Thursday, January 31, 2013

Nursing Schools Brace For Faculty Shortage

More From Shots - Health News HealthWhy Some Families Won't Qualify For Subsidized Health InsuranceHealthGut Microbes May Play Deadly Role In MalnutritionHealth CareBellevue Hospital's Slow Comeback After Superstorm SandyHealthDid Penicillin, Rather Than The Pill, Usher In Age Of Love?

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Payment Can Be Elusive For Medicare Beneficiaries In Personal Injury Cases

More From Shots - Health News HealthKeep Calm And Carry On, Except When It Comes To CancerHealthHey, Kid, You Could Be A 'Disaster Hero'HealthPayment Can Be Elusive For Medicare Beneficiaries In Personal Injury CasesHealthHanging A Price Tag On Radiology Tests Didn't Change Doctors' Habits

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Monday, January 28, 2013

These Are The Tweets That Will Get A Doctor In Trouble

More From Shots - Health News HealthMercy For Robots? Experiment Tests How Humans Relate To MachinesHealthTo Fight Addiction, FDA Advisers Endorse Limits On VicodinHealthWalk While You Talk: The Meeting Goes MobileHealthNew Norovirus Strain Rips Through The U.S.

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Presbyterians, TIAA-CREF hear call to divest from private health insurance firms

In the midst of a fierce debate on the national level around the Supreme Court�s decision to uphold the Affordable Care Act, the Divestment Campaign for Health Care made its official debut. Its stated mission: �to expose how the health insurance industry puts the need for profit above the needs of patients and to escalate public support for total removal of the private health insurance companies from our nation�s health care.�

Leading advocacy organizations dedicated to single-payer health care are committed to pursuing a divestment campaign from private health insurance companies in order to transform the treatment of health care as a commodity into a basic human right for all people in the U.S.

�We are responsible for our investments, and particularly as health care workers and patients, we see the immorality of the private health insurance companies as they deny payment for care in order to create huge profits for shareholders. Those who stand for a just and equitable health care system must recognize the corrupting force of the private health insurance industry on our political process that costs tens of thousands of lives every year in addition to being a huge financial drain,� states Dr. Rob Stone, M.D.

The Presbyterian Church (USA) became the first major institution to take steps towards divestment from private health insurance. On July 7th, the church�s national assembly unanimously passed a resolution stating they will �evaluate the variance between church principles of universal access and affordability on the one hand and corporate objectives on the other. It will also assess the likelihood of significant change in corporate behavior.�

The resolution passed after moving testimony was delivered by Rev. Dr. Johanna W.H. van Wijk-Bos, the widow of the original author of the resolution, Rev. A. David Bos who passed away from a sudden case of pneumonia last year, stating before the committee:

�As he lay in the hospital, struggling with the oxygen mask provided to give his lungs the air they needed, he spoke haltingly what would be his last words on this earth: �How much will this cost?� He died six days later. Three weeks after his death a representative from our health insurance company informed me in a telephone call that they rejected the claim to pay for my husband�s hospitalization and medical costs because of a �pre-existing condition.�”

Rev. Dr. van Wijk-Bos felt confident the work they had done would lead to full exposure of these corrupt companies because �corporate interests are incompatible with patient care.�

On the heels of this successful endorsement from the Presbyterian Church, activists gathered inside and outside the pension fund giant TIAA-CREF�s shareholder meeting in New York City to call attention to their holdings in private health insurance. Members of TIAA-CREF were shocked to learn that private health insurance companies are considered part of their socially responsible investment portfolio.

Sandy Fox, psychiatric social worker from Pittsburgh, PA, received applause from the other attendees when she asked President and CEO Roger Ferguson, Jr. about these holdings:

“How do you justify including health insurance companies–CIGNA, Humana, Aetna, Coventry, and WellPoint– in CREF-Social Choice? Private health insurance companies add enormous cost but no value to health care. Furthermore, these companies violate 3 of the 5 social criteria for inclusion in the fund including:

1) NOT �devoted to human rights;�

2) NOT �dedicated to producing high-quality and safe products;� and

3) NOT �managed in an exemplary and ethical manner.�

…We come to you today to demand that you immediately divest from these ruthless companies.�

Shortly before the meeting, the Campaign launched a petition to TIAA-CREF calling for them to move their money out of private health insurance receiving nearly 2000 signers in just a few days.

The Divestment Campaign for Health Care calls upon all people of conscience to shed light on the duplicitous practices that continue in the private health insurance industry. As the Campaign�s mission statement says �We have nothing to lose. Health insurance companies have everything to lose as their stock prices drop and their influence wanes. Go to your religious organization, your union, your pension plan, your 401k advisor, your university endowment, your city council, your friends and neighbors, and tell them it�s time to get the health insurers out!�

The ACA Leaves Out, Cuts Funds for Uninsured Immigrants

From the New York Times –

Hospitals Worry Over Cut in Fund for Uninsured

Community Health Centers Funding Cut

President Obama�s health care law is putting new strains on some of the nation�s most hard-pressed hospitals, by cutting aid they use to pay for emergency care for illegal immigrants, which they have long been required to provide.

The federal government has been spending $20 billion annually to reimburse these hospitals � most in poor urban and rural areas � for treating more than their share of the uninsured, including illegal immigrants. The health care law will eventually cut that money in half, based on the premise that fewer people will lack insurance after the law takes effect.

But the estimated 11 million people now living illegally in the United States are not covered by the health care law. Its sponsors, seeking to sidestep the contentious debate over immigration, excluded them from the law�s benefits.

As a result, so-called safety-net hospitals said the cuts would deal a severe blow to their finances.

The hospitals are coming under this pressure because many of their uninsured patients are illegal immigrants, and because their large pools of uninsured or poorly insured patients are not expected to be reduced significantly under the Affordable Care Act, even as federal aid shrinks.

The hospitals range from prominent public ones, like Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan, to neighborhood mainstays like Lutheran Medical Center in Brooklyn and Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego. They include small rural outposts like Othello Community Hospital in Washington State, which receives a steady flow of farmworkers who live in the country illegally.

No matter where they are, all hospitals are obliged under federal law to treat anyone who arrives at the emergency room, regardless of their immigration status.

�That�s the 800-pound gorilla in the room, and not just in New York � in Texas, in California, in Florida,� Lutheran�s chief executive, Wendy Z. Goldstein, said.

Lutheran Medical Center is in the Sunset Park neighborhood, where low-wage earning Chinese and Latino communities converge near an expressway. Hospitals are not allowed to record patients� immigration status, but Ms. Goldstein estimated that 20 percent of its patients were what she called �the undocumented � not only uninsured, but uninsurable.�

She said Congressional staff members acknowledged that the health care law would scale back the money that helps pay for emergency care for such patients, but were reluctant to tackle the issue.

�I was told in Washington that they understand that this is a problem, but immigration is just too hot to touch,� she said.

The Affordable Care Act sets up state exchanges to reduce the cost of commercial health insurance, but people must prove citizenship or legal immigration status to take part. They must show similar documentation to apply for Medicaid benefits that are expanded under the law.

The act did call for increasing a little-known national network of 1,200 community health centers that provide primary care to the needy, regardless of their immigration status. But that plan, which could potentially steer more of the uninsured away from costly hospital care, was curtailed by Congressional budget cuts last year.

That leaves hospitals like Lutheran, which is nonprofit and has run a string of such primary care centers for 40 years, facing cuts at both ends.

On a recent weekday in Lutheran�s emergency room, a Chinese mother of two stared sadly through the porthole of an isolation unit. The woman had active tuberculosis and needed surgery to drain fluid from one lung, said Josh Liu, a patient liaison.

The disease had been discovered during a checkup at one of Lutheran�s primary care centers, where the sliding scale fee starts at $15. But the woman, an illegal immigrant, had no way to pay for the surgery.

Another patient, a gaunt 44-year-old man from Ecuador, had been in New York eight years, installing wood floors, one in Rockefeller Center. The man had been afraid to seek care because he feared deportation. Finally, the pain in his stomach was too much to bear.

Dr. Daniel J. Giaccio, leading the residents on their rounds, used the notches on the man�s worn belt to underscore his diagnosis, severe B-12 deficiency anemia. The woodworker had lost 30 pounds in a month, and his hands and feet were numb. Reversing the damage could take months.

�This is a severe case of sensory loss,� Dr. Giaccio said. �Usually we pick it up much sooner.�

In some states, including New York, hospitals caring for illegal immigrants in life-threatening situations can seek payment case by case, from a program known as emergency Medicaid. But the program has many restrictions and will not make up for the cuts in the $20 billion pool, hospital executives said.

Continue reading…

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Targeting Single-Payer Advocates

President Obama�s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act sucks. It isn�t change in the dysfunctional American health care system that any one should believe in or defend. And yet that is exactly what liberals and progressives are doing. Led by spin doctors at The Nation, they�re spinning ObamaRomneyCare (ORC), and that�s what it should be called, as if it were a step in the right direction. As if it were the only outcome of the national health care reform debate in 2009.

The individual mandate that compels millions of people to purchase unaffordable underinsurance and then punishes them with a fine if they don�t, and the transfer of $447 billion in tax payer money to the health insurers were deal breakers for advocates of a single-payer, national health care system. It doesn�t make sense to give the corporations that cause the health care crisis more profits and power in exchange for a modest expansion of Medicaid and a series of mostly rhetorical reforms that the insurance industry and employers are already undermining. It�s no different than giving the bankers responsible for crashing the world financial system billions of dollars in bail out money. How�s that working for Americans?

Single-payer (SP) supporters opposed the passage of ORC and the Supreme Court decision forcing people to buy expensive, malfunctioning products from corporations that bankrupt, deny care or kill them. Many expressed �relief� at the decision to uphold ORC. That feeling was ephemeral as the implications of the Medicaid decision rippled across the country. The Supreme Court ruled that threatening to withdraw Medicaid funding from states that failed to expand their programs was coercive �economic dragooning.� But why isn�t the individual mandate �economic dragooning?�

Seven Republican governors already said they would opt out and dozens are taking a wait and see approach. The liberals told us we had to support ORC if only because 17 million people would get coverage through Medicaid. Now that reform is being scaled back. The Medicaid debacle illustrates why health care reform has to be federally funded and national in scope.

It�s useful to quote Obama on health care before he was president. He actually got it. Candidate Obama said that forcing the uninsured to buy insurance was like forcing the homeless to buy homes and he added, �I don�t have such a mandate because I don�t think the problem is that people don�t want health insurance, it�s that they can�t afford it.�

Senator Obama in 2005: �I happen to be a proponent of a single-payer, universal health care program. I see no reason why the United States of America, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, spending 14 percent of its gross national product on health care, cannot provide basic health insurance to everybody.�

Any reform that leaves 23 million people uninsured, that proudly excludes undocumented immigrants, and doesn�t cover abortion (watch Obama�s speech on health care to Congress in 2009, it�s sickening) doesn�t deserve one shred of support.

SP activists consistently called out Obama�s hypocrisy and challenged him to do the right thing. Liberal, Democratic astroturf organizations like Health Care for America Now (HCAN) worked overtime to convince people that there was no �political will� in Washington for SP. Groups like HCAN always surface when movements for fundamental reform rise. Their job is to dumb down expectations and channel activist�s energy into incremental reforms that help the fewest people and don�t threaten the power or the profits of the status quo. HCAN wasn�t an ally in the struggle for single-payer, they were a deliberate obstacle to it.

The Nation has published a bevy of articles that blindly and breathlessly spin ORC, gloss over its fatal flaws, and bully those who criticize it. The election fear factor has ramped up their dishonest defense of ORC. Now it�s all about reelecting Obama and who gives a damn that his �signature� legislation is unraveling.

David Cole who calls the uninsured �free-riders,� tied himself into a Gordian knot explaining why it was constitutional to force people to buy private health insurance. Is it a tax or is it a penalty? Who cares? It�s wrong either way. If a Republican president wanted the Supreme Court to uphold the individual mandate (say Bush or Romney) he would�ve argued the opposite. Apoplectic, Cole would have thundered: �How dare those Republicans mandate us to buy health insurance!� Cole constantly derides SP advocates with the nonsensical and irksome phrase, �Don�t make the perfect the enemy of the good.� But a single-payer system is not perfect. It�s simply good because it solves the health care crisis.

Katha Pollitt�s article, �Obamacare (s) for Women� is positively gushing about ORC. She thinks that �Progressive women should be more enthusiastic about Obama.� Pollitt admits upfront, though, that Obama �compromised abortion right out of health care reform.� But somehow that�s okay for one of the nation�s leading feminists. She lists seven ways that ORC will help women but every single one of them is under sustained attack and could be reversed. And gender rating hasn�t ended. In the new insurance exchanges, large group plans with more than 100 employees will be allowed to continue this sexist practice.

Wendell Potter is leading the attack on SP activists. In his article, Health Care Advocates: Time to Bury the Hatchet, he pejoratively calls members of Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) and Health Care NOW! �die-hards.� He writes ��we are still furious at the president and the Democrats for their baffling decision not to give single-payer legislation a decent hearing and for compromising too early and too often, in their view, with the special interests.� Damn right single-payer supporters are angry! And so are millions of Americans who don�t support ORC and not because they�re Republicans or Tea Party nut jobs. No doubt many are Democrats. They want a government funded health care system that eliminates the role of private, for-profit insurers.

Potter, whose book Deadly Spin chronicles the chicanery of his former employer Cigna brilliantly, ought to be a leading voice against ORC because as he writes, �It�s a windfall for the insurers.� As an ex-insider who spun PR daily, including the denial of a liver transplant to 17-year-old Nataline Sarkisyan who died, Potter has written some of the most powerful exposes and made compelling arguments for why the insurance industry must be put out of business. Period. He explains how there isn�t one reform these killers can�t gut or get around. And yet there he was on the steps of the Supreme Court providing commentary for Democracy Now! on why ORC had to be upheld. His former bosses at Humana and Cigna must have relished the delicious irony: Potter denounces the insurers and then Potter defends the Supreme Court decision giving the insurers constitutional rights, billions in subsidies and a mandate to rip off millions of new, coerced customers.

Potter charges SP advocates with failing to create a strategy, but that�s not true. For two decades PNHP has been organizing physicians and educating them about single-payer � no easy job given doctor�s vociferous opposition. Because of PNHP�s tireless work and the uncompromising leadership of Dr. Quentin Young, a majority of physicians now support a government financed health care system. That is a huge triumph! PNHP has over 18,000 members and is growing.

Health Care NOW! has a strategy of grassroots, community organizing. Throughout 2009, dozens of chapters across the country organized meetings, marches, demonstrations and �bird dogged� politicians. Hundreds of activists were arrested in a series of sit-ins at insurance company headquarters. Our movement took a quantum leap forward but unfortunately it wasn�t large enough to win single-payer.

This is our die-hard strategy: build a large civil rights movement for health care justice that forces whatever party is in power to enact a single-payer, national health care system. There is no short cut. And there is no compromising on the necessity to abolish the health insurance industry.

And where was Wendell Potter during all this activism? He was working with HCAN for the public option and then for passage of ORC. Potter made our job harder � not only did SP advocates have to fight Obama administration promises and lies, we had to wage a fight against the well funded, toxic influence of HCAN that consistently told people single-payer was off the table, so give it up.

Like President Obama, the health insurance industry has a �kill list.� Nataline Sarkisyan was on it. Currently, 84,000 people die every year because they lack access to health care. They�re on the kill list. We need to sharpen the blade of the hatchet and cut the head off the corporations that kill for profit.

Helen Redmond writes about health care and the war on drugs. She can be reached at: redmondmadrid@yahoo.com

Her new documentary about health care is called: The Vampires of Daylight: Driving a Stake Through the Heart of the Health Insurance corporations. Website: thevampiresofdaylight.com

Texas Slow To Review Health Insurance Rate Hikes

More From Shots - Health News HealthTo Fight Addiction, FDA Advisers Endorse Limits On VicodinHealthWalk While You Talk: The Meeting Goes MobileHealthNew Norovirus Strain Rips Through The U.S.HealthFighting Misconceptions About Sickle Cell Disease In The ER

More From Shots - Health News

Comments   You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login / Register

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.