Tuesday, July 21, 2015

The 49 Best Health and Fitness Apps of 2015 | Greatist

The 49 Best Health and Fitness Apps of 2015 | 







Here it is....all you have been looking for health and fitness on your phone, tablet, wearables.

Brought to you by Health Train Express  and Digital Health Space.



This information is not intended as medical device recomendation and we do not endorse any product. It is intended as a reference source.  None of these products have been approved by the FDA, nor is their reliability.

Monday, July 20, 2015

Statistics, Statistics, Lies and More Damn Lies, or is it just Ignorance ?

Health Care     A Tree of Life


It is becoming harder to surf the web looking for health related article without stumbling over another article about  HIT and Data. So here is the latest finding.

  • Percent of adults who had contact with a health care professional in the past year: 82.1%
  • Percent of children who had contact with a health care professional in the past year: 92.8%
  • Number of visits (to physician offices, hospital outpatient and emergency departments): 1.2 billion


Saturday, July 18, 2015

E pluribis Unum


Freedom is one of the features of a nation known for  "exceptionalism" . The term we all have heard is used as a global adjective to describe the United States.  In truth we do not excel in many areas.

In health we do excel in research and development and technology as applied to medicine. We fail miserably in access to health care and the bureaucracy surrounding it. We probably earn a C- in regard to social programs, not that we don't invest billions of dollars into helping certain segments of society to survive with basic necessities of life, food, shelter (inadequate) and a safety net for health-care.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Fee-for-Service is not Dead.......It is not even Wounded

Most industry leaders believe that, in the near future, fee-for-service payment will be replaced by “population-based payment,” intended to reduce incentives to over-treat patients and to encourage prevention. However laudable these goals, we believe the expected shift to population-based payment is unlikely to materialize.


We take population-based payment to mean time-limited fixed per-capita payment for a defined population of covered lives. Much of the inevitability of the trend toward population health is attributed to the Medicare ACO/Shared Savings programs created by the Affordable Care Act. The accountable care organization has been touted as the eventual successor to DRG and Part B payments in regular Medicare. Medicare's ACO programs now cover about 8 million of its beneficiaries (compared to 17 million in Medicare Advantage).

While advocates in the CMS claim hundreds of millions in savings (in an overall program spending more than $600 billion a year), the Pioneer ACO program and its much larger younger sister, the Medicare Shared Savings program, have struggled to gain industry acceptance. Medicare ACOs have so far had minimal impact in reducing costs. (PDF)Managed-care veterans (hospital- and physician-based) that have succeeded in Medicare Advantage or commercial HMO markets have largely failed with ACOs.



After a decade of experimentation, the pattern in these ACO programs is that a small fraction of ACOs generate most of the bonuses, and that excessively high prior Medicare spending, rather than excellent infrastructure and clinical discipline, may be the real reason for those successes. For the majority of ACOs, the return on investment for setting up and operating them is negative and likely to remain so. The recently issued ACO regulations did not materially improve the ROI calculus. In our view, it is extremely unlikely that ACOs will evolve into a “total replacement” for regular Medicare's current payment model.


KaufmanKaufman
On the commercial side, about 15 million patients participate in ACO-like commercial insurance contracts. More than 90% are so-called “one-sided” contracts, where there is no downside risk for providers who miss their spending targets. Yet some providers are giving up 30% discounts upfront to enter commercial ACOs that are really narrow-network PPOs. The discounts function as withholds with an earn-back if providers can meet spending and quality targets.

The commercial ACO deals we've looked at are one-sided in more than one sense: they frequently limit future rate increases, so nearly all inflation risk is borne by providers. As structured, they are a no-lose proposition for insurers that deliver real benefits to providers only if their competitors are excluded from the networks. Shifting more insurance risk to providers is unnecessary since insurers have already shifted a large amount of the first-dollar risk to patients (and therefore providers) through deductibles and copayments.

Moreover, with commercial medical-cost growth trends continuing in the mid-single digits, there is no cost emergency requiring a major change in insurers' contracting strategy; the present hybrid discounted fee-for-service model is doing its job. Deeply discounted fee-for-service with a small fraction of payments tied to “performance'” is not population health.

While many healthcare executives have embraced population health in concept, it is our experience that many of their physicians are not participating in a meaningful way. A recent RAND study of clinician acceptance of these models concluded that they have not substantially changed how physicians deliver face-to-face care, and that the additional nonclinical work required (mostly documentation) is perceived to be irrelevant to patient care.

Economists remind us that pursuing a given strategy means sacrificing gains from pursuing alternatives—the concept of “opportunity costs.” Not only are the potential gains from public or private ACO models limited, but the opportunity costs are steep. For hospitals and systems, they include recruiting and retaining physicians; improving hospital operations and profitability; reducing patient risk and improving their clinical experience; and commitment of clinician time to actual practice. Squandering scarce resources on a low-payoff strategy could prove costly for many health systems.

As industry veterans well know, our field is prone to periodic spasms of groupthink. The inevitability of population health is one of them. Though some may succeed in mastering population-health models, fee-for-service is likely to remain the core of the U.S. healthcare payment system for some time to come.

Jeff Goldsmith is president of Health Futures and an associate professor of public health sciences at the University of Virginia. Nathan Kaufman is managing director of Kaufman Strategic Advisors.

FDA Approves First-of-Kind Leg Prosthesis

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today approved the first prosthesis for above-the-knee amputations that does not rely on a conventional, cup-like socket fitting over the stump of a patient's leg.
With the new device, called Osseoanchored Prostheses for the Rehabilitation of Amputees (OPRA), an external prosthetic limb attaches to a fixture implanted in the patient's remaining thigh bone.


 There is a need for OPRA because not everyone with an above-the-knee amputation is a candidate for a prosthetic limb that connects to a customized stump socket, the FDA said in a news release. "Some patients may not have a long enough residual limb to properly fit a socket prosthesis or may have other conditions, such as scarring, pain, recurrent skin infections, or fluctuations in the shape of the residual limb that prevent them from being able to use a prosthesis with a socket," the agency said.










It takes two surgical procedures to install the OPRA device. First, a cylinder-shaped fixture is implanted in the remaining thigh bone. Six months later, a rod is inserted in the fixture. It extends through the skin at the bottom of the stump and connects to the prosthetic leg.
The FDA approved the new prosthesis through its humanitarian device exemption pathway, which dispenses with the effectiveness requirements found in its normal approval process. Devices can be designated a humanitarian device if they treat or diagnose a condition or disease affecting fewer than 4000 individuals in the United States each year.






Regina Holliday's Medical Advocacy Blog: Dark Willow and "73 Cents"


Pain and suffering are common to being human. It often seems to be the great catalyst that produces brilliance and genius in music, writing, painting and creative endeavour.


This is certainly true of Regina Holladay, a woman I have followed for many years. No, I am not a lurker, but a great admirer of this gifted lady who took lemons and made lemonade.


I hope you will feel what I feel every time I read her blog or see her paintings in The Walking Gallery. Every physician should see her exhibits.  Every physician should have one of her paintings on his back of his white coat, or in his office.


Regina Holliday's Medical Advocacy Blog: Dark Willow and "73 Cents"

Thursday, July 16, 2015

My Most Popular Blog (As told to me by Blogger)

Every once in awhile (like every day) I look back over my shoulder to see who is following me. (No, I am not paranoid, just narcissistic). I don't rank very high in social media or the blogosphere, and I have been at blogging since 2005. Many bloggers have fallen by the way in these ten years...some of them very good. Why am I still here ? I am a creature of habit...bad ones as well as good.  After ten years of dedication, discipline, good will, offending some,  and encouraging a few I am somehow pleased that I have had a forum to collate and be creative at times.

I average about 75-110 'hits' each day. The numbers are less than what I would expect or desire. However the interesing data that sticks out on Feedjit is the global impact of my blogs, U.S.,Canada and the highest and Romania, Thailand, India, Russian Federation, Phillipines, and our friends in the U.K.

Yesterday my count was over 230. It doubled and I had to know why. It was not the content. I looked at the title "revolutionary","healthy, #wellness". I have used those terms before, but never had this kind of response. I use buffer, newsana, digg, reddit, Google + and Facebook at times. (all the SEOs and experts on social media marketing advise that avenue.

Then it struck me. I use many hashtags, my most popular ones are #hcsm #hitsm #mhealth #cms #medicare #doctors and a few others I cannot remember. Yesterday I looked at the trending hashtags of twitter. I used the highest hashtags in my buffer.

Voila!

#espy

Go look it up.....who wuda known?