- KFF Health News Original Stories 2
- Why Glaring Quality Gaps Among Nursing Homes Are Likely To Grow If Medicaid Is Cut
- For Some Refugees, Women's Health Care Is A Culture Shock
- Political Cartoon: 'A Whole New Ball Game?'
- Administration News 1
- House Launches Investigation Into HHS Secretary's Private Jet Use; Trump Says He's 'Not Happy' With Price
- Marketplace 2
- Trump Promises Order To Allow Insurers To Sell Across State Lines -- But That Option Already Exists
- After Months Of Hand-Wringing, Insurers' Deadline To Lock Into Marketplace Passes Without Dramatics
- Health Law 3
- In Face Of Skepticism, Republicans Vows Repeal Will Happen By 2019
- With Repeal Effort Stymied, Sen. Johnson Opens Probe Of Medicaid Expansion Costs In 8 States
- Murkowski, Who Has Emerged As Key Player In Health Debates, Says Any Fixes Must Be Bipartisan
- Capitol Watch 1
- With Deadlines Looming, Congress Tardy On Funding For Children's Insurance, Health Centers
- Veterans' Health Care 1
- Despite Recent $2.1B Boost, VA Choice Program May Need More Funding By December
- Public Health 2
- 'Given The Scope Of This Crisis,' PhRMA CEO Backs Guidelines Limiting Opioid Prescriptions
- Quick, Low-Cost Dipstick Test For Dengue And Zika Could Help Diagnose And Track Outbreaks
- State Watch 2
- Rural Hospital Ills Reflect Economic Troubles In Small Town USA
- State Highlights: Molina's Ousted CEO Swoops In To Save Calif. Clinics; Nursing Homes Challenge Fla. Governor's New Requirements
- Editorials And Opinions 3
- Thursday-Morning Quarterbacking: Why The GOP Failed Again To Kill Obamacare And How The ACA Managed To Survive
- Tough Talk: 'The Price' Not Right For HHS Secretary; He Should Have To Repay Taxpayers These Funds
- Viewpoints: The Future Of The ER Involves More Than Just Technology; Paying For Care That Is Not Needed
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Why Glaring Quality Gaps Among Nursing Homes Are Likely To Grow If Medicaid Is Cut
Medicaid covers about two-thirds of nursing home residents, but it pays less than other types of insurance. (Jordan Rau, 9/28)
For Some Refugees, Women's Health Care Is A Culture Shock
Refugee women from conservative Muslim countries can be shocked by some U.S. medical conventions — like trusting a male doctor to care for them. (Sarah Varney, 9/28)
Political Cartoon: 'A Whole New Ball Game?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'A Whole New Ball Game?'" by Steve Sack, The Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
A NEW DIRECTION?
Repeal and replace.
Blind? Or just can't see the light?
Medicare for all!
- John Schneider
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:
When asked if Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price would be fired over his use of a private jet that has cost taxpayers more than $400,000 since May, President Donald Trump said, "We'll see." Meanwhile, the House Oversight Committee is requesting information on Price's travel.
Politico Pro:
House Oversight Committee Launches Investigation Into Agency Travel Following Price Reports
Under Federal Travel Regulations, officials are advised to take the “most expeditious” means of transportation and “by no means should include personal use,” Chairman Trey Gowdy and ranking member Elijah Cummings write in a sample letter addressed to Price, who served more than a decade in the House before joining Trump's administration. Similar letters were sent to 23 other agencies and the White House. (Diamond, 9/27)
Politico:
Trump Fuming Over Price's Charter Flights
Politico has revealed that Price has flown 26 times on private aircraft since last May at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars, a break with the practice of his predecessors, who generally took commercial flights. Some Trump advisers are urging Trump to get rid of Price, according to three people familiar with the conversations. “His conduct is pretty much indefensible,” one senior administration official said. “I don’t know how you defend it.” (Dawsey, Restuccia and Nelson, 9/27)
The Associated Press:
Top Health Official’s Travel Angers Trump
President Donald Trump says he’s “not happy” with his top health official, putting Tom Price’s job in jeopardy after his costly charter flights triggered a congressional investigation of administration travel. Asked whether he’s planning on firing Price, Trump responded Wednesday: “We’ll see.” (Alonso-Zaldivar and Lucey, 9/28)
The Washington Post:
Trump: ‘Not Happy’ About HHS Secretary Tom Price’s Taxpayer-Funded Travel On Private Jets
President Trump on Wednesday said he is "not happy" about revelations that Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price took numerous flights on government-funded private jets for work and personal trips. But the former congressman from Georgia is likely to keep his job, according to two people familiar with Trump's thinking. Responding to questions from reporters at the White House, Trump said he is “looking into” the situation and that “personally, I'm not happy about it, and I let him know it.” Trump spoke by phone with Price in recent days, said the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the personnel issue. (Nakamura and Gearan, 9/27)
The New York Times:
Tom Price’s Spending Habits Catch Trump’s Attention: ‘I’m Not Happy About It’
According to a senior administration official familiar with Mr. Trump’s thinking, the president’s willingness to ferret out financial wrongdoing is not good news for Mr. Price, a physician and a former Georgia congressman who has been a vocal proponent of cost-cutting within his own agency. Mr. Trump, who is known to dislike appearances of financial waste, is said to be increasingly frustrated with a series of reports published by Politico about Mr. Price’s spending habits. (Rogers, 9/27)
Los Angeles Times:
Will Health Secretary Tom Price Be Fired Over Use Of Charter Planes? 'We'll See,' Trump Says
The inspector general of the Health and Human Services Department is probing the flights, and the House Oversight Committee has asked the White House and various agencies to turn over information about any private flights. (Decker, 9/27)
NPR:
Trump, 'Not Happy,' Joins Critics Of His Own Highflying Cabinet Officials
On Capitol Hill, House Oversight Committee Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., and ranking Democrat Elijah Cummings, D-Md., sent letters instructing administration officials to supply details and documents from all trips on government-owned or chartered aircraft by nonelected political appointees. Letters went to the heads of 24 executive departments and independent agencies and to White House chief of staff John Kelly. (Overby, 9/27)
The Hill:
Democrats Call For Price’s Resignation
Democratic lawmakers began calling for Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price to resign on Wednesday following a series of reports about his use of private jets at taxpayers’ expense. Five House Democrats joined together to demand Price’s resignation, hours after President Trump said he’s “not happy” with his health secretary’s pattern of costing taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars to ride on private planes. (Marcos, 9/27)
Stat:
On Heels Of Tom Price Private Jet Revelations, House Committee Launches Inquiry
As a Republican effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act collapsed for the second time in three months this week, the man tapped to lead the charge found himself at the center of another controversy. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, according to a series of reports from Politico, has racked up a tab of more than $400,000 in private jet travel, despite his predecessors’ longstanding practice of traveling on commercial airlines. (Facher, 9/27)
Bloomberg:
Trouble Mounts For Trump’s Health Secretary After Private-Jet Trips
On Wednesday, the the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform released a letter asking Price for details on his use of “government-owned aircraft for personal travel or private non-commercial aircraft for official travel.” The letter, signed by the committee’s top Republican and Democrat, gives Price two weeks to provide the records. It also drags the former congressman into an inquiry by fellow Republicans, a relative rarity in Washington politics. HHS’s Office of Inspector General is also investigating the trips. (Edney, 9/27)
The Hill:
Oversight Panel To Investigate Cabinet Officials Using Private Planes
The House Oversight Committee will investigate the use of private jet travel by Cabinet officials. The committee on Wednesday sent letters to the White House and 24 federal agencies requesting information related to senior officials’ use of government-owned aircraft or private non-commercial aircraft for official and personal travel. (Weixel, 9/27)
The Hill:
Poll: Majority View Price's Use Of Private Jet As 'Inappropriate'
A majority of voters thinks it's inappropriate for Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price to use private jets for official business, a new poll released Wednesday shows. Price has used a charter flight at least 26 times since May, totaling about $400,000, according to a series of Politico reports. (Hellmann, 9/27)
Trump Promises Order To Allow Insurers To Sell Across State Lines -- But That Option Already Exists
Several states have tried it, and it's been a bust.
The Washington Post:
Trump Plans Executive Action To Let Insurers Sell Health Plans Across State Lines
President Trump said Wednesday that he could take executive action next week to allow insurers to sell health plans across state lines and make it easier for individual consumers to buy coverage as a group, a policy approach long championed by conservatives. Trump’s comments, which came on the same day that insurers in about three dozen states had to finalize their federal contracts to offer 2018 coverage under the Affordable Care Act, did little to allay their concerns or those of state officials. (Eilperin and Winfield Cunningham, 9/27)
CNN Money:
Trump Says He May Sign Executive Order On Health Care Next Week
A day after Congress' last-ditch attempt to repeal Obamacare failed, Trump said he may soon sign an executive order on health care that would affect millions of people. "I'll probably be signing a very major executive order where people can go out, cross state lines, do lots of things and buy their own health care, and that will be probably signed next week," he told reporters Wednesday. "It's being finished now. It's going to cover a lot of territory and a lot of people. Millions of people." (Luhby, 9/27)
The Hill:
Trump Plans Order Allowing Insurance Sold Across State Lines
Trump said the order is “being finished now. It's going to cover a lot of territory and a lot of people — millions of people.” Selling insurance across state lines is an idea Republicans have long backed. They say competition will help drive down prices. Experts said it’s not clear what an executive order on selling insurance plans across state lines would do. (Weixel, 9/27)
The Wall Street Journal:
Trump Says He’ll Work With Democrats On Health Care
The push to ease interstate health-insurance sales has long been a goal of Republicans. Insurers that operate nationally already can sell plans to consumers in any state as long as they are licensed in that state and follow its rules. Republicans have sought to give insurers leeway to sell policies to consumers in a state where they aren’t licensed; such policies would only need to meet the insurer’s home-state regulations. Groups such as the National Association of Insurance Commissioners have argued that insurers under such a system might flock to states with the most-limited requirements for the industry. That could result in some plans carrying bare-bones coverage, even if offering cheaper premiums. In recent years, a handful of states passed legislation setting up special agreements that allow insurers in one state to sell coverage to individuals in another state, but participation has been sparse. (Peterson and Hackman, 9/27)
Politico:
Health Plans, Regulators Pan Trump's Plan To Allow Purchase Of Insurance Across State Lines
Trump didn't elaborate on how he would allow insurance to be sold across state lines. But most insurance experts find it hard to imagine how an executive order could supplant existing state regulations, and believe such a move would likely spark a legal challenge. “Health insurers already have the ability to sell insurance in multiple states as long as they comply with state consumer protection and licensing laws, which many already do,” said Mike Consedine, CEO of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, in a statement to POLITICO. “The NAIC has long been opposed to any attempt to reduce or preempt state authority or weaken consumer protections.” (Demko and McCaskill, 9/27)
Previous KHN coverage: Sounds Like A Good Idea? Selling Insurance Across State Lines
After Months Of Hand-Wringing, Insurers' Deadline To Lock Into Marketplace Passes Without Dramatics
But the final decisions of some insurers hadn’t been disclosed as of Wednesday evening, so there is still a risk that companies might make 11th-hour pullbacks. Meanwhile, Stat offers a guide to the upcoming enrollment season, Democrats call for an investigation into the administration's decision to shut down healthcare.gov on Sundays for maintenance and more.
The Wall Street Journal:
Health Insurers Stay In ACA Despite Fears Of Last-Minute Exits
Health insurers appeared likely to offer Affordable Care Act plans in all U.S. counties next year, despite months of drama and worries among some state officials about last-minute exits, ahead of a late-Wednesday deadline. Some major insurers that had signaled that they might pull back, including Cigna Corp., Health Care Service Corp., Molina Healthcare Inc., Highmark Health and Independence Blue Cross, this week said they would stick to the states and regions where they had filed to offer ACA coverage. (Wilde Mathews, 9/27)
Stat:
A Patient's Guide To Enrolling In Obamacare In The Age Of Trump
In less than six weeks, despite months of Republican attempts to dismantle Obamacare, millions of people will return to HealthCare.gov to buy insurance. Or at least, they should.You might not know it from the political rhetoric, but the Affordable Care Act is still the law. Every American is still legally required to carry health insurance or face a tax penalty of at least $695. There will still be plans available on the exchanges in every county, and the federal government will still provide the subsidies that help more than 9 million people afford their premiums. (Mershon, 9/28)
The Hill:
Senate Dems Demand Investigation Into ObamaCare Website Shutdowns
A group of Senate Democrats on Wednesday called for an investigation into the Trump administration’s decision to periodically shut down the federal ObamaCare exchange website in the middle of the next open enrollment period. Sens. Brian Schatz (Hawaii), Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), Cory Booker (N.J.) and Chris Murphy (Conn.) asked the Department of Health and Human Services's inspector general to investigate plans for hours-long maintenance shutdowns of the HealthCare.gov website. (Weixel, 9/27)
Houston Chronicle:
White House Cuts Target Obamacare Enrollment Efforts
The Trump administration quietly has slashed grants this month to dozens of grass-roots groups that help enroll people in Affordable Care Act health plans, potentially crippling upcoming sign-up efforts for 2018. Some of these "navigator groups" in Texas have had their grants cut severely enough to force them to shrink outreach to the state's high number of uninsured and drastically reduce the staff who help people sign up or re-enroll for coverage. (Deam, 9/27)
Bloomberg:
Obamacare Rates Rise In Markets Unsettled By Trump
A day after Republicans failed yet again to repeal Obamacare, confusion sowed by President Donald Trump’s opposition to the law is roiling the health-insurance market. In many states, insurers face a deadline of Wednesday to lock in their rates for next year under the Affordable Care Act, and some are announcing double-digit increases. Florida said Tuesday that most of its 45 percent average increase in premiums stems from the risk that the Trump administration will skip cost-sharing payments that reimburse insurers for lowering rates. Anthem Inc. said it would exit Maine, the latest state withdrawal for the one-time Obamacare stalwart. (Tracer, Edney and Tozzi, 9/27)
Georgia Health News:
State Accepts Big Hikes On 2018 Exchange; Now It’s Up To The Feds
State insurance officials Wednesday gave approval to premium increases of more than 50 percent for the four insurers participating in next year’s insurance exchange in Georgia. The officials said that the huge rate hikes assume that subsidies for insurers to lower consumers’ out-of-pocket costs will not be paid next year by the federal government. (Miller, 9/27)
In Face Of Skepticism, Republicans Vows Repeal Will Happen By 2019
Meanwhile, President Donald Trump remains optimistic that there will be movement in the next few months. "[In] the meantime, I have that little period of time, I'll negotiate with the Democrats if we can come up with a fantastic health care bill, that's okay with me. Good for both parties. Bipartisan," the president says.
The Wall Street Journal:
GOP Promises Continued Push On Health-Care Rollback After Collapse
Republicans have a new promise on health care: It’s not over. As the GOP trumpeted the framework of a new tax overhaul plan at the Capitol on Wednesday, lawmakers wrestled with their message to voters after promises to roll back the Affordable Care Act officially came up short Tuesday, when party leaders scrapped a final vote after nine months of failed attempts. Now, Republicans are promising that repeal will still happen before the current session of Congress ends in January 2019. (Peterson and Armour, 9/27)
The Hill:
Trump Predicts Health Care Reform Will Pass In 'A Few Months'
President Trump in a new interview scheduled to air Thursday insisted that Republicans have the votes to repeal ObamaCare and will pass health care reform in “a few months.” “So we'll bring it into a few months from now. We'll vote it - it's block grants. It's going to be great health care,’ Trump told “Fox & Friends.” (Shelbourne, 9/27)
Bloomberg:
Trump Vows To Try Again After Senate GOP Kills Health-Care Vote
Leaders decided Tuesday that the Senate won’t vote before Saturday’s deadline to use a fast-track procedure to keep Democrats from blocking a GOP-only bill and they said they would turn instead to overhauling the U.S. tax system. “We don’t have the votes” for the health-care bill, co-sponsor Bill Cassidy of Louisiana told reporters in Washington. “We’ve made the decision, since we don’t have the votes, we’ll postpone that vote.” (Litvan and Dennis, 9/27)
The Associated Press:
Trump Says GOP Has Health Care Votes ... But It Doesn’t
Guess what? Turns out Republicans have the votes to push health care legislation through the Senate, but they’ve been flummoxed because one supportive senator is in the hospital. That was President Donald Trump’s view of where things stand Wednesday on Capitol Hill. And it’s not true. Trump made the remarks a day after Senate GOP leaders discarded their drive to repeal President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. They lacked the votes to succeed, a not-so-minor snag that hadn’t changed. The three GOP senators whose opposition sunk the Republican measure all remained against it, aides confirmed. (Fram, 9/27)
Politico:
Democrats Welcome GOP Keeping Obamacare Repeal Alive
To the Republicans vowing to keep their Obamacare repeal drive alive for as long as it takes, Democrats say: Please, and thank you. While Senate Republicans abandoned their last-gasp attempt to topple Obamacare before a Saturday deadline, they’re already suggesting they might try again next year. That timing — President Donald Trump said Wednesday that Congress would take up repeal again in the first quarter of next year — could keep the threat of upending the health care system front of mind in the thick of the 2018 campaign season. (Schor and Caygle, 9/28)
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is bruised after a tough week and a tougher summer —
The Associated Press:
Senate Leader McConnell Faces Doubts After Losses
Senate Republicans are reckoning with an insurgent’s win in Alabama that poses clear threats to their own grip on power and the leadership of Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Nearly $10 million spent by a McConnell-backed super PAC couldn’t save incumbent GOP Sen. Luther Strange, who had been endorsed by President Donald Trump as well. It came the same day that McConnell, short of votes, pulled the plug on the latest and possibly final GOP effort to repeal and replace “Obamacare.” (Werner, 9/28)
The New York Times:
McConnell Gambled On Health Care And The Alabama Senate Race. He Lost.
Now, a majority leader celebrated for years as a brilliant tactician looks vulnerable — to dissent within his Senate conference and to insurgents from President Trump’s populist wing of the party, who are looking to storm the Senate in 2018. And if Republicans fail to fulfill their next promise — overhauling the tax code — the consequences will be dire. (Stolberg, 9/27)
With Repeal Effort Stymied, Sen. Johnson Opens Probe Of Medicaid Expansion Costs In 8 States
The investigation signals that congressional Republicans may turn from efforts to repeal the health law and seek other ways to corral health spending. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) says he wants to know if states got Medicaid funding by wrongly signing up people as expansion enrollees.
The Wall Street Journal:
GOP Senator Is Examining Whether Some States Got Undue Medicaid Funds
A Republican senator who co-sponsored failed legislation to repeal most of the Affordable Care Act is looking at whether some states may have been getting federal money under the law’s Medicaid expansion that they aren’t entitled to. The probe by Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin suggests that some Republicans, fresh off their congressional effort to repeal the health law and its expansion, will now zero in on other potential ways to rein in the program and its costs. (Armour, 9/27)
The Hill:
GOP Senator Probes Rising Medicaid Costs
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) is investigating whether certain states are receiving more federal Medicaid dollars than they should, leading to burgeoning costs. Johnson, the chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, is making the push one day after the ObamaCare repeal-and-replace bill that he cosponsored failed. (Sullivan, 9/27)
Detroit Free Press:
Senator To Gov. Snyder: Why Is Michigan Spending So Much On Medicaid?
Questioning costs incurred under the Medicaid expansion program authorized under the Affordable Care Act, U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said, “Federal expenditures under this expansion are soaring” in the Healthy Michigan program, which offers Medicaid coverage to people making between 100% and 138% of the federal poverty limit at reduced costs in exchange for them taking on healthy behaviors. Snyder's office didn't immediately respond to the letter from Johnson. (Spangler, 9/27)
Illinois News Network:
U.S. Senate Panel Investigating 'Soaring' Medicaid Costs In Illinois, 7 Other States
The letter to [Gov. Bruce] Rauner says the costs of Medicaid expansion in Illinois exceed initial estimates by 90 percent. ... Johnson asked Rauner to provide information about new Medicaid enrollees in Illinois in 2016 and 2017, an explanation for why enrollment is increasing significantly faster than expected, why the per-enrollee costs increased significantly, and what the state's eligibility thresholds are.(9/27)
Honolulu Star-Advertiser:
U.S. Sen. Johnson Questions Hawaii’s Medicaid Spending
The chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs wants Gov. David Ige to explain what caused a rapid escalation in spending in Hawaii on Medicaid .... The letter also asks for information on why the costs for new enrollees have been increasing so rapidly, and whether the state has conducted or commissioned audits of those costs or the enrollees’ eligibility. The letter also seeks “all documents and communications between and among employees or contractors of Hawaii” regarding determination of eligibility. (Dayton, 9/27)
New Hampshire Union Leader:
Gov. Sununu Pressed For Answers On High Medicaid Costs
Federal expenditures on Medicaid are "soaring in New Hampshire and per-enrollee spending is rising exponentially," according to the chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, who wants some answers from Gov. Chris Sununu. In a three-page letter delivered Wednesday morning, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., submitted a list of questions designed to determine why the cost for new Medicaid beneficiaries in the state is rising so dramatically, up 253 percent from 2014 to 2015. (Solomon, 9/27)
Murkowski, Who Has Emerged As Key Player In Health Debates, Says Any Fixes Must Be Bipartisan
Senators are turning their attention back to stabilizing the marketplace following the collapse of their latest repeal-and-replace efforts.
The Hill:
Murkowski: ObamaCare Bill 'Needs To Be Bipartisan'
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said Wednesday that ObamaCare-related legislation "needs to be bipartisan" following the collapse of GOP efforts to repeal the health-care law this week. "You know what, I think it needs to be bipartisan and that's why I'm working with Sen. Alexander and Sen. Murray," Murkowski said when asked whether a Republican-only ObamaCare bill could pass next year. (Sullivan, 9/27)
CQ:
Market Stabilization Talks Resume As Insurers Finalize Rates
Republican senators are signaling an openness to stabilizing the individual insurance market in the short term after giving up on a last-ditch effort to replace President Barack Obama’s health care law. The negotiations are restarting just as insurers finalize contracts for the exchanges that will use HealthCare.gov next year on Wednesday. (Clason, 9/27)
The Hill:
Problem Solvers Caucus Pushes To Stabilize Insurance Markets
The House Problem Solvers Caucus is urging congressional leaders to consider bipartisan health-care policies aimed at stabilizing the insurance markets. “When we work across the aisle and govern together, Democrats and Republicans alike can find consensus on real solutions for the American people,” the group wrote to Democratic and Republican leaders in both chambers. (Roubein, 9/27)
Meanwhile —
The Hill:
GOP Senators Push For Delay Of ObamaCare Insurer Tax
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) and 10 Senate Republicans introduced a bill Tuesday to delay an ObamaCare insurer tax before it goes into effect next year. The health insurance tax, a fee on insurance companies to help pay for health care subsidies, is slated to return in 2018 after a one-year hiatus. (Hellmann, 9/27)
With Deadlines Looming, Congress Tardy On Funding For Children's Insurance, Health Centers
The legislative process is lagging on renewing funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program and community health centers. Meanwhile, congressional Democrats warn that the GOP tax plan could lead to cuts in Medicare and Medicaid.
The Hill:
Congress On Track To Miss Two Big Health Deadlines
Congress is at risk of missing two deadlines for health programs impacting millions of people, as funding is set to expire on Saturday. The House has yet to release a bill to fund the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) just days before the deadline. The Senate has released a bipartisan five-year bill to reauthorize the program, but a vote hasn’t been scheduled. Separately, billions of dollars to fund community health centers — a safety net for 26 million people — are also up in the air. (Roubein, 9/27)
The Star Tribune:
Federal Health Funds For Low-Income Kids, Uninsured Expiring
Minnesota health advocates are closely watching for signs of progress in Washington on programs that underwrite care for the uninsured and for low-income children. Unless reauthorized and funded, both are set to end on Saturday when the federal fiscal year ends. (Howatt, 9/28)
The Hill:
Senate Passes Bipartisan Medicare Reform Bill
The Senate on Tuesday night unanimously passed a bill aimed at making Medicare more efficient and saving it money. The passage of the under-the-radar bipartisan health-care reforms came on the same day that Senate Republicans abandoned a vote on a bill to repeal and replace ObamaCare. (Sulivan, 9/27)
The Hill:
Dems Slam GOP Tax Plan As Deficit-Buster, Risk To Medicare
Democrats on Wednesday excoriated the GOP's proposed tax framework, saying it would blow an enormous hole in the deficit — warning that popular social programs are next. “Make no mistake: After [the] Republicans’ tax plan blows a multitrillion-dollar hole in the deficit, they will sharpen their knives for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and vital job-creating investments for middle-class families across America,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). (Elis, 9/27)
Despite Recent $2.1B Boost, VA Choice Program May Need More Funding By December
But the House Veterans Affairs Committee was already anticipating that the emergency funding approved in August may not last the full six months.
The Associated Press:
VA Running Out Of Money For Private Health Care Program
Weeks after a veterans’ health initiative received $2.1 billion in emergency funding, the Trump administration says the private-sector Veterans Choice health care program may need additional money as early as December to avoid a disruption of care for hundreds of thousands of veterans. The Department of Veterans Affairs said in a statement that it hoped to move quickly on a proposed long-term legislative fix that would give veterans even wider access to private doctors. The proposal, under review by the White House Office of Management and Budget, would seek money to keep Choice running for much of next year as VA implements wider changes. (Yen, 9/27)
The Associated Press:
McCain Demands Accounting From VA On Money For Private Care
Sen. John McCain is demanding a full accounting from the Department of Veterans Affairs on the financial status of its private-sector health care program. The Associated Press reported this week that the Veterans Choice program could run out of money by year’s end, despite receiving $2.1 billion in emergency funding last month. (Yen, 9/28)
In other news —
CQ:
VA Seeks Expanded Hiring Authority to Address Rising Suicides
Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin implored senators Wednesday to change hiring laws so he can more quickly staff up the agency’s mental health department, as veteran suicide rates remain high. "We are going to need legislative changes,” Shulkin said at a Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee hearing. (Mejdrich, 9/27)
Orlando Sentinel:
Navy Hospital Ship Comfort Ordered To Puerto Rico As Part Of U.S. Military Hurricane Response
Amid criticism of what’s been called a slow federal response to Hurricane Maria destruction in Puerto Rico, the Pentagon said Wednesday that it will switch its efforts to land-based, long-term support. (Steele, 9/27)
'Given The Scope Of This Crisis,' PhRMA CEO Backs Guidelines Limiting Opioid Prescriptions
The move follows efforts by pharmacy benefit managers to restrict the supply of opioids to first-time users. The decision is creating some backlash for patients with chronic pain who are worried they can no longer get the treatment they and their doctors feel they need.
Stat:
PhRMA CEO Announces Support For Limiting Opioid Prescriptions
The pharmaceutical industry now supports limiting prescriptions of opioid painkillers to a seven-day supply for acute pain management, PhRMA CEO Stephen J. Ubl announced Wednesday at a meeting of the White House’s opioid abuse commission. “Too often, individuals receive a 30-day supply of opioid medicines for minor treatments for short term pain,” Ubl said. “Overprescribing and dispensing can lead to patients taking longer than necessary and excess pills falling into the wrong hands.” (Joseph, 9/27)
The Hill:
Drugmaker Group Backs Limiting Opioid Supplies
A powerful drug industry trade group announced its support for limiting a patient’s supply of opioids to seven days for first-time acute pain treatment, as a way to curb the opioid epidemic plaguing the country. “Too often individuals receive a 30-day supply of opioid medicines for minor treatments or short-term pain,” Stephen Ubl, president and CEO of Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, said. (Roubein, 9/27)
In other news on the epidemic —
Stat:
Relaxing Privacy Rules To Fight Opioid Addiction Draws Fire From Treatment Advocates
The on-the-ground groups targeting the opioids crisis almost universally support Washington’s efforts to direct more resources and flexibility toward their work. But a new coalition is cautioning that one proposed federal change — supported both by lawmakers and the Trump administration’s opioid commission — could actually hurt the people they’re all trying to help. At the center of the controversy: an effort to relax federal privacy rules for substance abuse treatments. (Mershon, 9/27)
KCUR:
Kansas’ Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Gets $178K Federal Grant
A prescription drug monitoring program in Kansas will receive a federal grant worth more than $178,000 to help fight the opioid crisis. The Kansas Board of Pharmacy oversees K-TRACS, a system for monitoring prescriptions for controlled substances. Board Executive Secretary Alexandra Blasi says doctors, dentists and pharmacists who participate in the program report their prescription activity to the state to verify a patient’s history. (Shaar, 9/27)
Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Fatal Overdoses Down, Overdoses Up Across Region So Far In 2017
While the number of people who have overdosed on opioids in Richmond and Chesterfield, Hanover and Henrico counties rose about 40 percent year-over-year as of mid-September, deaths from the drugs are down 19 percent from the 95 local authorities had tracked by this point in 2016. (Burnell Evans, 9/27)
Miami Herald:
Miami May Sue Big Pharma Over Opioid Crisis
City commissioners on Thursday are poised to hire a private law firm to pursue a complaint against prescription opioid manufacturers and distributors that would seek compensation for the resources Miami has been forced to dedicate to reviving overdose victims, policing drug-related crimes and healthcare. (Smiley, 9/27)
Quick, Low-Cost Dipstick Test For Dengue And Zika Could Help Diagnose And Track Outbreaks
"You can go from a sample to an answer within about 15 minutes," says one of the authors of the test. In today's other public health news: food safety violations, the link between exercise and willpower, autism and health issues of women refugees.
Stat:
Cheap, Fast Test For Zika And Dengue Could Cost Just $1
A new blood test can cheaply and quickly distinguish between the mosquito-borne Zika and dengue viruses, researchers reported Wednesday, giving public health officials a valuable tool to track the spread of outbreaks and prepare for the possible consequences of the different infections. The test, which was described in the journal Science Translational Medicine, relies on a simple paper strip, and researchers hope it can eventually be purchased for less than $1. The scientists who developed the test are at work to commercialize it and production would need to be scaled up before it could be deployed widely. (Joseph, 9/27)
WBUR:
Study: New Test Could Check For Zika Quickly And Cheaply
A new paper in the journal Science Translational Medicine offers a potential step forward for Zika testing: a fast-acting "dipstick"-type test much like a pregnancy test that costs as little as $5 per strip and can distinguish between Zika and dengue fever — a difficult challenge because the viruses are similar. It could be ready for broad use within a couple of years, says co-author Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli, associate professor of engineering at University of Massachusetts Boston. (Goldberg, 9/27)
WBUR:
FDA Not Doing Enough To Fix Serious Food Safety Violations, Report Finds
The Food Safety Modernization Act, which was signed into law in 2011, aims to ensure a prevention-oriented approach to food safety. ... But the new report concludes that the FDA has rarely taken advantage of these new tools. (Aubrey, 9/27)
The New York Times:
How Exercise Might Increase Your Self-Control
For most of us, temptations are everywhere, from the dessert buffet to the online shoe boutique. But a new study suggests that exercise might be a simple if unexpected way to increase our willpower and perhaps help us to avoid making impulsive choices that we will later regret. (Reynolds, 9/27)
Stat:
Can Tailored Swim Lessons Protect Children With Autism From Drowning?
Amusement parks, lakes, neighbors’ pools — they are dangers that families of children with autism have long known anecdotally to beware of. ... An authoritative study earlier this year put some numbers to the fear. Drowning is the most common fatal injury among children with autism, researchers found. Children with autism age 14 and younger are 160 times as likely to die from drowning as the general pediatric population, with drowning risk peaking from age 5 to 7. (Samuel, 9/27)
Kaiser Health News:
For Some Refugees, Women’s Health Care Is A Culture Shock
Dinnertime is nearing, and the kitchen in this tidy home is buzzing. Lamyaa Manty, a 29-year-old Iraqi refugee, wears a neon-pink T-shirt and stirs a big pot of eggplant, onion, potatoes and tomatoes on the stove, a staple of Iraqi cooking called tepsi. Spinning around with a butterfly net in her hand and dancing to Arabic music is Fatima Abdullah, an exuberant 9-year-old. At the center of the activity is Fatima’s aunt, Salima Abdullah Khalifa, a burgundy-haired matriarch from Baghdad, who pours Pepsi into small glasses on the table. (Varney, 9/28)
Unsafe Abortions Persist Even In Developed Countries, Report Finds
A team led by researchers at the World Health Organization and the Guttmacher Institute looked at data from 61 countries and found that the places where abortions are safest are also where they are most rare.
Los Angeles Times:
Abortions: Easier To Obtain Than Ever, Yet Nearly Half Worldwide Are Deemed Unsafe, Study Finds
It’s never been easier to have a safe abortion. With improvements in drugs designed to end a pregnancy and the spread of telemedicine, women all over the world are gaining access to low-risk, noninvasive abortions. But does this really mean that dangerous procedures are becoming a thing of the past? To find out, a team led by researchers at the World Health Organization in Geneva and the Guttmacher Institute in New York scoured abortion data from 61 countries and determined the level of safety for each procedure. The results were published Wednesday in the journal Lancet. (Kaplan, 9/27)
In other news —
The Associated Press:
Appeals Court Won’t Reconsider Arkansas Abortion Pill Ruling
A federal appeals court cleared the way Wednesday for Arkansas to impose new restrictions on the way the abortion pill is administered in the state, saying it won’t reconsider a panel’s decision in favor of the 2015 law. The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said it won’t reconsider a three-judge panel’s ruling lifting a federal judge’s preliminary injunction against the law. The measure requires doctors providing the abortion pill to maintain a contract with another physician with admitting privileges at a hospital who agrees to handle any complications. (DeMillo, 9/27)
Reuters:
Federal Court Strikes Down Abortion Ultrasound Law In Kentucky
A federal court struck down a law in Kentucky on Wednesday that requires women seeking an abortion to first undergo an ultrasound and hear a description of the embryo or fetus. The U.S. District Court Western District of Kentucky ruled that the state law is unconstitutional because it violates the free-speech rights of the patient and doctor, court documents showed. (9/28)
The Associated Press:
Kentucky's Abortion Law Struck Down By Federal Court
The ACLU said in a statement that the court recognized that the law “appears to inflict psychological harm on abortion patients,” and causes them to “experience distress as a result.” Attorney Alexa Kolbi-Molinas with the ACLU’s Reproductive Freedom Project said in the statement that, “We are pleased that Kentuckians will no longer be subjected to this demeaning and degrading invasion into their personal health care decisions.” (9/27)
Reveal:
Bayer Pulls Contraceptive Device From Global Markets
Essure, a device that represents the only permanent, non-surgical form of contraception, will no longer be available for purchase anywhere in the world except for America, though the U.S. Food and Drug Administration continues to monitor the device’s safety and efficacy. (Craven, 9/27)
Rural Hospital Ills Reflect Economic Troubles In Small Town USA
In other hospital-related news, an industry lawsuit becomes a stumbling block in Connecticut's efforts to adopt a state budget; Brigham and Women's struggle to control costs; and how a children's hospital is focused on lowering the risk of HIV among young sexual assault victims.
Georgia Health News/HuffPost:
A Hospital Crisis Is Killing Rural Communities. This State Is ‘Ground Zero’
Rural hospitals are in danger across the country, their closures both a symptom of economic trouble in small-town America and a catalyst for further decline.
Since 2010, 82 rural hospitals have closed nationwide. As many as 700 more are at risk of closing within the next 10 years, according to Alan Morgan, the CEO of the National Rural Health Association, a nonprofit professional organization that lobbies on rural health issues. The reasons are complex, woven into the fabric of a changing economy and an evolving health care system. But these rural hospital closures are hitting the southern United States the hardest. (Weber and Miller, 9/22)
The CT Mirror:
Old Hospital Lawsuit Poses New Wrinkle In Budget Talks
The struggle to adopt a new state budget hit another stumbling block Wednesday centered on a hospital industry lawsuit. At issue is a new taxing arrangement that the administration and the Connecticut Hospital Association negotiated that would help both sides by leveraging $365 million in new federal aid for them to share. (Phaneuf, 9/27)
Stat:
An Inside Look At Brigham And Women's Hospitals Struggle To Cut Costs
The heart of the Brigham’s austerity plan was a buyout offered this past June to more than 1,000 senior employees, including more than 400 veteran nurses. Some 800 workers decided to retire, including 7 percent of the nursing staff — a remarkably high acceptance rate. Many of them are leaving this week. While hundreds of new nurses are being hired at substantially lower entry-level pay, the large exodus underscores a critical challenge for the Brigham’s leadership: how to cut costs without harming patient care. (Winslow, 9/28)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Children's Hospital Works To Lower Risk Of HIV For Sex Assault Victims
[Barbara] Cuene is just one member of a team at Children’s Hospital taking a new approach to drastically reduce the risk of child victims of sexual assault contracting HIV. That innovative work, in partnership with Walgreens, puts an entire 28-day supply of the medication, known as post-exposure prophylaxis, into the hands of victims and their families before they leave the emergency room. (Lutheran, 9/27)
Media outlets report on news from California, Florida, Massachusetts, Iowa, Tennessee, Minnesota, Texas, Colorado and Michigan.
Modern Healthcare:
Ousted Molina Healthcare CEO To Snap Up Insurer's Calif. Clinics
Health insurer Molina Healthcare is getting out of the primary care business to focus on insurance, and it's quietly shutting down medical clinics in underserved areas across the country, according to its former CEO. Dr. J. Mario Molina, who was unexpectedly ousted earlier this year from the company his father created, is in the process of buying 17 of those clinics in California that would have closed otherwise. The California clinics serve about 120,000 patients annually. (Livingston, 9/27)
News Service of Florida:
Nursing Homes Call Florida’s Generator Deadline ‘Impossible’
Pointing to “impossible” timeframes, an industry group has filed a legal challenge to new requirements by Gov. Rick Scott’s administration that nursing homes and assisted-living facilities quickly install generators to power air-conditioning systems. (Saunders, 9/27)
The Associated Press:
Prosecutors Seek $74M In Deadly Meningitis Outbreak
Federal prosecutors say a Massachusetts pharmacy owner who was sentenced to prison after a nationwide meningitis outbreak that killed 76 people and sickened hundreds more should pay nearly $74 million in restitution. In a filing on Tuesday, prosecutors said the money would compensate about half of the victims of the 2012 outbreak for their expenses and lost income. The outbreak was traced to contaminated injections of medical steroids made by the now-defunct New England Compounding Center in Framingham. (9/28)
Nashville Tennessean:
2012 Fungal Meningitis Outbreak: Prosecutors Seek $73.7M For Outbreak Victims
Federal prosecutors are asking a judge to approve a $73.7 million restitution order against the former president of a drug compounding firm, who already is serving a nine year prison sentence following his conviction on racketeering and fraud charges. The motion seeks to have the $73.7 million distributed to 349 of the victims of the 2012 fungal meningitis outbreak who filed claims with the U.S. Attorney. It includes $1.9 million requested by insurance companies and medical facilities as reimbursement for drugs purchased from NECC. (Roche, 9/27)
Iowa Public Radio:
Challenges To Providing Safe Drinking Water In The Midwest
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says that levels of nitrate in drinking water at or above 10 parts per million are unsafe, particularly for infants, who could develop a potentially fatal blood disorder called "blue-baby" syndrome. The Interim Director for the Center for Health Effects of Environmental Contamination at the University of Iowa, Pete Weyer, says that the latest research shows negative health impacts—particularly cancer—for infants and even adults at a much lower limit. (Woodbury and Kieffer, 9/27)
Los Angeles Times:
Death Toll From San Diego Hepatitis Outbreak Rises To 17, With No Signs Of Slowing
The death toll in San Diego’s hepatitis A outbreak increased Tuesday, and the region’s top public health official said she hasn’t seen any signs of a slowdown in the public health emergency that has now killed 17 people. Dr. Wilma Wooten said there are 49 suspected hepatitis cases and one death still under investigation. A week ago, there were 44 cases, and the number of investigations has bounced from roughly 30 to 50 at any given time for several months, public health officials said. (Sisson, 9/27)
Minnesota Public Radio:
St. Cloud To Debate Raising Legal Tobacco Age To 21
St. Cloud could become the third Minnesota city to make it illegal to sell tobacco to anyone under age 21. The St. Cloud City Council set a public hearing for Nov. 6 on the proposed ordinance, following a study session in October. (Marohn, 9/27)
The Washington Post:
A Woman Survived A Fall Into Hurricane Harvey’s Floodwaters — Only To Die Of A Flesh-Eating Infection
A Texas woman died earlier this month after contracting a flesh-eating infection from floodwaters brought by Hurricane Harvey, according to health officials in Houston. The Houston Chronicle reported that Nancy Reed, 77, of Houston, contracted a dangerous bacterial skin infection after she fell into dirty floodwater in her son’s home, breaking and cutting open her arm. (Bever, 9/27)
The New York Times:
‘Flesh-Eating Bacteria’ From Harvey’s Floodwaters Kill A Woman
From the moment the waters began rising in Texas last month, disease was on health officials’ minds. Floodwaters, after all, are filthy. When Hurricane Harvey finally moved north and the feet of flooding drained, hospitals saw a spike in skin and gastrointestinal infections, but Texans were spared some of the most serious illnesses that contaminated water can spread: cholera, for instance, and typhoid. On Tuesday, however, the Harris County medical examiner’s office announced that the death of a 77-year-old woman 11 days earlier had been caused by necrotizing fasciitis: a gruesome and often deadly infection commonly known as flesh-eating bacteria. (Astor, 9/28)
Denver Post:
Anti-Vaccine Voices On Twitter Linked To Affluence, Recent Births
An online chorus voicing anti-vaccine views linking some immunizations to autism has gained momentum via Twitter, a five-year University of Colorado study shows, with most of the negative comments coming from California and several northeastern states — particularly in areas of high affluence and concentrations of new moms. The study used an algorithm to analyze more than a half-million tweets between 2009 and 2015 that mentioned both autism spectrum disorder and vaccines. Although anti-vaccine comments nationally became more common over time, the study notes that this does not measure prevailing attitudes on the subject — though it does suggest that the debate rages on. (Simpson, 9/27)
Detroit Free Press:
Michigan Lawmakers Want Reprieve For Medical Marijuana Dispensaries
Medical marijuana dispensaries would be allowed to stay open while the state decides who will get a license for the lucrative cannabis business under a pair of bills to be introduced in the state Legislature. Sen. David Knezek, D-Dearborn Heights, and Rep. Yousef Rabhi, D-Ann Arbor, will introduce the bills in the Senate and House this week to counteract an advisory by the state to dispensaries that they should close before Dec. 15 or risk their chances at getting a license. (Gray, 9/27)
Editorial pages continue parsing what happened earlier this week in the Senate when Graham-Cassidy, the most recent GOP repeal-and-replace legislation, failed to garner enough votes for Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) to bring it to the floor for a vote.
Bloomberg:
Seven Reasons Republicans Couldn't Kill Obamacare
First: Voters have feared every attempt by politicians to change their health-care arrangements. That sentiment helped defeat President Bill Clinton’s proposed overhaul in 1994. It forced President Barack Obama to devote half his sales job on his health-care law to reassuring people they could keep their doctors and insurance plans. This year, public wariness of change worked against the Republicans. (Ramesh Ponnuru, 9/27)
Vox:
Why Obamacare Survived
The secret to Obamacare’s persistence is that the American people want the health care system made better — by which they mean they want more people to have affordable health insurance — and Obamacare achieves that goal. By contrast, the GOP, at every single turn, has offered plans to make the system worse. (Ezra Klein, 9/27)
Bloomberg:
Graham-Cassidy's Death Is No Sure Relief
Shares of insurance companies with Obamacare exposure rallied Tuesday on news the Senate will not vote on the Graham-Cassidy bill, the GOP's latest effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA). But the rally has been small, likely reflecting the fact that the measure's chances of passage were always fairly slim -- and the GOP may not give up on this effort even after another bruising defeat. (Max Nisen, 9/27)
Lexington Herald Leader:
Reviled By GOP Right Wing, McConnell Should Try — Gasp! — Working With Democrats
There are other, even better reasons for McConnell to reach across the aisle and engage in — gasp! — bipartisanship: Americans are sick of a Congress that seems incapable of accomplishing anything. McConnell vows to repeal the Affordable Care Act someday but first wants tax reform. There are, however, urgent health-care matters that require bipartisan cooperation. At risk are 27 million Americans — including about 175,000 Kentuckians — who buy their insurance on the individual market or are covered by the Children’s Health Insurance Program, plus many more who are partially covered by CHIP. Happily, before everything was stopped to make way for the latest doomed ACA-repeal, Republicans and Democrats were working together to stabilize the individual market and fund CHIP which expires Sept. 30. They were working through committees — the “regular order” that McConnell once promised to restore. Sen. John McCain cited the flouting of Senate order — no hearings, debates or amendments — for his opposition which helped kill his party’s health-care bill. (9/27)
Arizona Republic:
John McCain Wants To Fix A Senate (And Obamacare) That Doesn't Exist
John McCain is clearly on a mission to redeem the U.S. Senate, to save it from what McCain regards as its wayward ways. But in his announcement of his opposition to Graham-Cassidy, McCain depicts a Senate that is a fantasy. (Robert Robb, 9/27)
Arizona Republic:
Doug Ducey Sides With Donald Trump Over Arizonans' Health Care, Jobs
Gov. Doug Ducey appears determined to turn a win-win situation for himself into a lose-lose. He’s sticking with his support of the now-failed Graham-Cassidy bill that would have repealed the Affordable Care Act and been a total disaster for Arizona. (EJ Montini, 9/27)
Tough Talk: 'The Price' Not Right For HHS Secretary; He Should Have To Repay Taxpayers These Funds
Opinion writers take a harsh look at the expenses Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price has racked up by flying chartered, rather than commercial, flights. But former HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt offers a defense.
The Washington Post:
Tom Price Should Pay Taxpayers Back
It’s hard to think of someone in Washington these days who might rival Mr. Price for brazen hypocrisy, though, admittedly, the bar is high. This is the very same Mr. Price, remember, who, as a congressman from Georgia for the past 12 years, piously condemned the federal government’s “reckless spending.” (9/27)
The Washington Post:
Of Course Tom Price Shouldn’t Have To Fly Coach!
For Tom Price, the price is right. The fake-news media is attacking our hard-working secretary of health and human services. First, those losers at Politico reported that Price took $60,000 in charter flights, including a $25,000 flight to Philadelphia, apparently at taxpayer expense. Politico pointed out that a train to and from Philly cost $72. (Dana Milbank, 9/27)
USA Today:
Trump And Tom Price: The Price Isn't Right For HHS Chief's Private Trips
Memo to Price: Several airlines fly to Philadelphia, Nashville and Atlanta. If you really want to keep in touch with Americans, you'll meet more of them on commercial flights. ... The underlying principle is simple: Don't waste taxpayer money. “Taxpayers generally should pay no more than necessary for transportation,” and non-commercial planes should be used when they are “the most cost-effective mode of travel,” say government rules and guidance. (9/27)
USA Today:
Tom Price Isn't Doing An Ordinary Job
Critics of Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price have called for the Office of the Inspector General to review his travel arrangements. It’s often the case that the allegation makes headlines, but when the issue is investigated, the report indicates proper procedures were followed. Opinion might be more credibly offered after a review is completed. Decisions to use a non-commercial aircraft for government officials cannot be made casually. For each trip, a full analysis is required by law. Before a trip is authorized, multiple government executives must attest to the trip’s government purpose and economic justification. (Mike Leavitt, 9/27)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Anti-Wasteful Spending HHS Secretary Tom Price Billed Taxpayers $400,000 For Private Jets
During the past five months, as congressional Republicans were making five separate efforts to gut health care for low-income Americans, the man in charge of administering Obamacare was flying around the country on private jets at a cost to taxpayers of more than $400,000. The “optics in some of this don’t look good,” Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price conceded to Fox News on Saturday. Indeed, the optics are so bad that the House Oversight Committee has begun an investigation. President Donald Trump, who said Wednesday that he’s “not happy” about the private jet use, is putting distance between himself and Price. (9/28)
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
Stat:
Looking Beyond Technology To Shape The Future Of Emergency Medicine
Not long ago, I attended a lecture given by a highly regarded emergency physician. His talk, “The Future of Emergency Medicine,” focused on how advances in telemedicine will transform emergency care. The following week, as I walked down a corridor at the back of my hospital, I passed seven telemedicine robots, each with a hastily scrawled “Out of Order” note taped to its screen. That captured my uneasy feelings about how interacting with a patient via internet video link would work in the poor neighborhoods served by my emergency department. (Harrison Alter, 9/27)
JAMA Forum:
The High Costs Of Unnecessary Care
In a recent study published in PLOS One, researchers surveyed physicians across the United States to ask about their perspectives on unnecessary medical care. These physicians reported that more than 20% of overall medical care was not needed. This included about a quarter of tests, more than a fifth of prescriptions, and more than a 10th of procedures. (Aaron Carroll, 9/27)
Stat:
3 Hurdles To Bringing Medical Devices To The U.S. Market
Medical devices have historically been viewed as having faster and lower-cost paths to market than their pharmacological counterparts: the average cost to develop high-risk, novel medical devices is estimated to be $94 million. After all, device engineers can leverage lower-cost animal models further into development than their pharmaceutical colleagues, the human clinical trials necessary for FDA approval are often smaller in scale, and, in some cases, expenses can be defrayed by revenue generated outside the United States in markets with faster regulatory pathways. Yet, despite these advantages, the FDA approved only 39 novel devices last year through its premarket approval process. Why is it so hard to bring a medical device to market in the U.S.? (Shantanu Gaur, 9/27)
JAMA:
Admitting Elderly Patients To The Intensive Care Unit—Is It The Right Decision?
One of the most important decisions that a physician makes is whether to admit a patient to the intensive care unit (ICU). ... ICU care is also one of the most expensive, intensive, and intrusive endeavors in health care. Although patients admitted to the ICU account for approximately one-quarter of hospitalized patients, they account for half of total hospital expenditures in the United States .... Furthermore, ICU care can be unnecessary, harmful, or futile. Importantly, the provision of ICU services is increasing. ... An important question is whether this growth in ICU services and beds is necessary to meet the demands of an expanding population of critically ill patients or whether ICU beds are being oversupplied and subsequently are being filled with patients who might be cared for in less-intense settings at lower cost with similar or better outcome. (Derek C. Angus, 9/27)
Sacramento Bee:
Record STD Rates Show Need For More Talk About Sex
In all, more than 2 million Americans were diagnosed last year with a sexually transmitted disease – including chlamydia, the most common. And while the hardest hit states were mostly in the Deep South, where stigmas around sex education and sexual health in general are strongest, some of the biggest statistical surprises were in tolerant, health-conscious California. (9/27)