Weekly Edition: December 6, 2019
As His Wife’s Caregiver, A Doctor Discovers What’s Missing At Health Care’s Core
Judith Graham
Harvard psychiatrist Arthur Kleinman shed his “veil of ignorance” during 11 years serving as the primary family caregiver for his wife, who had a rare form of early Alzheimer’s disease. In a new book, “The Soul of Care,” he offers suggestions for transforming health care ― just as caregiving transformed him.
‘I Feel Like I’m In Jail’: Hospital Alarms Torment Patients
Melissa Bailey
As alarms proliferate, hospitals are working to sort through the cacophony that can overwhelm staff and cause them to overlook real signs of harm.
Website Errors Raise Calls For Medicare To Be Flexible With Seniors’ Enrollment
Susan Jaffe
Members of Congress and others complain Medicare’s revamped Plan Finder had problems. Federal officials say they can help consumers who got bad information change their plans next year. But details about how switching will work are yet to come.
Medical Device Failures Brought To Light Now Bolster Lawsuits And Research
Christina Jewett and Heidi de Marco
Millions of injuries and malfunctions once funneled into a hidden Food and Drug Administration database are now available.
Anthem Blue Cross Gets Flagged And Fined More Than Other Insurers
Harriet Blair Rowan
Anthem Blue Cross has received a disproportionate share of violations and fines from California’s largest health insurance regulator, mostly related to its mishandling of patient grievances.
An Atlanta Nonprofit Brings Medical Care And Connection To The Homeless
Sam Whitehead, WABE
"Street medicine" programs seek out people living in back alleys and under highways. It’s a public health approach designed to build trust and eventually connect homeless patients to other services.
Black Mothers Get Less Treatment For Postpartum Depression Than Other Moms
Nina Feldman, WHYY and Aneri Pattani, The Philadelphia Inquirer
Cultural barriers may keep some African American women from seeking treatment for postpartum depression as early as they need it, and the standard screening tools aren’t always relevant for some black women.
Patient-Induced Trauma: Hospitals Learn To Defuse Violence
Heidi de Marco
Health care workers face a greater threat of workplace violence than workers in most other industries. Hospitals are installing security cameras and panic buttons, arming security guards with stun guns and teaching their employees how to handle potentially violent situations.
Built For Counterterrorism, This High-Tech Machine Is Now Used To Detect Fentanyl
Martha Bebinger, WBUR
Public health officials are adopting a law enforcement tool, the mass spectrometer, to instantly identify potentially deadly levels of opioids in local drug supplies.
HHS Hands Out Free HIV Prevention Drugs. Do You Qualify?
Carmen Heredia Rodriguez
Called “Ready, Set, PrEP,” the federal program will provide medication that can reduce the chances of getting AIDS to at-risk patients who don’t have insurance.
Pharma’s Take On The Pelosi Drug-Pricing Bill: Fair Warning Or Fearmongering?
Shefali Luthra
The pharmaceutical industry’s argument that capping drug prices would compromise drug innovation stands “on very shaky ground.”
‘An Arm And A Leg’: How Much For Stitches In The ER? Hard To Gauge Upfront
Dan Weissmann
Consumers are admonished to be “smart shoppers,” but that’s difficult if health care prices are clear as mud. When Sarah Macsalka’s son needed stitches, she did her best to avoid the ER and still ended up with a $3,000 bill.
California Surprise-Billing Law Protects Patients But Aggravates Many Doctors
Michelle Andrews
A California law, which took effect in July 2017, protects consumers who use an in-network hospital or other facility from surprise bills when cared for by an out-of-network doctor. But physicians say the law has allowed insurers to shrink networks, limiting access to those doctors who have contracted with the patients’ insurance plans.
KHN’s ‘What The Health?’: We Spend HOW MUCH On Health Care?
The annual accounting of national health spending is out. And the 2018 health bill for the U.S. was $3.6 trillion, consuming nearly a fifth of the nation’s economy. Meanwhile, Congress is nearing the end of the year without having finished either its annual spending bills or several other high-priority health items. Kimberly Leonard of the Washington Examiner, Joanne Kenen of Politico and Mary Agnes Carey of Kaiser Health News join KHN’s Julie Rovner to discuss this and more. Also, Rovner interviews KHN’s Markian Hawryluk about the latest KHN-NPR “Bill of the Month.”
Candidates Are Betting Big On Health. Is That What Voters Really Want?
Julie Rovner
Polls show that health care is at the top of voters’ issues, but the polls also say Democrats, let alone other Americans, are not ready for “Medicare for All.”
For Artist Inspired By Illness, ‘Gratitude Outweighs Pain’
Cara Anthony
After surviving two double lung transplants, Dylan Mortimer, a Kansas City artist, turns his battle with cystic fibrosis into joyous, whimsical art. Now Mortimer buys glitter by the pound and uses it to create mixed-media collages and sculptures for hospitals, private collectors and public spaces.
Analysis: Choosing A Plan From The Impossible Health Care Maze
Elisabeth Rosenthal
In 21st-century US health care, everything is revenue, and so everything is billed.