From The Staff

The Latest Health Wonk Review


May 24th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

Over at Wright on Health, Brad Wright presents the latest edition of the Health Wonk Review. Brad includes a Health Affairs Blog post by Al Adelman and Lew Morris reacting to an earlier Health Affairs Narrative Matters essay by Jonathan Welch. Welch’s mother received “indifferent” hospital care and eventually died; Adelman and Morris believe that this substandard care reflected systemic deficiencies, and they urge hospital leaders to ask hard questions about their institutions that address those factors. Read the rest of this entry »

Narrative Matters: Navigating The Coverage Maze In Pennsylvania


May 17th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

In the May Health Affairs Narrative Matters essay, two graduate students describe their fight with the bureaucracy to gain coverage for their son under the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and they express the hope that provisions of the Affordable Care Act will cut the red tape. The article, “To Cover Their Child, One Couple Navigates A Health Insurance Maze In Pennsylvania, is by Ari Friedman, a fifth-year medical-doctoral student in health economics at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine and Wharton School, and Tara Mendola is a sixth-year graduate student in comparative literature at New York University. Read the rest of this entry »

In One State, Cancer Patients Were 2.65 Times Likelier to File for Bankruptcy


May 15th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

A new study, released today as a Web First by Health Affairs, reports that cancer patients in Washington state were 2.65 times more likely to file for bankruptcy than people without cancer. Of 197,840 cancer patients age 18 or older in the western district of Washington between 1995 and 2009, 4,408 (2.2 percent) filed for bankruptcy protection after being diagnosed with cancer. Among a control group of 197,840 people from that same region who did not have cancer, only 2,291 (1.1 percent) filed for bankruptcy.

“Although the risk of bankruptcy for cancer patients is relatively low in absolute terms, bankruptcy represents an extreme manifestation of what is probably a larger picture of economic hardship for cancer patients,” conclude Scott Ramsey of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and coauthors. “As a policy issue, there may be a role for employers and governments in creating programs or incentives to reduce the likelihood of financial insolvency, given that bankruptcies are ‘lose-lose’ events for debtors and creditors alike.” Read the rest of this entry »

Post On Exchange Navigators Leads Health Affairs Blog April Top-Ten List


May 15th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

The list of most-read Health Affairs Blog posts for April includes four posts in Tim Jost’s ongoing series on implementing the Affordable Care Act; number one on the top-ten list is Tim’s post about proposed regulations on health insurance exchange navigators. The list also includes posts on accountable care organizations, patient-centered care, controlling health care costs. and more.

The full list is below: Read the rest of this entry »

Watch Health Affairs Briefing On Health Spending


May 13th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

If you missed last week’s Health Affairs briefing on our May issue, “Tackling The Cost Conundrum,” or if you just want to see it again, video and speaker materials are now available on the Health Affairs website. You can watch the whole briefing or select particular panels or speakers. Read the rest of this entry »

The Latest Health Wonk Review


May 10th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

At Managed Care Matters, Joe Paduda presents highlights of recent health policy blogging in a new Health Wonk Review. Among the pieces Joe highlights are Health Affairs Blog posts by John Holahan & Stacey McMorrow and Charles Roehrig on the causes and likely longevity of the recent slowdown in health spending growth. Read the rest of this entry »

New Health Affairs Issue: Will The Health Care Spending Growth Slowdown Last?


May 6th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

Health Affairs’ May issue, released today, analyzes the recent slowing in the growth of health care expenditures and explores whether the trend will last. The issue also addresses major cost drivers in Medicare and presents proposals for putting the program on a more sustainable path. Another article tracks federal spending on mental health during severe state budget constraints throughout the recession.

As Health Affairs Founding Editor John Iglehart notes on his “From The Founding Editor” page (quoted at length below), the new thematic volume, “Tackling The Cost Conundrum,” continues the journal’s coverage of a topic that has been a “driving theme” of the journal since its inception. The May issue will be discussed at a National Press Club briefing tomorrow morning, Tuesday, May 7. The issue and briefing are supported by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Researchers writing in the new issue are cautiously optimistic that the slowdown in health care spending is here to stay. A study by Michael Chernew, Alexander Ryu, and colleagues at Harvard Medical School looks at two factors potentially contributing to the record slowdown in growth to 3.1 percent during 2007-11: job loss and benefit changes shifting costs to the insured. Analyzing National Health Expenditure Accounts and large-employer data, the authors found that benefit design changes that increased enrollees’ out-of-pocket costs were responsible for about one-fifth of the observed decrease in the rate of growth. However, the slowdown occurred even when benefit generosity at large firms was held constant. The authors suggest that other factors are largely responsible and that major events, such as health reform, shifts in payment methodology, and the transformation of the delivery system’s organization may contribute to a longer-term trend of slower spending growth.

In a related article, David Cutler and Nikhil Sahni of Harvard University conclude that fundamental changes, including less-rapid development of imaging technology and new pharmaceuticals, increased patient cost-sharing, and greater provider efficiency, led to the majority of the slowdown in health care spending growth; if this path continues for the next ten years, public-sector health care spending could wind up $770 billion under projections, they write. Read the rest of this entry »

Reminder: Health Affairs Event On ‘Tackling The Cost Conundrum’


May 2nd, 2013
by Chris Fleming

US presidents and policymakers have for decades struggled with the issue of ballooning health care costs and were unsuccessful, or unmotivated, in finding a path to lasting cost containment.  Recently, though, there has been progress. The forthcoming issue of Health Affairs, “Tackling the Cost Conundrum,” explores the slowing growth of health care expenditures of late and examines whether it is a temporary or lasting phenomenon; the issue also examines major cost drivers and presents proposals for putting Medicare on a more sustainable path.

Please join Health Affairs Founding Editor John Iglehart on Tuesday, May 7, at the National Press Club in Washington, DC, for a Health Affairs briefing at which we unveil the May 2013 thematic issue, “Tackling the Cost Conundrum.” The thematic issue and briefing are supported by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

WHEN & WHERE:
.
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
9:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
National Press Club
529 14th Street NW (Metro Center)
Washington, DC
Register Now

Follow live Tweets from the event @HA_Events, and join in the conversation with the hashtag #HA_Costs.
Read the rest of this entry »

Medicaid Per Capita Caps: How Do They Work?


May 2nd, 2013
by Rob Lott

Yesterday, Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Representative Fred Upton (R-Mich.) released their plan for “Making Medicaid Work.” One of the blueprint’s key proposals is to implement per capita caps, which would impose a cap on the funds that the federal government contributes to states for each Medicaid beneficiary. In April Health Affairs released a Health Policy Brief that explains how a per capita cap would work and looks at the arguments for and against the approach:

Supporters contend that instituting a system of per capita caps would moderate the growth of federal spending on Medicaid. They describe the approach as a middle ground between the program as it currently operates and other proposals such as block grants, which would more dramatically change the way federal Medicaid funding is calculated.

Critics contend that a per capita cap approach would not necessarily slow the rate of growth of Medicaid spending. If it did, they say, it would do so by shifting the costs to the states, which would face even greater pressures to cut services or limit eligibility, ultimately limiting many poor Americans’ access to care. What’s more, they contend that setting up a system of per capita caps would be very complex and difficult to administer.
Read the rest of this entry »

Independent Review Needed for Future DSM Revisions


April 26th, 2013
by Chris Fleming

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), the association’s comprehensive guide that sets the classification, diagnosis, and treatment of mental disorders across the United States and the world. In an April 24 Health Affairs Web First analysis and commentary, Helena Hansen of New York University and coauthors argue that the revision process for the DSM-5 missed crucial population-level and social determinants of mental health disorders and their diagnoses.

Some of these include environmental factors triggering biological responses that manifest in behavior; differing cultural perceptions in defining normal and abnormal behaviors; and institutional pressures, such as insurance reimbursements, disability benefits, and pharmaceutical marketing. At stake, the authors believe, are billions of dollars in insurance payments and the accurate diagnoses and treatment of patients.

To address future DSM revisions, the Hansen and her colleagues propose the formation of an independent, multidisciplinary task force; the commentary outlines how this task force would operate. Read the rest of this entry »

Contributing Voices

Implementing Health Reform: Contraception Coverage And The Liberty University Case


May 23rd, 2013
by Timothy Jost

The first few days of the week of May 20, 2013 were quiet on the regulatory front, with no new Affordable Care Act regulations or guidance (at least that I could find).  HHS released power point slides from an earlier webinar that usefully describe the different kinds of assisters who will be available in the marketplaces (navigators, in-person assisters, certified application counselors, and agents and brokers).  It also has apparently updated its navigator and assister frequently-asked-questions paper, although most of these FAQs were released earlier.

In other news, however, the Fourth Circuit Federal Court of Appeals has released the recording of the May 17, 2013, oral argument in the case of Liberty University v. Jacob Lew.  The Liberty University case aroused quite a stir in November of 2012, when the Supreme Court reversed its earlier decision to deny certiorari in the case, granted certiorari, vacated the earlier decision of the Fourth Circuit rejecting the plaintiff’s case, and remanded the case to the Fourth Circuit for further proceedings.

In the case’s first incarnation, Liberty University challenged the authority of Congress under its constitutionally enumerated powers to adopt the Affordable Care Act’s individual and employer mandates.  Liberty also claimed that the ACA violated the Constitution’s Establishment Clause, by granting privileges to certain religious groups but not to Liberty, and the Free Exercise Clause (and Religious Freedom Restoration Act), by requiring Liberty to purchase insurance that covered abortion.  Liberty was joined by two individual plaintiffs in the case, who asserted similar rights for themselves. Read the rest of this entry »

How Ideas From Private Industry Help Combat Medicare Fraud, Waste, And Abuse


May 23rd, 2013
 
by Marco Huesch and Robert Szczerba

It is increasingly well-known that improper payments cost taxpayers as much as $50 billion each year. These include reimbursements for billing for non-existent patients, falsified diagnoses, non-covered procedures, services not rendered or simply upcoded, as well as billing errors in favor of providers. Steps are being taken to address these issues through increased acceptance of approaches, tools and techniques from private industry and from industries outside of healthcare. More than just technology, some of the most powerful ideas to come along are that incentives matter, decentralization may achieve results faster and better, and stretch goals are crucial.

Scale of the problem

Safeguarding taxpayer resources and maintaining access to healthcare are clear public policy priorities. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has long designated Medicare as a high-risk federal program due to its vulnerability to waste, fraud and abuse. Conservative estimates by the National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association are that improper payments represent 3 percent of national health care spending. The GAO and others estimate nearly 10 percent of the more than $500 billion in current annual Medicare payments are improper. At the same time, Medicare provides necessary — and often much needed — access to health care for 48 million Americans. Read the rest of this entry »

A Life-Course Approach to Vaccination Can Drive Healthy Aging


May 22nd, 2013

As life spans increase and birth-rates decrease, the world’s population is aging. From 2000 to 2025, the over-60 demographic segment will double from 600 million to almost 1.2 billion. By 2050, it will nearly double again, surpassing two billion and accounting for an incredible 22% of the total global population. A society this “old” has never before existed, and it is a social, ethical, and economic imperative to keep older adults healthy and engaged. It is timely for the global public health community to re-align its thinking, policies and activities to this new demographic reality.

Organizations at national and global levels have begun to pursue initiatives to promote healthy aging, and these efforts are going to intensify in the coming years. Thus far, the progress has been admirable, with the World Health Organization, the United Nations, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and others taking leadership roles. Yet, despite many promising developments, the potential of “life-course immunization,” which stresses the administration of vaccines throughout all stages of life – including for adults – to prevent disease and promote health, has been largely overlooked, especially among adults.

This is a missed opportunity. There is a growing body of research and data to show that immunizations against some of the more specific age-related health challenges – such as pneumococcal disease, herpes zoster, and others – are economically feasible investments that can create large public health benefits. Read the rest of this entry »

Seven Policy Recommendations To Improve Quality Measurement


May 22nd, 2013
by Robert Berenson

Performance measurement — if done right — can be a core activity to move the health care system to higher value for the American public, while rewarding health professionals and health care institutions for doing the right thing for their patients. Yet, policy makers, private and public, have a duty to the public, patients, and providers to get it right — to measure and report accurately and meaningfully.

Harlan Krumholz and Peter Pronovost have been among the most important contributors to the development of performance measures for quality and safety of health care.  At the same time, each has written powerful critiques of particular aspects of the current measurement enterprise with suggested improvements.  I work mostly inside the Beltway in a world of policy makers who, despite good intentions, by their actions often display a lack of understanding of the challenges associated with measures, measurement, public reporting, and pay-for-performance.  For example, the physician value-based modifier, which was mandated as part of the Affordable Care Act and now must be implemented by CMS, cannot produce a valid snapshot of an individual physician’s “value” but will be imposed nevertheless, unfortunately feeding those within the physician community who resist all efforts to improve accountability and transparency of performance.

With the encouragement of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Harlan, Peter, and I joined in a collaborative endeavor to produce a comprehensive look at the state of play of performance measurement and public reporting — their conceptual underpinnings and limitations, successes and failures, and, perhaps most importantly, recommendations for major steps that are needed now to put the measurement enterprise on track to achieve its potential to improve the value of U.S. health care without doing harm. Read the rest of this entry »

Where Was The Leadership? The Questions Raised By Jonathan Welch’s Narrative Matters Essay


May 21st, 2013
 
by S. Allan Adelman and Lewis Morris

Dr. Jonathan Welch’s Narrative Matters essay in the December, 2012 edition of Health Affairs, regarding the cascade of errors and omissions he witnessed in connection with the care provided to his mother, should raise profound questions about how the hospital allowed those failures of care to happen.  Dr. Welch, an emergency medicine physician, watched helplessly as his mother received indifferent care from various nurses and doctors and ultimately died.  Despite having classic signs of evolving sepsis, she was not closely monitored by the nursing staff which ignored alarming signs, was not put on a sepsis treatment protocol by her oncologist, and was not put in an intensive care unit where she could receive more intense monitoring and aggressive treatment from specialists.

While it is tempting to blame the nurse (for not taking vital signs frequently enough and not reacting to abnormal vital signs) and the oncologist (for not following the patient closely enough, not initiating appropriate treatment, and not involving other specialists), Dr. Welch’s story suggests that there were more deeply rooted systemic problems at the hospital that went beyond the shortcomings of the individuals involved in his mother’s care.

As health care attorneys who represent hospitals and physicians, we believe there are some fundamental questions which should be asked by this hospital’s administration, medical staff leadership and governing body to ensure Dr. Welch’s experience is not repeated.  Those questions, which the leaders in all hospitals should consider, include the following: Read the rest of this entry »

Implementing Health Reform: Preexisting Condition Insurance Plan & Medicaid/CHIP Renewal


May 20th, 2013
by Timothy Jost

Editor’s note: Health Affairs Blog has been proud to host Tim Jost’s series of posts, “Implementing Health Reform, tracking the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.  In recent days the implementing agencies — Health and Human Services, Labor, and Treasury — have been issuing regulations, proposed regulations, frequently asked questions, and other guidances on an almost daily basis, and new posts by Tim have consequently often appeared almost daily as well.  Going forward, to keep up with the flow of ACA guidance in an orderly fashion, Tim’s posts will generally appear twice a week, usually Mondays and Thursdays.  When major rules or proposed rules are released, such as the final rules on eligibility and appeals, wellness, and the SHOP marketplaces currently under final review by the Office of Management and Budget, we will feature additional posts in Tim’s series.

You can continue to look to Tim’s posts for current information on ACA implementation.  When new guidance appears, Tim will update his most recent post (a practice we have in fact already begun); we will note that there has been an addition at the beginning of the updated post and normally add the new material at the end of the post, so you can skip rereading the rest.  We will also Tweet significant updates. From time to time, we correct a post when we find a typographical error or Tim receives new information as to the meaning of an issuance.  If the correction is more than trivial, we will note this as well. 

We hope that this new approach will make this series even more useful to our readers.

On May 17, 2013, at the end of an otherwise quiet week, CMS released an interim final rule on the Preexisting Condition Insurance Plan (PCIP).  CMS also released a letter to state Medicaid directors on Facilitating Medicaid and CHIP Enrollment and Renewal in 2014.  This post will discuss these issuances. Read the rest of this entry »

Saving Money While Providing Benefit In Medicare: A Standard Applied Only To Hospice


May 16th, 2013
by Donald Taylor

Medicare is caught between two countervailing impulses: the desire of beneficiaries (and providers and the adult children of beneficiaries) to have a benefit package that covers more, rather than less, and the desire to restrain program spending due to its impact on the federal budget. This tension is heightened by the transition of the Baby Boomers from paying taxes into Medicare to receiving benefits.

The default is that Medicare covers acute care therapies, tests, and procedures if there is a patient that wants to receive them and a provider who is willing to deliver them, whether there is evidence of any benefit to the patient or not. As I tell students in my Introduction to Health Policy Course, while Medicare sets payment rates (and is therefore like Marlon Brando in The Godfather: “I have an offer you can’t refuse”), when it comes to what is covered in the acute care setting, it is more like my Grandmother serving lunch (“whatever you would like, honey.”)

There are exceptions. Recently, the Medicare Evidence Development and Coverage Advisory Committee decided not to approve the payment of PET scans to aid in the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease. However, such a move is rare, and both provider and patient groups are protesting this decision. Read the rest of this entry »

Hospital Charges And The Need For A Maximum Price Obligation Rule For Emergency Department & Out-Of-Network Care


May 16th, 2013
by Robert Murray

The release of average charges for common procedures in more than 3,000 U. S. hospitals last week by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) elicited divergent reactions – not surprisingly.  On one hand, it was front-page news for most of the major newspapers: “Hospital Billing Varies Wildly, Government Billing Data Shows,” was the headline in the New York Times.  The article went on to speculate that these new data would likely “intensify a long debate over the methods that hospitals use to determine their charges.”

On the other hand the data were “old hat” to most health policy analysts.  Several colleagues mentioned to me that “this is old news” and “it isn’t meaningful at all because we all know that charges don’t mean anything.”

“No one pays charges” is the common refrain.  “Charges are merely an accounting fiction.”

Charges Do Matter — They Matter A Great Deal

Counter to the belief of both hospital industry representatives and many of my colleagues, hospital charge levels and rapidly escalating charges matter a great deal. While individual states and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have instituted limits on the amounts low-income uninsured patients pay hospitals, insured patients that receive care at hospitals that are “Non-Par” or “out-of-network” are still victims of hospital’s exorbitant charging practices. When patients receive emergency services at an out-of-network hospital, the patient and/or insurance company (depending on insurer cost sharing for out-of-network care) pay full charges.

High and increasing hospital charges, combined with increasing proportions of cases admitted through the hospital Emergency Department (ED), are major factors behind the ever-declining negotiating leverage of private health insurers. This situation, coupled with the increased pricing power of the ever-more-concentrated provider industry, will be a major contributor to the almost certain rapid escalation in total U.S. health care costs in coming years. Read the rest of this entry »

Implementing Health Reform: More Guidance On Health Insurance Marketplaces


May 15th, 2013
by Timothy Jost

Affordable Care Act guidance is now literally arriving on a daily basis from the implementing agencies, particularly HHS.  Major rules remain to be finalized, including a lengthy eligibility and appeals rule, a rule on wellness, the employer and individual responsibility rules, and a number of shorter rules.  More proposed rules or amendments to rules are also promised.  These could arrive any day.  But in the meantime there is the steady flow of frequently asked questions (FAQs) and other guidances, which often appear unannounced.

This post deals with three sets of FAQS released by HHS on May 13 and 14. (It may be updated on May 15 or May 16 to note further guidance released over the course of those days.)  Two of the FAQs concern the use of section 1311 funding, one dealing with section 1311 funding in state partnership marketplaces and in states with federally facilitated marketplaces, the other addressing the use of such funding in consumer partnership marketplaces.  The third FAQ is simply titled “Frequently Asked Questions on Health Insurance Marketplaces,” but primarily deals with enforcement, reporting, and administration requirements.  (Since HHS seems irrevocably committed to the unfortunate term “marketplace,” I am going to try to use the term from now on, rather than “exchange,” in these posts.)

Section 1311 of the ACA establishes the marketplaces.  It also appropriates an unspecified amount of funding, to be determined by the Secretary of HHS, to make awards to the states as necessary to establish the exchanges.  HHS has issued more than $3.5 billion in establishment grants to date.  Section 1311 is one of the few uncapped sources of implementation funding available to the agencies, which are otherwise being starved by Congress of necessary ACA appropriations. Read the rest of this entry »

Why ‘Medicare-For-All’ Is Not The Answer


May 14th, 2013
 
by Dana Goldman and Adam Leive

The Affordable Care Act survived the Supreme Court and a presidential election, so why does it face such an uncertain future?  One reason is that it was essentially silent on how to control costs.  This has led many pundits — including the likes of Paul Krugman and Robert Reich — to argue that the best approach would be to extend Medicare to everyone.  A January National Research Council report on the relative disadvantage of America in global health outcomes, especially compared to countries with national health insurance, added further fuel to the fire.  But is a larger government role in health insurance the best approach?

The idea of universal Medicare is powerful and attractive. Mr. Krugman points out that in the last forty years, average Medicare costs per person have grown by 400 percent while those for private insurance have increased more than 700 percent. His numbers suggest that if everyone had Medicare for the last 40 years, we might now spend only 14 percent of GDP on health care instead of nearly 18 percent, while also reaching universal coverage. Mr. Reich argues that “Medicare-for-All” would save between $58 billion and $400 billion annually, and similarly concludes: “Medicare isn’t the problem. It’s the solution.” Critics of the U.S. system are also quick to point out that Americans don’t live as long as their counterparts in countries that spend much less, suggesting universal Medicare could save money and improve our health.

The argument for universal Medicare basically comes down to three key claims:  (1) Medicare gets lower prices; (2) Medicare’s administrative costs are lower; and (3) greater spending does not mean better health.  Each of these deserves closer attention. Read the rest of this entry »

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