Want to know the future of Obamacare? Take a look at Fort Dodge, Iowa.

 

In Fort Dodge, this is changing. UnityPoint Health (which was, until this week, named Iowa Health System) is one of the 32 Pioneer Accountable Care Organizations that volunteered to have part of their Medicare payments tethered to a set of quality metrics.

While UnityPoint has hospitals across the state, it decided to focus its ACO effort on a relatively small segment of its population to limit the health system’s exposure to the possibility of losing money on the endeavor.

“If we completely missed the mark, we knew it wouldn’t be disastrous from a financial standpoint,” UnityPoint President Bill Leaver said. “We knew it wouldn’t be overwhelming, but a good size to start with.”

The Pioneer ACOs launched Jan. 1, 2012, and for the first year, the program only required them to report quality metrics. Their payments would not yet depend on how well they met 33 measures.

The most difficult part of preparing to move to a system that pays for value rather than volume in Fort Dodge was asking doctors to rethink how they do their jobs. They would be encouraged to delegate relatively routine care, for example, to other advanced practitioners, while focusing their own work on care management.

“That is harder work than we thought,” Leaver said. “For physicians, they run the office and they’re the captain of the ship. Instead of seeing a strep patient now, you might have other people working for you that you’re going to deploy.”

Overall, Leaver describes his experience with the ACO Pioneer program as “generally positive.” What he likes most about the program is that, when the hospital gets a lump sum for each patient, it has more control over treatment. The health system can prescribe treatments that Medicare would not traditionally reimburse.

Want to know the future of Obamacare? Take a look at Fort Dodge, Iowa.

Health Reform Hits Main Street – Kaiser Health Reform

Follow the link at the bottom for the video…

Health Reform Hits Main Street

Confused about how the new health reform law really works? This short, animated movie — featuring the "YouToons" — explains the problems with the current health care system, the changes that are happening now, and the big changes coming in 2014. Learn more about how the health reform law will affect the health insurance coverage options for individuals, families and businesses with the interactive feature "Illustrating Health Reform: How Health Insurance Coverage Will Work."

Health Reform Hits Main Street – Kaiser Health Reform

Mental health minimum benefits bolstered – amednews.com

Mental health minimum benefits bolstered – amednews.com: Millions more will get psychiatric coverage

The Affordable Care Act’s minimum benefits mandate and a federal parity law will combine to provide mental health and substance abuse coverage to more than 32 million Americans who didn’t have any before, according to the Obama administration.

Insurance status Have benefits Will gain benefits Total with parity benefits
Individual plan 7.1 million 3.9 million 11 million
Small-group plan 23.3 million 1.2 million 24.5 million
Uninsured none 27 million 27 million
All 30.4 million 32.1 million 62.5 million

Source: “Affordable Care Act Will Expand Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Benefits and Federal Parity Protections for 62 Million Americans,” Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Dept. of Health and Human Services, Feb. 20 (link)

Excise Tax on Medical Devices Should Not Be Repealed — Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

 

By Paul N. Van de Water

Updated May 31, 2012

The House will soon consider legislation to repeal the excise tax on medical devices that was enacted to help pay for health reform.  The provision is sound, however, and the industry lobbying campaign aimed at repealing it is based on misinformation and exaggeration.
  • The medical device industry is not being singled out.  The excise tax is one of several new levies on sectors that will gain business due to health reform. The expansion of health coverage will increase the demand for medical devices and could offset the effect of the tax.
  • The tax will not cause manufacturers to shift production overseas.  The tax applies equally to imported and domestically produced devices, and devices produced in the United States for export are tax-exempt.
  • The tax will have little effect on innovation in the medical device industry.  To the contrary, health reform may well spur medical device innovation by promoting more cost-effective ways of delivering care.

The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that repealing the excise tax would cost $29 billion over the 2013-2022 period.[1]   Repealing the tax would undercut health reform in at least two ways.  Pay-as-you-go procedures would require Congress to offset the cost of repeal by increasing other taxes or reducing spending; one likely target would be the provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that expand health coverage to 33 million more Americans.  Also, repealing the tax would encourage efforts to repeal other revenue-raising provisions of the ACA, which in turn would either require still more painful offsets or increase the budget deficit (if Congress failed to offset the cost).

Excise Tax on Medical Devices Should Not Be Repealed — Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Remarks on Medicaid Expansion

I had the privilege of testifying in favor of Medicaid expansion for Pennsylvania at a hearing of the PA House Democratic Policy Committee, chaired by Rep. Dan Frankel of Allegheny County. (Follow the link for the agenda and other speakers.)

Good morning. I am Dr. Chris Hughes, state director for Doctors for America, a nation-wide group of physicians advocating for high quality, affordable health care. I have been an intensive care physician for my entire career, now approaching 25 years, and within the past year I have also begun practicing hospice and palliative medicine. I am a former Trustee of the Pennsylvania Medical Society and Chair of the Patient Safety Committee. I have completed graduate studies in health policy at Thomas Jefferson University, and I am now teaching there as well in the Graduate School of Population Health.

I tell you this to let you know that I can get down in the weeds with you about the nuts and bolts of implementation of the Affordable Care Act, and I know a fair amount about health care financing, access, cost shifting, and all the rest. But you have a fine panel assembled here today who can do that for you, and I know you all know your way around these topics as well.

I am here as a physician and a representative of my profession. Every doctor you know, and every nurse and pharmacist and social worker and everyone in the front lines of health care, for that matter, can tell you stories of how our health care system has failed someone. Our system fails people regularly, and often spectacularly, and often cruelly, day in, day out.

I’ve had patients who work full time in jobs that fall far short of the American dream. They get by, but they can’t afford health insurance.

I’ll give you a few of my patients’ stories here, not just to point out the obvious- that we are mistreating our fellow human beings – but that we are misspending countless dollars on the wrong end of the system.

There’s the cabbie who recognizes his diabetes and determines to work harder and longer so he can buy insurance before he is stricken with the label even worse than diabetes: preexisting condition! He doesn’t make it and ends up in the ICU with diabetic ketoacidosis.

There’s the construction worker who has a controllable seizure disorder that goes uncontrolled because he can’t afford to go to the doctor. He ends up in the ICU multiple times.

There’s the woman who stays home to care for her dying mother and loses her insurance along with her job. When she finally gets to a doctor for herself, her own cancer is far advanced.

The laid-off engineer whose cough turns bloody for months and months before he “accesses” the health care system – through the ED and my ICU with already far advanced cancer.

These are people who are doing the right thing – working, caring for family members – and still have to go begging for health care. How many hours does an American have to work to “deserve” health care? 40? 50? 60? I’ve seen all of these.

Not long ago, expanding access to health care was a nonpartisan goal. As recently as 2007, a bipartisan group of U.S. senators, including Republicans Jim DeMint and Trent Lott, ( let me repeat that, “Jim DeMint and Trent Lott” ) wrote a letter to then-President George W. Bush pointing out that our health care system was in urgent need of repair. "Further delay is unacceptable as costs continue to skyrocket, our population ages and chronic illness increases. In addition, our businesses are at a severe disadvantage when their competitors in the global market get health care for ‘free.’ "

Their No. 1 priority? It was to "Ensure that all Americans would have affordable, quality, private health coverage, while protecting current government programs. We believe the health care system cannot be fixed without providing solutions for everyone. Otherwise, the costs of those without insurance will continue to be shifted to those who do have coverage."

Medicaid expansion and the Affordable Care Act will get us closer to this than at any time in our history.

You will hear some physicians speak out against all of this. But what you generally will not hear is their leadership and organizations speaking out against it, except perhaps in the deep south. There is a reason for this. As leaders of our profession, we have to come to terms that we are not just in it for ourselves. We are in it for our profession as well, and that means we have to put our patients’ interests above our own, and that means we have to do our best to ensure that everyone has access to high quality, affordable health care. Don’t just take my word for it. The American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation and other organizations put together a Charter on Medical Professionalism about ten years ago, specifically making this part of our professional responsibility. If you go to their website, you will find that virtually every physician organization you can think of has endorsed it. That means the anesthesiologists and orthopedic surgeons as well as the pediatricians and the family practitioners.

For Medicaid expansion specifically, we should note here that the major national physician organizations, including the AMA, and the organizations representing internists, family practice, pediatricians, psychiatry and more, all endorse Medicaid expansion. On the state level, all of these organizations state chapters endorse it as well, with the exception of the Pennsylvania Medical Society, who have endorsed general terms of expansion only.

But this concept is really not controversial among physicians and health care providers. We see everything from the catastrophes to the small indignities. They are tragic, unnecessary, and we are on the road to ending them.

Some in the provider community have expressed concerns about Medicaid in particular as the way we are providing access, so I would like to take a moment to address the concerns we hear most often.

First, that Medicaid is “bad” insurance. What is bad about Medicaid is largely fixed in the ACA. Namely, it is very poorly reimbursed for providers. You’ve already heard [I assume] from HCWP why hospitals want it, but for providers in primary care, the frontlines of health care, they get a massive boost in reimbursement under the new law. Pennsylvania has historically had awful reimbursement in the Medicaid program, among the worst in the nation. Now, reimbursement will go to par with Medicare reimbursement, a huge incentive for providers to take on Medicaid patients whom they may have been reluctant to see previously. There are other new innovations such as Patient Centered Medical Homes and others, coming down the pike, that should really give people who previously had no chance at excellent care, a chance to avoid complications, avoid the ER and avoid the hospital.

I’ve also heard the strange claim that having Medicaid is worse than having no insurance. I suppose that in a vacuum where there is no good data, and where one sees, like I do, patients with no insurance or Medicaid, who don’t know how or aren’t able to access a doctor – you’d be amazed at how often this happens – you could look at patients who get very sick and attribute that to Medicaid, but we do have data now. In Oregon, due to a fairly bizarre set of circumstances a few years ago, Medicaid eligibility was determined by lottery, creating a natural experiment of haves and have-nots. In the first year, those who were enrolled were 70 percent more likely to have a usual source of care, were 55 percent more likely to see the same doctor over time, received 30 percent more hospital care and received 35 percent more outpatient care, and much more.

People often ask me why I am so passionate about this, and I always tell them, “I blame the nuns.” Growing up Catholic, there was nothing so drilled into me as Matthew 25. We used to sing a hymn based on it, “Whatsoever you do to the least of my brothers,” on a regular basis at Mass. And we went to Mass before school every day!

It turns out this is a pretty universal sentiment. I checked. Go to the websites of every mainstream Christian denomination in America and it will be in there somewhere: The Social Gospel and Social Justice. Dignity of the individual. Our duties to the less fortunate. It is a component of every major religion and philosophy in the world, with one notable exception – Ayn Rand’s. And I mention Ayn Rand and her most famous book, Atlas Shrugged, because it is perennially listed as the second most influential book in America after the Bible. A damning fact for us.

In spite of that, I am glad that social justice and a commitment to the fair distribution of our health care resources is integral to the sense of duty of my profession, the nursing profession and all health professions.

I encourage debate about how we get to universal health care, but I refuse to accept that America, alone among all modern nations, and Pennsylvania in particular, will reject the idea that we need to get there. And right now, Medicaid expansion, the Health Insurance Exchanges and many other components of the Affordable Care Act are our best hope. Let’s not squander it.

Thank You.

Ohio Right to Life comes out in ‘100 percent’ support of Gov. John Kasich’s proposed Medicaid expansion

 

After days of criticism from conservatives, Gov. John Kasich snagged a significant endorsement for his Medicaid expansion plan Friday from Ohio Right to Life.

The prominent anti-abortion group’s board agreed to back to back the proposal with "100 percent approval," President Mike Gonidakis told The Plain Dealer.

"Our mission is to support life from womb to tomb," Gonidakis said. "In this case minorities will benefit, the poor will benefit. It will cover the parents of young children."

He added: "I think what we’re seeing from this governor is a kind and compassionate approach. I would ask our friends in the Tea Party to read the full proposal and see it’s not only the most compassionate, but also the most fiscally responsible. You don’t have to be a Democrat or a Republican to support this."

Kasich, a Republican up for re-election in 2014, announced he favored the expansion Monday while unveiling his two-year budget proposal. Though he maintains that he is a staunch opponent of President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, Kasich said the expansion called for under the law known as Obamacare provides coverage for those in need. With the U.S. Supreme Court upholding the law but giving states the right to opt out of the expansion, Kasich does not want to risk losing federal funds supporting the expansion to other states.

"Without this move Obamacare is likely to increase health insurance premiums even higher in Ohio," Kasich wrote in defense of his decision Wednesday on the conservative website RedState.com. "Worse, it takes $17 billion of Ohioans’ federal tax dollars out of our state and gives it to other states — where it will go to work helping to rev up some other state’s economy instead of Ohio’s."

http://blog.cleveland.com/open_impact/print.html?entry=/2013/02/ohio_right_to_life_comes_out_i.html

Take money for Medicaid

Valerie Arkoosh and Marc Stier in Philly.com

If we take the money to expand Medicaid, Pennsylvania will receive $43.3 billion over 10 years from the federal government. And if for any reason the money does not come to Pennsylvania, the governor can cancel the expansion at any time.

Taking federal money to expand Medicaid requires Pennsylvania to spend $4 billion over 10 years. But roughly $2 billion will be saved because federal money will replace funding for General Assistance-related programs. More than $850 million will be saved because the state will not have to compensate hospitals for ER care for the uninsured. And between $800 million and $1.4 billion will be available for county health services, where harsh cuts have already taken place.

Take money for Medicaid

Moving beyond Parity — Mental Health and Addiction Care under the ACA — NEJM

Moving beyond Parity — Mental Health and Addiction Care under the ACA — NEJM

Enactment of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act in 2008 was the culmination of a decades-long effort to improve insurance coverage for mental health and addiction treatment. The law’s passage constituted a critical first step toward bringing care for people with mental health and addiction disorders — including depression, anxiety, psychoses, and substance abuse and dependence — into the mainstream of the U.S. medical care system by requiring parity in coverage (benefits for mental health and substance abuse, often referred to collectively as “behavioral health,” that are equivalent to all other medical and surgical benefits). Now, the passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has the potential to affect the financing and delivery of mental health and addiction care even more profoundly.

Hurray for Health Reform – NYTimes.com

Hurray for Health Reform – NYTimes.com: It’s said that you can judge a man by the quality of his enemies. If the same principle applies to legislation, the Affordable Care Act — which was signed into law two years ago, but for the most part has yet to take effect — sits in a place of high honor.

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