Listen Up

Saturday, December 21, 2013

WHY AREN'T DOCTORS INVOLVED IN HEALTH REFORM--ACTUALLY WE ARE, BUT NO ONE LISTENS TO US

Dear lawmakers: 


As I was watching CNN news recently, I noted in the headlines different ways Obamacare is failing.  Current problems discussed were the customers’ sticker shock of high deductible plans (up to $12,700 for families), the president blaming the insurance companies for having substandard plans, and the people blaming the president for losing their current insurance.
One patient even complained, “My new health care plan tripled in price, and now, it is like having a third loan to deal with, including my car and home loan.”  A vicious cycle of blame between Washington, health insurance companies, and the patients is quickly demoralizing this nation and simply increasing costs with more administrative regulations.
And we need answers.
Surprisingly, in all of this, doctors were not even mentioned.  As if doctors do not know the intricacies of how the health care system works.  As if doctors are not there for their patients 24 hours per day, ordering tests or doing procedures that can benefit a patient’s well-being.  As if doctors are not dealing with denials from the insurance companies on a daily basis, losing valuable hours to menial paperwork that could be spent caring for our country’s sick.
Doctors have a duty to care for their patients and are the engines that put health care into motion. They yearn to maintain that physician-patient relationship that is important to the care of our patients.  Unfortunately, doctors are not being directly involved in the health care reform debate despite being on the front lines of care.  They have an opportunity to provide valuable insight into the day-to-day operations of this health care machine.
Would you want to fly in a plane with no input from a pilot? Or design a curriculum without a teacher’s input?  These “insider” insights are essential to health care in order to exact true change and improve health care for everyone to enjoy. Unless we embrace this idea and look to doctors to help solve these dilemmas, we will be doomed with increasing prices, more talking heads on TV blaming others, and dysfunctional insurance companies, all who have never spent a minute shadowing a doctor, yet claiming to know all the answers.
The current law and regulations being implemented under Obamacare will ultimately lead to sicker patients and low quality care for three reasons:
First, older doctors will retire early fed up with the system. These older doctors feel that the loss of a patient-physician relationship and the burdensome regulations (ie. paperwork) will choke off their ability to provide good care.  In addition, their expenses are increasing with these new regulations.  Add in the projected cuts in reimbursement up to 26%, and their livelihood will be threatened. These cuts could force these doctors out of practice or force them to stop seeing Medicare patients simply because their expenses (which rise yearly) are exceeding their declining reimbursement, which has declined steadily over the past several years already.
Second, young smart minds will no longer enter the field due to rising debt (average $250,000 after medical school) and severe cuts in reimbursement (yearly threats of 26% cuts to reimbursement).  If young college students realize that they cannot provide for a family despite going to school and training for 14 years, deferring income for all those years, and then being slapped with a $250,000 medical school bill, they will turn to different professions.
Third, current younger doctors will become more demoralized with administration and lawmakers dictating how they provide care.  They will feel as if they are increasingly being treated as machines, expecting to provide great care such as answering patient calls at 2am, working 24 hours shifts, doing more procedures for less, and filling out more and more paperwork, all with the threat of getting sued if they don’t perform without making a mistake.  This will produce a high burnout rate and poorer care.
These doctors went into medicine to feel a healthy bond between themselves and their patients.  They enjoy talking and spending time with them in the office.  Unfortunately, with all the unnecessary documentation regulations and time restraints, doctors are losing the bond that is so critical for care. For those doctors who choose to stay in the field of medicine, many of them will instead elect to practice concierge medicine, taking the insurance company out of the equation and attempting to maintain the physician-patient relationship.
There are numerous articles out there that show concierge medicine is growing.  With current doctors feeling demoralized and younger students afraid to enter the field, this will create a massive shortage of doctors and threaten the health of our citizens.
Having said all this, I as a doctor do not want this to happen.  I went into medicine as a calling to help others and take this role seriously.  I longed for the idea of sitting down and talking with my patients, sharing stories with them, not on the clock, and without cumbersome, slow computers and administrators documenting every move I make.  I want every person in America to have access to quality health care all at a reasonable price because our citizens deserve this.
Unfortunately, universal access to care at a reasonable price cannot materialize unless lawmakers look to doctors on the front lines of care for specific input.  We as doctors know in many ways why costs are high and why the public is unfortunately misinformed about how it all works.  But we need a representative sample of practicing doctors in Congress discussing these issues so that these “insider” insights can be applied to our current laws.
I would now like to outline below a few of these ideas that would lead to better and more affordable care.
The first idea involves making costs and reimbursement more simplified and transparent.  These changes would help clarify misconceptions about doctor’s pay.  Leaders need to stop attacking doctors for how much they earn because they do not really know how it works.  In all other professions, one gets paid what the bill says.  If a handyman comes in to fix your sink and charges $80, you pay him $80.  If you seek a lawyer, and he says he charges $250/hour and he works 4 hours for you, you owe him $1000.
Unfortunately, the medical billing is unique, confusing, and wrong.  The charges (bills) that patients see in the mail are not what doctors get paid.  These are inflated numbers derived from contracts between hospitals or groups and insurance companies.  A recent New York Times article headlines read “As Hospital Prices Soar, a Stitch Costs $500.”  Sadly, these inflated numbers have nothing to do with what the doctor gets paid. In fact, those bills do not go to the doctor at all, but rather to the hospital.
When a hospital or doctor submits a charge (bill), the insurance companies or Medicare/Medicaid, depending on the patient’s insurance, utilize a fee schedule.  This schedule consists of thousands of codes that give dollar amounts for individual procedures or clinic visits.  Each code has a dollar figure to determine how much to reimburse that doctor.  This is called a “Medicare fee schedule” and insurance companies will pay a certain percentage of the fee based on Medicare.  This can range from 80% to 180% of Medicare depending on the insurance carrier.
If a patient has Medicare, however, one can see exactly what that doctor will get paid based on the code for that procedure, test, or office visit (CPT code) by using the fee schedule.  This is often called the “allowable charge” in patient’s bills.   The revenue the doctor receives is in fact this fee and is set no matter how much the hospital or doctor chooses to charge.
To complicate matters, there are usually two different charges in a patient’s bill: a “professional” charge from the doctor, and a “facility or hospital” charge.
First, the doctor only collects a fraction of the “professional charge.”   This is the charge for the doctors’ services (e.g. office visit vs. procedure vs. MRI interpretation).   The doctor only receives a fraction of this “professional charge” because this is reduced by the fee schedule to the appropriate amount.  Remember, charges and what the doctor actually gets paid are very different in medicine.   The doctor does not collect any of the hospital charge as this charge goes to the hospital.  After all of this, a doctor gets paid only a small fraction of this “professional charge” because these allowable charges do not include overhead expenses the practice incurs (which can range from 30 to 60%).
This situation I describe above is not understood by our leaders as verified in this video of President Obama discussing foot amputations in diabetics.   President Obama claimed that surgeons get paid “30, 40, 50 thousand dollars” for a foot amputation.  Looking at the Medicare Fee schedule, CPT code 28805 states that the surgeon would get paid $738.90, which is the fee before his expenses are considered.  This $738.90 needs to cover his office space, staffing, medical liability, and years of training to have the privilege of performing this life saving operation.  Thus, the doctor actually gets paid 1.4% ($738.90/$50,000) of what President Obama claimed he got paid. Our leaders are clearly confused and have no right attacking physicians’ reimbursement.
Another example of confusing costs of medical treatment hits closer to home as my own mother presented to the ER with sudden blurry vision a few weeks ago.  Concerned for serious causes for this symptom, several tests were run to rule out causes such as stroke or tumor.  Thankfully, her diagnosis was nothing life threatening and is recovering.  She then received the following bill two weeks later in the mail explaining her charges.  I have attached a copy of the bill.
She was shocked at how high the charges were and could not decipher this bill.  Referring to my explanations above, under “professional/physician charges,” it “appears” a physician gets paid $450.00 to interpret a CT head and $580.00 to interpret a MRI of the brain.  As I described above, this is far from the truth.  Looking at the fee schedule, code 70450, a CT head would pay a doctor $29 for a Medicare patient.  This is far different than the $450 shown on the bill.  In fact, it is only 6% of what the bill states!  Likewise, an MRI brain, code 70558, would pay a radiologist $109.  Way off from the charge of $580.   There are other inflated fees for the hospital as you can see in this bill totaling over $11,000, but these are not related to a doctor’s compensation.
This clearly illustrates that doctors payment systems are confusing for patients and creates much anxiety when trying to decipher a bill in the mail.  It is apparently even confusing to lawmakers and the president who are trying to modify reimbursement yet do not know how doctors get paid.   Even though a stitch may cost $500, the doctor got paid $28 dollars to read a complex CT scan of the brain.  We need real costs to health care, not inflated charges from hospitals.  This needs to be addressed so patients and lawmakers can understand where doctors are coming from and realize that doctors are getting paid much less than meets the eye.
In addition to the above explanation, doctors do not get paid for talking on the phone to patients or other doctors, writing prescriptions, or ordering lab work or radiology tests. This is simply work we do to allow patients to get the best care and do not charge hourly fees for this work.  We do this work in between seeing patients in the office.
Further, if we drive to the hospital in the middle of the night to perform a procedure, we get paid the same and we do not charge extra.  Doctors do not collect whatever they want for clinic visits or procedures; this is all determined by the fee schedule explained above.  In addition, if one procedure takes longer than average or is more complex, a doctor does not collect more for that procedure unlike other professions that are paid hourly.  The fee is pre-determined by the Medicare fee schedule no matter how sick the patient is.  This is clearly different among other professions which charge an hourly rate.
In addition, if there is a follow up call or letter after the procedure, this is all part of the one fee and no additional fees are billed.  If that patient calls at 9pm that night with a health complaint or the patient arrives 30 minutes late to an appointment, there is not an increased charge (ie. we do not get paid more).  I am not stating that hourly rate work like how lawyers get paid is flawed or wrong; I am simply stating it is very different and sometimes this contrast is not noticed.  Do I speak with patients at 9pm and do I spend the extra 30 minutes helping patients get the quality care they deserve?
Of course, I willingly do this because I went into medicine to help those in need and I get satisfaction from this. I do worry, however, that this may not continue to be the case for all doctors if reimbursement models are not modified and doctors’ fees are not corrected for inflation and practice expenses.  They simply will not bring in enough revenue to cover their expenses. Again, doctors’ fees have been declining, are not secure (please read about the SGR formula), and do not adjust for inflation.  Solutions involve making costs and charges more transparent and realizing the true (not inflated) costs and benefits of medical devices, services, and materials.  With actual costs (not inflated charges) being available and transparent, patients would be given choices and autonomy about their health.
The vehicle for this would be health savings accounts (which I will describe in more detail below), which would allow patients to use their own money with their doctor’s advice to decide on what care is best for them.  This would increase competition amongst providers, lower prices, and offer more choice and involvement in their care.
The second idea involves tort reform.  We as doctors have a calling to help patients.  But, as we all are human, mistakes can happen. It is very important that patients who are injured by mistakes be compensated in a way that the law is supposed to provide.  However, the point of law is to provide reliable decision-making that can sort good health care from bad health care.  Instead, currently, it is run ad hoc jury by jury with no set standards. The system currently favors a doctor if in fact something was done wrongly or it may favor a patient even if no mistake was made.  This unreliability leads to defensive medicine, ordering tests and procedures just to prove that you did something, or excessively documenting trivial facts to prove you looked at everything.  The estimates for defensive medicine has been estimated up to $200 billion per year.  The current laws neglect both the patient and the doctor and drives up costs with administrative and attorney fees.
Here is an example of the evolution of defensive medicine. If a family physician determines a patient’s headache is likely due to tension and there are no warning signs for something serious, the doctor may choose not to order a CT scan and have the patient follow up if symptoms do not improve. Rarely, a tumor or bleeding in the brain could present in such a way despite a normal clinical evaluation by the doctor.  If that patient ends up having a tumor or bleeding, they can sue the doctor for not ordering the CT scan earlier.  In turn, that doctor doesn’t want that to ever happen again, even though he did everything right by using his clinical knowledge to determine nothing serious was likely going on.
Thus, he will order CTs on everyone simply to avoid a frivolous lawsuit even though he knows that the CT will be normal.  This exponentially increases costs as doctors across the thousands of hospitals in America follow suit not only for headaches but for other common ailments. No, doctors cannot play God and know every outcome with the thousands of patients they see yearly.  But they are very good at using their knowledge and training to determine if someone is sick and likely needs further immediate attention or not.
Having said that, if the doctor did do something wrong, the patient is still taken advantage of with the current tort system.  Thirty-nine percent of cases take three years to settle and 60 cents on the dollar are used for lawyer fees and administrative costs.  Patients definitely deserve to be compensated for poor health care and this current system fails them.
The answer to this rests in health care courts described by Common Good Chair Philip K. Howard.  He states that expert judges without juries would determine what is good versus bad care.  This would provide consistent standards of what is required in certain health care situations.  It would benefit patients because they would not spend three years dealing with the jury system nor pay trial lawyers 60 cents on the dollar for a case they may not even win.  And it would benefit physicians because they could act on their best professional judgment without being scared of being liable when they did nothing wrong.  It would let us do our jobs without being smothered by lawyers looking over our shoulder, yet provide patients with fair consistent rulings in cases of being wronged.
By creating clear standards of care, health care courts will allow judges to dispose of weak and invalid claims quickly after filing, while also disincentivizing doctors and insurers from defending cases in which they are clearly at fault.
The third solution highlights increasing patients’ roles in their own health, which would lead to more patient satisfaction, and actually lower costs.  This could be accomplished with health savings accounts.  These accounts would be funded by patients with pre-tax dollars and contributions made by employers and/or government subsidy stratified based on the individual’s income and job status.   With actual money in these accounts, patients would be able to discern costs better and use this money as if they were consuming any other good or service, such as handyman services.   This money could grow each year like an investment account and even be passed on to heirs at the time of death, keeping that sense of ownership with loved ones.
In order for these accounts to work well though, hospitals’ and doctors’ prices need to be more transparent and reflect true costs so patients know what they are buying.   Currently, that is impossible.  Hospital and doctor bills make little sense, are falsely inflated (as described above), and do not reflect true costs, leaving patients confused about real costs to their health.  When a patient hurts his or her knee, goes to the doctor, and the doctor orders an expensive MRI, there is no mention of costs.  The patient’s insurance “covers” the MRI, making the costs a non-issue for that patient.  There is no incentive to try ice, physical therapy, and rest before delving into an expensive MRI.
If the actual price was known for that MRI, patients could know what they are “buying.”  This price would be significantly less than the inflated charges because prices would be required to be transparent.  True prices would be published and patients could shop for MRI scanners just as they would for any other service.  This would thus allow patients control over how they spend their health care dollars.
In the same light, during the last six months of our lives, we spend up to 50% of our own total lifetime health care dollars.   In America, when patients are extremely sick and brought into the hospital, everything in our medical repertoire is used to keep them alive.  Costs can be up to $10,000 per day of ICU care not including other aggressive measures.
Unfortunately, patients may not know these costs.  With patient funded health savings accounts, patients would have more of a role in their own care, and could decide based on a doctor’s recommendation the best course of action, considering the patient’s prognosis, benefits, risks, and costs.   Of course, families always have input into their loved ones health near the end of his or her life and can decide how aggressive they wish to be while talking with their team of doctors.
However, the way it is being done is likely wrong.  Doctors are not bringing up hospice to patients early enough. Instead, many families with their loved ones are faced spending their last months in an ICU, hooked up to breathing tubes, only prolonging the inevitable.  Patients’ and their families are being deprived of spending that time at home in a more comfortable setting.  Quality of life is not being brought up, only quantity.  An article in the Washington Postaddresses these end of life issues extremely well, entitled “An unrealistic view of death, through a doctor’s eyes.”
It states that modern medicine may be doing more to complicate end of life issues, rather than improve it.  The article also states that people think death is a failure of modern medicine rather than simply life’s natural conclusion.  I am not saying that every patient in an ICU needs hospice brought up.  Each patient in unique and families should decide based on their values and wishes.  A previously healthy 28 year old involved in a car wreck who remains in an ICU may need months in an ICU to recover and would benefit from this long hospitalization.
However, a 90-year-old patient with other medical problems such as heart failure and kidney disease in the ICU with a new diagnosis of a terminal cancer may benefit from a talk with hospice.  Every human being is unique in their health needs and I feel families and doctors need to be more open about goals of care at the end of life   An interesting article details some of these issues, entitled “How Doctors Die.”
It basically points out that most doctors choose less, not more, care at the end of their life because they personally witness the limits to human medicine action.  It illustrates that there is not always an answer or a cure and that doing nothing is sometimes the best care available.  All in all, more patient ownership of end of life costs utilizing their health savings accounts combined with frank discussions with their doctors about these end of life issues would definitely lower health care costs and even help families cope with difficult illnesses.
The final suggestion involves preventing chronic illnesses that end up costing Americans a lot as they age.  We are very good at treating complex medical problems with patients who are very sick, but not very good at reducing medical costs through preventative medicine.  We are very good at bringing a new state of the art drug used to thin the blood to the market, but bad at actually preventing the reason for needing that drug in the first place!
In fact, 50% of our health care dollars ($623 billion) are spent on the sickest 5% of patients (30 million) in America.   Interestingly, the top 1% of health care “spenders” accounted for 20% of the total health care expenditures in America.   These are usually patients with multiple chronic medical conditions such as obesity, diabetes, kidney and heart disease. Studies often quote Americans as spending a lot on health care, yet being ranked lower than most other countries on health care outcomes.  This is the reason these stats make sense.  We spend a lot on patients who are very sick and can prolong their life, but do little to prevent them from getting sick.
Recently, Sanjay Gupta summed up the solution to this paradox very well in a CNN article.  He basically states that increased access to health care with Obamacare would not improve our health outcomes.  Rather, patients taking ownership of their own health and holding themselves accountable will promote a healthier America.  Eating better, exercising more, and reducing stress can go a long way.  It would also reduce the likelihood of developing these expensive chronic medical conditions, which drive costs higher.
In conclusion, I feel that Capitol Hill needs input from doctors working in the front lines to discuss our issues so that the best reform possible can be made.  Doctors experience all of the above issues on a daily basis and have insight that politicians cannot observe since they do not spend time in doctor’s offices or hospitals.  These are a few issues that would help our deserving patients get the best care and restore that critical relationship we need with our patients.
I believe that by empowering patients more in the health care system through health savings accounts, reforming our tort laws, making costs more transparent, being more realistic about end of life issues, and living healthier, we can come a long way. I hope we can work together with lawmakers to create a system that can benefit everyone.
Matthew Moeller is a gastroenteroloigst.

mHealth----More Necessary Regulations


Much of the big news in health IT this year came out of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT. ONC -- along with CMS -- is in charge of overseeing the widespread adoption of EHRs through the meaningful use program. After years in the works, the first phase of that program is wrapping up right now.

The past several years were almost frantic for HIT and ONC, with meaningful use standards, interoperability standards, incentive funding and a succession of creative and dynamic national coordinators, each with their own focus on what needed to be accomplished.

Unlike other Executive departments, Medicine has been fortunate to have a clear path, relatively clear goals, and minimal political divisiveness......all to the benefit of our patients.

mHealth has had an explosive growth in mobile applications for iOS and Android.  The hardware form factors are multiple with stiff competition and new hardware offerings almost monthly.

Growth and competition are plentiful and numerous manufacturers (Nokia, Windows, Google, Motorola,iPhone) in smartphone or pc tablet form.  In many cases EHR vendors have rapidly developed a mobile app portal.  The acceptance rate has been high for those who are tech savy.  Despite the potential vulnerability to a security breech and all that HIPAA stands by on the sidelines ready to pounce with a hefty penalty. The plain truth is that these applications and hardware offer so much to efficiency a way needs to be found quickly to certify HIPAA compliance for each application and device.

Not withstanding this urgent need there have been several attempts to regulate this market. FDA, FTC, FCC,  and HHS have all been mentioned. Suffice it to say that regulatory agencies are pressed to stay current with new hardware and devices.

Why, How and Which  Mobile Health applications need regulation?

In an article (blog post) in June 20012 I discussed  Five Reasons Why Digital Health Technologies Need FDA Oversight   Now the FDA is in the process of forming a mobile health division to study, certify and authenticate applications.  A new workgroup in HHS has been formed,

According to mobiHealthNews;

"The workgroup’s efforts will likely end up affecting the regulation of mobile health and health IT. According to HHS, FDASIA requires Sibelius, with the ONC and the FCC, to “develop a report that contains a proposed strategy and recommendations on an appropriate, risk-based regulatory framework for health IT, including medical mobile applications, that promotes innovation, protects patient safety, and avoids regulatory duplication.”  The new workgroup’s input will feed into that report.

According to Brian Ahier,

"As a general matter FDA regulates all medical devices and FCC regulates devices that utilize electromagnetic spectrum - i.e. broadcast devices. So with regard to mobile health devices - sensors, applications, systems - FDA regulates any given device as a medical device while FCC regulates the device as a communications device. 

Recognizing the potentially overlapping jurisdiction in digital health, in 2010 the agencies entered into a Memorandum of Understanding "to promote collaboration and ultimately to improve the efficiency of the regulatory processes applicable to broadband and wireless enabled medical devices."

Last month FCC announced its mobile body area network (MBAN) proposal, which would allocate electromagnetic spectrum for personal medical devices (see link below). The allocated spectrum would be used to form a personal wireless network, within which data from numerous body sensors could be aggregated and transmitted in real time."


Representative Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and others introduced The Software Act.which will act to build a cohesive multi-agency over view of mHealth.











The Physician's Plight Some doctors back away from Obamacare

In the Press Enterprise

BY LAURIE UDESKY  CHCF Center for Health Reporting  December 20, 2013; 






The Affordable Care Act has placed most physicians in a state of conflict. I don't know any physicians who would not want all their patients to have good health and wellness.  Wellness is always a less expensive alternative and pursuing it adds to the quality of life immediately.

While the Affordable Care Act has these components as part of the basic standard many physicians cannot participate in the roster of providers who will accept patients in Covered California, the state exchange.

Surveying other exchanges may reveal the same situation repeated 50 times.  Much of it depends upon the rates for reimbursement set by insurers, and is individualized by each insurer.





The California Health Care Foundation did a survey of physicians in California and found that 70-80% of physicians who studied the reimbursement plans,  (about 70% of the Medicare rates) decided to not participate in Covered California (the Health Benefit Exchange run by the state. 

Medicare rates have already been decreased almost 50% since 1988.  This in spite of inflation and skyrocketing administrative costs for providers due to increased regulatory requirements in order to be an eligible provider for CMS.


Dr. Steven Larson, the CEO of the Riverside Medical Clinic (140 providers), said he was taken aback when he saw what insurance companies were willing to pay. “The rates were 70 percent of Medicare [reimbursement]. It doesn’t leave room for making a living,” he said. “It’s potentially a huge problem,” said Larson, who also is the chairman of the California Medical Association Board of Trustees.

The clinics serve 300,000 patients under a variety of plans, including many Medicare patients who are not affected by the new exchanges. But the patients who want their care covered under a health exchange plan will now to have to look elsewhere for a doctor.

 In some cases they are trying to decide whether to join. In other cases they are finding that they have been dropped from plans. And many are just trying to get information about whether they are listed in an exchange plan or not.

Covered California maintains that the plans offered through the exchanges include 80 percent of the state’s physicians. “We arrived at the 80 percent by comparing our network to the two largest commercial networks,” said Covered California spokeswoman Anne Gonzales.  This reveals the lack of expertise and knowledge that state health agencies have about health care in the market place. A recent survey of California Physicians showed that 70-80% would not participate.

About a year ago numerous insurers (or Covered California ) sent out letters of intent asking providers if they would participate in the exchanges.  At that time there were no  speciffics as to reimbursement or other provisions, which are left to the insurers as long as their policies conformed to the ACA benefits.

This amounted to asking providers to sign a 'blank check'.



Recent analysis of insurer directories reveal they are inaccurate for many reasons. The directories are prepared annually with many months of lead time. 
California Medical Association President Dr. Richard Thorp. “Many times when we look at their physician directories, they include names of people who have moved out of state, are retired or dead. ”Some physicians have even  been listed in the exchange after they refused to participate because of the low reimbursement rates.

The challenges to participate in Covered California are as great for providers as it is for patients.

The scenario is unbelievable, except that it is fact.

Health Train Express reviewed California Health Care Foundation statements as well as the California Medical Association. The following are some of the examples:


Insurers are required to notify doctors if they’re included, according to Lisa Folberg, vice president of medical and regulatory policy for the California Medical Association.
That hasn’t always happened in Riverside, according to the executive director of the Riverside Medical Society. “Basically doctors don’t know if they’re in or out of the network,” she said. The society has told doctors to call the plans directly.

If the present situation is confusing, unfortunately the future, despite the government's intention to organize health reform, looks even more grim.  Insurance c ontracts are usually an annual renewal. At any time after the first year and later as the system matures it will be in the purvey of these "guardians of Covered California' to alter the rates.  Debt ceilings, national catastrophe, conflicts will all effect health.

The current GDP incorporates the sixteen percent due to health enterprise.  The ACA has added more levels and administration to an already bloated health system.






Friday, December 20, 2013

ObamaCare: We Did Not Know What was In It Until It Passed

It did pass, and we still don't know what  is in it.  Each day we learn of waivers, modifications, amendments to 'fix' fatal flaws in the law.  This is the simple part.....getting people to sign on for health coverage....the doorway to health and wellness.

Dates have been set, mandates have been put on hold, insurance policies were cancelled, no wait..Obama says "Kings X", I take that back. Sebelius smiles and goes before congress, non-plussed.  She must be close to retirement so no problem and undoubtedly she will be through with her public service.  I wonder if she has health coverage?

Many of us have tried to take the high road and plan health reform logically analyzing each step as we proceed.  This is almost a futile endeavour, because the landscape is constantly changing.




Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius testifies at a Congressional panel last week. The White House has outlined a new exemption under the Affordable Care Act






n a last-minute policy change, the Obama administration waived the so-called individual mandate under the Affordable Care Act for people whose individual health insurance policy is being canceled.
The act requires most Americans to have qualified health insurance starting in 2014 or pay a tax penalty, unless they meet one of myriad exemptions. One is if qualifying coverage would cost more than 8 percent of household income (the affordability exemption). Another is they can prove a hardship such as homelessness, bankruptcy, domestic violence, large medical debts, utility shutoff notice or death in the family.
Under new guidance issued late Thursday, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) said that having an individual insurance policy canceled now qualifies for the hardship exemption.
The process is not really that simple:
People who qualify for the cancellation hardship exemption have two options:
-- Don't buy coverage and don't pay a fine.
-- Buy a bare-bones catastrophic policy on an exchange. These catastrophic policies do not meet the requirements of the Affordable Care Act, but people who buy them won't owe a fine. Before Thursday's rule change, to buy this policy a person had to be younger than 30 or meet the affordability exemption.
To qualify for the new policy-cancellation exemption, consumers must complete a hardship application, which will let them purchase a catastrophic plan or receive a penalty waiver, according to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. (For the application, see http://1.usa.gov/19YrBnK.)
To purchase the catastrophic policy, they must submit the form, and evidence of a canceled policy, to a company selling such policies in their area.
The announcement came just days before the Monday deadline for enrolling in coverage to start Jan. 1, and insurance companies are not happy.
When Obama announced another policy reversal in November - saying insurance companies could temporarily renew certain policies that were to be canceled because they did not comply with the act - he gave states the option of allowing that or not.
Covered California did not. As a result, most individual health policies in California that are not grandfathered will be canceled Dec. 31.
Some customers of Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of California will be able to keep their non compliant policies until the end of February or March, respectively, under a settlement with the state insurance commissioner.
People with individual plans that are grandfathered, meaning they had them before the act was signed in March 2010, may keep them until the insurance company decides to cancel them.
It appears that nothing is guaranteed as to the roll out. Insurers, providers, hospitals are all nervously watching and waiting. 


The New Public Health Advertising and Social Media

This post today does not reflect approval or disapproval of the Affordable Care Act.   It does point out the means to which the administration has gone to "sell ObamaCare" to the public by riding on the coattails of famous people.


Celebrities and Public Health.

Whether your  favorite celebrity knows anything about health may be open to question.

However given the visibility of celebs such as Angelina Jolie and the topic of breast cancer; or  type II diabetes (such as Tom Hanks) many want to contribute their celebrity either due to a personal involvement with the disease or for charitable purposes.

Somewhat open to question are those who endorse a specific treatment,rather than elevating the public awareness of the disease or treatments.

Celebrities can use their enormous stage presence and visibility to the general public far more than millions of dollars spent by government in public health advertising or announcements.



Who does not know more about HIV and AIDS due to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, or Michael J. Fox and Parkinsonism.



The list goes on.

Actress Angelina Jolie explained her decision to undergo a prophylactic double mastectomy to significantly reduce her risk of inherited breast cancer,



      The effects of the so-called "Angelina Jolie effect" even have reached across the pond, where breast cancer charities have reported a four-fold surge in women asking about having their breasts removed since Jolie announced she'd had the procedure, according to Daily Mail. And the number of calls Cancer Research UK's helpline received about a family history of breast cancer increased from 13 in April to 88 in May, the article noted. In response to Jolie's breast cancer media bombshell, doctors acknowledged not all women need genetic testing but all women should discuss it with their doctors, FierceHealthcare previously reported.

Kim Kardashian brought to light the importance of privacy and confidentiality in the health space and protected information by HIPAA.Some hospital employees in Los Angeles may have gone too far in their quest to "Keep Up with the Kardashians" and now have to face the consequences.



Five workers and a student research assistant at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (Calif.) were fired over privacy breaches involving patient medical records--and there is speculation that the patient was Kardashian, who gave birth to her daughter with rapper Kanye West in a birthing suite at the hospital on June 15, the Los Angeles Times reports. This event publicized HIPAA rules for the public and providers.

News correspondent Amy Robach announced that she has breast cancer and would undergo a double mastectomy--after reluctantly agreeing to have a mammogram live on-air for Good Morning America. Had she followed the United States Preventive Services Task Force 2009 guidelines for screening, it's likely she wouldn't have undergone her first mammogram until a decade later. Robach is just 40 years old and has little history of breast cancer. This brought to life the controversy of statistical evidence for screening for many diseases.

     Obama's camp took to popular comedy site Funny or Die to get the word out about the Affordable Care Act, with skits featuring Jennifer Hudson, Amy Poehler and Olivia Wilde.  Parodying TV's Scandal, Jennifer Hudson plays a "fixer" who offers up the simple (well, it should be simple) solution of signing up for coverage on Healthcare.gov to clients presenting their problems.

     The first lady stepped into the public health spotlight with her "Let's Move" campaign, encouraging schoolchildren to eat healthier foods and exercise daily--she even enlisted Sesame Street characters Elmo and Rosita to help her promote eating fruits and vegetables during an official press conference

    In fact the Obama campaign used many celebs to raise awareness of Health.gov the national website to enroll in the Affordable Care Act. As health care professionals we should not take for granted our knowledge base as compared to the public.  The Obama effort has some very funny videos that made even me laugh, and the ACA is no laughing matter.

Katherine Zeta-Jones revealed she had bipolar disorder back in 2011, shortly after husband Michael Douglas was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer. Zeta Jones commented on her struggle with bipolar ll (which is less severe than bipolar l), in 2011,

And then there have been comments from people such as Jenny McCarthy.  McCarthy told Oprah Winfrey she "graduated from the University of Google," to come to this idea, but she's been spreading her view that vaccinating young children for diseases like mumps results in autism in books, newspapers and on TV--much to the dismay of doctors, scientists, researchers and other celebrities.

No matter what popular culture is influenced by the media for better or worse.









Thursday, December 19, 2013

The United States of Affordable Care (Act)


Health Care Financing would seem to be a long way off from the patient waiting to see their physician.

In today's world the quantitiy and qualitiy of care depends very much upon the type of health insurance the patient has to use.   The care may be far different according to region, or state.

The term 'public health ' is a misnomer. The public health system is not accessible to all people for a number of reasons.  Many perceive public health as inferior to the 'private system of health care", and only would access a center if there were no other option. Many current users of public health and/or Federally Qualified Health Centers would not even know how to access ' private care'. Learn more about them here and here and  here.  I particularly like the last one. No one home --

The resource cannot be found.

If you are successful, the rules are as long as the Affordable Care Act.

A new term which may be unfamiliar to most providers and/or patients is the "Federally Qualified Health  Centers".  These centers are found more commonly in areas of low economic assets and amongst many people who fall in the range of the Federal Poverly Level (FPL).  And here are the numbers which are both unrealistic at the lower end and even more unbelievable at the top end.

  • $11,490 to $45,960 for individuals
  • $15,510 to $62,040 for a family of 2
  • $19,530 to $78,120 for a family of 3
  • $23,550 to $94,200 for a family of 4
  • $27,570 to $110,280 for a family of 5
  • $31,590 to $126,360 for a family of 6
  • $35,610 to $142,440 for a family of 7
  • $39,630 to $158,520 for a family of 8
We seem to be an impoverished nation in the world of developed countries.

Many of these centers predominantly serve 'medicaid' beneficiaries. They also serve ( unintentionally) to isolate medicaid and those who are receivng public assistance from the main stream of health care.  Hospitals and providers also treat these patients differently, not so much in terms of the quality of care they receive....rather the accessibility.  Many budgetary decisions by states often effect Medicaid patients first, because large portions of state budgets are allocated to Medicaid.

There is a non-admitted  'caste' system when it comes to medical care.  It largely is secondary to income and location, and in cities there is often a sharp divide between those living in upper middle class neighborhoods and lower class neighborhoods.

The situation is also becoming worse, and there is no sign the Affordable  Care Act will diminish the divide.
Although the ACA specifies preventive medical care  (for free)  Despite being "free", there will be a cost. There are 14 general categories,   22 special categories for women, and 25 categories for children.

A disturbing distinction between public health and private health financing is also more evident with the introduction of health information technology. In order to qualify for Grants for Information systems and operational financing a non-profit status is a requirement, which immediately rules out most entrepenurial systems (ie, private fee for service office and/or clinics, as well as some hospitals.




Health Benefit Exchange

Has health care improved since the ACO went into effect??  We have been told that already the ACA has saved millions and perhaps billions of dollars. How is that so?  Where are the details?

I have an open mind and I am willing to consider the facts....so just show me the numbers. How is it that the government has infused billions of dollars into health IT and providers must now support it operationally ? Given the lifetime of IT hardware and software obsolescence in five years at the most it will all have to be upgraded and/or replaced with a second generation of sofware that has real meaningful usability, not the garbage that HHS is insisting we use to accomodate the "quants" at HHS who massage the information spewing out of their machines.

Health care now supports an industry of high tech that has nothing to do with patient care. Vendors of hardware, software, consultants, IT consultants, a stream of auditors, review firms, outcome studies. What idiots think we are saving money?  The money in health care no longer is going to patient care......it is going to many parasitic organizations.  The only good thing about it is that unemployment would be much worse than it is already.

How long will  health benefit exchanges  be useful after the initial period of signing up the uninsured. Surely it will cost a great deal to fix it, and maintain it.

If the affordable care act continues to roll out the next five years will be a financial and health disaster.

For all the details on Health Benefit Exchanges and which insurance companies have signed up here is the list. It does not mean your doctor will accept these plans since the reimbursement rates in the Affordable Care Act will be very low compared to the current rates.

Stay tuned.




NIH Leader Calls for Evidence on mHealth

Only about 20 randomized clinical trials involving mHealth tools or services have been conducted in the United States since 2008 under the auspices of the National Institutes for Health. And more than half of them have failed to document clear evidence of improved outcomes.

 Francis Collins, MD, the NIH's director, delivered the message to attendess at the 2012 mHealth Summit in his closing keynote on Dec. 5. Collins pointed out that the lack of trial-based evidence is hindering acceptance of the technology by a healthcare industry that could really use these tools.
Dr. Collins also noted that controlled trials often are diffiicult to design in the real world by saying,
"The mHealth field is evolving so rapidly that oftentimes the technology used in trials is outdated by the time the trials are completed. For that reason, he said, the scientific and healthcare communities have to work together to fine-tune the process, producing viable results in a timely manner.
The alternative? Forge ahead with mHealth without evidence that mHealth is improving healthcare."
This viewpoint may be highly biased as to the cohort and demographics of such a study.  Presently there are thousands of mobile apps in development, most stimulated by public perception and enthusiasm from the HIT community. The feeding frenzy for profit is dynamic with the federal stimulus packages.
Many vendors in mHealth would argue differently. Hopefully some of them will comment here.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Health Reform: A Play in Multiple Acts

It is a very exciting and troubling time  for health care in the United States.  The stage is set for multiple acts occurring simultaneously.

For those who have boots on the ground with financial commitments and assets the changing landscape means unknown profits (if any) or losses.  Health institutions and providers charged with improved outcomes and 'less cost' are facing the conundrum of supplying more care with less money.

Leonard Zwelling M.D., a Houston physician who was a congressional staffer during the writing of the affordable care act puts it this way, as he discusses a statement made by


Norman Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, one of the leading experts on the workings of Congress, summed it up in one sentence during a briefing for the press and politicos in November 2008. He said:

"Every one's idea of health care reform is the same: I pay less."

Where I was trying to get my head around a solution to the three tenets of my idea of health care reform, everyone around me was trying to preserve or increase his piece of the health care payoff pie. I was looking for a legislative solution to assist the country in arriving at the place where the rest of the civilized world was - the provision of some form of universal health care as a right of citizenship. Everyone else was looking to cut a deal that preserved his place at the trough of health care profiteering. Guess who won?


With the full cooperation of the Congress and the White House, health care was not even remotely reformed. The Affordable Care Act is not about health care reform. It is about money, particularly preserving the insurance industry's hold over how health care dollars are spent.

Hospitals and providers had little to do with the Affordable Care Act.

"The Affordable Care Act continued to allow hospitals to jack up prices with no relation to actual costs. Only the doctors gave up something because, unlike the insurance industry and the pharmaceutical industry, medicine did not speak with one voice when lobbying on Capitol Hill and thus could largely be ignored. This is health care reform? I don't think so.
The reason the Affordable Care Act did what it did is because that's what it aimed to do - increase access to insurance for the uninsured, get everyone else to pay for it, and make sure no one currently in the health care business loses a dollar from the amounts they are already extracting from patients and doctors alike.
Complicating Ornstein's comments are the multiple scenes ongoing in the 'reform' efforts
Technological advancements such as

Health information technology which includes electronic health records, health information exchanges, the proposed upgrading of the ICD - 9 to ICD -10, the advances in mobile health, telemedicine and more.......



The increased regulatory arm with meaningful use in 3 steps.  MU is linked with financial  incentives from CMS to offset the expense of providers and hospital acquisition of electronic medical records.

The challenging role of an unproven health benefit exchange system, with an incomplete back end disconnecting the actual payment to insurers.





The details of connecting the dots are only now coming into focus for bureaucrats and congress who badly underestimated the complexity of health care delivery.  The turmoil is clearly more evident among providers, hospitals and the patients who are the "guinea pigs"

During the next 12 to 24 months the 'symphony" will unfold.  Will it be harmonious or an unfinished symphony?








Sunday, December 15, 2013

Freedom of Information Act Request filed by Health Train Express

Doctors Complain They Will Be Paid Less by Exchange Plans.  Many will opt out of private plans. News reports indicate that 70% of California MDs will not participate in the Health Exchange and the Private plans Some have complained to medical associations, including those in New York, California, Connecticut, Texas and Georgia, saying the discounted rates could lead to a two-tiered system in which fewer doctors participate, potentially making it harder for consumers to get the care they need.




Insurance officials acknowledge they have reduced rates in some plans, saying they are under enormous pressure to keep premiums affordable. They say physicians will make up for the lower pay by seeing more patients, since the plans tend to have smaller networks of doctors.

If you’re a physician and you’ve negotiated a rate from insurance, shouldn’t it be the same on or off the exchange?” said Matthew Katz, executive vice president of the Connecticut State Medical Society. “You’re providing the same service.”

The benchmark for physician fees is the rate the federal government sets for services provided to older Americans through Medicare. In many markets, commercial plans may pay slightly above the Medicare rates, while doctors say that many of the new exchange plans are offering rates below that.

Physicians are uncomfortable discussing their rates because of antitrust laws, and insurers say the information is proprietary. But information cobbled together from interviews suggests that if the Medicare pays $90 for an office visit of a complex nature, and a commercial plan pays $100 or more, some exchange plans are offering $60 to $70. Doctors say the insurers have not always clearly spelled out the proposed rate reductions.

Health Train Express has filed a FOIA request from CMS (Freedom of Information Act which will require full disclosure to the providers and public  (ie, transparency that Obama claims to encourage)  Watch for the published link in about one month



Friday, December 13, 2013

Affordable Care Act "It ain't over until it's Over"

If you are reading this blog and waiting for me to tell you what is going to happen in health reform, you have come to the right place.  I know as much about this as Kathleen Sebelius or Barak Obama.

I am certain that makes you all feel better.

I know that is reassuring to my readers, because Obama and Sebelius had access to and heard many learned opinions on developing the affordable care act. However they were not listening and the elephant in the room was political intrigue, and 'what's in it for me ?"

Today my spouse received the magic letter from Covered  California stating that she has qualified, and now all she has to do is go to the website  log-in and pick her (Silver plan) That is no small task.



Among many other things, the subsidies make no logical sense to me (or others)  I need all of my funds to support myself and my disabled wife who has been unable to work for over ten years.  $250 USD would help pay for the pain medication she takes as a result of a bad wrist injury in 2002. After that she was uninsurable, so I am grateful that the ACA now affords her the ability to become insured until she reaches age 65 and  will be eligible for Medicare.

 It seems that my user id and/or password is incorrect, and I do not remember any of the questions, or answers for the security questions. Small wonder....their selection of Q&As is quite a mystery to me. I am so old I don't remember who my best friend in high school was, no the color of my first car, nor my favorite food (I like them all). Whatever happened to my mother's maiden name?

I called the telephone numbers listed on Covered California for lost user ids/passwords, and was either greeted with a busy signal or a 'we are busy right now, go to our web site, coveredca.com. Now would anyone call them if they had not already tried to use the web site.  The live on line chat room brings up a blank white screen.

The ACA has created stress for all of us, not knowing the eventual outcome...success or failure or some point in between  For those whose former policies  have been cancelled I say let's let them get to the front of the line.


It makes a lot of sense......they are already paying customers and the system needs their premium dollars now.

Everyone else should wait several weeks. Another month won't make much difference to those who have not been insured for the past decade or so.

Although I have never liked insurance companies, I do feel empathy for the mess the affordable care act has produced on top of the measly 15% margin they must operate upon now, and all those pre-existing condition patients waiting in the wings.

As Yogi Berra (byname of Lawrence Peter Berra) once told me, "It ain't over, until it's all over"  (Yes, he did tell me that personally when I was a sprite living in Connecticut.)  My Dad took me to at least a hundred Yankee games in the Bronx. I also have a signed Mickey Mantle original photo of the "Bronx Bomber"

So what does that have to do with the ACA? Let's listen and take seriously what Yogi had to say. I trust him, after all he was a Yankee on a team that broke all records winning  7 world series' back to back.

Would you rather trust President Obama, our Congress, or Secretary Sebelius?  After all Yogi batted left handed and threw right handed. (source Wikipedia)/






Thursday, December 12, 2013

To Be or Not to Be (Or What is This Post About?) hint: Medical School




The title of this post is not going to sit well with search engines....Shakespeare will probably appear often. In fact I did a quick search of the  "quote", and the listing began with, Wikipedia's listing on Shakespeare, The Complete Works of Shakespeare,Shakespeare Online, a listing of all Shakespeare productions in process, and not last nor least, "How Shakespeare would end "Breaking Bad"

I admit I have plagiarized much of this writing from Ali Binazir, who I assume is an MD.  Kudos to him for not punctuating his name with M.D. As  Yankel in      states, "A blessing on your house"...Mazel tov, mazel tov !  (or perhaps he did not graduate)  However, no aspersions are cast upon this author.  He articulates the 10 reasons why you should not become a doctor, and points out the one reason you should become a doctor.


Ali Binzar is an M.D. he graduated from Harvard (B.A.) and then the University of California San Diego.

My google search failed to show him listed on Healthgrades.com. (a real accomplishment, one which most of my readers would like to know how he did that). Most of the searches yielded writing, books, mostly centering around love, and dating. He is on the UCSD faculty of Medicine.  This I found on Doximity a peer social media platform for physicians.

Why You Should Not Go To Medical School     

1) You will lose all the friends you had before medicine.
2) You will have difficulty sustaining a relationship and will probably break up with or divorce your current significant other during training.
3) You will spend the best years of your life as a sleep-deprived, underpaid slave.
4) You will get yourself a job of dubious remuneration.
5) You will have a job of exceptionally high liability exposure.
6) You will endanger your health and long-term well-being.
7) You will not have time to care for patients as well as you want to.
8) You will start to dislike patients — and by extension, people in general.
9) People who do not even know you will start to dislike you.
10) You’re not helping people nearly as much as you think.


AND THE ONE AND ONLY REASON WHY YOU SHOULD GO INTO MEDICINE:
You have only ever envisioned yourself as a doctor and can only derive professional fulfillment in life by taking care of sick people.*

Following the article there are many comments from wannabee doctors, and young medical students, with a fresh view on this subject