House, while Republicans dominate the state Senate and the congressional delegation. The governor's race has turned into a referendum on President Barack Obama's signature health care law, and the results could affect the health insurance of more than half a million people. Beshear used an executive order to expand the state's Medicaid program to cover an additional 400,000 Kentucky residents and create a health exchange, where more than 100,000 people have purchased discounted health plans with the help of federal subsidies. (11/1)
News outlets report on health issues in Iowa, Florida, Arkansas, Washington, Oregon, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New York and Ohio.
The Associated Press:
Iowa Medicaid Privatization Plans Continue To Draw Scrutiny
Gov. Terry Branstad's effort to privatize Iowa's Medicaid program continues to move forward, though critics are raising questions about the projected cost savings, how contracts have been awarded and just how the change would impact patients. On Tuesday a special legislative oversight committee will hold the first of two scheduled hearings to review the privatization plans. Branstad said the move to private management will mean more streamlined service at a lower cost, but many involved in the Medicaid system — including patients and health care providers — are less sure. (Lucey, 11/1)
Health News Florida:
New Plans Would Let ARNPs, PAs Write Prescriptions
A new bill would allow physician assistants and nurses with advanced training to write prescriptions. Representative Cary Pigman is again pushing to open prescribing rights to midlevel practitioners. The move has failed in recent years due to pushback from doctors. But the Avon Park Republican says the move could help provide more care in rural and underserved areas. (Payne, 11/1)
The Associated Press:
Arkansas Program Allows Health Startups To Pitch Ideas
Startup companies with ideas for improving health care in Arkansas will get a chance to pitch their products to investors under a program announced Friday that organizers compared to the popular television reality show "Shark Tank." Baptist Health, which operates eight hospitals in Arkansas, and the Arkansas Regional Innovation Hub announced it was launching HubX-LifeSciences, touted as the first such privately funded and industry-specific program in the state. (DeMillo, 10/30)
Reuters:
Chipotle Shuts Seattle, Portland Stores After E.coli Outbreak
Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc said on Sunday it had closed all its restaurants in two West Coast markets due to a reported outbreak of E. coli bacteria that is being investigated by the company and health authorities. "After being notified by health department officials in the Seattle (Wash.) and Portland, Ore. areas that they were investigating approximately 20 cases of E. coli, including people who ate at six of our restaurants in those areas, we immediately closed all of our restaurants in the area out of an abundance of caution," Chipotle said in an emailed statement. (Pierson and Baertlein, 11/1)
NJ Spotlight:
Sandy's Legacy Includes Heightened Awareness Of Behavioral Health Needs
When Raychelle Black moved to Atlantic City in October 2013, she was at a low point – both of her parents had died in the previous year, and she had lost her family home in New York City. Then Sandy struck, and she lost nearly all of her remaining possessions when her new home was flooded. But it wasn’t until several months later, through a visit to her primary-care provider – a Southern Jersey Family Medical Centers’ clinic – that she learned she had depression. (Kitchenman, 10/30)
Health News Florida:
In The Keys, Medical Airlift Can Be Cost Free - Or Not
In July 2014, Ellen Engelson's leg broke spontaneously, weakened from radiation treatments years before. She lives in Key West, so she went to the emergency room at the only hospital within 50 miles. But because her leg needed specialized care, she had to get to a hospital on the mainland. (Klingener, 10/30)
The Associated Press:
Police Adopt Drug Addict Program Pioneered In Massachusetts
A police program in northern Massachusetts that helps fast-track heroin addicts into treatment is catching on in other states and showing signs of reducing crimes associated with addiction. Gloucester police say dozens of departments in nine states have taken a page from their ANGEL program, which gives addicts a chance to make treatment rather than arrest the first response they get from police. (Marcelo, 11/1)
The New York Times:
In Fight To Save Young People, Brooklyn Doctor Treats Violence As A Public Health Issue
Dr. Robert Gore was stirred awake one morning in July by an urgent phone call from work. That was not unusual, given his job in the emergency department at Kings County Hospital Center in Brooklyn, a level-one trauma center that provides the highest level of care. Still, his years of skillful, coolheaded practice, of stopping bleeding and saving lives, had not prepared him for what he heard. (Gonzalez, 11/1)
The New York Times:
On Ballot, Ohio Grapples With Specter of Marijuana Monopoly
As a member of the International Cannabinoid Research Society, a collector of antique marijuana apothecary jars, the founder of an industrial hemp business and “a pot smoker consistently for 47 years,” Don Wirtshafter, an Ohio lawyer, has fought for decades to make marijuana legal, calling it “my life’s work.” But when Ohio voters go to the polls Tuesday to consider a constitutional amendment to allow marijuana for both medical and personal use, Mr. Wirtshafter will vote against it. (Smith and Stolberg, 11/1)
Views On Health Enrollment: One Employer's Experience; Cost-Shifting; Beware Bush's Plan
Several columnists and editorials look at issues surrounding the opening of the health law's marketplaces.
The Wall Street Journal:
The Slow-Motion Implosion Of ObamaCare
ObamaCare expanded coverage in 2014 to the extent that it gave people free or nearly free insurance. That goal could have been accomplished without the Affordable Care Act. To justify its existence, ObamaCare must make affordable private insurance available to a broad cross-section of uninsured Americans who are ineligible for Medicaid. But with fewer people buying insurance through the exchanges, the economics aren’t holding up. ... At our company, CKE Restaurants, we offer eligible employees ObamaCare-compliant coverage. We used federal guidelines and set our employee monthly contribution for the least expensive Bronze plan at $1,116 a year, or about 25% of the annual premium. The company pays the rest, and the deductible is $5,500. But even when next year’s higher penalty kicks in—2.5% of income above $10,000—an employee would need to earn more than $50,000 a year for the penalty to exceed the premium. ... Of our company’s 5,453 eligible employees, only 420 enrolled. Our experience isn’t unique, according to press reports. (Andy Puzder, 11/1)
The Kansas City Star:
Beware Of Cost-Shifting While Shopping For Health Insurance
In the big picture, the data on health care costs looks positive as Americans prepare to choose insurance plans for 2016. People in employer-sponsored programs saw their premiums increase a manageable average of 4 percent last year, according to a nationwide survey. The federal government estimates that eight of 10 Americans who enroll in the Affordable Care Act’s insurance exchange will pay less than $100 a month next year after receiving tax credits. ... But for many people in the trenches, the picture is much less bright. Consumers understand that premiums are relatively stable only because cost-sharing measures are at all-time highs. Their paychecks may not show big increases for health insurance, but they are carrying large deductibles and paying more in co-pays for doctor’s visits and prescription drugs. (10/30)
Huffington Post:
6 Things To Know If You're Shopping For Obamacare This Year
This is now the third year that the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces are open for business. The prices in year one were actually lower than many experts had predicted and, in year two, they rose only a tiny bit. This year is a different story. They are clearly rising more quickly, as analysts and insurance officials predicted this past spring. There are a few reasons for the acceleration, but the most important is that many insurers initially set their premiums too low. They assumed the pool of beneficiaries would be larger and healthier than what they actually got. Now they are adjusting. (Jonathan Cohn, 10/31)
The New York Times' The Upshot:
Why Consumers Often Err In Choosing Health Plans
It’s open enrollment season for almost every kind of health insurance in America. Millions of Americans using Medicare plans, employer-sponsored health insurance or Affordable Care Act marketplaces select health plans each fall. Many consumers face numerous options, and research shows that they make many mistakes, often paying more than they need to. Some err by selecting deductibles that are too low. Lower deductibles can be a fine choice for some consumers, but trying to save money with a lower deductible can be a poor choice if a person pays even more in premiums. For instance, at one large American company in 2010, employees could reduce their deductible by $250 — to $750 from $1,000 — by paying $500 more in premiums. Trading $500 for $250 is clearly a bad deal for the consumer. (Austin Frakt, 11/1)
The Washington Post:
An Alternative To Obamacare?
Jeb Bush released a health-care plan last month that would disassemble Obamacare’s “three-legged stool” — its federal mandate requiring all individuals to carry health insurance, its ban on insurance companies denying or pricing out people with preexisting conditions, and its subsidies to help people buy coverage. In its place, he would assemble a flimsier one. (11/1)
Viewpoints: Problems With GOP Tax Plans; Pass The Mental Health Bills
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
The New York Times:
Why The Republican Tax Plans Won’t Work
The Republican presidential candidates were full of tax talk at this week’s debate. But none has a tax plan coherent enough to be the basis of a substantive discussion, let alone one that could meet the nation’s challenges. ... The only way the Republican candidates could ever pay for such large tax cuts would be by slashing big spending programs, namely, Medicare and Social Security. All of these candidates deny fiscal reality. In the next 10 years, revenues will need to increase by 40 percent simply to keep federal spending even, per capita, with inflation and population growth. Additional revenues will be needed to pay for health care for the elderly, transportation systems and other obligations, as well as for newer challenges, including climate change. (10/30)
The New York Times:
Partisan Growth Gaps
Republicans need to promise economic miracles as a way to sell policies that overwhelmingly favor the donor class. It would be nice, for variety’s sake, if even one major G.O.P. candidate would come out against big tax cuts for the 1 percent. But none have, and all of the major players have called for cuts that would subtract trillions from revenue. To make up for this lost revenue, it would be necessary to make sharp cuts in big programs — that is, in Social Security and/or Medicare. But Americans overwhelmingly believe that the wealthy pay less than their fair share of taxes, and even Republicans are closely divided on the issue. And the public wants to see Social Security expanded, not cut. So how can a politician sell the tax-cut agenda? (Paul Krugman, 11/2)
The New York Times:
Ben Carson Is Inspiring, But Not For President
Carson wants to end Medicare and replace it with health savings accounts, and that pretty much makes him unelectable, although he’s now backing away from his position. So my hunch is that the betting markets are right and that Senator Marco Rubio will ultimately emerge as the nominee. But maybe the more interesting question is what Carson says about America. He seems to see his rise as an indication that America needs not so much social programs as firmer character. (Nicholas Kristof, 10/31)
The Hill:
GOP Hurts Itself With Medicare Attacks
It is a riddle. Republicans running for the party’s presidential nomination continue to push cuts in Medicare spending even as Republican voters oppose cuts in Medicare spending. Seventy-seven percent of Medicare beneficiaries are white and 84 percent are over 65, according to recent studies. Those older white Americans “tilt heavily Republican,” according to the Pew Research Center’s poll findings. So why do Republican politicians keep bringing up the idea of cutting or eliminating Medicare, a losing proposition among every voting group, including Republicans? (Juan Williams, 11/2)
The Wall Street Journal:
Libertarian Dream Of Pharmaceuticals
The real point is that today’s mega-griping about the drug industry comes from politicians unhappy with drug companies for following the incentives that politicians create for them. Mega-griping is already descending on a bruited merger between Pfizer and the Ireland’s Allergan, all for incentives made in Washington. The U.S. tax code’s treatment of international profits provides a giant motive for Pfizer to transfer its corporate headquarters abroad. The expense and risk of bringing new drugs to market under the FDA is a reason the duo prefer to market the hell out of existing drugs like Viagra and Botox. The plague of third-party payership encouraged by the tax code, Medicare, Medicaid and ObamaCare helps make it possible for the industry to hike prices without losing sales. (Holman W. Jenkins Jr., 10/30)
The Washington Post:
Movement On Mental-Health Care
Mass shooting after mass shooting, Democrats call for more gun regulations while Republicans stress the importance of improving mental-health care. Both are necessary. Yet the depressing result of this partisan routine has been that nothing happens on either issue. That might soon change, at least on the mental-health front. Solid, bipartisan mental-health bills are poised to move in both chambers. They should be passed, reconciled and signed into law. (11/1)
The Philadelphia Inquirer:
Unfair Attacks On Mentally Ill
The leading Republican candidate for president tells heartbreaking stories of violence committed by a few Mexican immigrants as evidence that they are rapists, murderers, criminals, and drug dealers. He depends on outrage and fear to gain support for building a 2,000-mile fence and detaining and deporting millions of individuals. A similar tactic is being used to influence national policies about people with serious mental illnesses in the wake of well-publicized mass murders. The intention is to cause fear by linking violence and mental illness, and then blaming the illnesses and the mental-health system for the problems. The proposed solutions? A return to asylums; more involuntary outpatient commitment; attacks on a federal agency that has spearheaded advances in mental-health policies and services; and challenges to the nation's emphasis on protecting the rights and freedoms of all citizens. (Mark Salzer, 11/1)
The Washington Post:
Being A Doctor Who Performs Abortions Means You Always Fear Your Life Is In Danger
Every few months, I do an Internet search for my name, as recommended by a media-savvy colleague. In the past I’ve found myself in all the predictable places — among a list of doctors who graduated from my residency program, on my employer’s Web site, in various social-media posts. But in the stillness of a warm evening this past August, after putting my daughter to bed, I found myself in a new and terrifying place: an anti-choice Web site that claims I am part of an “abortion cartel.” In addition to my office address and links to find my medical license numbers, it features several photos of me. In one of the photos, taken from social media, I’m holding my then-15-month-old daughter. (Diane J. Horvath-Cosper, 10/29)
The Washington Post:
Why Are We More Interested In Pushing Death Than Improving Life?
Beginning in January, the taxpayer-funded Medicare program will pay health-care professionals to counsel the elderly as they choose to pursue or reject life-preserving medical treatment. Sadly, most health-care professionals are unlikely to act as neutral assistants. Cost pressures, combined with an increasingly pervasive ideological commitment to avoiding “poor quality of life,” will result in the subtle — or not-so-subtle — “nudging” of those who are most vulnerable to accept premature death. (Burke Balch, 11/1)
The Philadelphia Inquirer:
Questions To Ask To Ensure The Best Care
If you want information on a hospital's infection rate, call the hospital and ask to speak to someone in the infection control department. Ask: What is the hospital's infection rate and how does it compare with the national average? What is the infection rate for your surgical procedure and how does it compare with the national average? Is the hospital having any cluster or outbreak of certain infections such as MRSA or c. difficile? For the first two questions, ask for specific percentages. Don't accept just "as good as." If the first person you reach cannot answer these questions, ask who can. (Maryanne McGuckin, 11/1)
The Kansas City Star:
Alzheimer's Disease Battle, Caregivers Gain Support From President Obama
People struggling against Alzheimer’s disease — either as those who have it, their caregivers, advocacy groups or researchers — got a tremendous boost this week from President Barack Obama. The Oval Office support is long overdue. Obama joined other presidents, proclaiming November 2015 as National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness month. “This November, let us focus our nation's attention on the challenges posed by Alzheimer's disease, which families across America courageously face every day,” Obama said. (Lewis Diuguid, 10/31)