- KFF Health News Original Stories 3
- Fancy Flourishes At Hospitals Don’t Impress Patients, Study Finds
- Critics: Medicaid Services Ill. Gov. Rauner Would Cut Save Illinois Money
- Lesser-Known Florida Insurance Exchange Spends $2.4M, Signs Up 50 People
- Political Cartoon: ‘Winner Take Fall?’
- Health Law 4
- Survey: With Health Law's Help, Uninsured Rate Drops To Lowest Level In 7 Years
- Key Variables In Health Law Challenge: Who Has Standing? What Do Four Words Mean?
- Almost 11 Million People Get Medicaid Under Health Law
- Sign-Ups Stagnate In State Exchanges This Year
- Marketplace 2
- Humana, Aetna Project Lower Medicare Revenue
- Hospitals Spending Billions On New Buildings, But They May Not Improve Patient Satisfaction
- State Watch 3
- Calif. A.G. Allows Sale Of Safety-Net Hospitals To Prime Healthcare
- Va. Lawmakers Reject Medicaid Expansion, Embrace Some Mental Health Spending
- State Highlights: N.D. Senate Rejects Plan To Expand Dental Hygenists' Duties; NYC Council Considers Proposal To Pay For City Workers' Health Care
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Fancy Flourishes At Hospitals Don’t Impress Patients, Study Finds
A study at Baltimore’s Johns Hopkins finds that patients in older buildings rate their care about the same as those in a sleek new hospital tower. (Jordan Rau, 2/24)
Critics: Medicaid Services Ill. Gov. Rauner Would Cut Save Illinois Money
Some legislators and patient advocates say the targeted services, including dental and mental health services, not only help keep people healthy — they save the state money. (Wes Venteicher, Chicago Tribune, 2/24)
Lesser-Known Florida Insurance Exchange Spends $2.4M, Signs Up 50 People
State legislators created Florida Health Choices in 2008 as a voluntary marketplace for Floridians to purchase coverage, but no subsidized policies are offered. (Chabeli Herrera, The Miami Herald, 2/24)
Political Cartoon: ‘Winner Take Fall?’
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: ‘Winner Take Fall?’" by Gary Varvel, Indianapolis Star.
Here's today's health policy haiku:
WHEN IT COMES TO HOSPITAL REVIEWS...
How does the song go?
Can't get no satisfaction...
Patients sing it too.
- 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:
Survey: With Health Law's Help, Uninsured Rate Drops To Lowest Level In 7 Years
A nationwide Gallup survey found the nation's uninsured rate dropped in 2014, with those states that fully implemented the health law leading the decline in adults without coverage.
Los Angeles Times:
Health Law Drives Down U.S. Rate Of Uninsured Adults, Survey Finds
America's uninsured rate plummeted last year, with the improvement driven by states that have fully implemented the Affordable Care Act, a new nationwide Gallup survey indicates. Led by Arkansas and Kentucky, which both had double-digit declines, seven states saw the percentage of adults without insurance fall by more than 5 percentage points between 2013 and 2014. (Levey, 2/24)
The Associated Press:
Survey: Uninsured Rate Hit New Low In 2014
The share of Americans without health insurance dropped to its lowest level in seven years in 2014 as President Barack Obama's overhaul took full effect, according to an extensive survey released Tuesday. The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index found that the trend appears likely to continue this year, since 55 percent of those who remained uninsured told the pollster they plan to get coverage rather than face escalating tax penalties. (2/24)
Key Variables In Health Law Challenge: Who Has Standing? What Do Four Words Mean?
News outlets examine various arguments that could factor into the Supreme Court's consideration of a pending challenge to the health law.
The New York Times:
Health Law Challenge Tests Supreme Court’s Firmness On Right To Sue
The Supreme Court has developed elaborate tests to determine if plaintiffs have standing to sue. But their essence, Justice Antonin Scalia once observed, is a four-word question: “What’s it to you?” To get into court, it is not enough to be unhappy about something. Only people with a direct stake in a dispute have standing to sue. Which brings us to the four plaintiffs in the latest threat to President Obama’s health care law, to be heard next week. (Liptak, 2/23)
The Associated Press:
Meaning Of Four Words At Center Of High Court Health Law Fight
The Supreme Court next week hears a challenge to President Barack Obama's health care overhaul that hinges on just four words in the massive law that seeks to dramatically reduce the ranks of the uninsured. The argument threatens subsidies that help make insurance affordable to consumers in about three dozen states. (Sherman, 2/23)
Reuters:
Chief Justice Could Again Swing Obamacare Case In Government's Favor
Three years ago, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts cast the tie-breaking vote in a ruling that saved President Barack Obama’s signature healthcare reform. As the high court prepares to weigh another challenge that could shatter Obamacare, a review of Roberts’ recent votes and opinions suggest he could again sway the case the government’s way. (Hurley, 2/24)
While the subsidy case moves forward to the high court, another aspect of the law is continuing to raise challenges.
The Washington Post:
The Obamacare Challenge That Won’t Die
Back in 2010, Sen. Charles E. Grassley proposed a minor amendment to a massive health care bill, requiring that federal lawmakers and their staffs start buying coverage through new insurance marketplaces that would – if the legislation ever passed – be set up by the government. In doing so, the Iowa Republican set into motion a strange series of events, entangling both city and federal officials in Washington, triggering one of the most stubbornly resilient legal challenges to the Affordable Care Act, and ultimately giving rise to a bizarre question: Can Congress be considered a small business? (Harrison, 2/23)
On another legal topic, experts suggest that Anthem's recent privacy breach could entangle a number of plans in litigation.
Modern Healthcare:
Legal Liabilities In Recent Data Breach Extend Far Beyond Anthem
The potential legal liabilities from the unprecedented breach of some 80 million individuals' records at Indianapolis-based insurance giant Anthem could entangle nearly 60 health insurance plans from Hawaii to Puerto Rico, legal experts say. More than 50 class-action lawsuits related to the breach already have been filed in less than a month. (Conn, 2/23)
Almost 11 Million People Get Medicaid Under Health Law
Since the health law took effect, 10.8 million more people are covered by the federal-state insurance program for low-income residents. Meanwhile, Utah's hospitals offer to pay for the state's share of Medicaid expansion.
The Hill:
Medicaid Rolls Grew By 10M Under ObamaCare
Over 10 million people enrolled in Medicaid and the children's health insurance program since ObamaCare's launch a year and a half ago, the administration announced Monday. The numbers show that through the end of December 2014, 10.75 million more people are enrolled in Medicaid or the CHIP children's health program compared to before ObamaCare's coverage expansion took effect in 2013, about a 19 percent increase. (Sullivan, 2/23)
CQ Healthbeat:
Hospitals Said To Offer To Pay For Utah's Share Of Medicaid Expansion
Utah Republican Gov. Gary Herbert said Monday that hospital operators volunteered to pick up the state’s share of costs for people who enroll under a Medicaid expansion plan. But he added he doesn’t believe he will need to take the industry up on its offer during the first two years of the program. Herbert indicated that hospitals understand that they may benefit from an expansion more than other groups and would be “willing to pay their share if in fact we need it.” (Adams, 2/24)
And a Republican gubernatorial hopeful in Kentucky vows to undo the state's Medicaid expansion if elected.
The Associated Press:
Bevin Would Eliminate Kentucky's Medicaid Expansion
Republican candidate for governor Matt Bevin said he would undo the expansion of the state's Medicaid system, a move that would take away health insurance from nearly 400,000 people. Bevin is the first candidate to promise this, ensuring the Affordable Care Act will play a prominent role as four Republicans try to woo the state's conservative voters ahead of the May 19th primary. (Beam, 2/23)
Cincinnati Enquirer:
Bevin: Reduce Medicaid, Cut Kynect If Elected Ky Gov.
Republican Matt Bevin Monday said that he would he undo the state's expansion into Medicaid and shut down the state-run health insurance exchange program known as Kynect as part of his "blueprint" for the state if he were to win the governor's mansion. ... Bevin is one of four Republicans seeking the GOP nomination – the primary is scheduled for May 19. (Pilcher, 2/23)
Sign-Ups Stagnate In State Exchanges This Year
Although state-run exchanges in California and New York led the nation in enrolling consumers in health coverage in 2014, that was not the case this year, reports Bloomberg News. Other stories look at enrollment tallies in Florida, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Connecticut.
Bloomberg:
California Love For Obamacare Only Goes So Far As Sign-ups Sag
Obamacare-loving California led the nation in embracing the health-care law, and in enrolling its citizens for 2014 coverage. This year, however, sign-ups for private health plans in California, New York and other states that opted to build and run their own insurance markets has stagnated. Yet in more conservative parts of the country that declined to participate and where enrollment is run by the federal government, sign-ups have surged. (Wayne, 2/23)
Politico Pro:
Why Florida Shined In Obamacare Enrollment
Florida managed to sign up or renew 1.6 million people by the end of open enrollment this month, in spite of state leaders’ unabashed disdain for the health care law. The figure is the highest in the country, even ahead of Texas, which has a larger population and a higher uninsured rate, and big states like California and New York, which are running their own exchanges but have seen new enrollment level off. (Pradhan, 2/23)
The Boston Globe:
Open Enrollment Closed But Health Connector Still On The Job
Monday was the last day of open enrollment to buy health insurance through the Massachusetts Health Connector, the state agency that serves people who don’t get coverage from an employer. But Connector officials say their work is far from over. (Freyer, 2/24)
Minneapolis Star-Tribune:
For Thousands, MNsure Tax Forms Have Yet To Arrive
Thousands of people are still waiting for tax forms from MNsure, but health exchange officials say the final batch of delayed documents soon will be in the mail. MNsure is in the final stages of sending about 35,000 forms that list the value of tax credits for those who bought private health plans through the exchange for 2014. (Snowbeck, 2/23)
Connecticut Mirror:
Access Health CT: 110,095 Picked Obamacare Insurance Plans
Just over 110,000 people signed up for private insurance plans through the state’s health insurance exchange, Access Health CT, during the open enrollment period that ended Feb. 15, according to figures released by the exchange Monday. (Levin Becker, 2/23)
Sen. Hatch Prepares Obamacare Contingency Plan
The Senate Finance Committee chairman is readying a "short-term" proposal to help those who could lose subsidies if the Supreme Court strikes them down in a challenge to the health law. Elsewhere on Capitol Hill, some push to tie funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program to a Medicare doctor pay fix, and changes are in store for the top leadership at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
The Associated Press:
Capitol Hill Buzz: Sen. Hatch Prepping Health Plan
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch is backing a Supreme Court challenge to one of the keystones of President Barack Obama's health care law. Now, he says he's preparing a plan to help people who might be hurt if his side wins the case. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments next week in a case by conservatives and Republicans that says many subsidies the law provides for millions of people are unconstitutional. They argue that the law only allows such subsidies for the 13 states that set up their own marketplaces to sell health insurance, not the 37 states that use the federal HealthCare.gov website. (2/23)
CQ Healthbeat:
Advocates Press To Add Children's Health Funding To 'Doc Fix'
Democrats laid down a marker on health spending this month when they simultaneously introduced bills in the House and Senate to renew funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program through fiscal 2019. It was the opening gambit in what could be a months-long battle with Republicans over a program serving at least 8 million children that once provided a rallying cry for bipartisanship. Although the parties have time to find common ground before funding expires Sept. 30, children's health advocates say the issue, as a practical matter, needs to be resolved before states approve their budgets. And they are pressing to add a funding extension to "doc fix" legislation Congress is expected to pass in March that would block scheduled cuts to doctors participating in Medicare. (Attias, 2/23)
USA Today:
Changes At The Top Of Medicare, Medicaid Agency
Big changes are in store later this month at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services after Administrator Marilyn Tavenner officially steps down. Andy Slavitt, CMS' principal deputy administrator and a top spokesman for the dramatically improved Affordable Care Act rollout this year, takes over for Tavenner, the agency said last month. On Monday the agency announced Slavitt will be replaced in an acting capacity by Patrick Conway, a doctor who is chief medical officer at CMS. (O'Donnell, 2/23)
Humana, Aetna Project Lower Medicare Revenue
The insurers respond to Medicare's announcement of a slight decline in payment rates for Advantage plans. Meanwhile, Tenet recorded higher admissions and revenue as newly insured patients sought treatment.
The Wall Street Journal:
Humana, Aetna Predict Drop In Medicare Funding For 2016
Humana Inc. and Aetna Inc. said Monday that they expect their Medicare funding to drop in 2016, after federal regulators last week proposed slight decline in payments for insurers that offer private Medicare plans. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services estimated that the Medicare Advantage rate proposal represented a decline of 0.95% on average for 2016, though the agency said the insurers would likely see overall revenue increase about 1.05% as they deliver, and bill for, more intense services. (Dulaney, 2/23)
The Wall Street Journal:
Tenet Healthcare Swings To Profit On Higher Admissions
Tenet Healthcare Corp. swung to a profit in the fourth quarter, as the hospital operator recorded higher admissions and revenue. The company, which in recent quarters had seen improved results from the U.S. health-care policy overhaul as newly insured patients sought treatment, attributed most of its admissions growth in the fourth quarter to operational adjustments. In the current quarter, the Dallas company expects to make five cents to 55 cents a share and revenue of $4.3 billion to $4.5 billion, compared with the consensus of 42 cents a share and $4.28 billion, according to Thomson Reuters. (Armental, 2/23)
Hospitals Spending Billions On New Buildings, But They May Not Improve Patient Satisfaction
NPR examines the building boom among hospitals and how these new facilities differ from what they're replacing. KHN reports on a study from Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore that found patients weren't any more satisfied in a new building.
NPR:
New Hospital Buildings Define Future Of Health Care
Across the country, the health care industry is pouring billions of dollars into new hospitals and medical centers. And the new hospitals of today are very different than the ones they're replacing. (Silverman, 2/23)
Kaiser Health News:
Fancy Flourishes At Hospitals Don’t Impress Patients, Study Finds
For decades, hospital executives across the country have justified expensive renovation and expansion projects by saying they will lead to better patient reviews and recommendations. ... Patient judgments have become even more important to hospitals since Medicare started publishing ratings and basing some of its pay on surveys patients fill out after they have left the hospital. [Dr. Zishan] Siddiqui’s study, published this month by the Journal of Hospital Medicine, contradicts the presumption that better facilities translate into better patient reviews. (Rau, 2/24)
Federal Lawmaker Calls For 'Superbug' Prevention Investigation
Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., is asking a House committee to examine what the federal government is doing to prevent such infections. In the meantime, regulators are skeptical the instruments implicated in a superbug outbreak in California can be properly cleaned.
Los Angeles Times:
UCLA Superbug: Lawmaker Asks Congress To Investigate FDA Response
Prompted by the UCLA superbug outbreak, a federal lawmaker is calling on Congress to investigate what the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and device makers are doing to prevent further patient deaths and infections. In a letter sent Monday to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) said outbreaks related to contaminated medical scopes “have national security ramifications.” (Terhune, 2/23)
The Associated Press:
California Congressman Wants Hearing On Superbug Outbreak
Congress should launch an investigation into what the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is doing to prevent additional superbug infections after a deadly outbreak at a Los Angeles hospital linked to tainted medical scopes, a lawmaker said Monday. (2/23)
Los Angeles Times:
FDA Official Casts Doubt On New Method To Clean Scopes Linked To Infections
A senior Food and Drug Administration official voiced reservations about the new method UCLA's Ronald Reagan Medical Center is using to clean medical scopes linked to an outbreak of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The official also said Monday that the agency will require makers of any new devices to show that they can be cleaned more reliably. In the aftermath of the outbreak at UCLA, which contributed to the deaths of two patients, university officials began sterilizing the instruments, known as duodenoscopes, using a toxic gas. (Willman and Terhune, 2/23)
And nine groups call gun injuries a public health emergency --
Los Angeles Times:
Gun Injuries Are A Public Health Emergency, Nine Organizations Say
Seven medical specialty societies, the American Bar Assn. and the American Public Health Assn. on Monday joined forces to declare gun-related injuries, which annually kill an average of 32,000 Americans and harm nearly twice that number, "a public health crisis" that should be studied and solved "free of political influence or restriction." (Healy, 2/23)
Calif. A.G. Allows Sale Of Safety-Net Hospitals To Prime Healthcare
Attorney General Kamala Harris approved the $843 million deal late last week but laid out a number of "take it or leave it" conditions Prime must meet.
California Healthline:
State Attorney General OKs Sale of Hospitals to Prime, But With Conditions
The state Attorney General last week approved the sale of six California safety-net hospitals to Prime Healthcare after a long and contentious approval process. (Gorn, 2/23)
San Jose Mercury News:
Prime Healthcare Has No Wiggle Room With Attorney General Mandate In Hospital Deal
Take it or leave it. That's the message to a Southern California for-profit company from Attorney General Kamala Harris who late last week laid out a dozen requirements for Prime Healthcare Services' $843 million deal to buy six cash-crunched nonprofit hospitals. (Seipel, 2/23)
Meanwhile, in Georgia -
Georgia Health News:
Rural Health Panel Offers Plan To Cut ER Use
A special state panel created by Gov. Nathan Deal has proposed a pilot program that would use telemedicine and other techniques to bolster rural health care in Georgia. The Rural Hospital Stabilization Committee report, released Monday, supports a “hub and spoke’’ model to relieve the burden on rural hospital emergency rooms. It would use telemedicine-equipped ambulances to facilitate remote diagnoses of patients in rural areas. (Miller, 2/23)
The Associated Press:
Rural Health Panel Backs Changes At Struggling Hospitals In Georiga
A panel studying Georgia's rural health issues on Monday recommended a pilot program pairing four hospitals with other providers in their area, creating a "hub and spoke" model aimed at cutting down on expensive emergency room visits to struggling hospitals. Members of the Rural Hospital Stabilization Committee said in their report that four rural facilities have closed in recent months and 15 are financially fragile — including six operating on a "day-to-day basis." (2/23)
Va. Lawmakers Reject Medicaid Expansion, Embrace Some Mental Health Spending
Negotiators working on Virginia's budget found agreement after working over the weekend, but decided against expanding a health program for poorer Virginians. In Connecticut, some criticize proposed Medicaid cuts.
The Washington Post:
Va. Budget Negotiators Reach Agreement
House and Senate budget negotiators announced on Monday that they have struck a deal that rejects the fee increases and Medicaid expansion sought by Gov. Terry McAuliffe, but embraces some of the governor’s other spending priorities for mental health and economic development. Negotiators quickly struck the agreement after working over the weekend — a dramatic change from last year, when a months-long standoff over Medicaid delayed passage of a budget until the state was on the verge of a government shutdown. (Vozzella, 2/23)
Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Budget Ensures Care For Up To 22,000 With Serious Mental Illness
People with serious mental illness but no health insurance would get help under the state budget agreement that emerged Monday from the House of Delegates and Senate. (Martz, 2/23)
Connecticut Mirror:
Providers, Advocates Call Malloy Medicaid Cuts Short-Sighted
Medicaid is one of the state’s largest expenses, and a big target for savings in Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s proposed two-year budget. But health care providers and social service advocates say the way Malloy would cut Medicaid is financially short-sighted and threatens to undermine recent progress in a program that has added thousands of new members as part of the federal health law, expanded the network of providers willing to treat them, and reduced its per-client costs. (Levin Becker, 2/24)
A selection of health policy stories from North Dakota, New York, Pennsylvania, Florida, New Jersey, California and Vermont.
The Associated Press:
North Dakota Senate Kills Bill To Expand Hygienist's Duties
North Dakota's Senate has killed a bill that would allow dental hygienists with advanced training to conduct certain procedures now done by dentists.The Senate defeated the bill 40-6 on Monday. Supporters of the measure say the legislation was aimed at improving access to dental care in rural North Dakota and on American Indian reservations in the state. (2/23)
The Associated Press:
NYC Council Plans To Set Aside Money For Health Care Costs
Some New York City Council members are proposing a change to the city charter to help pay for future health care obligations for municipal workers. The city is projected to eventually pay $92.5 billion in health care obligations for current and retired city workers. (2/23)
The Associated Press:
NY Attorney General Expands Herbal Supplements Investigation
Three weeks after ordering four major retailers to pull store-brand herbal supplements off their shelves following DNA tests that found little or none of the listed herbs, New York's attorney general is targeting the manufacturers of the popular products. Attorney General Eric Schneiderman sent letters Monday to four manufacturers in New York, California and Utah, demanding detailed ingredient and quality control information on every herbal supplement they sell in New York state. (Esch, 2/24)
The Associated Press:
Philadelphia District Appeals Ruling Sparing Teachers From Health Costs
Philadelphia's public school system is asking the state Supreme Court to reverse a lower court ruling that bars it from unilaterally imposing health care costs on unionized teachers. The School District of Philadelphia and its School Reform Commission said Monday that the Commonwealth Court erred when it sided with a teachers' union that argued imposing costs must be negotiated during collective bargaining. (2/23)
The Associated Press:
Privatized Prison Care Raises Concerns
Months after he landed in Florida’s Manatee County Jail, Jovon Frazier’s pleas for treatment of intense pain in his left shoulder were met mostly with Tylenol. Four months later, after Frazier’s 13th request resulted in hospitalization and doctors diagnosed bone cancer, his arm was amputated, according to a lawsuit by his family. (Geller, 2/24)
The Associated Press:
Doctor Accused Of Fraudulently Billing Health Insurers
A northern New Jersey doctor stands accused of fraudulently billing Medicare, Medicaid and private health care insurance companies for hundreds of thousands of dollars for office visits that were never rendered. Federal prosecutors say Albert Ades from 2005 through June 2014 fraudulently billed insurers for face-to-face office visits. They claim he wrote prescriptions, authorized refills or performed other tasks without ever seeing those patients on the billed dates. (2/24)
St. Louis Public Radio:
St. Louis Medical School Gets $6.6M To Boost Primary Care Training
Citing the projected demand for primary care physicians in underserved areas, a California-based foundation is donating $6.6 million to Saint Louis University’s School of Medicine. The donor, the Everest Foundation, is the charity arm of a Los Angeles-based consulting firm for medical students called Residents Medical Group. Over a 10-year period, the gift will fund a visiting research fellowship program, five residency positions and a scholarship for family physicians returning to pursue a master’s degree. Of the seven positions filled annually, the donor would select the candidates for one of them. (Bouscaren, 2/23)
The New York Times:
Geisinger Health System, Known For Innovations, Names UCLA Health President As Chief
Geisinger Health System, which is viewed as a national model in providing both high-quality and cost-effective medical care, announced on Monday that it had chosen Dr. David T. Feinberg, the president of the UCLA Health System, as its next chief executive. (Abelson, 2/23)
The Associated Press:
Vermont's Deal With Jonathan Gruber Criticized In Audit
A top aide to Gov. Peter Shumlin is defending the administration's handling of a contract with Massachusetts Institute of Technology health economist Jonathan Gruber, after criticisms were lodged by the state auditor. (2/23)
Viewpoints: A Possible GOP Alternative To Health Law; Disability Insurance 'Meltdown'
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
The Wall Street Journal:
A Simple Cure For ObamaCare: Freedom
On March 4 the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in King v. Burwell, with a decision expected in late June. If the court strikes down the payment of government subsidies to those who bought health insurance on the federal exchange, Republicans will at last have a real opportunity to amend ObamaCare. Doing so, however, will be politically perilous. ... Republicans need a strategy that is easy to understand, broadly popular and difficult to oppose. ... I believe that strategy is what I would call “the freedom option.” Every American should have the right to decide not to participate in ObamaCare: If you like ObamaCare and its subsidies, you can keep it. If you don’t, you are free to buy the health insurance that fits your needs. (Phil Gramm, 2/23)
Forbes:
Obamacare's Medicaid Expansion Could Cause 2.6 Million Able-Bodied Adults To Drop Out Of Labor Force
One of the biggest myths pushed in statehouses across the country is that Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion will be an engine of economic growth. The Obama administration promises that more than 350,000 jobs would be created nationwide in 2015 if all states opted into Obamacare expansion. But the truth is that expanding Medicaid to able-bodied adults will discourage work, create massive new welfare cliffs and ultimately shrink the economy, not grow it. (Jonathan Ingram, Nic Horton and Josh Archambault, 2/24)
The Wall Street Journal:
Averting The Disability-Insurance Meltdown
Sometime next year Social Security’s $150 billion disability-insurance program will become insolvent. The program, which offers income supplements to those who cannot work full time due to physical or mental disabilities, has buckled as the number of beneficiaries has soared to more than 11 million in 2014, from 3.8 million in 1984. The bipartisan Social Security Advisory Board has urged reforms. Yet the Obama administration’s 2016 budget proposes the opposite of reform: an unconditional transfer of revenues from Social Security’s retirement program. (Andrew G. Biggs, 2/23)
The New York Times:
How To Develop New Antibiotics
The bacteria are winning. Every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at least two million people are infected with bacteria that can’t be wiped out with antibiotics, and as a result, 23,000 people die. Direct health care costs from these illnesses are estimated to be as high as $20 billion annually. ... The development of antibiotics has been glacial. We need a completely new approach. (Ezekiel J. Emanuel, 2/24)
The Washington Post:
In Much Of The World, The Survival Of Newborns Cannot Be Taken For Granted
At a health center [in Tanzania], a young woman is in the recovery room after a Caesarean section. A nurse takes the newborn to a table for cleanup. We (a group organized by the Center for Strategic and International Studies) are allowed to enter and see the child. But she starts struggling for breath. Three more nurses enter. One briefly applies bag-and-mask ventilation. Yet the infant’s breathing grows weaker and weaker as she turns a horrible shade of gray. (MIchael Gerson, 2/23)
Reuters:
More Than Measles: The Threat To America’s ‘Herd Immunity’
When reviewing the recent and entirely preventable measles epidemic that began in, of all places, Disneyland, I was reminded of many things. The first was the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s ranking of the Ten Great Public Health Achievements in the 20th Century, a list based entirely on reproducible scientific data. The No. 1 achievement, without doubt, was the development of effective immunizations against a battery of infectious scourges such as measles, polio, whooping cough and diphtheria. Yet as physicians treating measles in poorer nations already know and, most recently, those in California are learning, this disease is no weakling in the pantheon of infectious diseases. (Howard Markel, 2/24)