- KFF Health News Original Stories 4
- Trump’s Debate Claim On Health Care Costs: It Depends What You Mean By 'Cost'
- Rising Health Premiums Rankle Individuals Paying Full Price
- New Law Will Expand Mental Health Services For Low-Income Californians
- California Won’t Extend Parental Leave Rights To Small Businesses
- Political Cartoon: 'That's A Thing?'
- Campaign 2016 1
- Voters In Trump Country Are Staggeringly Unhealthy, But They Don't Expect An Easy Fix
- Marketplace 2
- Hospital, Doctor Groups Say New Rules Needed To Protect Consumers From Surprise Bills
- Blood Testing Startup Theranos Engaged In 'Series Of Lies,' Investor Alleges In Lawsuit
- Public Health 3
- Standing Water Left From Hurricane Offers New Breeding Ground For Zika Mosquitoes
- Late-Stage Breast Cancer Diagnosis No Longer Seen As Terminal
- Small Steps Credited For Major Gains In Cancer Survival Rates For Children
From KFF Health News - Latest Stories:
KFF Health News Original Stories
Trump’s Debate Claim On Health Care Costs: It Depends What You Mean By 'Cost'
Although many consumers are feeling the heat from increased health care spending, the overall bill may not be larger. (Julie Rovner, 10/10)
Rising Health Premiums Rankle Individuals Paying Full Price
Insurance customers who don’t get federal subsidies are facing double-digit premium increases in many places this year and forced to make hard choices about coverage. (Virginia Anderson, 10/11)
New Law Will Expand Mental Health Services For Low-Income Californians
Legislation recently signed by Gov. Brown will allow about 1,000 clinics statewide to bill Medi-Cal for treatment by marriage and family counselors, deepening the pool of mental health providers. (Anna Gorman, 10/11)
California Won’t Extend Parental Leave Rights To Small Businesses
Gov. Jerry Brown vetoes a bill that would have guaranteed employees of small businesses can keep their jobs if they take parental leave to bond with a new child. (Michelle Andrews, 10/11)
Political Cartoon: 'That's A Thing?'
KFF Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Political Cartoon: 'That's A Thing?'" by John Deering from "Strange Brew".
Here's today's health policy haiku:
FEDERAL SPENDING, INDIVIDUAL PREMIUMS … YOU GOTTA BE SPECIFIC
When you say health costs?
What do you mean? Your answer
changes THE answer.
- 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:
Voters In Trump Country Are Staggeringly Unhealthy, But They Don't Expect An Easy Fix
The communities in which support for Donald Trump runs deep also share another defining characteristic: poor health. But no one there thinks either candidate will do anything to change that. In other news, The Associated Press offers a look at the candidates' proposals to curb opioid abuse, an economist deems Trump's health policy "garbage salad," and experts say selling insurance across state lines is better in theory than in practice.
Stat:
In Trump’s America, Towns In Poor Health Don’t Think He Will Save Them
This is an unhealthy place. Its residents die younger than all but a few other counties in this important swing state. The suicide rate is well above the national average. Brown County saw a 50 percent increase in drug overdose deaths over two years. In one barn at this year’s fair, people stop to learn how to administer Narcan, the opioid overdose medication. On a wet September afternoon, the booth still had visitors. About 130 miles west of here, not far from Indiana Governor Mike Pence’s office, nearly 200 people in a town of 4,000 have been diagnosed with HIV, acquired while they injected heroin and liquefied prescription painkillers. (Scott, 10/11)
The Associated Press:
On Opioid Epidemic, Clinton Offers More Specifics Than Trump
Hillary Clinton calls the scourge of heroin and opioid addiction a "quiet epidemic." Donald Trump marvels that overdoses are a problem in picturesque American communities. "How does heroin work with these beautiful lakes and trees?" he said recently in New Hampshire. "It doesn't." Both presidential candidates agree drug addiction is a major problem in America, but only Clinton has offered a detailed plan to tackle it as part of her campaign. (Ronayne, 10/10)
Morning Consult:
Gruber: Trump’s Health Policy Is ‘Garbage Salad’
After Donald Trump brought up MIT economist Jonathan Gruber in Sunday night’s debate, Gruber struck back, calling Trump’s health policy plans “garbage salad.” Gruber helped write the Affordable Care Act, which Trump railed against during the debate. “My only comment is that last night showed the difference between a candidate with a strong and coherent health care agenda (Clinton) and one with a garbage salad of right wing talking points (Trump),” Gruber wrote in an email to the Boston Business Journal. (Owens, 10/10)
The Hill:
Jonathan Gruber Hits Back At Trump Over ObamaCare Criticism
Jonathan Gruber is firing back at Donald Trump after the Republican presidential nominee called him out for comments about ObamaCare. “My only comment is that last night showed the difference between a candidate with a strong and coherent health care agenda (Clinton) and one with a garbage salad of right wing talking points (Trump),” Gruber, a professor at MIT, wrote in a statement, as first reported by Boston Business Journal. (Sullivan, 10/10)
Modern Healthcare:
Experts Say Selling Insurance Across State Lines Not A Solution
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump once again touted the idea of allowing health insurance to be sold across state lines at the second general election debate Sunday, despite multiple analyses that show such a policy could substantially damage the individual market and roll back protections that consumers have come to rely on. Trump has not provided details for how selling insurance across state lines would be regulated. (Muchmore, 10/10)
For more on selling across state lines, check out KHN's video: Sounds Like A Good Idea? Selling Insurance Across State Lines.
Kaiser Health News:
Trump’s Debate Claim On Health Care Costs: It Depends What You Mean By ‘Cost’
Health care finally came up as an issue in the second presidential debate in St. Louis Sunday night. But the discussion may have confused more than clarified the issue for many voters. During the brief exchange about the potential fate of the Affordable Care Act, Republican Donald Trump said this: “Obamacare is a disaster. You know it. We all know it. It’s going up at numbers that nobody’s ever seen worldwide. Nobody’s ever seen numbers like this for health care. (Rovner, 10/10)
Preventive Care Task Force Should Be Decoupled From Insurance, Experts Say
Under the Affordable Care Act, any preventive service that receives one of the USPSTF's top two ratings must be covered by insurance, but three doctors have spoken out against the rule, saying it breeds the possibility of manipulation within the system.
NPR:
EpiPen Triggers Change In Thinking About Obamacare Requirement
Three doctors who have led a task force that evaluates preventive medical services say the group's recommendations shouldn't be tied by law to insurance coverage. The former chairmen of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force say the link between medical recommendations and insurance coverage leads to financial incentives that can corrupt the process and distort people's health care decisions. (Kodjak, 10/10)
Bloomberg:
Mylan Puts Its Troubles In The Past, At A Price Of $465 Million
The worst appears to be over for Mylan NV and its EpiPen controversy. It took a $465 million settlement with the U.S. Justice Department and a grilling from Congress for its chief executive officer to get there. The drugmaker’s shares rallied Monday following Friday’s settlement with the Justice Department, resolving claims by Medicaid that Mylan overcharged the government health program for the allergy shot. That helped erase some of the stock’s 26 percent slide since August, when lawmakers began asking why Mylan had raised the EpiPen’s price sixfold since 2007, and whether it ripped off the government along the way. Meanwhile, the cost of the shots hasn’t changed. (Armstrong, 10/10)
In other news on costs and the health law —
Kaiser Health News:
Rising Health Premiums Rankle Individuals Paying Full Price
Shela Bryan, 63, has been comparing prices for individual health insurance plans since May, and she can’t believe what she sees. “They cost a thousand, $1,200 [a month], and they have a deductible of $6,000,” she said. “I don’t know how they think anyone can afford that. (Anderson, 10/11)
St. Louis Public Radio:
After The Debate, How Are Health Insurance Costs Rising In Missouri And Illinois?
The 12.7 million people who enrolled in coverage on Healthcare.gov last year make up a small portion of the population, but their insurance costs seem to be the most in flux. “That simply may be that health insurers don’t know how to price policies yet," said Sidney Watson, a health law specialist at St. Louis University. "They don’t really understand the risk pool; they are learning trial by error.” Her research shows that the premium changes vary widely from city to city. In Missouri, last year pre-subsidy premiums for the benchmark plans rose by more than 20 percent in some areas, but declined in Hannibal, Mo. (Bouscaren, 10/10)
California Healthline:
What Would A Public Insurance Option Look Like In California?
The “public option,” which stoked fierce debate in the run-up to the Affordable Care Act, is making a comeback — at least among Democratic politicians. The proposal to create a government-funded health plan, one that might look like Medicare or Medicaid but would be open to everyone, is being reconsidered at both the federal and state levels. (Bartolone, 10/11)
Hospital, Doctor Groups Say New Rules Needed To Protect Consumers From Surprise Bills
The American Hospital Association and the American Medical Association, responding to a proposed federal rule, said the government is not yet providing enough protection for patients against charges they receive when they get care from providers who are not in their insurers' network. Also, in the news, UnitedHealthcare is trying to keep confidential some information it gave the government about rivals' proposed mergers.
Modern Healthcare:
Providers Say CMS Needs To Push Plans Harder To Prevent 'Surprise Bills'
Providers say the CMS isn't doing enough to protect consumers from receiving surprise bills and ensuring low-income exchange enrollees have access to care. Surprise medical bills come when consumers get care at an in-network facility by an out-of-network specialist. Many times this happens because their insurer hasn't properly informed its customers. In a proposed rule that outlines coverages policies for plans in 2018, the CMS suggested that plans should count enrollee cost sharing for care provided by an out-of-network provider at an in-network facility toward the enrollee's annual deductible . The agency proposed the policy for plans both and off the exchange. CMS received 664 comments on the proposed rule by its Oct. 6 deadline. (Dickson, 10/10)
The CT Mirror:
UnitedHeathcare A Player In Insurance Merger Lawsuits
UnitedHealthcare, the nation’s largest health insurer and former potential suitor to merge with Cigna, provided the Justice Department with a large amount of sensitive, proprietary and confidential information to help the government investigate and block the mergers by its rivals. In filings in the DOJ’s antitrust lawsuits against the mergers of Anthem-Cigna and Aetna-Humana, UnitedHealthcare said “the sweeping scope of the DOJ’s concurrent investigations required United (Healthcare) to produce extensive, highly confidential documents and data." It is now trying, so far unsuccessfully, to prevent its rivals from gaining access to that information in court. (Radelat, 10/10)
Blood Testing Startup Theranos Engaged In 'Series Of Lies,' Investor Alleges In Lawsuit
A San Francisco-based hedge fund that invested $96 million in Theranos is now suing the company.
The Wall Street Journal:
Major Investor Sues Theranos
One of Theranos Inc.’s biggest financial backers has sued the embattled startup and its founder for allegedly lying to attract its nearly $100 million investment, according to a fund document and people familiar with the matter. Partner Fund Management LP, a San Francisco-based hedge fund, filed the suit in Delaware Court of Chancery Monday afternoon, a letter to the hedge-fund’s investors says. (Weaver, 10/10)
When It Comes To Getting A Diagnosis, Doctor Knows Best
In a matchup with symptom-checker apps, a real physician outperformed them by a margin of more than 2 to 1, according to a new report.
Los Angeles Times:
Your Phone May Be Smart, But Your Doctor Still Knows More Than An App
If you’re feeling sick and you want to know what’s wrong with you, there’s an app for that. But the diagnosis won’t be as accurate as the one you’d get from a doctor — not by a long shot. In a head-to-head comparison, real human physicians outperformed a collection of 23 symptom-checker apps and websites by a margin of more than 2 to 1, according to a report published Monday in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine. (Kaplan, 10/10)
In other health technology news, there are plenty of gadgets coming out to help diabetes patients, whether they actually use them is another question —
Stat:
Diabetes Care Is Getting Much More High Tech. Will It Matter?
Among the tech on the way from companies large and small: Socks designed to monitor diabetics’ feet for signs of injury. A bandage-like sensor that continuously measures their glucose levels. An app meant to predict how the sandwich they had at lunch is likely to affect their blood sugar. ... But there’s also reason for caution. Some of the new tech could carry high price tags, and even those that don’t will add expenses for patients already grappling with the soaring costs of insulin. Patients by and large haven’t embraced the most promising technologies already on the market. And devices that were touted as transformative in years past have fallen flat. (Robbins, 10/11)
Standing Water Left From Hurricane Offers New Breeding Ground For Zika Mosquitoes
Although the biggest health threat following the hurricane is the potential for injury as people start to rebuild, this year there's an added danger with the Zika virus. In other news, a look at how a hospital system handled Hurricane Matthew.
ABC News:
Health Issues After Hurricane Matthew Could Include Increased Zika
The storm's disruption of mosquito-control efforts in the Miami area could also provide an opportunity for the Aedes aegypties mosquito population, which spreads the Zika virus, to multiply. For areas still grappling with flooding, standing water can be a concern, especially if sewers start to overflow. Debris and bacteria can hide in floodwaters, raising the risk of health infections for those who wade in. (Mahoney, 10/10)
Georgia Health News:
Evacuating Patients: How A Hospital System Responded To A Hurricane
With Hurricane Matthew bearing down on Georgia, a pair of coastal hospitals swung into action. Starting Thursday, both campuses of Southeast Georgia Health System (SGHS) – in Brunswick and St. Marys – moved all 190 patients to other hospitals in the state prior to the storm’s arrival. The SGHS hospitals are in low-lying areas near the water. (Miller, 10/10)
Late-Stage Breast Cancer Diagnosis No Longer Seen As Terminal
Patients are now able to live for years with a late-stage breast cancer diagnosis. In other women's health news, Texas is lagging behind on some key breastfeeding metrics and women are turning toward the holistic approach when it comes to hormone therapy.
Miami Herald:
Late-Stage Breast Cancer Can Be Stabilized With New Treatments
It was the breast implants Silverman had had put in two years prior to her diagnosis that ended up saving her life. She has no history of cancer in her family and later tested negative for the BRCA gene mutation, which increases your risk of contracting breast cancer. So on a vacation to Georgia, when she felt the painful lump, Silverman’s first thought was an implant-related issue. And when doctors found a tumor pushing out of her breast, she assumed the implants would have to come out. Turns out, they did not, nor did Silverman have to undergo a mastectomy. (Huffaker Evans, 10/10)
Texas Tribune:
Breastfeeding On The Rise: Mothers Call For Community Support
A new report from the CDC outlines how the nation and individual states are progressing toward the Healthy People 2020 breastfeeding objectives. Texas has met the CDC target of 81.9 percent of mothers ever having breastfed, but still falls behind in other key metrics. Texas medical facilities lag behind the national average in the percentage of live births taking place at baby-friendly facilities, as well as in implementation of procedures that can help encourage breastfeeding. These procedures are outlined by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) as the optimal level of care for breastfeeding and mother-child bonding. (Schroeder, 10/10)
WBUR:
More Women Choose Custom-Made Hormone Therapy; Influential Docs Worry About Potential Harm
The term "bioidentical hormone" doesn't really have a standard definition. In general, it's taken to mean hormones that have the same chemical and molecular structure as hormones produced in the human body... Studies show that up to a million or more women take the custom-made hormone medications, and the number is increasing. But the trend frustrates and even alarms many doctors because custom-compounded varieties aren't FDA approved, nor do they carry labels detailing the risks and possible side effects of all types of hormone therapy. (Zimmerman, 10/11)
Small Steps Credited For Major Gains In Cancer Survival Rates For Children
In the 15 year time span of the study, overall deaths from childhood cancer fell by 20 percent.
The New York Times:
Cancer In Retreat On One Front: Fewer Children Are Dying
Children are dying less often from cancer, with substantial declines in all races and age groups, according to a new report from the National Center for Health Statistics. From 1999 to 2014, the overall deaths from childhood cancer fell by 20 percent. The rate among 1- to 19-year-olds went down to 2.28 per 100,000 population, from 2.85. Adolescents 15 to 19 were the most likely to die, but their rate fell by 22 percent. (Bakalar, 10/10)
In other public health news —
The Wall Street Journal:
Students Flood College Mental-Health Centers
The [Beating Anxiety] workshop advises students to tackle anxiety by exercising, getting enough sleep and reframing catastrophic thoughts (if my friend doesn’t text me back right away, she hates me) in more logical ways (maybe she’s studying) among other strategies. It is one part of Ohio State’s effort to cope with the dramatic increase in the number of its 59,000 students on the Columbus campus seeking help for mental-health issues. (Petersen, 10/10)
Sacramento Bee:
It’s Flu Shot Time, Especially For Seniors
Influenza data released by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week showed that during the 2015 to 2016 influenza season, vaccination rates dropped 1.5 percentage points among the general population, with 46 percent vaccinating against the flu. Rates dropped by 3 percentage points among adults over 50, and Hispanic and African American adults continued to experience lower vaccination rates than white adults. Older adults are more severely affected by the flu than younger people and are more likely to be hospitalized if they catch it, said Dr. William Schaffner, medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, in a news release. (Caiola, 10/10)
WBUR:
'Rapunzel Syndrome,' Compulsion To Eat Hair, Is Rare But Similar Disorders Are Not
Trichophagia, the eating of hair, is a subset of trichotillomania, which is the compulsive pulling out of one’s own hair. And trichotillomania, in turn, belongs to a broader group of disorders, called body-focused repetitive behaviors, or BFRBs, that include skin-picking and are estimated to affect one to three percent of the population... Cognitive behavioral therapy is currently the gold-standard for treating disorders like mine, but near-term prospects for a cure are bleak: 80 to 90 percent of hair pullers never recover from their disorder. (Koppel, 10/10)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Change From Within: Hypnotherapists Draw Out Clients' Subconscious Minds To Guide Them Toward Self-Betterment
According to the American Association of Professional Hypnotherapists, hypnosis is “simply a state of relaxed focus” that is experienced in daily life. For example, it’s the dreamy phase people pass through when they fall asleep or awaken. It is also known as a trance. Using relaxation techniques, hypnotherapists induce clients into a trance to help them overcome problems or make desired changes in their personal lives. (Goldstein, 10/10)
Miami Herald:
Walmart Will Provide Health Screenings At All U.S. Stores On Oct. 15
Each of the nation’s 4,600-plus Walmart stores will provide free health check-ups and low-cost immunizations on Saturday, Oct. 15 as part of Walmart Wellness Day, believed to be the nation’s largest one-day health event. Dubbed “America’s Biggest Health Fair” last year, Walmart changed the name for this year’s event, but the services provided will remain the same. From noon to 4 pm, health professionals will provide free blood glucose screenings, blood pressure screenings and even vision screenings at some locations. More than 10,000 of the company’s licensed pharmacists will also provide low-cost immunizations during the event. (Pugh, 10/10)
Outlets report on health news from Minnesota, Connecticut, Kansas, Tennessee, California, Virginia and New Hampshire.
The Star Tribune:
Allina, Striking Nurses Reach Tentative Deal
Allina Health and its nurses reached a tentative agreement around 4 a.m. Tuesday after a 17-hour negotiating session called together by Gov. Mark Dayton at his residence... More than 4,000 nurses from five Allina hospitals will now vote whether to accept the contract. Nurses have rejected three prior contracts, most recently in an Oct. 3 vote. But this time their union, the Minnesota Nurses Association, will recommend the contract’s approval, according to the statement from the governor’s office. (Olson, 10/11)
The New York Times:
Connecticut Wants To Hold On To Doctors Trained In The State
Connecticut officials, concerned that graduates of its medical schools are fleeing the state, are looking for ways to encourage those freshly minted doctors to remain. State Rep. Prasad Srinivasin, a board-certified allergist and the only physician in the General Assembly, said he's worried Connecticut is losing both home-grown and out-of-state medical students to other states where there may be more doctor-friendly medical malpractice laws and affordable costs of living. (10/10)
Kansas Health Institute:
Kansas Hospital Network Reduces Rate Of Acquired Infections
As part of a federal quality improvement effort, Kansas hospitals are reducing the odds that patients will get certain types of infections. And while that effort provides information on hospital quality throughout the state, finding information about the quality of care at individual hospitals remains a challenge. The Kansas Healthcare Collaborative runs a hospital engagement network that includes 106 of the state’s 133 hospitals. Through a federally funded program, hospitals in the network are working to reduce patient harm and hospital readmissions by sharing their best practices. (Wingerter, 10/10)
The Tennessean:
TriStar, Maury Regional Plan Behavioral Health Facility In Columbia
TriStar Health and Maury Regional Medical Center are planning an in-patient behavioral health facility in Columbia. The availability of behavioral health beds to treat has been highlighted by state and industry officials as an obstacle to treating people with substance abuse and addiction, for example. The proposed $24.4 million facility would have 60 beds for adult and adolescent patients. (Fletcher, 10/10)
Sacramento Bee:
Sutter’s Visiting Nurses Program To Cut 154 Jobs In Northern California
Sutter Care at Home is cutting 154 jobs in Northern California, part of a reorganization of its visiting nurses program, officials announced Monday. The cuts, which affect administrative and medical coding positions, include 15 jobs in Sacramento, 20 in Roseville, eight in Yuba City and 14 in Modesto. Sutter Health officials said the job losses do not affect staffers who provide patient care, such as home health care or hospice. The positions are either being consolidated or outsourced. (Buck, 10/10)
Kaiser Health News:
California Won’t Extend Parental Leave Rights To Small Businesses
Aiming to attract and keep top-notch talent, a growing number of companies are dangling family-friendly perks such as lengthy paid leave for new moms and dads, back-up child care and onsite infant vaccines. But the attention-grabbing headlines — such as “IBM plans to ship employees’ breast milk home” — obscure the reality that for many workers, basic benefits such as guaranteed parental leave, even unpaid, is unavailable. (Andrews, 10/11)
Sacramento Bee:
Spending Big On Sex And Drug Initiatives, AIDS Activist Michael Weinstein Says He ‘Can’t Lose’
Weinstein, 64, leads the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, an organization he willed from a 25-bed hospice near Dodger Stadium to a global powerhouse that rivals the American Cancer Society. AHF, as it is known, has a projected $1.3 billion budget, more than 600,000 clients and operates in 37 countries. Weinstein still can’t be described as beloved, and his latest attempt to curb drug prices isn’t helping his cause. (Cadelago and White, 10/10)
Kaiser Health News:
New Law Will Expand Mental Health Services For Low-Income Californians
The staff of Clinica Sierra Vista, which has health centers throughout the Central Valley, screened its mostly low-income patients last year for mental health needs and determined that nearly 30 percent suffered from depression, anxiety or alcoholism. Christopher Reilly, Sierra Vista’s chief of behavioral health services, said he was concerned about the high percentage of patients afflicted, but even more so about the clinic’s ability to treat them. (Gorman, 10/11)
The Washington Post:
Loudoun Deputies Learn How To Identify, Respond To People With Autism
Drew Gutenson loves to talk about his collection of prescription eyeglasses and his fondness for playgrounds — slides, swings, trampolines and zip lines. Gutenson, who describes himself as a high-functioning adult with autism, knows that some skills are particularly challenging for him, such as sensing when people don’t want to talk to him. He also understands that his fondness for playgrounds can be a source of concern for those who don’t know him. (Barnes, 10/10)
New Hampshire Union Leader:
After Twin's Illness, Weare Family Finds Hope, Help In Community
Folks in two New Hampshire towns are wrapping a Weare family in love and prayers, after one of their twin baby girls contracted bacterial meningitis and needed emergency brain surgery....A surgeon performed an emergency craniotomy on the tiny girl to try to clean out the infection in her brain, then sewed her up, leaving a portion of her skull missing to accommodate swelling. (Wickham, 10/10)
Viewpoints: Viewing The ACA In A Positive Light; What About Trump's Health Policy Proposals?
A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.
The Washington Post:
The Affordable Care Act Is Covering People, Holding Down Costs And Not Killing Jobs
I’m on a panel this morning talking about the impact of the Affordable Care Act on the broader economy. My rap starts from the perspective that the ACA, while not perfect, is working remarkably well. The ACA debate, on the other hand, has become inseparable from intense partisan politics and this has led to incessant hand-waving and smoke-blowing such that it’s impossible to get the straight dope on its impact. (Jared Bernstein, 10/11)
Los Angeles Times:
Trump’s Proposals On Tax Loopholes And Healthcare Aren’t What They Seem
On healthcare, Trump pledged to repeal the 2010 Affordable Care Act and replace it with “something absolutely much less expensive.” His prime tool for lowering costs, he said, would be to let insurers offer policies across state lines. That’s a change that Republicans have been touting for years, premised on the idea that an insurer in a state with light regulation could undercut the premiums of those in states with tougher rules. But Trump either overlooked or ignored that insurers can’t offer policies in a new state unless they strike deals with the doctors, hospitals and other providers in every community they plan to sell coverage. (10/11)
Stat:
To Drive Real Health Care Reform, Look To What Employers Are Doing
Private, non-government employers provide health care coverage to more than 55 percent of Americans, according to the Census Bureau. Many of these companies are already carrying out their own do-it-yourself, market-based health care reform. The formulas they use are both simple and sophisticated. Here’s how it works. First, you need an integrated database coupled with data analytics so you can understand what’s going on with your work force and how your policies on pay, health plans, sick leave, and disability time may provide incentives, for better or for worse. Then you can overhaul benefit programs to align workers’ goals with those of the business. After that, you need to focus resources where the real health care costs and waste are. (Hank Gardner, 10/10)
Bloomberg:
Not Working Makes People Sick
It has become one of the Great Questions of Our Age: Why have so many prime-age American men dropped out of the labor force? The percentage of American men ages 25 through 54 who are neither working nor looking for work has been growing for decades. ... On Friday, Bloomberg Businessweek's Peter Coy reported on new research by Princeton University economist Alan Krueger that explored another possibility -- maybe men have given up on working or looking for work because they really don't feel good. (Justin Fox, 10/10)
Los Angeles Times:
'Big Data' Could Mean Big Problems For People's Healthcare Privacy
The future of the U.S. healthcare system will be influenced to a large extent by a company that makes weapons of war. Defense giant Northrop Grumman has signed a nearly $92-million contract with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to build the second phase of a computer system that’s currently focused on reducing fraud but down the road will play a greater role in anticipating beneficiaries’ medical disorders. (David Lazarus, 10/11)
Sacramento Bee:
Prop. 56 Will Save Lives And Discourage Young People From Smoking
The leading cause of preventable death nationwide and in California, tobacco exacts a grave toll on communities, families, health care systems and businesses. Tobacco kills more Californians than car accidents, guns, alcohol, illegal drugs and AIDS combined, and harms the health of nonsmokers through secondhand smoke. This is a public health crisis. (Michael Ong, 10/10)
Stat:
Dear Fellow Doctors: Please Play Nice
“Doctors, especially residents, are so tired and so overworked that we don’t realize that the person on the other end of the phone is also tired and overworked,” a surgery resident at a Boston-area hospital told me. Exasperation with the medical system and sheer exhaustion, she said, “comes out as rudeness.” Yet lashing out just makes a bad situation worse. And a body of research shows it hurts patients, too. (Allison Bond, 10/10)