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Above the Fold

POLITICS/POLICY/HEALTH PLANS: On the Blues’ political giving & CDHP complexity

Says here that Blues Plans Favor Republicans With Their 2006 Campaign Contributions. But I think what it means is that they’re favoring incumbents. Having said that and reading the polls and the tea leaves, I think the Blues might think about evening up those contributions given that the Congress is as likely to flip over his year as any since 1994, and that the Blue Dog Democrats are the crowd most traditionally aligned with their interests.

Meanwhile, Joe Paduda is showing that the CDHP is even more confusing to consumers than ordinary health plans. Well, when United bought the shysters at Golden Rule, you didn’t actually think that they were going to reform them, did you?

 

POLICY/THE INDUSTRY: Nice work if you can get it

So for rewriting Alain Enthoven’s lectures from the late 1980s and missing the main points, apparently Michael Porter is being paid $50,000 a day, and that is a discount from his apparently usual fee of $100,000! Damn, that’s nice work and yes I am very jealous. Hopefully I’ll soon have his co-author Elizabeth Teisberg on THCB to explain what I don’t understand about their book which I’m chunking through at the moment.

When I said he was sinking in the health care quagmire, I should have said that he would be rolling in it.

PHYSICIANS/INDUSTRY: Retail clinics

I recently met Michael Howe who is CEO of MinuteClinic, and he had the good graces to call me back and talk on the day that they sold out to CVS. Very classy as it would have been easy to blow me off.

So the rumor quoted here is that CVS paid $170m for the company—certainly an endorsement that they at least think that retail NP clinics are real. But if you want to really know more, look at this new report on retail clinics from the California Health Care Foundation written by Mary Kaye Scott. Very nice summary indeed.

PHARMA/CONSUMERS: Med Solutions

This is more of a public service announcement, but Med Solutions offers a service which can put you in touch with all the patient assistance programs from big Pharma. It looks to be well worth checking out if you need drugs and can’t afford them.

BLOGS: Medpundit’s back

My fiancee complains when I come to bed late after blogging. Medpundit’s family complained when she ranted to them instead of to us. So she’s back! Hi Syd and welcome back!

HOSPITALS/POLICY: Unhealthy & unhappy Returns from BillMon

I missed this but last week my favorite writer on the entire Internet, Billmon at the Whiskey Bar, wrote about health care. 99% of his posts are about foreign policy, from an extremely cynical point of view. But this time he looked at the capital problems facing hospitals and his extrapolating guess is that to maintain the profitability of hospitals we will soon be allowing emergency rooms to turf people out to die in the streets. His piece on the future of EMTALA (not that he uses the term, but he clearly understands it) is called Unhealthy Returns.

THCB – You’ve got mail!

Or we’ve got mail. Or we’ve all got mail. Or something … 

After much late night heroism by THCB’s trusty (and highly sensitive) tech staff, the THCB email list is up and running. If you’d like to get a quick email in your inbox with a rundown of new posts – with news flashes for important stories – you can sign up here.

If you subscribed to the list in its earlier incarnation, there’s no need to do so again.

PHARMA/POLICY: Medicaid gets screwed over on best price, Ignagni fibbing again.

A little while ago I sat through a webcast starring my favorite factually challenged health plan lobbyist. Karen Ignagni said this about the costs of pharmaceuticals for Medicaid that are now bought instead by the private plans working under Part D:

"I’m hearing shock from (state) Medicaid directors that we’re getting better prices than they are"

At the time I postulated this

Ignagni is either lying here
(or massively overstating the truth from a few anecdotes), or going to
find a few men in sharp suits from the rich part of K street funded by
big Pharma coming down to see her carrying baseball bats.

You see, Medicaid plans get from pharma manufacturers
what’s known as “best price”. In other words if they give a better
price to another customer, they also have to give that price to
Medicaid. Medicaid is still of course buying its drugs for its
non-Medicare dual eligible population. The drug companies know this, so
I doubt that what she’s saying is true. But if it is true that
Ignagni’s health plan members are getting a better price than the
states are, then the states can go back to the pharma manufacturers to
get a better rebate — oh, and also prosecute Pharma companies for fraud
over not giving them best price, as has happened many times.

And today writing in the New York Times Milt Freudenheim has picked on the issue, which he calls  a Windfall From Shifts to Medicare. So was Ignagni telling the truth? Were the prices that Medicaid is now paying for its drugs via Part D lower than they were paying under the best price regime? Well take a wild guess.

Under that program, as it turns out, the prices paid by insurers, and eventually the taxpayer, for the medications given to those transferred are likely to be higher than what was paid under the federal-state Medicaid programs for the poor.

McLellan is also quoting the line that Part D is getting better prices, but the article has a raft of evidence suggesting that the drug companies think they’re doing better, and the states are being asked to return more under the "clawbacks"–the amount they are being billed as they no longer have to provide drugs for the dual eligibles–than if they’d maintained their own programs. Several states are suing the Feds about that.

Meanwhile, I still think that they ought to be able to go to the drug companies and get "best price" for the rest of their Medicaid drugs (unless someone can tell me they have an exemption under the law). Which I guess in the end may make this a wash, if the drug companies have to provide even cheaper Medicaid drugs.

But for now it’s just more evidence that Part D is a windfall for drug companies and health plans, and that AHIP’s President has been caught being extremely economical with the truth. Not exactly news, I know.

Hospitals: Doctor in Katrina case arrested

From THCB’s NEW YORK DESK – Authorities in
Louisiana have arrested a doctor and two nurses in connection with the deaths
of scores of elderly patients at  Memorial Medical Center in New Orleans during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Attorney General Charles Foti’s office said late yesterday that Dr. Ana Pou and nurses Cheri
Landry and Laura Bubo have been charged with murder in the deaths.  A spokeswoman for his office says: “We’re not calling this
euthanasia. We’re not calling this mercy killings. This is second-degree murder."Industry observers have wondered for months what  impact criminal charges would have on Tenet, which owns Memorial and three other hospitals in New Orleans. We now get to find out.  On Tuesday, the company announced that it is selling Memorial and two other hospitals to the local Ochsner Health System. It is not clear how the charges will affect the deal.

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