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Health Wonk Review

Up and kicking at the Health Business Blog. Don’t forget that the big kahuna of all these compendiums in health and medical blogging comes to THCB next Tuesday when we host Grand Rounds. (Yes, it’s the result of a bet which we lost!) Send your finest submissions to john at thehealthcareblog dot com. Please send us a link along with a HTML-ready synopsis of your piece. Third party nominations accepted! 

State of the Nation

Daschle out at HHS – Sharfstein in at FDA?

Oie_090203_daschle_634The early stages of the Obama administration are beginning to
resemble the Clinton years, which I 
observed from afar (I was a foreign
correspondent in Tokyo at the time). Take Zoe Baird and substitute Tom
Daschle, who dropped out of the running for Secretary of Health and
Human Services today because of tax and conflict-of-interest problems.
Take gays in the military and substitute putting in charge of the bank
bailout a man (Tim Geithner) who knows all the bankers from his years
at the New York Fed, seems overly solicitous to their needs, and has
his own tax problems.

Once again, a new Democratic president appears to have a semi-automatic weapon semi-permanently aimed at his foot.

Continue reading entry

The Case for Ron Wyden

Wyden_smile
Let me be the first to suggest that the President name Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) to be the next 
Secretary of HHS. The
withdrawal by Tom Daschle has underscored just how important it will be
for the President to name someone who can bring a number of key
strengths to the job. All day reporters have been asking me whom the best person was for the
President to now turn to and get his health care agenda back on track.

Seems to me Ron Wyden fits the bill.

Continue reading “The Case for Ron Wyden”

Berwick “Perfectly Designed” for HHS Secretary Post?

Several well-informed sources independently told me that Institute
for Healthcare Improvement founder Dr. Donald Berwick had been chosen
by the Obama administration to run the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services — a fascinating selection. (This article,
though, reminds us of Don’s background in public health and in
government commissions that deal with a broad swath of the policy
elite.)

But would Berwick continue to agree to serve under an HHS
secretary with less prestige, Congressional clout, presidential access
and deep understanding of health care than Tom Daschle? I’m presuming
here that Berwick already had a personal relationship with Daschle and
his senior advisers. Still, Berwick has spoken in recent months of
reform from “the inside out,” and there are few “insider” positions
with more influence over health care than being in charge of the
Medicare program.

Continue reading “Berwick “Perfectly Designed” for HHS Secretary Post? “

| Permalink
| Matthew Holt
Comments
(6)

Carmona could be logical pick for HHS job

Merrill Goozner
has been speculating about who will be nominated as the new Secretary
of HHS. He reviewed his most likely candidates (David Cutler or David
Blumenthal), and threw in a “dark horse” potential nominee: Ken Thorpe
(whom I’ve interviewed several times on this blog and spent time with during Obama’s inauguration ceremony).

Tommy Thompson told me that the nominee is likely to be a current or former democratic governor (such as Kathleen Sebelius or Howard Dean).

But I’ve been pondering the “long shot” question and think that
Goozner may have missed a more obvious choice – someone who works with
Ken Thorpe at the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease: former Surgeon General Dr. Richard Carmona.

Continue reading “Carmona could be logical pick for HHS job”

The Perils of Play or Not Pay

Remember those heady days with a newly-elected Democratic President
and solid Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress, when it
seemed that national health care reform was just around the corner?
Remember how, after the face-off between the liberals who wanted a
single-payer system and the conservatives who wanted as little change
as possible, the centrists took command? Remember the early 1990s, and
play-or-pay as the magical way to universal coverage?

So you do
remember play-or-pay? Be careful about admitting it. After the failure
of the Clinton plan and the collapse of similar state reforms in
Washington and Massachusetts, a mere mention of the term would cause
political eyes to roll, while its inclusion in any reform plan was
enough to kill the proposal dead, dead, dead.

Continue reading “The Perils of Play or Not Pay”

Economics | Permalink
| Matthew Holt
Comments
(11)

Obama remains committed to health reform, White House official tells wonks

Lambrew
President Obama remains committed to comprehensive health care reform
in 2009 and believes the declining economy emphasizes its urgency, a
top White House official told hundreds of health policy experts Monday
in Washington D.C.

“The current economic crisis has really highlighted the problems and put them under fluorescent lights,” said Jeanne Lambrew, deputy director of the newly created White House Office of Health Reform.

The Academy Health conference
is probably the wonkiest of meetings on the increasingly crowded health
reform conference circuit. University PhDs and private sector policy
analysts are here to discuss and assess the impacts of reform.

Continue reading “Obama remains committed to health reform, White House official tells wonks”

Stimulus bill offers docs big incentives for technology, but demands effective use

6a00d8341c909d53ef010537105c50970b-800wiThe economic stimulus bills are a great step forward for health information 
technology and medicine.

The two bills, “HR1” and “S1,” continue to barrel down the legislative track and continue being amended, but as currently written they create real incentives for adopting certified electronic health records – upwards of $40,000 per physician starting in 2011.

The legislation emphasizes rewarding designs that improve care and create a path for certification of records with added functions, such as decision support, order entry, connections to other systems and reporting on quality measures. The bill focuses on implementation by tying the physician bonuses to proven, effective use. The stimulus package also formalizes the Office of the National Coordinator for Health information Technology (ONC).

Of the nearly $900-billion stimulus package, about $20 Billion would go to Health and Human Services, with $6 billion for the Office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services. Of that $6 billion, $2 billion would be for the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) to support information technology.

Continue reading…

Commentology

The anonymous eDoc had this to say about Merrill Goozner's report that Obama may be considering Emory's Ken Thorpe as a replacement for Tom Daschle: 

"As a member of the Emory community, I know Ken Thorpe as a mover and a shaker in the area of public health with strong ties to the CDC (his office is literally next door to the CDC). He has Washington experience as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health Policy during the early years of the Clinton administration, and has testified before Congress a number of times on public health issues. There is no stronger advocate for public health and preventative care than Thorpe."

Continue reading…

Saving Medicare Advantage the Easy Way

Al Lewis

Brokers who enroll senior citizens in Medicare Advantage (MA) plan often make more on those members than the health plans themselves.  Up to $500 can be spent on a broker fee by the health plan, contributing to a total member acquisition cost which can exceed 10% of the premium dollar.  Even if Medicare Advantage plans can deliver the actual health benefit at a considerably lower cost than Medicare Fee For Service (FFS), it is possible that the entire savings could be consumed by member acquisition costs.

These costs are a tax on Medicare as a whole, a tax whose existence becomes simply unsupportable when the dire forecasts of Medicare solvency are considered.  And an unnecessary burden on health plans as we enter an era in which cutbacks are likely.

The solution is easy enough.  Where MA is available, make Fee For Service an Opt-Out rather than something which has to be “sold.”  When the benefits of both FFS and the various MA plans are laid side by side and people are told that they can simply select a plan from the chart or else complete a lot of paperwork to go FFS, more people will select the MA plans without a broker than would select those plans with an expensive broker if they are put in FFS originally and need to be “sold” to get into an MA plan.

Continue reading…

The AMA Wins a Round Against Accountability and Patient Information

On January 30th, a 3-judge DC appeals court overturned a lower court decision that would have forced public release of Medicare physician data. Writing for the majority in a split 2-1 judgment, Circuit Judge Karen LeCraft Henderson declared that

“The requested data does not serve any (freedom-of-information-related) public interest in disclosure. Accordingly, we need not balance the nonexistent public interest against every physician's substantial privacy interest in the Medicare payments he receives.”

But in a strongly worded dissent, Judge Judith Rogers, the third member of the ruling panel, found that the request by the consumer group, Consumer Checkbook, represented “a commanding and important public interest in disclosure of the data.”

Continue reading…

Daschle out at HHS – Sharfstein in at FDA?

Oie_090203_daschle_634The early stages of the Obama administration are beginning to
resemble the Clinton years, which I 
observed from afar (I was a foreign
correspondent in Tokyo at the time). Take Zoe Baird and substitute Tom
Daschle, who dropped out of the running for Secretary of Health and
Human Services today because of tax and conflict-of-interest problems.
Take gays in the military and substitute putting in charge of the bank
bailout a man (Tim Geithner) who knows all the bankers from his years
at the New York Fed, seems overly solicitous to their needs, and has
his own tax problems.

Once again, a new Democratic president appears to have a semi-automatic weapon semi-permanently aimed at his foot.

Continue reading…

The Case for Ron Wyden

Wyden_smile
Let me be the first to suggest that the President name Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) to be the next 
Secretary of HHS. The withdrawal by Tom Daschle has underscored just how important it will be for the President to name someone who can bring a number of key strengths to the job.

All day reporters have been asking me whom the best person was for the
President to now turn to and get his health care agenda back on track.

Seems to me Ron Wyden fits the bill.

Continue reading…

Berwick “Perfectly Designed” for HHS Secretary Post?

Several well-informed sources independently told me that Institute for Healthcare Improvement founder Dr. Donald Berwick had been chosen by the Obama administration to run the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services — a fascinating selection. (This article, though, reminds us of Don’s background in public health and in government commissions that deal with a broad swath of the policy elite.)

But would Berwick continue to agree to serve under an HHS secretary with less prestige, Congressional clout, presidential access and deep understanding of health care than Tom Daschle? I’m presuming here that Berwick already had a personal relationship with Daschle and his senior advisers. Still, Berwick has spoken in recent months of reform from “the inside out,” and there are few “insider” positions with more influence over health care than being in charge of the Medicare program.

Continue reading…

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