June 26th, 2009
Getting “the right care to the right patient at the right time” is hard enough in highly developed countries like the United States. In low- and middle-income countries, the challenges are only magnified. Delivering on global health means dealing with a broad array of details that differ depending on the intervention and the location involved. Whether it’s saving the lives of women giving birth in rural Peru, or influencing the spread of effective antimalarial medications in Africa, enormous difficulties must be overcome to combat disease and death.
The July-August issue of Health Affairs, supported by a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, is a thematic volume that addresses the challenges of global health care delivery. The issue will be released at a briefing on July 14, at the Capital Hilton in Washington D.C. At the briefing:
- Ramanan Laxminarayan of Resources for the Future will discuss an innovative international approach to delivering affordable antimalarial treatments in a way that will avoid the development of treatment-resistant strains of malaria.
- Judith Kaufmann, a visiting scholar at the Paul Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, will discuss diplomatic efforts undertaken during an official boycott of polio immunization in Northern Nigeria and the lessons that can be learned from those efforts.
- Scott Barrett, the Lenfest–Earth Institute Professor of Natural Resource Economics at Columbia University, will discuss the challenges involved in eradicating polio.
- David Gaus of Andean Health and Development in Ecuador will describe how rural Ecuadoreans convinced him of the critical need for a high-quality and affordable secondary care hospital in their community, and how such a hospital achieved financial sustainability.
- And veteran health policy reporter Nellie Bristol will discuss the challenges involved in reducing the number of women in poor countries who die during pregnancy and childbirth.
Here are the details:
WHEN:
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
9:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
WHERE:
Capital Hilton
1001 16th St., NW (northeast corner of 16th and K), Washington DC
Metro: Farragut North (Red Line); Farragut West (Blue & Orange Lines)
RSVP for this event online here.
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June 19th, 2009
Should Americans be able to enroll in a newly created, publicly administered health insurance option as the nation works to expand health coverage? That question is at the center of the current health reform debate. It is also the subject of the latest health policy brief from Health Affairs and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), which was released today.
The new brief explains the broad outlines of public health insurance plan proposals and probes the general concerns of supporters and opponents. It is the third in a series produced by Health Affairs with support from RWJF. The free, online policy briefs provide a clear overview of front-burner health issues. Alerts for the health policy briefs are available by email and RSS feed. You may also follow Health Affairs on Twitter for new alerts.
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June 12th, 2009
A new study published today in Health Affairs finds that the decade-long nurse shortage is easing, or even ending, partly as a result of the continuing recession. Study author Peter Buerhaus of the Vanderbilt University School of Nursing and colleagues found that older nurses are delaying retirement or returning to the workforce and part-time nurses are becoming full time in response to the employment insecurity of their spouses.
In 2007 and 2008, the number of full-time-equivalent (FTE) registered nurses grew by nearly a quarter of a million, an increase of 18% over the two-year period. An article in today’s Wall Street Journal noted that this surge was “particularly remarkable at a time when the U.S. economy has shed more than six million jobs, helping solidify the profession’s “recession-proof” image.”
Today’s Wall Street Journal blog, “Real Time Economics,” notes, “The irony is that few are eager to draw attention to this temporary resolution, for fear it will draw policymakers’ — and the public’s — attention away from the long-term shortage that’s still likely to develop.” Indeed, Buerhaus and colleagues report that the relief will be temporary as a new RN shortage looms in the next decade as baby boomers retire from the nursing workforce.
The Buerhaus study is one of six papers on the nursing workforce published online today by Health Affairs [2-week free access]. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 11th, 2009
“Dare we say it; reform is actually possible, perhaps more possible than at any time since 1964,” writes Health Wonk Review host and cofounder, Joe Paduda. He focuses today’s terrific health policy blog round-up on the prospect for reform and leads off with Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND) on why reform is possible. Paduda then follows with posts from Health Affairs Blog on the wide range of views surrounding the public plan, plus a slew of posts on health care costs, impact on hospitals and doctors, the Massachusetts experiment, and more.
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June 9th, 2009
Join us for a discussion, moderated by Susan Dentzer of Health Affairs, examining the impact of the nursing workforce on health care delivery, access and quality. This event, on Friday June 12 from 9 a.m. to noon at the Union Station Columbus Club in Washington DC, also marks the publication of several papers in Health Affairs focusing on the nursing workforce and health care quality.
The event is sponsored by Health Affairs and the Center to Champion Nursing in America, a joint initiative of AARP, the AARP Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Speakers include:
- Congresswoman Allyson Schwartz (D-PA)
- John Rother, Executive Vice President, Policy & Strategy, AARP
- Linda Aiken, Director, Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing
- Mayra Alvarez, Office of Senator Richard Durbin
- Peter Buerhaus, Director, Center for Interdisciplinary Health Workforce Studies, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
- Brenda Cleary, Director, Center to Champion Nursing in America
- Dan Elling, Republican Staff Director, U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health
- Wendell Primus, Senior Policy Advisor on Budget and Health issues to Speaker Nancy Pelosi
- Susan Hassmiller, Senior Advisor for Nursing, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
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June 8th, 2009
Health Affairs has launched a new series of Health Policy Briefs, with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. These free, online briefs aim to provide congressional staff and busy policy-watchers with quick, clear overviews of complex, front-burner issues in the health reform and policy debate.
The first 2 briefs look at Medicare reform. The first summarizes the current debate about cutting payments to “Medicare Advantage” plans – the privately run health plans that now serve a quarter of Medicare enrollees. The second brief explains the pros and cons of the Obama Administration’s proposal to save $177 billion through a new competitive bidding system.
Health Policy Briefs include competing arguments from various sides of a policy proposal and the relevant research supporting each perspective. The jargon-free information is reviewed by Health Affairs authors and expert reviewers. Color maps and charts help tell the policy story at a glance, and may be downloaded. You can sign up to receive an email alert or RSS feed about upcoming briefs.
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June 4th, 2009
Last week’s New Yorker article by Atul Gawande highlighted the phenomenally high variations in cost of medical care and services between regions in the United States, specifically focusing on McAllen, Texas. Gawande’s spotlight on McAllen was based on many studies of our health care system. For Gawande’s readers, we would like to point you to the original studies that have appeared in Health Affairs.
Discussions about the size of the medical workforce in McAllen compared to the rest of the United States appeared in a study by David Goodman, “Twenty-Year Trends in Regional Variation in the U.S. Physician Workforce,” published on the Web in October 2004.
Katherine Baicker and Amitabh Chandra have collaborated on studies of regional variations in Medicare spending and in quality outcomes since 2004 when both were at Dartmouth; they have continued this collaboration at Harvard, where they both now work. Some of their earliest work on this subject appeared in Health Affairs in April 2004: “Medicare Spending, the Physician Workforce, and Beneficiaries’ Quality of Care.” Their work also appeared in October 2004: “Who You Are and Where You Live: How Race and Geography Affect the Treatment of Medicare Beneficiaries.” Read the rest of this entry »
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June 3rd, 2009
Despite economic hard times, Massachusetts still shows gains in insurance coverage and access to care as a result of its 2006 state health reform. However, some of the early gains in reducing barriers to health care and improving affordability had eroded by the fall of 2008, according to Urban Institute researchers in a new study published last week on the Health Affairs Web site [2-week free access.]
Lead author Sharon Long, a senior fellow at Urban, told the Boston Globe that the affordability problems that have started to resurface cannot be blamed on the state’s overhaul, but on a much larger and troubling national trend. “Health care costs, in general, are increasing faster than inflation,” she said.
About one in five of the over 4000 adults surveyed in fall 2008 in the state reported that a doctor’s office or clinic informed them that they were not accepting patients with their type of coverage or were not accepting any new patients. And lower-income residents faced more difficulties finding a physician than higher-income residents (24% of residents enrolled in state-subsidized health plans said they were told that a physician did not accept their insurance versus 7% of residents with private coverage). Overall, 17.9% of Massachusetts residents in 2008 reported having difficulty paying their medical bills, compared with 16.5% in 2007.
Lessons for health reformers in Washington
- “Although major expansions in coverage can be achieved without addressing health care costs, cost pressures have the potential to undermine the gains under reform,” write authors Long and Paul Masi.
Read the rest of this entry »
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June 2nd, 2009
The number of uninsured Americans is projected to increase by at least 6.9 million by 2010 — meaning 19.2 percent of nonelderly Americans would be uninsured. This is an increase of 2.0 percentage points from 2007, say Todd Gilmer and Richard Kronick of the University of California, San Diego, in a paper published May 28 on the Health Affairs Web site [2-week free access]. Gilmer and Kronick estimate that the number of uninsured Americans will reach 52 million in 2010.
Recession Impact
The current economic downturn is partially reflected in this projection because sluggish growth in personal income for American workers is a key factor driving the results. However, because this model is based on extrapolating from uninsurance rates among workers, it does not directly take into account the effect on uninsurance of the significant job losses that occur during recessions and that have been particularly pronounced in this recession. Said Gilmer: Read the rest of this entry »
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July 1st, 2009
It is often observed wryly that Americans have more interest in the well-being of their automobiles and pets than their own health. The challenges of activating patients to manage diet, lifestyle, and chronic conditions are well documented, and the accompanying costs of chronic illness are even more thoroughly characterized. The threats these pose to health reform, however, are poorly understood.
As we confront the best possibility of health care reform in the last 40+ years, it is important for policymakers to dwell on tools that can address this dilemma and support active, successful collaboration between patients and providers to manage health and health outcomes. We have the tools to achieve this at hand, but public expectations of health care and the incentive structure confronting providers foster apathy and even resistance instead of transformation.
Reform plans circulated to date have emphasized improved access to care for the uninsured and implementation of electronic medical records (EMRs). Both are laudable goals. Neither carries the transformational vision that is required to bring the outcomes achieved in line with the investment made on health care in the U.S. This is because neither of these policy goals has any incentives for improved effectiveness — actually accomplishing the desired results — or efficiency — doing so at less cost — inherent in their implementation. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 24th, 2009
Editor’s Note: Dr. Patchin wrote the blog post below in her official capacity as Chair of the Board of Trustees of the American Medical Association.
Health Affairs recently published an interview with Kerry Weems, former acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. In the interview, inaccurate statements were made about the role of the AMA/Specialty Society RVS Update Committee (RUC), which advises CMS regarding the relative levels of reimbursement for different medical procedures performed by physicians. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 23rd, 2009
While the most visible national health reform fight at the moment focuses on a public plan option for people covered through health insurance exchanges (or gateways), a quieter debate is brewing over whether coverage for low-income people should be achieved through Medicaid expansions or subsidies to purchase insurance through an exchange. For example, the Senate Finance Committee’s coverage options paper indicated interest in expanding Medicaid coverage for people with incomes up to 100 percent or 150 percent of the federal poverty level, which would particularly help low-income parents and childless adults.
Currently, the median income eligibility level for parents in Medicaid is 68 percent of poverty, or about $12,000 for a family of three, and only six states provide Medicaid coverage for poor childless adults, although a few additional states provide more limited benefits. However, the Senate Finance Committee also suggested an alternative: that low-income people might be assisted via subsidies for insurance bought from an exchange. What makes the most policy sense? Read the rest of this entry »
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June 18th, 2009
Editor’s Note: Below is the transcript of a Health Affairs Blog Roundtable on Atul Gawande’s New Yorker article on McAllen, Texas, and variations in health care costs. The roundtable used the article as a jumping-off point for a wide-ranging discussion on the policy implications of cost variations, delivery system reform, and other topics. Participants included Robert Berenson, an Institute Fellow at the Urban Institute; Elliott Fisher, Director of Health Policy Research at Dartmouth’s Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences; Robert Galvin, Director of Global Health at General Electric (GE); and Gail Wilensky, Senior Fellow at Project HOPE. The roundtable was moderated by John Iglehart, Founding Editor of Health Affairs.
JOHN IGLEHART: The subject of the first thematic issue that Health Affairs published in 1984 was variations in clinical practice patterns. When I met Jack Wennberg for the first time at the Pooks Hill Holiday Inn and suggested this to him, Health Affairs was virtually an unknown journal — that was 25 years ago.
Obviously, the variation theme has been played many a time in the policy community and the health services research community and the like, but I think we’ve all been struck by the impact that the Gawande article has had in the general public community and among elites. Elliott, how have you seen and measured impact from your end? I’m sure you’ve heard from a variety of people about it. As I understand it, the president read the Gawande article and it was discussed at a White House meeting a couple of weeks ago. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 17th, 2009
Editor’s Note: In the post below, Amitabh Chandra responds to criticisms of the Dartmouth Atlas and offers his vision of the lessons of the Dartmouth findings on variations in health care costs and practice styles. Watch the Blog tomorrow for a roundtable discussion on Atul Gawande’s New Yorker article on McAllen Texas and the policy implications of the Dartmouth work. Roundtable participants will include Robert Berenson, Elliott Fisher, Robert Galvin and Gail Wilensky.
Since 1973, when Jack Wennberg and Alan Gittelsohn first documented geographic variation in health care, researchers at Dartmouth and their collaborators have compiled a large literature that helps us to understand the phenomenon of regional variation in health care utilization, and its uncertain link with patient outcomes. Over the past three decades, Jack’s pioneering analysis has been replicated at the level of states, regions, cities, hospitals, and even hospitals within regions. It has been examined in different types of patients: aged, newborn, medical, surgical, and the chronically and acutely ill. More than 100 peer-reviewed publications support the finding that more health care spending does not automatically translate into better outcomes, that improvements in health are often caused by lower-cost interventions, that cost growth in health care originates from the use of technologies that are beneficial in some patients but offer great scope for overuse in others, and that there is tremendous geographic variation in the efficiency of the local delivery system that is not explained by patient health, preferences, or malpractice pressure. The last point is the most important one, for it says that regardless of whether the association between spending and outcomes is positive, flat, or negative, there are plenty of providers who’re able to deliver high-quality care without being high-cost suppliers of care. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 15th, 2009
Federal support for graduate medical education (GME) training positions has been capped for more than a decade and it is no secret that the country’s teaching hospitals are restive. They want “more cap.” A number of bills have been introduced in the House and Senate proposing an increase in the Medicare funded GME cap by fifteen percent, or roughly 15,000 positions. These proposals are an alluring Siren song but they will not be good for health care reform or for the country.
What could be wrong with more residents?
To answer this question, it is important to understand the background of federal GME support. Residency training programs have enjoyed generous Medicare funding for more than two decades. In 2007, Medicare paid hospitals more than $8.6 billion in support of GME based on formulas for “direct” medical education (costs such as resident salaries and teaching time) and “indirect” medical education (non-specific hospital costs associated with teaching hospitals.) In 2007, approximately 89,300 residencies were funded under this system making the average Medicare per resident payment an astonishing $96,000.
Not surprisingly this system is enormously popular with teaching hospitals since it represents a large and predictable funding stream based on the number of residents they employ – and employ is the operative word. Residents are learners, to-be-sure, but with their 80 hour weeks, they are also valuable and inexpensive skilled labor. Medicare GME funds make the resident a mini revenue center. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 11th, 2009
Editor’s Note: Health Affairs has recently published two studies looking at the association between hospital costs and quality. The first, by Ashish Jha and coauthors, appeared in our May-June issue, and the second by Laura Yasaitis, Amitabh Chandra, and coauthors, was published online.
Variations in spending and intensity of care, and the effects of these variations on quality and outcomes, have become a major focus of the current health reform debate. Therefore, the Health Affairs Blog asked Jha and Chandra to each describe the major findings of the two studies, and then to explain whether they viewed the studies as consistent with each other or as contradictory. Jha’s response is below and Chandra’s response is here.
The two researchers touch on differences between the methods and conclusions of the two studies. However, both researchers appear to essentially agree that, in Jha’s words, “unlike most sectors of the U.S. economy, where we usually have to make a cost-quality trade-off, no such sacrifice is likely to be necessary in the health care sector. There is ‘plenty of fat’ that can be removed to identify the high-quality, low-cost institutions.”
We examined whether hospitals that cost more provided better care than hospitals that had lower risk-adjusted costs. We found no relationship between risk-adjusted costs and patient outcomes but did find a small but consistent relationship between risk-adjusted costs and somewhat better clinical care. For those who have assumed that “you get what you pay for,” our findings are largely disappointing: hospitals that spend more don’t seem to have better outcomes and have only marginally better quality.
Why we did this study
High costs and variable quality are two of the main challenges facing clinical leaders and policymakers. There have been very few systematic examinations of whether health care providers that spend more money on their patients produce better outcomes (as one might imagine from other industries). We sought to determine whether this hypothesis had any validity in the hospital sector. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 11th, 2009
Editor’s Note: Health Affairs has recently published two studies looking at the association between hospital costs and quality. The first, by Ashish Jha and coauthors, appeared in our May-June issue, and the second by Laura Yasaitis, Amitabh Chandra, and coauthors, was published online.
Variations in spending and intensity of care, and the effects of these variations on quality and outcomes, have become a major focus of the current health reform debate. Therefore, the Health Affairs Blog asked Jha and Chandra to each describe the major findings of the two studies, and then to explain whether they viewed the studies as consistent with each other or as contradictory. Chandra’s response is below and Jha’s response is here.
The two researchers touch on differences between the methods and conclusions of the two studies. However, both researchers appear to essentially agree that, in Jha’s words, “unlike most sectors of the U.S. economy, where we usually have to make a cost-quality trade-off, no such sacrifice is likely to be necessary in the health care sector. There is ‘plenty of fat’ that can be removed to identify the high-quality, low-cost institutions.”
In a study comparing hospital-level spending and quality, we found no evidence that hospitals with higher spending provide better care. In fact, in some cases hospitals that spend more provide worse care.
Background
In a climate of growing concerns about how much our country spends on health care, it is increasingly important to know what we’re getting for our money. Previous research has demonstrated a negative relationship between quality and spending at the regional level. However, findings at the level of the Hospital Referral Region (HRR) — a geographic designation devised for the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, reflecting hospitals’ typical service areas — do not lend themselves to actionable policy. Our study is one of the first to examine the relationship between hospital-level quality and spending. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 9th, 2009
The appointment of Dr. Thomas Frieden as the new director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is a triumph for public health and the American people. A passionate and well-informed professional, Frieden has been unusually successful as New York City’s Public Health Commissioner. In that role, with the strong backing of Mayor Mike Bloomberg, Frieden was able to greatly expand smoke-free areas in restaurants and other public areas, decrease smoking among adolescents, eliminate trans fat from foods sold by purveyors, and promote other initiatives that have led to improvements in the health of many New Yorkers.
Now, Frieden is moving to a larger stage, and, inevitably, the triumphs he achieved in New York will be cast in a broader political light. Besides the plaudits that led President Barack Obama to appoint him, there could also be cries that Frieden is overreaching and creating a “nanny state” from those who believe that government should not stick its nose into the private lives of individual citizens. Read the rest of this entry »
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June 9th, 2009
Everyone in the health care debate seems to agree that the biggest problem is costs and that the best way to control costs is to get at the waste in the system. To raise the money needed to cover everyone and to make the system sustainable, goes the argument, we need to convert the upwards of 30% in excess costs now in the system to savings.
I think that’s right.
Many of my friends in the health care debate say the way to do that is with a robust public-plan option. The reasoning goes that a Medicare-like public plan that can drive down reimbursement rates for providers will create strong competition for the traditional insurers and health maintenance organizations (HMOs) so they finally have to tackle the problem of costs and waste.
I agree with their premise that we need to have unambiguous incentives for the stakeholders to get the job done and finally drive the waste out of the system.
But I question whether a Medicare-like public plan option can do it by creating a new competitive landscape based upon provider underpayment: today most private health plans pay doctors about 20% more than Medicare and pay hospitals about 30% more.
The Problem With Paying Providers Less
Provider underpayment schemes never work. Just look at the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula. The SGR was created many years ago as a means to force Medicare doctors to become more efficient. The idea was, if Medicare physician costs grew at a rate faster than we could afford, the docs would retroactively give the money back the next year in the form of compensating fee reductions. The message was clear: become efficient or we’ll take the money back next year. Read the rest of this entry »
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