Saturday, September 17, 2016

Obamacare should have been named Emanuel Care




Ezekiel Emanuel's part in formulating the Affordable Care Act was overshadowed as it became known by President Obamas campaigning for it's passage. The bill was passed by the Republicans refusal to compromise on some important values to all Americans. The democrats won a political victory by expediency.  The clock was ticking and the moment was at hand.  Rather than passing an intelligent, logicall and well thought out law the ACA was passed with an end goal in mind, not the liklihood that it would work.

A major goal was to insure 40 million Amercans that were then uninsured.  The goal was not achieved, however missing it by tens of millions, leaving those still uninsured. Affordability is open to question.

I thought it would be a good time to republish my thoughts of November 2013,  

What They Said Before the Train Wreck: The Top 10 Worst Quotes Pushing ObamaCare


Patient-Centered Care? Not for This Patient |



Patient-Centered Care? Not for This Patient

And not for how many more?

Any situation such as the one described here sometimes defies any algorithm or ven diagram designed to assure continuity and totality of patient management.
The term seems to have evolved to assuage patient concerns that our health system is in run-away mode driven by self interest of providers, specialists, primary care physicians, insurance companies, pharma, and our government. Each has it's own self-interest.
Now in the era of 'big data' and analytics another powerful force is taking over. " the patient experience'.  Surveys present the opportunity to serve up how well providers, hospitals and insurers meet standards of compliance. In a world of check boxes rankings depend upon documented compliance with an arbitrary bar, and without looking deeper into the evaluation.
Given the task of measurement by managers the statistician becomes a 'king maker' with his numbers. At first glance knowing the numbers seems to be objective and factual. Most highly educated professionals know that statistics often lie, and are only probabilities. Statistics do not solve problems, they are merely one of the tools for managers, providers and others to support ideas and proposals for change-making.











Credits: Patient-Centered Care? Not for This Patient | Medpage Today
President Obama, in the Rose Garden, signed the so-called doc-fix bill, which permanently ended automatic Medicare payment cuts to doctors.


The 20 year war by physicians to rescind the SGR (sustained growth rate)  which had been designed to decrease the inflation of health cost has been placed. The result was a trade-off for MACRA and MIPS.

Administratively MACRA and MIPA are highly complex and require significant and expensive reorganization.  Will it save money? That is a good question. Has anyone seen a financial analysis of these requirements?

Friday, September 16, 2016

Agate Resources insiders made $34 million on sale of company that used public funds to provide health care to low-income Oregonians | Local | Eugene, Oregon

Is this a legal transaction ?

Is this an ethical transaction?

A small group of insiders in a private Eugene company that managed medical services for low-income Lane County residents made about $34 million when the company sold last year to a large out-of-state buyer, documents obtained by The Register-­Guard show.
For-profit Agate Resources owned and ran Trillium Community Health Plan, which oversees the Oregon Health Plan in Lane County, using federal and state government money to provide health care for about 94,000 low-income residents in Lane County and 2,000 in Douglas County.
The sale has been controversial because of concern that Agate held onto government Medicaid money to make itself attractive to a buyer, instead of spending more aggressively to provide doctors and medical services for Oregon Health Plan patients.
Early last year, 13,000 Lane County OHP patients did not have a primary care doctor. The problem wasn’t fully resolved until a year later.
Centene reported in its latest annual report that it bought Agate in September for $109 million. Agate shareholders divvied up that cash, according to the sale plan documents obtained by The Register-Guard.
Eleven Agate executives and directors became millionaires over night, the documents show. They include Chief Executive Officer Terry Coplin, who received the biggest single sale payout, of about $5.7 million, and Chief Financial Officer David Cole, who received about $4.2 million, the sale documents show.

Agate Resources insiders made $34 million on sale of company that used public funds to provide health care to low-income Oregonians | Local | Eugene, Oregon

Medicare's second-highest paid doc accepts three-year exclusion

One of the country’s highest paid physicians agreed to a three-year exclusion to settle claims that he billed Medicare for medically unnecessary cardiac procedures, according tothe Department of Justice.


Last year, the DOJ joined two whistleblower lawsuits against Asad Qamar, who owned the Institute of Cardiovascular Excellence in Ocala, Florida. The lawsuits alleged that he regularly billed for unnecessary procedures and violated the Anti-Kickback Statute by waiving Medicare copayments. Months later, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services banned Qamar from the Medicare program, prompting support from a Super PAC of former patients who were “disgusted and distressed” by the government’s portrayal of Qamar.
In addition to a three-year exclusion from Medicare, Qamar will pay $2 million and forgo an additional $5.3 million in suspended claims.
One thing to remember is that these occurences are rare. The real question is how medicare waits so long to act on these suspicious billings. The claims should be suspended pending adequate analysis.  The system needs to be proactive to avoid fraud and theft from the public tillers.
Fraud such as this is inexcusable, and the alleged perpetrator should have his medical license suspended  pending further analysis.  With this volume of surgery  his records also should be thoroughly examined. No doubt he owned his own surgery center and had no peer review. Were the procedures even indicated ?
These issues brought forth by the DOJ on behalf of CMS are difficult to analyze at times. There were a number of providers in this group and it may be that all were included under his billing identifications. No other providers were named in the action.
Here is the doctors letter of response to his patients. Bottom line...pay a fine, make retitution and you are still in business...all about money for the feds....not a real moral or ethical issue for them. Was he guilty.  I present.... you decide.  

Patients are easily fooled, especially if complication rates are low. Examine the Facebook pages of grateful happy patients. PR and marketing can be clever camouflage for deception and fraud

WebMD reports multiple physicians in this group. Dr Qamar may have been the only interventional cardiologists receiving referrals from the other cardiologists. The devil is in the details. It is a standard practice for cardiologists, and other interventional providers who no longer operate to see and diagnose patients with serious cardiac problems and refer them to someone who performs PCCT. It is also a proven fact that 'high volume' surgeons have fewer complications... We do not know all of the details which become murky and obscured by what is published by others. Either that or the doctor is a sociopath. Case closed.

Digital Health Space neither agrees or disagrees with any stipulated legal settlement between Dr Assad Qamar with CMS and/or HHS.  This is only opinion..

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Dropout by Dartmouth Raises Questions on Health Law Cost-Savings Effort - The New York Times



 In its quest to remake the nation’s health care system, the Obama administration has urged doctors and hospitals to band together to improve care and cut costs, using a model devised by researchers atDartmouth College.
But Dartmouth itself, facing mounting financial losses in the federal program, has dropped out, raising questions about the future of the new entities known as accountable care organizations, created under the Affordable Care Act.
The entities are in the vanguard of efforts under the health law to moveMedicare away from a disjointed fee-for-service system to a new model that rewards doctors who collaborate and coordinate care.
Medicare now has more than 400 accountable care organizations, serving eight million of the 57 million Medicare beneficiaries. Obama administration officials say the new entities are saving money while improving care, but some independent experts have questioned those claims.
“There’s little in the way of analysis or data about how A.C.O.s did in 2015,” said Dr. Ashish K. Jha, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health. “The results have not been a home run.”
In addition, he said, “there is little reason to think that A.C.O.s will bend the cost curve in a meaningful way” unless they bear more financial risk, sharing losses as well as savings with the government.
An evaluation for the federal government found that Dartmouth’s accountable care organization had reduced Medicare spending on hospital stays, medical procedures, imaging and tests. And it achieved goals for the quality of care. But it was still subject to financial penalties because it did not meet money-saving benchmarks set by federal officials.
“We were cutting costs and saving money and then paying a penalty on top of that,” said Dr. Robert A. Greene, an executive vice president of the Dartmouth-Hitchcock health system. “We would have loved to stay in the federal program, but it was just not sustainable.”
Dr. Elliott S. Fisher, the director of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, said: “It’s hard to achieve savings if, like Dartmouth, you are a low-cost provider to begin with. I helped design the model of accountable care organizations. So it’s sad that we could not make it work here.”
The idea of accountable care organizations and the name are generally traced back to a paper in 2006 by Dr. Fisher and colleagues at Dartmouth and its medical school. Writing in the journal Health Affairs, they reported that Medicare beneficiaries received most of their care from doctors who were directly or indirectly affiliated with a local hospital.
Rather than trying to measure the performance of individual doctors, they said, Medicare should assess the hospital and the doctors together and hold them jointly accountable for the cost and quality of care provided to a defined group of Medicare patients.
In effect, this was an effort to overcome the fragmented nature of most American health care and to replicate some of the benefits of managed care while still allowing Medicare patients to visit any doctors they wanted.
The new entities, unlike health maintenance organizations, “can’t tell you which health care providers to see” and “can’t limit your Medicare benefits,” the Obama administration tells beneficiaries. But, it says, doctors and hospitals working together in an accountable care organization can share information, including test results and prescription drug data, so it is easier for them to coordinate care for patients.
This result is the outcome of muddled thinking. True cost savings and reductions in fees would not be known for some time.  They also exclude the organizational costs and information technology (software development) to administer the new organization.
Accountable care organizations are one of many demonstration projects being conducted by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, an office created by the Affordable Care Act to test new ways of financing and delivering care. Under the law, the secretary of health and human services has sweeping power to expand such projects nationwide if she finds that they would reduce Medicare spending without harming the quality of care.
The center is testing new ways to pay for prescription drugs, medical devices, cancer care, hip replacement surgery and many other services.
The Congressional Budget Office predicts that the center’s activities will save $34 billion over the next 10 years, although it does not know which projects will save money.
Bottom line:
We want you to reorganize to save money, and we will penalize you if you don't or cannot.  (CMS Center for Innovation)






Dropout by Dartmouth Raises Questions on Health Law Cost-Savings Effort - The New York Times

8 Tips for Healthier Eyes

Infographic: 8 Tips for Healthy Eyes