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Quality Is A Priority For Only Half Of Hospital Boards


November 6th, 2009
by Chris Fleming

According to the first national study of hospital board chairs linked to quality performance, just half the boards rated quality of care as one of their two top priorities and only a minority reported receiving training in quality.  The study was published today on the Health Affairs Web site.

“Most boards have primarily focused on financial issues, mistakenly assuming that their hospital’s quality of care is adequate,” says lead author Ashish Jha.  “Major opportunities exist to shift the knowledge, training, and practices of hospital boards to promote a focus on safe, effective care.”

The findings of this study are cited in a cover story in this coming Sunday’s New York Times Magazine, entitled “Making Health Care Better,” by David Leonhardt.  A preview of the article is already up on the New York Times website.

U.S. Lags Behind Other Countries In Primary Care


November 6th, 2009
by Chris Fleming

In many countries, primary care clinicians serve as the foundation for health care and the “gatekeepers” for more specialized referrals. A new international survey of primary care physicians in eleven countries finds that American doctors are significantly behind many of their counterparts elsewhere in providing access to high-quality care and use of health information technology, according to a study by Cathy Schoen of The Commonwealth Fund and coauthors published November 5 in Health Affairs.

The data, collected from February to July 2009 by Harris Interactive Inc. and subcontractors in each country, were obtained through a combination of mail, online, and telephone surveys. (The method varied by country.) More than 10,000 primary care physicians in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States responded to a common questionnaire. Some of the key findings include the following:

  • The vast majority (69 percent) of U.S. respondents report that their practices have no provisions for after-hours care, leaving their patients no choice but the emergency room. The U.S. was behind every other country surveyed on this finding.
  • Fifty-eight percent of U.S. primary care physicians say their patients often have trouble paying for their medications and care, compared to 5-37 percent in the other ten countries. Read the rest of this entry »

Public Opinion And Health Reform


November 6th, 2009
 
by John Iglehart and Chris Fleming

On October 13, the day the Senate Finance Committee passed its version of health reform, the Health Affairs Blog held a roundtable on public opinion and health reform. Participants included Bob Blendon, professor of health policy and political analysis at Harvard; Chad Bohnert, director of marketing and e-commerce at Zogby International; Mollyann Brodie, vice president, public opinion and survey research, at the Kaiser Family Foundation; and Bill McInturff, partner and co-founder at Public Opinion Strategies.

Participants addressed many topics, including issues related to health reform that appear to be important to Americans. For example, Bohnert discussed a Zogby survey finding that including malpractice liability reform – defined as providing for independent medical reviews of claims, mediation, and limits on noneconomic damages – would greatly increase support for the Senate Finance Committee’s health reform bill.

Participants also discussed the importance of the wording, framing and context used by pollsters, and the influence that these factors can have on answers given by respondents. McInturff noted that a two-to-one majority of respondents in one of his surveys said that an individual mandate to purchase health coverage was acceptable; however, when a second survey pointed out to respondents that such a mandate could mean a fine for those who did not purchase coverage, the percentages for and against a mandate completely reversed.  Brodie added that informing respondents of the strongest arguments for or against proposals such as an individual mandate or a “public option” could turn favorable majorities into unfavorable ones and vice versa. Read the rest of this entry »

The Most-Read Blog Posts For October


November 5th, 2009
by Chris Fleming

Posts on public opinion about health reform and how to achieve high-quality, low-cost health care topped the Health Affairs Blog most-read list for October. Additional comment on these and all posts is always welcome.

  1. Can Slumping Support For Health Care Reform Be Turned Around?
    by S. Ward Casscells, Hiliary Critchley, Thomas Amoroso, James Tyll, and John Zogby
  2. Are Higher-Value Care Models Replicable?
    by Arnold Milstein, Pranav P. Kothari, Rushika Fernandopulle and Theresa Helle
  3. High-Quality, Low-Cost Care: An Interview With Gundersen-Lutheran CEO Jeff Thompson
    by John Iglehart and Chris Fleming
  4. Creating the Virtual Integrated Delivery System
    by Ken Thorpe and Lydia Ogden
  5. Pros And Cons Of A Public Insurance Plan
    by Jane Hiebert-White
  6. A Tax That Targets Health Insurance Innovation
    by Alain C. Enthoven
  7. The Grandparents Corps: A New Primary Care Model
    by Arthur Garson
  8. Dangerous Confusion On Medicare Cost Control
    by Joseph White
  9. The Insurance Exchange In Health Reform: Essential Characteristics
    by Elliot Wicks
  10. The Accountable Care Organization: Not Ready For Prime Time
    by Jeff Goldsmith

Narrative Matters Essays Honored


November 4th, 2009
by Ellen Ficklen

Narrative Matters, the personal essay section of Health Affairs, publishes firsthand stories that explore the personal, ethical, and moral issues of delivering or receiving health care—and that carry a health policy message within them.  The essays are popular with the journal’s readers (many say that Narrative Matters is what they turn to first), and they receive a tremendous number of hits and downloads on the Health Affairs Web site.  Happily, during the past several years, an increasing number of media outlets and readers have discovered this compelling, affecting, literary nonfiction being published in Health Affairs.

Now, in fall 2009, Narrative Matters authors and essays from 2008 have been honored in two national “best-of” publications.  Read the rest of this entry »

A Halloween Health Wonk Review


November 3rd, 2009
by Chris Fleming

For some of the best recent health policy blogging, check out last week’s “Halloween” edition of the Health Wonk Review. Among the articles highlighted is a piece from the Health Affairs Blog by Arnold Milstein and coauthors on replicating higher-value care models.

Health Affairs Examines Neglected Diseases And HIV/AIDS


November 3rd, 2009
by Health Affairs

Responding to the HIV/AIDS pandemic and tackling so-called neglected tropical diseases are the focus of the November/December 2009 edition of Health Affairs, released today. The articles, by leading global health experts from around the world, show that although these challenges differ dramatically, rising to meet them could save millions of lives.

Health Affairs will highlight the issue’s content on neglected diseases at a briefing today in Washington D.C. Another briefing next week will focus on the material on HIV/AIDS, including a study, described in a New York Times article, which warns that increasing prevalence of HIV infection coupled with the current global economic slowdown portends a drastic funding shortfall for addressing the HIV/AIDS pandemic in both the short and long run. By the year 2031, when the pandemic enters its 50th year, funding needed for developing countries could reach $35 billion annually — three times the current level, warn Robert Hecht, managing director of the Results for Development Institute in Washington, D.C., and coauthors. Even then, more than 1 million people will be newly infected each year; some 33 million people worldwide are infected currently.

The Challenge of Neglected Tropical Diseases

Approximately 1 billion people, mostly in the developing world, die or are sickened by a class of infectious diseases often referred to as “neglected” tropical diseases. Today, more than 30 diseases caused by worms, protozoa, bacteria, fungi, or viruses afflict the poorest people in the poorest countries, and collectively cause as much burden as does malaria or AIDS. Global health researchers argue these conditions are demonstrably treatable and can even be eliminated without a large investment of dollars. Read the rest of this entry »

Do Hospitals Treating The Poor Face A Digital Divide?


October 27th, 2009
by Health Affairs

A new study published yesterday in Health Affairs finds that hospitals that disproportionately care for low-income patients are falling behind in adopting electronic health records (EHRs). This is the first paper to use national data comparing EHR adoption between acute care providers primarily caring for the poor and those serving more general populations.

Ashish Jha of the Harvard School of Public Health and coauthors surveyed the 3,747 acute care nonfederal U.S. hospitals with available DSH (Medicare disproportionate-share hospital) indices and received responses from 2,368, a response rate of 63.2 percent. They found that for many of the functions examined, hospitals that served a higher proportion of poor patients had modestly lower levels of adoption of health information technology (IT). In addition, the results suggest that EHR systems could help improve the quality of care delivered, and that hospitals serving a larger proportion of poor patients cited cost as a major barrier to EHR adoption. Read the rest of this entry »

Senate Bill Will Include Public Option With State Opt-Out Provision


October 26th, 2009
by Chris Fleming

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) answered some important questions at his Capitol Hill news conference today: The health reform bill he will send to the Senate floor will include a public health insurance plan with a state opt-out provision, and as a result the much-courted Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) — the lone Republican to vote in committee for any Congressional health reform measure – will at least as of now not support the bill.

Sen. Reid twice pointedly chose not to answer another question: Can he hold the 60 votes from the Democratic caucus needed to overcome a united Republican filibuster and pass a bill containing a public option? Stay tuned.

New Policy Brief Explores Insurance Market Reforms


October 22nd, 2009
by Chris Fleming

Congress is debating provisions of health reform bills that would considerably revamp segments of the private health insurance market. Focused on health insurance for individuals and small businesses, the changes would end the commonplace practice in these parts of the insurance market of using health status to set premiums or deny coverage.

A new Health Policy Brief from Health Affairs and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation examines these proposed market reforms and new consumer protection measures. The provisions have won unprecedented support from both consumer advocates and, with some qualifications, from insurance industry leaders. But insurers remain concerned that inadequate penalties for enforcing a mandate on individuals to purchase coverage could keep millions uninsured. That, they say, could spur “adverse selection,” in which only the sickest people would sign up for coverage, and would defeat the entire premise of insurance market reform. Read the rest of this entry »

Contributing Voices

Public Attitudes Toward Health Reform: A Roundtable


November 6th, 2009
 
by John Iglehart and Chris Fleming

Editor’s Note: What follows is the transcript of a roundtable on public opinion and health reform that took place on October 13,  the day the Senate Finance Committee approved its version of health reform legislation. Participants included Bob Blendon, professor of health policy and political analysis at Harvard; Chad Bohnert, director of marketing and e-commerce at Zogby International; Mollyann Brodie, vice president, public opinion and survey research, at the Kaiser Family Foundation; and Bill McInturff, partner and co-founder at Public Opinion Strategies. Highlights of the roundtable are also available.

CHRIS FLEMING:  Thank you all for joining us. I’d like to address the first question to Bob Blendon. Bob, obviously this is a pretty momentous day in the health reform process.  The Senate Finance Committee is set to approve its version of the health reform bill.  Could you give us your assessment where you think things stand now in terms of public opinion?

BOB BLENDON:  My take is relatively simple.  The public expects some bill to be enacted.  There’s a real sense that something has to happen.  The problem is this: If you look at polls that were taken in the last eight days which asked about the legislation that was being considered before the Congress, or the president put forward, not one of them has majority public support. So what you have is the sense that the public wants a healthcare bill to be passed.  As a result, I can’t imagine something not coming out of this Congress.  But there’s a lot of concern about what’s included in these bills, and the concerns are around issues that are not all about if there is a public plan or employer mandate. They are about the cost of services for people, concerns about taxes, about the deficit, about Medicare cuts.  So I believe there will be a lot of public concern about the final legislation that emerges. The bottom line is we’re moving towards a final bill, but the desired content of it in the public’s mind is not settled. Read the rest of this entry »

The House Health Reform Bill: Delivery System Reforms And Other Provisions


October 31st, 2009
by Timothy Jost

Editor’s Note: Tim Jost wrote 3 posts analyzing the House health reform bill HR 3962. The first looks at financing reforms, the second post delves into the public option, health insurance exchanges, and more.

In this final post, I will explore the remaining 1600 pages of HR 3962.  Although these provisions have received less attention (except from the interest groups immediately affected by them), they will in fact work important changes in the American health care system.

First, however, I will mention a few provisions buried in the health care financing reform provisions—the first 400 pages of the bill—that are worth noting.  First, the “compromise” worked out on abortion in the Energy and Commerce Committee is included in the bill. Currently federal funds cannot be used to pay for abortion except in cases of rape, incest, or life endangerment.  But, according to some reports, most private insurance plans cover abortion. If private plans are to be more heavily regulated and funded through premium subsidies, what affect will this have on abortion?

HR 3962 prohibits the requirement of abortion as an essential service that must be covered by private health plans or by the public plan.  The bill also prohibits the use of affordability subsidies to pay for an abortion, although the bill does not contain the accounting procedures that the Senate Finance bill uses to implement this requirement.  The federal and state governments may not discriminate against providers or plans for refusing to cover, provide, or refer for abortions (although the government is not prohibited from discriminating against those that do).  Exchanges may not discriminate against plans that cover or refuse to cover abortions, but apparently are not obligated to offer at least one plan that does cover abortion, as the Senate bill requires.  Federal and state abortion and conscience protection laws are expressly not preempted.  In sum, the abortion issue is addressed but neither side of this contentious issue is likely to be satisfied. Read the rest of this entry »

The Public Option And Insurance Exchange In The House Bill


October 30th, 2009
by Timothy Jost

In my first post, I described the major features and basic approach of HR 3962, as well as the provisions of the bill that would go into effect more or less immediately.  This post will look more closely at some of the bill’s basic insurance reform elements.  In a final post, I will discuss the bill’s other features.

To begin, there is the public option.  It is one of the most popular features of the bill—many polls find that it is supported by a majority of Americans—but the media continues to insist that it is a loony left-fringe idea and it terrifies the insurance industry.  Some analysts believe the public option to be the most effective cost-control mechanism in the reform legislation, as a public plan paying something close to Medicare rates could introduce competition into markets which a single or small group of insurers currently dominate.  This includes the vast majority of local insurance markets in the United States.

Insurers have little to fear from this public plan, however, it is in all likelihood a paper tiger. Read the rest of this entry »

A Compromise Proposal On Financing Health Reform


October 30th, 2009
by Mark Pauly

Both the new House health reform bill and the Senate Finance Committee bill, despite their best efforts, have to impose some taxes on some taxpayers; they cannot get all of a trillion dollars of subsidies for insurance out of Medicare.  But they differ on what and whom to tax: the House proposes to tax well-off people by limiting their tax deductions for things unrelated to health care or insurance, while Senate Finance proposes to levy an excise tax on high cost health plans. 

As a card-carrying health economist, I am programmed to believe that the best choice for limiting health spending is to curtail the current open-ended exclusion of employment based health insurance premiums (whether nominally paid by employer or worker) and the flexible spending account loophole.  As an economist I am programmed to believe that a tax on insurers will be mostly shifted to buyers of insurance, who in turn are mostly employers—but who in turn will react by paying the higher premiums through lower worker wages and by curtailing the generosity of benefits to keep the tax burden on workers down.

Here I want to suggest a meritorious compromise: why not tax the high cost benefits of high income workers?  Read the rest of this entry »

HR 3962: The Affordable Health Care for Americans Act


October 30th, 2009
by Timothy Jost

HR 3962, the Affordable Health Care for Americans Act, hit the House floor with a thud Thursday morning at 1990 pages, almost double the size of the bill we last saw before the Energy and Commerce hearings at the end of July.  The bill incorporates, of course, amendments from the House jurisdictional committees, but also ideas from the Senate Finance bill and some new initiatives as well. In addition, far more than earlier congressional versions of health reform legislation, the new bill includes important initiatives that will impact the American public quickly, an important consideration both substantively and politically.

The intent of this post is to describe what is in the bill and the longer-term politics and policies that the bill’s contents represent.  The politics de jour of the bill are being amply covered by the media and will be given less attention here.

Most of the discussion over the summer and fall has focused on the health insurance reforms in the bill, and in particular on the public plan.  These reforms remain in the bill, and have indeed been expanded.  Over three-quarters of the bill, however, concerns other subjects.  The legislation would make major changes in the Medicare and Medicaid programs; establish a number of workforce, wellness, and prevention initiatives; significantly amend Native Americans health care legislation, establish a new voluntary insurance program for community living assistance services and support (CLASS) like that advanced by the late Senator Kennedy; revoke the insurance antitrust exemption, encourage certain state malpractice reform efforts, and enact a licensing pathway for biosimilars. Read the rest of this entry »

The AHIP Report: Beneath Questionable Numbers Is A Serious Concern


October 29th, 2009
by Jon Gabel

On October 12 America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) released a commissioned report by Price Waterhouse Cooper (PWC), “Potential Impact of Health Reform on the Cost of Private Health Insurance Coverage.”   The study reported that health care reform as envisioned by the Senate Finance Committee would raise the cost of private health insurance by 23 percent above the costs projected for the current system from 2009-2016. 

The timing of the report–released one day before the vote of the Senate Finance Committee of its bill–brought an immediate and sharp response by the mainstream media, congressional Democrats, and the Obama administration.  Besides its timing, other issues impaired the study’s credibility.  First, the report did not include potential savings brought about by reform legislation in estimating the cost of coverage.  Second, the report provided limited information as to how cost estimates were derived.  Third, when methods were described, the assumptions at times seemed implausible.

Beneath the opaque and questionable numbers, however, AHIP calls to our attention an issue that should be of great concern to all supporters of reform and universal coverage: the destabilizing selection effects of insurance reforms without an effective individual mandate.  This blog examines evidence about reformed markets operating with and without mandates. Read the rest of this entry »

A Narrative On Narrative Matters


October 28th, 2009
by Richard Lamm

Narrative Matters recently brought together 80 writers, journalists, and academics to celebrate the Tenth Anniversary of Narrative Matters.  There was much to celebrate: over 150 Narratives published in Health Affairs that covered a spectrum of human stories set in the increasingly institutionalized health care system.  We came to celebrate the power of stories and storytelling in the human drama of health.  A diverse group of men and women from a variety of backgrounds attended; the common denominator was a dedication to the health narrative.

It was a needed function.  There is an often-unarticulated human side to every profession, but the healing professions have a special need for articulate writing.  No other profession is as complex; no other profession finds us as needy and vulnerable.  Health care delivery has gone from the family doctor of my youth to mostly large institutions and group practices.  It has gone from mostly touch to mostly technology. That doesn’t necessarily translate to indifference or uncaring, but it clearly challenges the human and humane side of health care delivery.

I had written one of the essays and was honored to be asked to attend and be on a panel “Stories and Policy: Policymakers’ Roundtable,” moderated by Susan Dentzer. I could sense the tenor of the conference on the way in from the airport to the site of the conference.  The van, after the initial awkwardness of strangers, was filled with narratives of the health delivery system, much of it on the tragedy of unmet need.  One woman told of the need for more translators in more languages in hospitals.  Another added a story of a deaf man who had an appendix attack and was not given a signer, another on the cruelty of health reform not covering illegal aliens.

I served as governor of Colorado for 12 years and was no stranger to unmet need.  Yet on that initial ride and all the way through the conference, as I listened to the human stories articulately told, I felt a growing frustration about my inability to articulate how difficult it is to balance a budget and draw lines.  How could I articulate the agony of decision making and the need to say both “yes” and “no” to need? No modern nation can provide all the “beneficial” health care to all citizens.  In a system filled with near-miraculous technology, need cannot automatically convey a duty to fund. Read the rest of this entry »

Flat-Lining Quality And The Implications For Health Reform


October 22nd, 2009
by Margaret O'Kane

As Congress prepares for an historic floor debate over health care reform, those of us who have worked in the trenches to measure and improve the quality of care are watching with a mix of anticipation and concern. Reform has the potential to significantly improve the transparency and, ultimately, the quality of our system of care. But I worry that the provisions needed to achieve a transparent, high quality system could end up on the cutting room floor as lawmakers strive to finish the picture.

The unique perspective of the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) on the status of health care quality in the U.S. is based on rigorously audited data submitted annually by health plans according to specifications laid out in the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS®) and the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS®) information. Today, we publish the 13th in a series of annual reports known as the State of Health Care Quality and, for the first time, the results leave us little room to celebrate. In fact, performance across all three sectors of health care – commercial insurance, Medicare and Medicaid – was nearly flat, with only a few bright spots. Read the rest of this entry »

Are Higher-Value Care Models Replicable?


October 20th, 2009
 
by Arnold Milstein and Pranav P. Kothari

Editor’s Note: In addition to Arnold Milstein and Pranav Kothari (pictures and bios above), coauthors of this post include Rushika Fernandopulle MD, MPP, of Harvard Medical School and Renaissance Health in Boston, and Theresa Helle of the Boeing Company in Seattle. For more on health care delivery system innovations and reforms, see the Sept-Oct 2009 issue of Health Affairs, titled “Bending The Cost Curve,” and the Sept-Oct 2008 issue of Health Affairs, titled ”Overhauling The Delivery System.” 

A just-completed pilot project sponsored by the Boeing Company shows that enhancing care via a “medical home” designed explicitly for patients with severe chronic disease can improve quality of care and reduce per capita spending in well-led physician organizations without a long history of national clinical distinction. Although it was a small study, the pilot project’s findings align with other recently reported results from similar initiatives.   

Introduction

A handful of pioneering private purchasers are testing care delivery and/or benefit design innovations aimed at changing clinician and/or patient behavior. Of these, tests of re-engineered primary care models for the chronically ill are perhaps the most challenging, due to the small organizational scale of primary care and the consequent small number of any one purchaser’s chronically ill patients served by a single physician office. Read the rest of this entry »

Hiding In Plain Sight: Using Medicare To Solve The ‘Public Option’ Conundrum


October 20th, 2009
by Jeff Goldsmith

As Senate and House Committee versions of health reform move toward unified legislation and floor votes, the most complex political challenge is how to resolve the “public option” controversy.  While one would have thought weightier issues such as the shape of Medicare reform, the taxation required to support coverage subsidies, or the presence or absence of mandates would have been pivotal in this debate, the seemingly peripheral issue of a Medicare-like “public option” might be the hill on which health reform dies.

The reasons are almost completely political.  The Democratic base wants to end private health insurance.  Single payer advocates view the public option as a down payment on an entirely public health financing system. Public option advocates believe that the plan’s bargaining power will drive private insurers out of business.  (I’ve argued in a previous blog posting that, without fully understanding what they are doing, these single payer advocates are probably right.)

Moderate Democrats, who will need independent and some Republican votes to be re-elected next year, cannot afford to be perceived as advocating a further expansion of government influence.  After deeply unpopular partial nationalizations of our banking and auto industries, public support for further expansion of government power appears to be waning.  Republicans appear ready to capitalize on the growing backlash against deficits and growing government power in the coming Congressional election cycle. Read the rest of this entry »


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