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PHARMA/POLICY: Part D Costs–Shurely shome mistake, Ed?
An article called West ‘on verge of medical crisis’ on how health care is all screwed up in the UK conservative newspaper The Daily Telegraph has this rather interesting subheader.
Western nations are on the brink of a crisis in medical services, according to the man credited with curbing the rise in health care spending in America.
Given that health care costs in America have been rising fast for the last 40 years apart from a brief period in the mid-1990s, I was very keen to find out who this hidden genius was. I initially suspected that Mark McClellan would be a little surprised to find out what the Torygraph thinks he’s responsible for! But reading down in the article, it appears that the boaster is McClellan himself.
Dr McClellan has taken a leaf from the Altman book. After years in which the Medicare budget exceeded projections, he managed to keep drug spending 40 per cent below projections. This "unprecedented" improvement followed moves to encourage patients to take generic rather than brand-name prescription drugs. The key was information, giving patients the wherewithal to see for themselves that generic drugs were as effective as their pricey counterparts, he told the meeting. Dr McClellan has taken a leaf from the Altman book. After years in which the Medicare budget exceeded projections, he managed to keep drug spending 40 per cent below projections. This "unprecedented" improvement followed moves to encourage patients to take generic rather than brand-name prescription drugs. The key was information, giving patients the wherewithal to see for themselves that generic drugs were as effective as their pricey counterparts, he told the meeting.
POLICY: What about a fair shake for home care workers? by Mary Kay Henry, SEIU
Mary Kay Henry is an Executive Vice President of the SEIU, the nation’s largest health care
union where she’s the head of the union’s Health Systems Division. The SEIU has been very active in health care generally, not least in their “alliance” with Wal-Mart and others on national reform. But there are other issues too that they care about. Here’s another issue that concerns her and probably given where we’re going we should all be concerned about them. What about fair share for the poorest care givers—home care aides?
Seventy-three-year-old Evelyn Coke worked for 20 years as a home care attendant for the elderly for sometimes as many as 24 hours a day, four days a week,. She occasionally even slept overnight at her clients’ homes so she could be there for them if they needed her. Unfortunately, because of the “companionship exemption” under the Fair Labor Standards Act, she rarely ever received overtime pay for the extended hours she put in. Today Evelyn stands alone as the sole plaintiff awaiting a Supreme Court decision. How the justices rule on Long Island Care at Home Ltd v. Coke might mean larger paychecks, overtime coverage, and ultimately a reduction in high turnover, which could go a long way to reducing shortages in one of the nation’s fastest growing occupations — home care workers.
As SEIU continues promoting new health care solutions, we must
remember the contributions of health care industry workers — especially
in the midst of a looming “care gap” and an aging elderly population
expected to grow 40% by 2030. This “care gap” is present in nursing
homes, assisted living facilities, and home and community-based care
across the country. As the number of elderly Americans increases
dramatically, the long-term care industry is not keeping pace. We are
barreling toward a crisis, and it is going to take some innovative
thinking and some radically different ways of doing things to avert
what could be a disaster for a generation of Baby Boomers who will all
too soon hit their “golden years.”
TECH: Community for Connected Health
We’d like to welcome aboard THCB ‘s latest sponsor, Cisco’s Community for Connected Health. Connected Health’s core focus is to provide value to caregivers, end-users, CIOs and other IT professionals through education, interaction and access to Cisco healthcare and technology experts. Find out more at the Community for Connected Health web site.
BLOGS: Health wonk review
Up at The Sentinel Effect.
POLICY/POLITICS: The cautious approach
I have another of my occasional pieces up at the Guardian’s Comment is Free site, trying to make sense of American health care for an international audience. I take aim at how the cautious nature of the main Democratic front-runners health care proposals doesn’t match their fiery rhetoric — Comment is free: The cautious approach.
Even though Iraq seems to have sucked all the oxygen out of American
political life at the moment – even Cindy Sheehan has given up and gone
home – healthcare does remain the largest domestic issue.Several weeks have passed since the Democratic candidates for
president had a debate about healthcare. It’s interesting that despite
an attempt by probable Republican candidate Fred Thompson to take on
documentary filmmaker Michael Moore over the topic, none of the front
runners on the Republican side have made much mention of healthcare at
all. This is doubly curious as one of them, former Massachusetts
Governor Mitt Romney, left office having at least partially helped
make his state the most advanced healthcare reform " laboratory" of
them all. But apparently among the conservatives and evangelicals who
dominate the Republican primaries, the issue of universal healthcare is
not seen as a great vote-getter – a worldview the Republicans might
come to regret. Continue.
THCB Reader mail
In response to our post announcing Health 2.0 San Francisco, Matt Guldin writes:
Regardless of whether or not we go to a single-payer system, move to a
consumer-directed health care world, or stay pretty much status quo,
the administrative and clinical tools & infrastructure that are
being generated as part of "Health 2.0" will be here to stay.
Chad Markson liked the podcast interview with AthenaHealth CEO Jonathan Bush. He had this to say:
"This guy is a rock star – just what are industry needs. What a great
interview – took a while to get going but what a great exchange. I
think Bush nailed the current market dynamics. Will be interesting to
see how things play out."
NDDB responds to this week’s post on the physician rating site’s
spat with Revolution Health:
“Please don’t play this off as a competition squabble. Like
I said, NDDB is not the only site out there, RateMDs and many others are as
well, and I think they all do a great job. I’ve not seen one I had a problem
with. They do what they say they are doing, they don’t make outrageous claims,
and they don’t claim to be "revolutionary," even though some of them
could.”
Thomas Goetz, the author of the New York Times op-ed on WorldVista, had
a reaction to yesterday’s "Put this one down in the somewhat bizarre
category" critiquing his piece on the open source system. He writes:
“Sounds like you didn’t quite read the piece – the whole
point is that WorldVista has been certified as ready for the market, meaning
it’s available now. Not sure why you think a 2 year old story disproves that…”
To which Matthew responds:
“Yeah but … WorldVista isn’t ready for prime-time for a physician’s office.
There isn’t really a support network to put it in place, and as I mentioned the
office-ready version isn’t — unless it snuck by me somehow. AND the biggest cost of the ambulatory EMR is
not the software, it’s getting it up and running. Which is harder with these
open source models.I am with you in spirit (honestly! whatever my other commenters think). I
just think we need to pay and force doctors to use the EMR. Telling them to get
on VistA isn’t going to do it."
In response to the debate set off by Healthcare Partners of Southern California’s recent decision to
publish prices for certain procedures, frequent contributor Dr. Eric Novack writes in to say:
Many physicians have recoiled against the idea of insurance companies
publishing contracted rates for services. I disagree. As I believe I stated at THCB previously, once
all rates are truly transparent, a remarkable thing will happen: Doctors no
longer need to be a part of insurance plans. They can just publish their own
rates, eliminate much of their billing staff, and go simply assist patients in
filing claims when the dollars amount is high enough to warrant it.And the
total cost of healthcare would decrease.
Lastly, in response to an earlier post on the Edwards plan,
Ryan writes: “Americans pay more per person for healthcare than socialized
countries. Sadly, many of our increased costs are because the rest of the world
is socialized.”
THCB Sponsorships
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TECH: A robot train (very cute)

Aethon (whom I interviewed at HIMSS) make the TUG, an autonomous robot which moves stuff around hospitals. And for children’s hospitals, they’ve made a rather more fun version named JR.Go read the story of how JR came to life at Robots.net
TECH/HEALTH2.0: Healthcamp2
I was sick on Saturday plus had had certain domestic issues arise after telling my fiancee that I was planning on abandoning her for work on a Saturday that was, err, unpaid. So I missed HealthCamp2. But it looked pretty interesting.
Mary Kay Henry is an Executive Vice President of the SEIU, the nation’s largest health care