Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2011

Health Care Reform Has Begun! So how does it benefit you and yours?

Democrats.org has a cool quick-tool to find out how Health Reform now specifically helps you and the people you know: "Right now, the Affordable Care Act is helping millions of Americans like you, your friends, and family. Take a minute to answer the questions below and find out how health reform helps you and your nearest and dearest."

Also, here is a pointed summary from Doctors for America--spread the word!:

Moving Forward: 10 Ways Health Reform is Helping America

Here are 10 ways health reform is moving forward. Please share this far and wide! 
1. Patients are no longer threatened with lifetime caps on coverage.  Families no longer have to make the hard choices of delaying care or facing bankruptcy.
2. Children with pre-existing conditions are no longer being denied coverage.  Insurance companies can no longer deny coverage to children under the age of 19 because of a pre-existing condition or disability.
3. Young adults are getting covered on their parents’ insurance.  Many medical students in Doctors for America are now covered thanks to this provision.  Over 1.2 million people age 19-26 are eligible!    
4. Medicare fraud prevention is getting ratcheted up!  $350 million was invested in 2010 for enhanced efforts to prevent criminals from defrauding Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP – contributing to a record $4 billion recovered in 2010.
5. People and communities are focusing efforts on preventing disease.  $750 million in 2010 and $500 million in 2011 have already gone to programs in tobacco cessation, obesity prevention, care coordination, behavioral health, and more in all 50 states.
6. Seniors (4 million of them!) are getting help with prescription drugs.   Seniors in every state got rebate checks in 2010.  In 2011, they get a 50% discount on brand-name drugs in the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap – so they don’t have to cut pills to make them last longer!
7. Hospitals are gearing up to improve quality and safety.  Medicare reimbursement changes in 2012 are getting hospitals around the country to step up efforts to prevent hospital-acquired infections and to keep people from landing back in the hospital within 30 days of going home.
8. Small businesses are getting help covering employees.  Up to 4 million small businesses that employ 16 million people are eligible for 35% tax credits on health insurance premiums right now.  Note: small businesses will not be required to buy insurance under the law.
9. Insurance companies have a new cap on profits.  As of January 1, insurance companies have to spend at least 80% of premium dollars on health care. In the large-group market (big employers), they must spend at least 85% on health care -- so more of our premium dollars go to health instead of corporate vacations and CEO bonuses.
10. We are training thousands more health care providers to take care of the population.  $320 million in grants is already boosting primary care residency programs, training physician assistants, and helping states create innovative plans for their unique health care workforce needs.


Are you a doctor or medical student?  Sign our pledge to Return to Core Values as we work together to build a patient-centered health care system that puts justice, integrity, and compassion first!

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Doctors for America: Take action TODAY and "Tell Congress To Vote No On Repeal"

"On Wed, January 19th, the House of Representatives is voting on a bill to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), just as many of the new provisions take effect. As physicians and medical students, we see firsthand the need for health reform. Already, many of our patient's lives are improving because of reform.

Thousands of doctors have stood up to tell Congress to let health reform move forward.  Congress needs to hear your voice again!  Take a look below for the phone number and sample script.  Then call your Representative today and tell to vote NO on repealing health reform.

Note: if you are not a doctor or medical student, you're welcome to use our call Congress tool for the general public!


Fill out the form below so we can find your congress members' phone numbers for you to call..."  [Go to webpage]

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Friday, October 1, 2010

"Health Reform Hits Main Street" (incredible, & INCREDIBLY educational short animated movie featuring the "YouToons")

Pssssst... Pass this on to at least 10 friends--and help this amazing, short, animated movie go viral!!!
"Confused about how the new health reform law really works? This short, animated movie -- featuring the "YouToons" -- explains the problems with the current health care system, the changes that are happening now, and the big changes coming in 2014."

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Sunday, April 11, 2010

Center for American Progress: "How Health Reform Really Works"

Health Care Reform Bill has become Law.  It's a big change--or as a certain VP said on live TV, "...this is a big f*cking deal."

With that expletive magnitude of a change, you'd be the exception if you weren't at least a little confused about all of its many components.

Below's a great succinct, clear video (w/ animation!) laying out the new land.  On the other hand, there's plenty of misinformation out there these days, even talk of fear-mongerers trying to get the health reform law repealed--so help spread the word now on what Reform really means for us!

In addition to the Center for American Progress's video below, Organizing for America also has a series of brief videos on "Benefits of Reform," tailored to your own state, etc., on this webpage.

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Tuesday, April 6, 2010

NY Times: "New Health Initiatives Put Spotlight on Prevention"

New Health Initiatives Put Spotlight on Prevention
By ROBERT PEAR
Published: April 4, 2010

(To read full article, click here.)
WASHINGTON — Amid all the rancor leading up to passage of the new health care law, Congress with little fanfare approved a set of wide-ranging public initiatives to prevent disease and encourage healthy behavior.

...Under the law, chain restaurants will have to provide nutrition information on their menus. Employers must provide “reasonable break time” for nursing mothers.

Health insurance companies will soon have to cover all recommended screenings, preventive care and vaccines, without charging co-payments or deductibles.

Medicare beneficiaries will get free annual physicals. Medicaid will cover drugs and counseling to help pregnant women stop smoking. And a new federal trust fund will pay for more bicycle paths, playgrounds, sidewalks and hiking trails.

...“When people have insurance,” Dr. Seffrin said, “they are much more likely to receive screenings and treatment. And they are more likely to seek screenings when they do not have to pay co-payments or deductibles.” As a result of such screenings, he added, cancers are more likely to be detected at an early stage, when they are treatable.

Under the law, insurers must provide coverage for all services recommended by an independent panel of experts, the United States Preventive Services Task Force, and cannot impose “any cost-sharing requirements.”

In addition, each Medicare beneficiary will be entitled to an “annual wellness visit,” in which a doctor can assess the patient’s condition, check for signs of Alzheimer’s disease and draw up a “personalized prevention plan” with a screening schedule for the next five or 10 years.

Senator Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa and chairman of the Senate health committee, said: “We don’t have a health care system in America. We have a sick care system. If you get sick, you get care. But precious little is spent to keep people healthy in the first place.”

Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, said the measures, taken together, had immense potential to “save lives and to save money.”

...The new law also allows employers to give stronger incentives to employees who participate in programs to lose weight, stop smoking or improve their health in other ways.
Employers can offer rewards equal to 30 percent of the cost of coverage — up from 20 percent under prior law — to employees who participate in such programs.

“This is exciting,” said Helen Darling, president of the National Business Group on Health, which represents 300 large employers. “It puts the emphasis on health improvement, not just paying for illness and injuries.”...

(To read full article, click here.)

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Sunday, March 21, 2010

Call/write your Congressperson now!--Healthcare Reform vote in a few hours...

1min now! Crunch time! Call your Representative & Senators:
Easy steps through Doctors for America here; or, if you're not a physician/medical student, also easy to find steps to call your Representative here.  Also, SPREAD THE WORD.

Here's a quick animation (just ignore the bad repititious music...) that very effectively illustrates why we are in dire need of this health reform, & what this reform will do: 


At the speech on Friday at George Mason University, this 1-year old voice urging for health care reform--which has so often been meek, confused, and convoluted--seems to have finally matured, and found its clear intelligent populist voice.  See for yourself:


If you've still got interest/energy, and want to see how it went down tonight at a House of Representatives meeting with President Obama, see below.   Washington Post media columnist Howard Kurtz described Obama's address as "the most emotional speech I've ever seen him give."

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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

NYT Staff Editorial: "This may be the last best chance. [We] should fight to win"

The Live Bipartisan Health Care Summit--this coming Thursday morning 10am EST--of the president bringing together Republican and Democratic Congressional leaders, arrives to a TV (you can also watch it online, free, live & streaming right here at DownstateCafe.blogspot.com, or at http://drsforamerica.org/summit.php!) near you...

The New York Times has issued this verdict on current developments (read full article here):

"The president was right to invite Republican leaders to a health care summit this week. He should hear them out but also challenge them — directly — to come up with credible ideas that would both expand coverage for tens of millions of uninsured Americans and begin to rein in out-of-control medical costs. For too long they have been allowed to obstruct and demagogue.

And Mr. Obama will need to keep pushing in the days that follow and stiffen the spines of any wavering Democrats.

Most important, Mr. Obama needs to clearly explain the stakes to the American people. Reform is essential for Americans who have no health insurance. But it is just as crucial to the millions more who are just one layoff away from losing their coverage, and many millions more who watch with fear as the cost of care and their insurance premiums rise relentlessly. 
After delving into the pros & cons of "The President's Plan" for healthcare, just hot off the press this morning (and accessible for user-friendly browsing of its entirety & main points, at www.whitehouse.gov/health-care-meeting/proposal), the staff editorial ends,
"...Mr. Obama’s proposals provide a firm basis for both the Senate and House to move forward with comprehensive reforms. If the Republicans resort to filibusters to block passage, the Democrats should use a budget reconciliation procedure that requires only a majority vote for passage in the Senate.

This may be the last best chance for decades to come to reform the nation’s broken health care system. Mr. Obama and Democratic leaders should fight to win." (read full article here)
After so many hopes for this crucial healthcare reform, then disappointment, then hopes then disappointments again, then hopes,--who, with the resilient spirit, thinks the hopes will be answered?  Let's hope so.  Any thoughts?

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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Did'ya catch the Super Bowl??--Announcing a "Bipartisan Summit on Health Care"

"President Obama said Sunday that he would convene a half-day bipartisan health care session at the White House to be televised live this month, a high-profile gambit that will allow Americans to watch as Democrats and Republicans try to break their political impasse.

Mr. Obama made the announcement in an interview on CBS during the Super Bowl pre-game show, capitalizing on a vast television audience. He set out a plan that would put Republicans on the spot to offer their own ideas on health care and show whether both sides are willing to work together.

...the bipartisan meeting, set for Feb. 25..."(full article at New York Times)

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Thursday, February 4, 2010

U MUST SEE! THIS IMPASSIONED PLEA, on the ground w/ suffering America: Ed Schultz reporting from a temporary free clinic

Finally, someone who voices the raw anger and frustration at where the hell this political football has been kicked...

Finally, a piece of media that spotlights the real stories concerning the urgency of Health System Reform, stories that have been missing from the terrible, endless Washington debates...

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Saturday, December 19, 2009

Obama says: Let's keep our eyes on the Health Reform prize

So, Americans, what's the big deal?  What's at stake?  Here's from the Man at the top, his take:

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Healthcare Reform (don't miss the train!)

Dear friends & colleagues,

Health Insurance/Healthcare reform has come a long way, and it's not too late to learn what it's all about (esp. with the holidays coming up, so that you'll be able to converse about healthcare with others back home), and more importantly, to make a difference by adding your uniquely influential voice as a medical student/future physician.  For an easy & quick way to learn about/add your voice to this reform that will significantly affect us all, check these out:

1. Doctors for America is a grassroots group of 16,000 physicians and medical students.  I've pasted their latest email update for you to see (below).  Within it is this fantastic link to a poll of the "6 key reforms," which, when you click on each reform's "see how the bills address this," will give you a very clear & succinct synopsis.  Joining their listserve is easy, and the resources on their website are just as user-friendly & informative: http://drsforamerica.org/

2. Sign on to the American Academy of Family Physician's "Connect for Reform" group.  You must first register here (free for medical students) to become an AAFP member.  Then after you register, go to http://www.aafp.org/ and click on the "AAFP Connect for Reform" button to sign on.
    •    receive periodic emails with the inside scoop on Health Reform, and easy ways that healthcare professionals and students can join to help.
    •    Connect with other members, and add your voice to advocacy actions.

3. If you have any other ideas/suggestions/links for how students can join the conversation and help, or if you'd like to write any kind of healthcare-related article yourself, please email me and I can post onto DownstateCafe.blogspot.com .

Best,
Abe

from: Vivek Murthy MD, MBA
to: abraham.young

date: Fri, Dec 18, 2009 at 1:18 PM
subject: Moving Forward
Abraham -

Need your input: What's most important to you in this health reform bill?
 So we can take a stand together
After a whirlwind week in the health reform fight you might be wondering what all the developments mean for reform, whether a bill is still worth supporting, and what our community of physicians should fight for at this moment.

What happened:


This week, the public option and its substitute (the Medicare early buy-in provision) were both dropped from the Senate bill as Senate leadership worked to win 60 votes for the overall bill. This was quite a disappointment to our members after working for a public option for many months and considering it to be an important component of successful reform.

Aside from the public option, the Senate - unlike the House - has not included provisions to address defensive medicine. The Senate also does not include a permanent fix to the flawed Medicare payment formula (SGR); there is currently only a one year patch of the SGR.  The bill is certainly far from perfect.
 
What didn't happen:


Health reform isn't over and the final bill hasn't been written. Moreover, a lot of very important provisions are still in both the House and Senate bills. And that's because time-after-time we've spoken out for the issues we care about - expanding coverage, strengthening primary care, making premiums affordable, investing in prevention and improving quality.

As it stands, the current bill will cover 31 million more Americans, establish the strongest restrictions on insurance companies in history, and invest substantially in improving our health care delivery system - all while reducing the national deficit over 10 years. (See below for more details).

What now:

This brings us to this moment. The ultimate success of health reform depends on what we do in the next few weeks. The Senate is working to secure the 60 votes necessary to stop a filibuster on the Senate floor. Once they do so and pass a bill, the Senate and House bills will then be merged. 

While there are provisions in the bill that help doctors and patients, any of these can be weakened or stripped altogether from the final bill. So your voice is as important now as ever.  As the Senate hammers out the details over the next 24-48 hours, tell us:
Your efforts have brought us to the brink of history and we hope that you will continue to fight with us to enact health reform for all Americans.

Thank you for all that you've done.
Vivek Murthy MD, MBA
President
Doctors for America

Overview of the Senate Bill
Key Element of the bill:
    •    Cover the uninsured: Expands health insurance coverage to 31 million previously uninsured Americans.

    •    Regulate the insurance industry: Prevent insurers from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions, dropping individuals who become ill and imposing caps on health care spending. 

    •    Help people afford insurance: Subsidize insurance premiums on a sliding-scale for small businesses and the middle class.

    •    Support primary care: Investments in physician workforce expansion, including new loan forgiveness programs, scholarships and National Health Service Corps funding - for primary care.

    •    Payment reform: Payment reform that rewards value in health care delivery through new pilot programs for the medical home and accountable care organizations. 

    •    Investments in prevention and public health: Establishes fund of $7 billion dedicated to prevention and public health related activities. 

    •    Control Cost: Multiple cost control mechanisms with the potential to reduce national health care spending by $683 billion over a decade.
Reasons to keep fighting:
... to make insurance coverage affordable for all Americans.
... to ensure that enough doctors are there to take care of the newly insured.
... to secure fair pay for the hard work physicians routinely do.
... to create a truly fair insurance market via increased regulation.
... to cultivate innovation and efficiency in health care delivery.

For more information about the Senate bill and how it affects doctors, seniors, children and womenvisit the DFA resource center.

--
Doctors for America is a grassroots group of over 16,000 physicians and medical students in all 50 states. Together we are committed to building a health system that works better for us and better for our patients. To contact us please e-mail info@drsforamerica.org

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Friday, November 6, 2009

Welcome to Primary Care Week @ Downstate!!!


 (**Speaker Bios below)
Tuesday, November 10th - Primary Care 101


When: Noon to 1 PM
Where:
Student Center Main Lounge
FREE Food
:
Heros/Kosher Sandwiches
Speaker:
Dr. Michael Gusmano, Research Director for Alliance for Health & the Future (Dr. Gusmano will be speaking about the growing need for primary care physicians and about public health policy)


Wednesday, November 11th - Faces of Primary Care

When: 5:30 PM to 7 PM
Where: Student Center Main Lounge
FREE Food: Italian/Kosher Sandwiches
Speakers:

Dr. Margaret Golden, Pediatrics Clerkship Director at Downstate
Dr. Heather Paladine, Director of Women's Health at Columbia University Medical Center
Anthony Accurso
, 4th Year Medical Student at Downstate


(This is more of a Q&A session - a great opportunity to ask the panelists about their personal experiences in primary care)

Thursday, November 12th - Future of Primary Care

When: 5:30 to 7 PM
Where: Student Center Main Lounge
FREE Food: Thai
Speakers:

Dr. Neil Calman, Family physician and President/CEO of the Institute for Family Health, NY
Lauren Hughes, National President of AMSA
(Dr. Calman will be talking about the future of primary care and how PCPs contribute to the community)

So, come learn more about the unsung heroes of medicine! Hope to see all of you there!!!  (We will also be giving out PRIZES! If you would like Kosher food to be served, please e-mail Regina Finan at Regina.Finan@downstate.edu.)

**Speaker Bios: 


Neil Calman, M.D.
Neil Calman, MD, is president and co-founder of the Institute for Family Health, developing family health centers in the Bronx and Manhattan.  In 2002, the Institute became one of the first community health center networks in the country to implement a fully integrated electronic medical record and practice management system, improving both preventive and chronic care treatment outcomes. In recognition, Dr. Calman received the 2006 Physician's Information Technology Leadership Award, presented annually by the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society.  Dr. Calman serves on the Primary Care Health Information Consortium, the NYSDOH's Information Technology Stakeholder Group Planning Committee, is the Chair of the Clinical Committee of the Community Health Care Association of New York State. He has also been appointed to the Health Policy Roundtable of the Aspen Institute, a group charged with delineating the values and principles on which the United States must base its future health care system.



Heather Paladine, M.D.
Heather Paladine, MD, attended Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York.  She then completed a residency in Family Medicine at Oregon Health and Science University and went on to do a fellowship in Maternal and Children's Health Care at California Hospital in Los Angeles.  After working in Washington, Oregon, and California, she recently returned to New York City to become faculty at the New York Presbyterian/Columbia University Family Mediciine residency program, where she is Associate Residency Director and Director of Women's Health.

Michael Gusmano, M.A., Ph.D.
Dr. Michael Gusmano is the director of research for the Alliance for Health & the Future and co-director of the World Cities Project at the International Longevity Center-USA. Dr. Gusmano's work has focused on comparing the health status and use of health and social services for older persons. His other research interests include politics of healthcare reform, Medicare, Medicaid, and comparative welfare state analysis. Dr. Gusmano was a senior research associate in the Division of Health and Science Policy at the New York Academy of Medicine.


Margaret Clark-Golden, M.D.
Associate Professor at Downstate Medical Center
Pediatrics Clerkship Director at the Children's Hospital at Downstate

M.D. - Duke University School of Medicine
Residency: Cook County Hospital (Pediatrics) and Michael Reese Hospital Medical Center (Pediatrics)

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Thursday, November 5, 2009

Taking Action with Doctors for America



Doctors for America
"As physicians and medical students, we can make the difference and make sure we get strong, effective health reform this year! Here's how:

1. Get informed.
2. Take action.
3. Help others do the same!

Visit our Action Center to learn more."

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

The Economist: "His is a bold ambition indeed; but this week the president looked a bit closer to fulfilling it."

I've posted an article once before ("4 emails debating health reform!") from the magazine, The Economist.  Their editorials are (I believe) usually thoughtful and objective, and here's what they had to say this week about Obama's health-care speech.  For the wonkier/wonkiest, below that are snippets from a 2nd article that goes into much more detail explaining the significance of this speech where "Mr Obama also unveiled the main elements of his own centrist reform plan for the first time." Click on the link to read the full article at economist.com. 

The art of the possible

A fine, measured piece of oratory from the president. But there is still tough work to do


“I AM not the first president to take up this cause, but I am determined to be the last.” Thus Barack Obama, late in the day, took his quest to reform America’s expensive and flawed health-care system to the floor of Congress with a mighty speech that will surely stand as one of the defining moments of his presidency, whether it leads to eventual triumph or disaster. His is a bold ambition indeed; but this week the president looked a bit closer to fulfilling it.

Politics, as everyone knows, is the art of the possible; and there have been times over this ill-tempered summer when the idea of tackling a system that costs almost twice as much as any other rich country’s, yet yields substandard results and leaves tens of millions of people with no health insurance at all, has seemed simply impossible. Mr Obama has to find a package of policies that is fiscally and politically moderate enough to win over a vital few Republicans to his side (and also prevent the defection of nervous conservative Democrats). But at the same time he has to keep the support of the leftish Democratic Party base, which wants to see a more expansive and costly set of reforms. He may well fail. But on September 9th the president for the first time laid out in some detail what such a plan might look like. Cleverly borrowing good ideas from both sides of the party divide, his proposals at least look like a plausible basis for agreement (see article).

The plan obliges everyone to take out health insurance while creating a tapering subsidy for poorer families to help them afford it. It also requires insurance companies to end various nefarious practices, such as refusing to insure people with existing conditions or cancelling their coverage just when they need it most. To pay for these long-held liberal goals (the cost is put at $900 billion over ten years), the president has committed himself to several policies that Republicans, if only they could remove their partisan spectacles, should applaud.

There is, for instance, a tax on insurance companies that offer “Cadillac” plans to richer individuals; since this will inevitably be passed on to consumers, it is a useful step towards making individuals aware of the cost of their coverage. He has made a cast-iron pledge that he will not sign a health bill that increases the deficit, and has promised automatic spending cuts if savings do not materialise. He wants to set up a new technocratic committee that could mandate changes to the hugely expensive Medicare system of health care for the elderly (an idea that cleverly takes such difficult decisions out of the hands of politicians, who have displayed a lamentable failure to grapple with them). And the president also promised conservatives reform of America’s mad tort system. The risk of being sued pushes up costs, obliging doctors to practise “defensive medicine” in the shape of needless tests and procedures.

Give me public options, but not now

Still up in the air is the trickiest question of all: whether the government should create a “public option”, its own insurance provider, which people could use if they dislike what the free market has to offer. Medical insurers and most Republicans say a public plan would enjoy unfair advantages and destroy competition. Liberal Democrats say the insurers will not cut prices without it. Both sides have a point. This newspaper still thinks the best solution would be to keep the public option as a threat: to set up a formal provision in the bill whereby a public plan would be introduced in, say, five years’ time if certain targets were not met. In his speech Mr Obama hedged his bets, sticking with the public option but signalling a willingness to compromise. This may come back to haunt him. But overall, this performance was a big step forward.

Fired up and ready to go

As Congress returns to work, two big bills before it may determine the fate of Barack Obama’s presidency—and he knows it. First, health care

“THE time for bickering is over. Now is the time for action.” With those fiery words, delivered to a special joint session of Congress on September 9th, Barack Obama made his case for reforming America’s troubled health system....

The speech was a success on several measures. It was passionate, which is essential if he is to win over a sceptical American public and energise his liberal base....

....Reading from a letter he had received from [Senator Edward Kennedy] posthumously, as his widow listened from the gallery, Mr Obama made the moral case for change: “At stake are not just the details of policy, but fundamental principles of social justice and the character of our country.”

During this passage, he cleverly reminded Americans that leading Republicans currently hostile to Democratic efforts at health reform—including Senators Orrin Hatch and John McCain—had worked hand-in-hand with Mr Kennedy on earlier, smaller efforts at health reform. That points to the second reason to think that Mr Obama’s speech may yet succeed in kick-starting reform this autumn: it managed to position the president as a reasonable and moderate adult in a room full of petty and partisan ideologues....

...He also announced a surprising idea to use executive authority to encourage state-level experiments in curbing malpractice abuses.

Mr Obama also unveiled the main elements of his own centrist reform plan for the first time. He wants to expand coverage to some 30m Americans without insurance, principally by introducing an individual mandate for cover, insurance exchanges, subsidies for the less well-off and heavy regulation of insurers. He also accepted an important proposal to tax the most lavish of insurance plans.

Crucially, he made it plain that he would not accept a health-reform bill from Congress that raises the deficit—not now, not ever. He also vowed that most of the $900 billion his plan will cost—again, the first time he has given a firm figure for his initiative—will come not from taxes on the rich, as the current bills in the House envision, but from internal savings to be realised within the health system.

He offers two reasons to suppose that this claim is not complete bunk. The first is the White House’s support for empowering an independent panel of experts to cut costs in Medicare and other government health schemes. This matters, because Congress has shown it is incapable of making such difficult cuts. More impressive is his vow this week that any final bill must include provisions for mandatory spending cuts that would kick in if budgeted cost savings do not materialise.

Will this speech be enough to get the president’s reform agenda back on track? It just might be. One reason to think so is the deft way Mr Obama signalled a willingness to compromise on the “public option” this week. The left has insisted on a government-run insurance scheme, but this ill-founded idea is strongly opposed by the health-care industry and by Republicans. It also has no hope of passing the Senate, as Max Baucus, the head of its Finance Committee, confirmed this week. Mr Obama voiced theoretical support for the idea, but by also supporting other options—including, crucially, the idea that such a plan could be triggered only if necessary later—he has, in effect, dealt it a death blow.

Several committees in the House have already passed versions of health bills, but all contain the public option and are seen as too far to the left of the Senate—and now, it is clear, of where Mr Obama stands. So all eyes are now on the Senate Finance Committee, where a “Gang of Six” led by Mr Baucus has been working to forge a moderate bill that could provide the backbone for any final health law this year. Mr Baucus this week unveiled his own $900 billion proposal (also a moderate approach without the public option), and announced plans to finalise a bill next week.

Earlier this week that effort seemed to be flagging, as two of the Republicans in the gang, Charles Grassley and Mike Enzi, appeared to be undermining its efforts. That leaves Olympia Snowe, the free-spirited Republican from Maine, as the most courted legislator in recent memory. Mr Obama’s speech and sensible proposals, which are similar to those drafted by Mr Baucus, and his openness to the trigger option favoured by Ms Snowe, can only boost efforts at compromise.

Whether it is enough to keep Ms Snowe and perhaps one or two other Republicans firmly on board remains to be seen. But even if it does not, the next few weeks could yet produce a bill that is better than anything seen thus far and which would be worth passing. He was not the first president, Mr Obama said, to take up health-care reform; but he was determined to be the last.

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Wednesday, September 2, 2009

"Health Care Sound and Fury"


Health care debate has heated up, some of the added volume to drown actual discussion, other voices shouting to remain heard above the crowd. But this news segment goes on from there to summarize a new PBS documentary, "Money-Driven Medicine," which is gradually earning people's ears & attention, because of its thought and willingness to actually listen & learn from the stories of doctors and patients in America.

To watch the full PBS documentary see below:



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Friday, August 28, 2009

New York Times Op-Ed: Health Care Fit for Animals

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/27/opinion/27kristof.html?_r=1

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Opponents suggest that a “government takeover” of health care will be a milestone on the road to “socialized medicine,” and when he hears those terms, Wendell Potter cringes. He’s embarrassed that opponents are using a playbook that he helped devise.
“Over the years I helped craft this messaging and deliver it,” he noted.
Mr. Potter was an executive in the health insurance industry for nearly 20 years before his conscience got the better of him. He served as head of corporate communications for Humana and then for Cigna.
He flew in corporate jets to industry meetings to plan how to block health reform, he says. He rode in limousines to confabs to concoct messaging to scare the public about reform. But in his heart, he began to have doubts as the business model for insurance evolved in recent years from spreading risk to dumping the risky.
Then in 2007 Mr. Potter attended a premiere of “Sicko,” Michael Moore’s excoriating film about the American health care system. Mr. Potter was taking notes so that he could prepare a propaganda counterblast — but he found himself agreeing with a great deal of the film.
A month later, Mr. Potter was back home in Tennessee, visiting his parents, and dropped in on a three-day charity program at a county fairgrounds to provide medical care for patients who could not afford doctors. Long lines of people were waiting in the rain, and patients were being examined and treated in public in stalls intended for livestock.
“It was a life-changing event to witness that,” he remembered. Increasingly, he found himself despising himself for helping block health reforms. “It sounds hokey, but I would look in the mirror and think, how did I get into this?”
Mr. Potter loved his office, his executive salary, his bonus, his stock options. “How can I walk away from a job that pays me so well?” he wondered. But at the age of 56, he announced his retirement and left Cigna last year.
This year, he went public with his concerns, testifying before a Senate committee investigating the insurance industry.
“I knew that once I did that my life would be different,” he said. “I wouldn’t be getting any more calls from recruiters for the health industry. It was the scariest thing I have done in my life. But it was the right thing to do.”
Mr. Potter says he liked his colleagues and bosses in the insurance industry, and respected them. They are not evil. But he adds that they are removed from the consequences of their decisions, as he was, and are obsessed with sustaining the company’s stock price — which means paying fewer medical bills.
One way to do that is to deny requests for expensive procedures. A second is “rescission” — seizing upon a technicality to cancel the policy of someone who has been paying premiums and finally gets cancer or some other expensive disease. A Congressional investigation into rescission found that three insurers, including Blue Cross of California, used this technique to cancel more than 20,000 policies over five years, saving the companies $300 million in claims.
As The Los Angeles Times has reported, insurers encourage this approach through performance evaluations. One Blue Cross employee earned a perfect evaluation score after dropping thousands of policyholders who faced nearly $10 million in medical expenses.
Mr. Potter notes that a third tactic is for insurers to raise premiums for a small business astronomically after an employee is found to have an illness that will be very expensive to treat. That forces the business to drop coverage for all its employees or go elsewhere.
All this is monstrous, and it negates the entire point of insurance, which is to spread risk.
The insurers are open to one kind of reform — universal coverage through mandates and subsidies, so as to give them more customers and more profits. But they don’t want the reforms that will most help patients, such as a public insurance option, enforced competition and tighter regulation.
Mr. Potter argues that much tougher regulation is essential. He also believes that a robust public option is an essential part of any health reform, to compete with for-profit insurers and keep them honest.
As a nation, we’re at a turning point. Universal health coverage has been proposed for nearly a century in the United States. It was in an early draft of Social Security.
Yet each time, it has been defeated in part by fear-mongering industry lobbyists. That may happen this time as well — unless the Obama administration and Congress defeat these manipulative special interests. What’s un-American isn’t a greater government role in health care but an existing system in which Americans without insurance get health care, if at all, in livestock pens.

Read More...

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

4 emails debating health care reform! (Please chime in w/ comments!)

EMAIL #4

Hi all classes,
Glad to see this "healthy" debate among Brandon, Kate, and Anthony, and probably others (like me) who would be itching to jump into this conversation and interact with everyone's viewpoints--if not for these damn things they call exams.

But just wanted to throw in this article from this week's The Economist (a right-leaning magazine in regards to business/economy, as its name gives away; but I find a very smart, clear-minded, progressive, and not-shy voice in-general): it provides no blanket verdict of "Yay" or "Nay" on the issue of the Medicare-based public plan, but it does succinctly elicit the subtleties and nuances of the whole situation.

Enjoy! And in any case hope U.S. health care gets some form of huge overhaul for the better in the next year(s), otherwise Healthcare itself may become the cause of morbitiy & mortality not only on the growing uninsured, but also on all other sectors of American society by the time we're retired (as the article aptly forecasts).
-Abe

PS. I have copied the article below, along with all the discussion so far (Kate and Anthony, if you'd like me to remove your responses from the website I'd be glad to do so) on the website:
http://DownstateCafe.blogspot.com/
Please feel free to continue the lively discussion there (via "leave a comment"), or if there is any other articles/items you'd like to suggest for the website, please let me know.

THE ECONOMIST: "The future of health-care reform"

The moment of truth

Jun 4th 2009 | WASHINGTON, DC
From The Economist print edition

Congress is about to tackle health care, for the first time since the debacle of 1993-94. Do the reformers stand a chance this time?


Corbis

A PICTURE of a handsome young man riding a bucking bronco hangs in the office of Max Baucus. The Democratic senator from Montana was a novice in the rough world of rodeo three decades ago, but when challenged he did not hesitate. The nerve-racking ride that ensued foreshadowed his current wild adventure. As chairman of the Senate’s Finance Committee, this relatively unknown figure has emerged as a central force in the struggle over health reform.


Barack Obama has made health care a domestic priority. But rather than designing his own plan, he is leaving it to Congress to take the lead by crafting a bill which he hopes to sign before year’s end. Last month he gathered insurance and health-industry executives at the White House. This week he called in leading Democratic senators working on the issue. And on June 6th Organising for America (a political group that sprang from Mr Obama’s presidential campaign) plans to raise the heat further. Its website declares that “in thousands of homes across the country, we’ll gather to launch our grassroots campaign for health care.”

For the first time since Hillary Clinton’s failed attempt of 1993-94 Congress has taken up health reform in earnest. On May 20th Senator Tom Coburn from Oklahoma and three fellow Republicans (including the up-and-coming congressman Paul Ryan) introduced their version of a health-reform bill. On June 2nd Judd Gregg, a conservative Republican senator, introduced another. An innovative earlier bill by Ron Wyden, a Democratic senator, has a number of Republican co-sponsors. All this, says Mr Gregg, proves that his party is willing to participate in, rather than obstruct, efforts at health reform this time round.

That pledge of bipartisanship may not survive. And it may not matter much, for Mr Obama has made it clear that he will sign health reform as part of the budget reconciliation process if necessary—a controversial manoeuvre that would need only 50 votes in the Senate, not the normal 60. So the reins are firmly in the hands of two senior Democrats: Mr Baucus and Edward Kennedy, the head of the Senate’s Health Committee. Both are expected to deliver their own bills this month. Although Mr Kennedy’s is expected to tilt further to the left, insiders expect that the two will be merged fairly easily. That hybrid bill will be the one that matters.

For much of the presidential campaign, the debate on health reform seemed to hinge on cost versus coverage. John McCain appeared more concerned about reining in runaway health inflation, while Mr Obama seemed more concerned about extending coverage to the nation’s uninsured. Confronted by the financial crisis, however, the new president has made it clear that he now wants to tackle both objectives. Christina Romer, the head of Mr Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers (CEA), believes that “there are linkages in both directions”.

She points out that extending insurance to all can save money because tens of billions of dollars are spent today on the uninsured, who get late and expensive care in emergency rooms. In a new report the CEA argues that any reform that slowed the annual growth rate of health costs by 1.5% would boost America’s economic output by over 2% and increase the average household’s income by $2,600 in 2020. The CEA analysis suggests that universal coverage would lead to a healthier, more mobile and more productive workforce.

Those forecasts are probably a bit rosy, but the report also spells out the implications of failure. The CEA forecasts that health spending, which will account for perhaps 18% of America’s GDP this year, will soar to over one third of output by 2040. More politically salient is its warning that health inflation will squeeze wages hard as an ever larger share of compensation comes in the form of health insurance (see chart). A new report from the Urban Institute, a think-tank, adds that doing nothing means the number of uninsured will grow from perhaps 49m today to 62m in a decade. Taken together, all these factors explain why there is such momentum behind health reform.

Details please

But what will the reformers actually come up with? Although the final details will not be known until the Baucus and Kennedy bills are unveiled, a few important elements are already clear. Despite the hopes of some, there is, in the words of Mr Baucus, “no chance” of a single-payer system advancing in legislation this year. “We’re not Sweden, Britain or Canada,” he says, “and we’ll come up with an American solution” that will involve both government and the private sector.

That points to a fight over some form of government-run insurance plan. Many on the left, including Mr Obama, argue that reform must include a “public plan” that would provide an alternative to rapacious private insurers. But industry types are convinced that any government plan would enjoy unfair advantages, like implicit government guarantees and huge pricing power, and suspect it would serve, in Mr Gregg’s words, as “a stalking horse for a single-payer system”.

Who is right? Neither side, perhaps. Andrew Stern, the head of the Service Employees International Union and an influential labour boss, believes a compromise is possible. But Douglas Elmendorf, the head of the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), observes wryly that “the closer a public plan is to a private plan, the less the gain.” Old lags of health reform suggest that some in Congress want to pick a fight over the public plan issue to distract from other, bigger reforms in the works.

One of those is the once controversial notion of an individual “mandate” to purchase insurance. Without such a requirement in place, too many healthy people choose not to pay for insurance. This leaves less money to cover the sick, and some of the uninsured inevitably turn up at emergency rooms. A mandate would need to be coupled with comprehensive insurance-market reforms. This would involve stronger regulation of insurance firms to force them to offer insurance to everyone, the creation of central exchanges for buying insurance, and subsidies for the poor.

Pioneering reforms in Massachusetts have helped win over many liberals to the mandate idea. Mr Kennedy’s bill is likely to be an expanded version of those reforms. And a U-turn by the industry is also winning over Republicans. The health insurance lobbies now say they are willing to live with rules forcing them to accept all patients without regard to pre-existing medical conditions—but only if this is accompanied by an individual mandate. Mr Gregg’s proposal has just such a requirement, while Mr Ryan’s bill has a similar proposal for “automatic enrolment” of people into private insurance schemes.

The other surprising area of possible agreement concerns the most important question: how to pay for these reforms, which may cost $1 trillion or more over the next 10 years. The biggest available pool of money is the tax exclusion granted on employer-provided health insurance. Jonathan Gruber of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology thinks eliminating this distorting giveaway would net some $2.3 trillion over the next decade or so. When Mr Wyden proposed abolishing that tax break to pay for universal coverage in 2006, many thought the notion outlandish, but it now looks likely to happen, at least in part.

Mr Stern warns of a “middle-class riot” if any such reform is seen as a tax increase on working folk with insurance. But as everyone involved in reform piously vows their plan will be “budget neutral”, this cow is suddenly no longer so sacred. Mr Ryan’s bill would end the tax break for the most expensive of these plans. A cap on this benefit is proposed by Mr Gregg, who reckons this is “the most logical way to raise money.” Mr Baucus also supports capping this perk, though not abolishing it. One problem for Mr Obama is that, during the presidential election, he excoriated Mr McCain for exactly this idea. He also opposed individual mandates. This week, though, he hinted in a letter to Democrats at a compromise on both issues.

There are many other good ideas to cut costs making the rounds. They range from investing in prevention to expanding the use of health information technologies to rejigging incentives so that doctors get paid for health outcomes rather than for treatments. Alas, most of these ideas will not get counted by the Congressional Budget Office, which is charged with evaluating such proposals, as savings, either because their pay-off is too uncertain or because they require short-term investments that pay out far off in the future.

Three decades ago, as he got on that bucking bronco, the Western senator was given this advice: “Don’t look at the ground, because if you do that’s where you’re going to end up.” There has been an air of civility and bipartisan co-operation around health reform so far, but it may not last long. Mr Baucus should keep looking forward and hang on tight.



EMAIL #3

On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 4:06 PM, Anthony wrote:
Greetings Classmates,

After reading the Action Alert, I would like to make one change:

Update: Support a Medicare-based public plan

I am firm supporter of a move towards a public funding source for health care in this country.

And with no offense intended towards my esteemed acquaintance Brandon, I would like to applaud Kate for helping us all to see both sides before acting on Action Alerts.

Cheers to Brandon and Kate for encouraging us all to think critically about health care as a political issue and educate ourselves about both sides.

I've written some arguments for a move towards a public plan below, with links.

Anthony Accurso, COM 2010
Member: American Medical Student Association
Member: Physicians for a National Health Program



Reasons for a move towards a public plan:

AMSA:
our medical student professional organization - openly supports a single-payer Medicare-for-all system.

- The U.S. is the only industrialized nation in the world that relies primarily on a for-profit privately funded health care system. We pay more for our system than any other nation, but it lands us between 20th and 30th worldwide in Life Expectancy and Infant Mortality. Frontline.

- Polls show that upwards of 62% of U.S. citizens and 59% of U.S. physicians would prefer a single payer system, publicly financed, privately delivered (resembling Medicare Parts A and B). ABC/Washington Post Poll Question 47, Annals Int Med, p566

- AHIP (America's Health Insurance Plans) and other powerful lobbies have vested interests in sustaining their industry. Data from the rest of the world shows us that public options would likely cover all Americans, ensure choice of doctor, prevent discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions and provide improved efficiency that would help to control costs.

For more information about the potential of publicly funded health care:
- PNHP is a professional organization of 14,000+ physicians who support creation of a publicly funded, privately delivered health care system. Also PNHP-NY
- California Nurses Association
- PHIMG


EMAIL #2

On Sat, Jun 5, 2009 at 9:42 PM, Kate wrote:

Hello,

I am writing to encourage all of you to contact the numbers below to
encourage our senators to support a government-run insurance option.
I'll try keep my response brief, but there are a few things that I feel
should be addressed.

First of all, President Obama's proposal would not mandate that all
American's enroll in a government run health plan; it would potentially
mandate that all Americans posses some form of health insurance,
private OR public, unless they are found to be unable to pay for it.

Consider the following:

18% of people under 65 in the US are uninsured and rising

The percentage of people with employment-based health insurance has
dropped from 70 percent in 1987 to 62 percent in 2007. This is the
lowest level of employment-based insurance coverage in more than a
decade

Rapidly rising health insurance premiums are the main reason cited by
all small firms for not offering coverage. Health insurance premiums
are rising at extraordinary rates. The average annual increase in
inflation has been 2.5 percent while health insurance premiums for
small firms have escalated an average of 12 percent annually.

Lack of insurance compromises the health of the uninsured because they
receive less preventive care, are diagnosed at more advanced disease
stages, and once diagnosed, tend to receive less therapeutic care and
have higher mortality rates than insured individuals.

The United States spends nearly $100 billion per year to provide
uninsured residents with health services, often for preventable
diseases or diseases that physicians could treat more efficiently with
earlier diagnosis.

The uninsured are 30 to 50 percent more likely to be hospitalized for
an avoidable condition, with the average cost of an avoidable hospital
stayed estimated to be about $3,300.

The majority of us, I hope, entered this field because we are dedicated
to caring for others and serving them to the best of our abilities. I
have no desire to underplay the frustrations we all experience from
being underpayed for our hard work, however we are, as physicians, a
relatively well-off group (I'm looking at you, future anesthesiologists
of America!). In the end, I am certainly more concerned with adequate
coverage and care for all of my family and friends than I am about my
own income, which, even with Medicare/Medicaid reimbursement will prove
adequate.

Please look into this issue on your own. This is a chance for our
country and our profession to provide effective care for everyone.
It's a chance to truly save lives -- and not just the lives of those
who are fortunate enough to be able to pay for the high insurance
premiums that allow private insurance companies to reimburse us more
"adequately."

http://www.nchc.org/facts/coverage.shtml
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/opinion/05krugman.html?scp=3&sq=krugman&st=Search



EMAIL #1

-----Forwarded by Brandon on 06/05/2009 07:41PM -----

To: Brandon
Date: 06/05/2009 06:16PM
Subject: Action Alert








Action Alert

Update: Oppose a Medicare-based public plan

More Info



Contact your Senators TODAY!



Last week I sent an Action Alert asking you to contact your U.S. Senators and urge them to oppose a Medicare-based public plan. If you have not yet taken action, I urge you to do so immediately.
Your action on health care reform has never been more crucial.
As a result of developments this week, it appears all but certain that the key Senate committees are proceeding with legislation that includes a public plan option - a government sponsored health plan that would compete with commercial health insurance products. Though the ASA has not taken a stand either for or against a public plan, we have a strong stand against any public plan whose payment to anesthesiologists is based on Medicare rate. Please urge your Senators to reject a Medicare-based public plan, and to ensure that physicians can voluntarily participate.
Please contact your Senators today:
Recently released documents suggest that key U.S. Senate health care committees-the Senate Finance Committee and the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee-are likely to propose the creation of a new government plan when they unveil their health system reform legislation in the coming weeks. According to one document circulating around Capitol Hill, this new plan or "public option plan" would be based upon Medicare payment levels. Additionally, participation in the plan would be mandatory.
Just days ago, President Obama sent a letter to Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) and HELP Committee Chairman Edward Kennedy (D-MA) urging inclusion of "a public health insurance option operating alongside private plans."

As ASA has consistently stated, we remain open to a wide range of options for health reform. However, any public plan option considered by Congress must NOT be based on Medicare's unacceptably low payments. As it stands, Medicare pays 33% of what private insurers pay for anesthesia services (according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office - GAO-07-463) and significantly discounts payments for pain services. An extension of this broken payment system would severely damage our specialty.
Further, physicians should be able to voluntarily participate should a public plan be established.
For those of you who have already responded to this action alert, thank you. Your involvement in our efforts will help ensure that Congress understands the unique challenges that our specialty faces.

Your ASA Washington Office staff is available to answer questions or provide additional information. You can reach the office at (202) 289-2222.
To stay up-to-date on the latest health care reform news, please use the following ASA tools:
We are at a critical juncture. Please contact your U.S. Senators and urge them to oppose a Medicare-based public plan, and to allow physicians and hospitals to voluntarily participate should a public plan be created.

Read More...

Saturday, June 6, 2009

NYT: New trends in practicing medicine!

If All Doctors Had More Time to Listen


Published: June 6, 2009


(Dr. Lili Sacks moved to a clinic in Seattle that focuses on longer appointments. She now sees up to 12 patients a day instead of 25.--->)

(<---Dr. José Batlle invested in technology to reduce administrative costs, saving enough to move into a new office in Manhattan.)

WHEN Dr. José Batlle met his 93-year-old patient in her small Bronx apartment, she didn’t have much furniture beyond a small TV, a sofa and a wheelchair. What she did have in abundance were pills — 15 types from a variety of doctors, including a pulmonologist, a cardiologist and a gerontologist. He discovered that some medicines had expired, others were unnecessary and some were dangerous if taken together.

Sitting with his patient and her son, Dr. Batlle cut the number of her medicines to four. He also gave the family his personal cellphone number.

Before coming to see him, the woman had endured several emergency-room visits and hospital stays. With Dr. Batlle, she was able to avoid all of that.

Calling a doctor on his cell? No waiting for an appointment? It’s the type of service that Dr. Batlle tries to offer to all of his 1,500 patients. “I prefer to keep them healthy than treat them when they are sick,” he says.

The efforts of Dr. Batlle and other primary care physicians may get a boost at the federal level. The Obama administration is considering ways to persuade medical students to pursue careers in primary care by raising their pay, and is channeling them to work in underserved rural areas. And the White House has already set aside $2 billion for community health centers through the economic stimulus package.

But more far-reaching health care reform remains an uncertainty, and in the interim a small but growing number of doctors are trying to take matters into their own hands.

By stepping off the big-clinic treadmill, where doctors are sometimes asked to see a different patient every 15 minutes, Dr. Batlle has joined the vanguard of physicians trying to redefine health care. These doctors spend more time with patients, emphasize prevention and education to keep them healthy and can handle many medical problems without referrals to specialists.

In many cases, this kind of care can reduce a patient’s medical bills. That’s more crucial than ever: according to a study published online by the American Journal of Medicine, 60 percent of all bankruptcies in the United States in 2007 were driven by health care costs.

Exact numbers are hard to come by, but doctors involved in this movement, called “patient centered” practices, say its popularity is growing.

“I travel to a lot of medical conferences, and I’m meeting more and more doctors embarking on this path,” said Dr. L. Gordon Moore, who runs IdealMedicalPractices.org, a program to help small practices become more innovative and efficient. The Web site IdealMedicalHome.org has about 800 doctors who post and trade ideas, while more than 700 physicians have adopted methods from HowsYourHealth.org. Many of these doctors see fewer patients per day than they did before.
To make personalized care possible in an era when compensation is often tied to the number of patients they see, doctors use technology to streamline processes and reduce administrative costs. Dr. Batlle, for example, uses online appointment scheduling and manages his medical records electronically. He prescribes medications from his computer and offers virtual visits by phone and e-mail.

It cost Dr. Batlle about $25,000 to buy the technology to make all of this possible, but he estimates that he saves close to $100,000 a year in salaries and billing costs. And he has made enough money to begin renovations on a new office in Washington Heights in Manhattan.

The model seems to be working, according to a 2008 study by Dr. John H. Wasson at Dartmouth Medical School. His research showed that patients in patient-centered practices were more likely to say they were informed about how to manage chronic diseases and got the care they needed, compared with those in a national sample of medical practices. They also were less likely to say they had to wait for an appointment.

“If the goal is to deliver patient care when and how they want and need it, this is the way to go,” Dr. Wasson said.

Of course, even doctors in this movement acknowledge that it is not a panacea for the country’s health care problems. Privacy advocates warn that electronic patient records can be breached, and computer glitches can make patient records inaccessible for hours. Big clinics can be better for people who have several health problems and need easy access to a variety of specialists. Moreover, some doctors may not want to leave a big clinic because they feel they lack the technical or business skills they need — or because a salaried job there may be more stable in this economy.

And while the patient-centered movement is growing, the nation may not be able to afford to have all its primary care doctors reduce the number of patients they see. Across the country, primary care physicians are in short supply, in part because average salaries for family practitioners are the lowest of any medical specialty. According to a 2008 survey of physician salaries by the American Medical Group Association, their average annual salary is $201,555, versus $356,166 for a general surgeon and $614,536 for a neurological surgeon.

“Medical school loans can be so high, you need to be a specialist to pay them back,” Dr. Batlle said. “But our country doesn’t need yet another sleep apnea specialist.”

LILI SACKS, a primary care doctor in Seattle, says she began thinking differently about her work on the day she realized she was beginning each appointment with the words, “Sorry I’m late.”
Scheduled to see as many as 25 patients a day at a large clinic, she lacked the time for thorough examinations and discussions. Because of this, she said, primary care doctors are often forced to order tests and send patients to specialists.

“Could I have helped some people without specialists and tests? Absolutely,” said Dr. Sacks. “Would it have saved the patient and the insurance company both money? Absolutely. Is the system set up for the best care and cost efficiency? Absolutely not.”

Dr. Sacks said she worried that seeing so many patients would lead to errors. Last year, she moved to a clinic that focuses on longer patient appointments, 30 to 60 minutes. This translates to 10 to 12 patients a day. Patients also communicate directly with her by phone or e-mail.
During those longer appointments, Dr. Sacks can perform basic lab tests and simple procedures, so patients see fewer specialists.

“I probably head off a handful of emergency-room visits and hospital stays every month because patients can see me as soon as they have a problem, and I can be thorough rather than rushed,” she said.

One patient who avoided the emergency room was Todd Martin, a store manager in Seattle who went to Dr. Sacks’s clinic on a Saturday.

“I couldn’t stop coughing and was having trouble breathing,” Mr. Martin said. “They were able to see me and give me a chest X-ray.”

Mr. Martin said he spent $40 for the resulting prescription but the rest was covered by a monthly fee he pays Dr. Sacks. “A weekend visit to the E.R. would have easily cost $1,000,” he said.

Dr. Sacks charges patients a direct monthly fee of $54 to $129 based on age, and she doesn’t take insurance. Her office calls its philosophy “direct practice” because it’s a direct contract between doctor and patient. But she advises patients to obtain insurance plans to cover large, unexpected health costs like those to treat cancer or a heart attack.

“We say it’s like having a car and paying for your own oil changes and tuneups, but getting insurance in case you need a big repair,” she said.

Dr. Garrison Bliss, who in 2007 founded the group where Dr. Sacks works, has offered direct-practice services since 1997. He says patients can save 15 to 40 percent of their medical costs by using this model, based on his examination of insurance rates and his belief that good primary care can fill most of a patient’s needs.

Insurance plans that cover every little thing can be very expensive, Dr. Bliss said. He said that a patient who paid an annual fee at his clinic and took out a higher-deductible insurance plan would usually come out ahead, even if the patient’s health needs meant that he or she had to pay the entire deductible.
Dr. Bliss’s office operates with just two administrative employees for seven doctors. He estimates that if he took insurance, one or two administrative workers would be needed per doctor.

Insurance administration costs can take a big bite out of a practice’s revenue. A recent Weill Cornell Medical College study found that a third of the money received by primary care physicians pays for interactions between a doctor’s practice and patients’ health plans.

Patricia Rogers Caroselli, a retired assistant principal who is a patient of Dr. Sacks, dreaded going to her former clinic. “The waiting room was always noisy and crowded,” she said. In the examining room, she felt that she should “get in and out and not waste the doctor’s time with questions,” she said.
In contrast, she said, she appreciates the friendly calm of Dr. Sacks’s new surroundings and the personal attention. “Everyone should have this kind of patient care,” she said.

Dr. Sacks said the financial mechanics of the direct-practice model match her medical goals. When she was compensated based on insurance, she was paid every time she saw a patient. Now, if she can use education and prevention to reduce office visits, she and her patients benefit, she said.

“Having more time to sit with each patient has made me a better doctor,” she said. “I had a disabled patient that I saw for 13 years. Until she came to my new clinic, I never had the time to learn the details of her accident and the resulting complications. I was always treating whatever the immediate concern was.”

TECHNOLOGY has helped many doctors reduce costs. Dr. Batlle says he has been building his arsenal of technology solutions one by one, with “lots of trial and error,” for eight years.
Recently, he saw a 52-year-old patient with hypertension. As he examined the patient, noting blood pressure and other vital signs, he entered the information into his laptop computer to add to the patient’s electronic medical record. He also typed in the codes for billing and insurance.

The patient wondered if he was due for a prescription refill, so Dr. Batlle checked his computer again, found that he was, and hit a button to send the refill request to the pharmacy. As the patient left, Dr. Batlle hit the keyboard to send the bill electronically to the insurance company.

“He’ll even go to the Web to schedule his follow-up appointment,” Dr. Batlle said. “I don’t pay a receptionist to sit and answer phones.”

Dr. Batlle says other doctors could outfit an office for less than the $25,000 he spent on technology.
“Most doctors think they need to hire two receptionists, a billing person and two nurses to run a primary care office,” he said. “But they can learn about these technologies from other doctors, and the software salespeople do some training.”

Some physicians hire consultants to find and install the right equipment. Doctors who want to switch to electronic health records may also receive financial support from the government through the stimulus package.

By using new technology and streamlining processes, small primary care practices can reduce their costs to half of what a typical practice pays, from about 60 percent of income down to 30 percent, Dr. Wasson said. He said that doctors who focus on reducing their costs can see fewer patients without sacrificing income. Dr. Sacks said she and her colleagues didn’t have to take a pay cut when they moved to Dr. Bliss’s practice.

As Congress and the Obama administration begin to focus more closely on health care, some primary care doctors are weighing in. Dr. Bliss, for instance, has been to Washington twice in the last month to share his ideas with legislators. He knows he’s in a debate with powerful voices, especially insurance companies and hospitals. So he and other doctors are encouraging patients to speak up as well.

“We need to bring the patients to the barricades with us,” Dr. Batlle says.

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