Author Topic: The Politics of Health Care  (Read 769046 times)

ccp

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Fauci has new book coming out
« Reply #1900 on: June 15, 2024, 06:17:34 AM »
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/donald-trump-apologized-to-anthony-fauci-after-irate-call-book/ar-BB1ofc0l?ocid=msedgntp&pc=DCTS&cvid=b18670393ad748b7bb58345c997f4d93&ei=55

 **Trump allegedly said that Fauci "cost the country one trillion f****** dollars."**

The medical experts led by Fauci and CDC cost the economy at least 6 trillion.

ccp

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Fauci still never admits anything on softball CBS interview
« Reply #1901 on: June 16, 2024, 07:49:18 AM »
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/dr-anthony-fauci-on-pandemics-partisan-critics-and-the-psyche-o
f-the-country/ar-BB1ojM4d?ocid=msedgntp&pc=DCTS&cvid=61909f5b013e42cba6ab697868596257&ei=44

"no regrets"

 :roll:

ccp

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PBMs skimming
« Reply #1902 on: June 21, 2024, 03:49:15 PM »
https://dnyuz.com/2024/06/21/the-opaque-industry-secretly-inflating-prices-for-prescription-drugs/

Is it not obvious that organizations who will not be transparent about their inner financing are almost by definition wheeling, dealing, and stealing for themselves.


Body-by-Guinness

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Politics Trump Proven Successes While Bulwarking Failures
« Reply #1903 on: July 09, 2024, 01:51:22 PM »
Interesting bon mots re how policies are perceived by who proposed them:

Why We Hate Each Other, Part II

July 9, 2024

By JOHN C. GOODMAN

In a previous post, I argued that the reason why our society is so polarized is not because we are deeply divided over any particular set of public policies. Instead, we have evolved into tribes whose dislike for each other has grown over time.

Under tribalism, public debates quickly devolve into attacks on the personality of people in the other tribe, instead of facilitating rational discussion about an issue.

Yet, although issues are not what divides us, what does divide us can spill over and affect how we think about issues.

A recent Fox News poll found that the idea of not taxing tips is quite popular—with twice as many people favoring as opposing the idea. But once people were told that the proposal was made by Donald Trump, support for it among Democratic voters dropped 40 points.

That’s a remarkable outcome. If it holds for other issues, that implies that who proposes an idea is far more important than the idea itself.

Take the field of health policy.

In the last two decades, there have been two very significant changes in our health care system. More than 32 million Medicare beneficiaries are now enrolled in private health insurance plans as part of Medicare Advantage. And more than 21 million people who have obtained their own insurance are enrolled in private plans through the (Obamacare) marketplace exchanges.

On paper, these two programs look very similar. Each has an annual enrollment period; enrollees choose among competing private plans; there are significant government subsidies for the buyers; and there can be no discrimination based on health condition.

Importantly, these two programs look the same because their intellectual roots are the same.

However, the Medicare Advantage program—although originally a bipartisan reform—evolved to be thought of as a Republican program. In fact, Barack Obama campaigned against it in his 2008 bid for the presidency. Conversely, Obamacare is clearly thought of as a Democratic program, and Republicans have been bashing it ever since.

Now, as a practical matter, Medicare Advantage works much better than the Obamacare exchanges. That’s because Medicare Advantage was designed and significantly improved over time with a great deal of care. Obamacare, by contrast, was rushed through Congress at the last minute, after making unfortunate concessions to a lot of special interests.

Had the Democrats been smarter, in designing Obamacare they would have simply copied the blueprint established by Medicare Advantage. Even today, the most sensible way to improve Obamacare is to make it look a lot more like Medicare Advantage. And since MA plans have lower costs and higher quality than traditional Medicare, the best way to reform the latter is to make it look more like the former. Yet outside of a small group of economists I work with, these ideas are rarely discussed.

The field of health policy is heavily dominated by people whose political views are left-of-center. That includes academics, policy analysts, government employees, newspaper reporters and journal editors.

That may explain why—especially during the Biden presidency—there has been a slew of government agency reports and academic journal articles critical of MA plans—but none that are critical of traditional Medicare or Obamacare—which have far worse problems.

A Google search shows the same pattern among newspaper stories. About the only articles you will find on Obamacare describe its success in insuring more people. There are virtually no stories about Obamacare’s high deductibles, narrow networks and huge out-of-pocket exposure for people with large medical bills.

In other words, the vast bulk of people who are writing and evaluating health care programs reveal a bias based on which party designed the program, not on how well it works relative to other programs.

Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) are usually thought of as a Republican idea, and by law plans that offer HSAs they must include a high deductible. Through the years, the left has been generally critical of HSAs in general and high deductibles in particular. However, the highest deductibles in the entire health care system right now are found in the Obamacare exchanges. The average for an individual is currently $5,101, and that is without any HSA. By contrast, the average in employer plans last year was $1,735.

For the last decade, you would be hard-pressed to find a news article describing how folks with Obamacare coverage are having trouble affording health care. You do see an occasional poll asking people whether they have failed to fill a prescription or see a doctor because of cost, and the numbers are quite high. But this problem is almost never connected to Obamacare.

The biggest problem with tribalism is this: It is in the self-interest of politicians to come up with new solutions to persistent problems; but once an idea is proposed, the knee-jerk reaction is for everyone in the other party to dismiss it—no matter how good the idea is.

As long as that is the state of affairs, our most serious public policy problems will never be solved.

 
JOHN C. GOODMAN is a Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute, author of Priceless: Curing the Healthcare Crisis and President of the Goodman Institute for Public Policy Research.

https://www.independent.org/news/article.asp?id=14987

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Politics of Health Care
« Reply #1904 on: July 09, 2024, 07:13:57 PM »
Though some pertinent examples are given, on the whole I quite disagree with this:

"issues are not what divides us"

Racial Marxism vs. the Merit based Natural Law of our Founding Fathers.  Hard to think of a more substantive divide.

ccp

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Re: The Politics of Health Care
« Reply #1905 on: July 10, 2024, 06:07:24 AM »
"The biggest problem with tribalism is this: It is in the self-interest of politicians to come up with new solutions to persistent problems; but once an idea is proposed, the knee-jerk reaction is for everyone in the other party to dismiss it—no matter how good the idea is."

True, but the reason we have tribalism (really coming from the Dem side) is exactly what CD points to:

"Racial Marxism vs. the Merit based Natural Law of our Founding Fathers.  Hard to think of a more substantive divide."


Body-by-Guinness

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Fixing the Last Fix, with a New Fix that will Also Require a Fix
« Reply #1906 on: July 15, 2024, 06:47:15 PM »
Here’s an idea: lets get all these ineffective layers of government out of the way:

Reason for Our Health Care Crisis: Government

July 15, 2024

By JOHN C. GOODMAN

Sarah Stierch / Wikimedia Commons

Also published in Forbes Fri. July 12, 2024

The old saw about health care in leftist quarters is this: “The United States is the only industrialized country without national health insurance.” The listener is left to infer that in our country we care less about whether people have access to health care than other countries do.

But consider this. Compulsory spending on health care (government spending plus mandated private spending) consumes a greater share of our health care spending than in most other developed countries (85 percent in the U.S. versus an OECD average of 76 percent). Further, compulsory health care spending consumes a greater portion of our national income than any other country in the world.

Not only is government more involved in health care spending than other countries, it is also more active in regulating health care. For example, among a select group of drugs, the U.S. requires a physician’s prescription for twice as many as are required in Australia.

Trying to Solve Government-Created Problems

And that’s the problem, according to Michael Cannon, author of Recovery: A Guide to Reforming the Health Care System. Cannon argues that all of our major health care programs (Medicare, Medicaid, Obamacare, etc.) came into existence primarily to solve problems created by previous government interventions. And, the reason why there is a continuing push for further reform is because all the programs that are supposed to be solving problems are creating new ones.

Take Medicare. Cannon writes that before Medicare started in 1965, numerous private insurance plans were guaranteed to be renewable for the beneficiary’s lifetime. Even if their health deteriorated, people had continuing insurance coverage. The reason many retirees didn’t have that kind of insurance at the time is that government policies encouraged them to get tax-free health insurance from their employers. When they retired, they lost that insurance.

Medicare and Medicaid unleashed an enormous amount of new health care spending. But there was no overall increase in health care. There was a shifting of resources to the elderly and the poor from the rest of the population. But the number of overall doctor visits and hospital procedures barely changed.

As any freshman economics student knows, if you have a substantial increase in demand with no change in supply, prices will rise. In the years following the introduction of these two programs, physicians’ fees rose twice as fast as the economy-wide rate of inflation, and hospital prices increased almost five times as much. By one estimate, one-third or more of this spending was wasted, and economists find that no additional senior lives were saved in the first 10 years of Medicare’s existence.

What Led to Medicaid?

Cannon says that one reason we have Medicaid is that low-income families were priced out of the market for medical care. The cause: regulations that limit the number of people who can become doctors and limit what services nondoctors can offer. The American Medical Association (AMA), long regarded as the most successful medieval guild in the U.S. economy, has for well over a century been responsible for excessively limiting the number of students who can be trained in medical schools and then licensed to practice.

Most states legally prevent nurses and physician’s assistants from practicing to the full extent of their training. Even where nurses provide routine primary care (e.g., walk-in clinics), state medical societies lobby to hobble them with costly regulations. Cannon says the AMA boasts that in 2019 alone it blocked more than 100 attempts to expand scope-of-practice freedom to nondoctors.

The hospital sector may be even worse. Certificate of Need (CON) laws make it impossible to erect a new hospital or medical facility unless the newcomer can show that the market needs more supply. Existing facilities get to challenge any such claims and argue that all relevant needs are already being met. Cannon cites studies showing that CON laws protect monopolistic providers, raise costs and increase the size of patient bills.

Cannon says another reason for the existence of Medicaid is the tax subsidy for employer-provided health insurance. In 2021, employer family coverage averaged $22,221. Assuming a 30 percent marginal tax rate, that’s a $7,333 annual subsidy. Yet historically there has been little or no tax subsidy for low-income families buying their own health insurance.

Government tax subsidies for years encouraged middle- and upper-income families to over-insure and over-consume care, while crowding out care for those at the bottom of the income ladder.

Currently Medicaid finances 20 percent of all health care spending in the U.S. What are we getting for all that money? Cannon cites an Oregon study, which is the most comprehensive study of the effects of Medicaid ever undertaken. The study found that new enrollees in Medicaid increased their emergency room visits by 40 percent and that after two years there was no difference in their physical health. This is the exact opposite of what the health policy orthodoxy predicted would happen.

Although Cannon doesn’t mention it, 40 percent of children in this country are enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP. Since these programs pay rock-bottom fees, that may explain why the incomes of pediatricians are lower than any other specialty. That, in turn, may explain why there is a persistent shortage of pediatricians.

Why Do We Have Obamacare?

There is only one reason why we have Obamacare. Its advocates frightened people who had employer-provided insurance. The fear was that people might be discriminated against if they left their employers, had to buy their own insurance, and had a pre-existing medical condition. But the only reason why that fear lingered is because federal tax policy prohibited employers from funding personal and portable health insurance and failed to subsidize individually owned insurance to the same degree that it subsidized employer-provided coverage.

Even so, in the first decade under Obamacare, the number of people buying private insurance in the (Obamacare) exchanges was largely offset by a decrease in employer coverage. Almost all the increase in the number of insured was achieved through an increase in Medicaid enrollment. This increase was achieved by giving states financial incentives (a larger matching rate) to enroll healthy, single adults, while doing nothing to increase access for the developmentally disabled on Medicaid waiting lists.

As in the case of Medicare and Medicare, there was no increase in health care nationwide under Obamacare, despite a huge increase in government health care spending. There was a small uptick in services for low-income families offset by an insignificant decrease in services for the rest of the population. But that was it. Doctor visits per capita actually went down in the years leading up to the Covid pandemic.

Cannon says that because Obamacare private insurance was available for the same premium, regardless of health condition, premiums doubled in the first four years and families were exposed to the highest deductibles and out-of-pocket exposure found anywhere in the entire health care system. To make matters worse, Cannon cites studies showing there has been a “race to the bottom,” in which the plans are denying high-quality care to patients most in need of it.

How Congress Rescued Obamacare

As a result, the unsubsidized part of the (Obamacare) exchanges was in a free fall (what some might call a “death spiral”)—as people left to find better insurance options elsewhere. A Democratic Congress came to the rescue with “enhanced subsidies,” which include as much as “$12,000 for people earning $212,000 a year.”

Remember what the same Congress didn’t do. It didn’t use that same money it is spending on healthy adults and high-income families to meet the far greater needs of the developmentally disabled on waiting lists or to increase the fees for pediatricians needed to care for children in low-income families.

The solution? Cannon would give Medicaid and Medicare funds to the beneficiaries in the form of cash and give employer payments to employees in the form of large Health Savings Accounts. I’ll write about those ideas in a future column.

 
JOHN C. GOODMAN is a Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute, author of Priceless: Curing the Healthcare Crisis and President of the Goodman Institute for Public Policy Research.

https://www.independent.org/news/article.asp?id=14992


Body-by-Guinness

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Fewer American Able to Afford Health Care
« Reply #1908 on: July 22, 2024, 03:47:38 PM »
Perhaps this helps explain why minorities appear to be breaking for Trump:

Americans less able to afford healthcare than 2022: Study
The Hill News / by Patrick Djordjevic / Jul 22, 2024 at 4:34 PM

Story at a glance

There has been a 6% decrease in Americans who are imminently able to afford and access quality healthcare on the 2022 index by West Health and Gallup.

In the same category, those in the 18-49 age bracket dropped 5%, 50 to 64-year-olds decreased 5% and those 65+ had lessened by 8%.
Black and Hispanic people became more "cost desperate," meaning they are unable to access affordable medicine, both recently and at present.
(NewsNation) — The percentage of Americans struggling to afford healthcare has grown since 2022, according to the West Health-Gallup affordability index.

There has been a 6% decrease in Americans who are imminently able to afford and access quality healthcare on the 2022 index by West Health and Gallup.

In the same category, those in the 18-49 age bracket dropped 5%, 50 to 64-year-olds decreased 5% and those 65+ had lessened by 8%.

Brief evening exercise can improve sleep time: Study
Ready access to adequate healthcare was termed as "cost-secure" by the index; meaning people who had no recent incidences of household members being unable to afford care, medicine, or treatment if it were needed today.

The survey was conducted via mail and internet methodologies across all 50 states - as well as the District of Columbia - with 5,149 adults aged 18 and over.

What's more, Black and Hispanic people became more "cost desperate," meaning they are unable to access affordable medicine, both recently and at present.

Cost desperate Black adults grew from seven to eleven percent since 2022, while Hispanics rose from eleven to 14%.

https://thehill.com/changing-america/respect/poverty/4783833-americans-less-able-to-afford-healthcare-than-2022-study/

ccp

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Just got this in my mailbox this am from Maine board of licensure
« Reply #1909 on: July 29, 2024, 06:37:53 AM »
Totally out of left field and totally offensive and insulting and even more unnecessary.

FROM THE CHAIR
Communication and Diversity
Maroulla S. Gleaton, M.D., Chair

"As we look to solve physician shortages in our state, the legislature has turned its attention to filling the gap with internationally trained and/or practicing physicians. A more diverse workforce of physicians is coming to practice in Maine and there is more cultural diversity in our practice populations. In the past, we typically interacted with colleagues and patients who were also Mainers and culturally familiar to us. Colleagues and staff members were often from the same country, state, and even community which meant they most often had similar ways of communicating and making decisions. That is no longer the case for many of us. So, outlined below are several areas to consider as we encounter more diversity in colleagues, staff, patients, and their families.

Physicians must first of all understand their own biases, assumptions, attitudes, likes, and dislikes. We are all trained to be professional in many technical and organizational aspects of medical care but sometimes we need more education in verbal and non-verbal communication.

We could all learn more about different cultures and their values, especially in population bases we are likely to work with and take care of depending on where we practice and how our practice setting and community might change over time. This includes interactions with colleagues, staff as well as patients. Nobody practices in a vacuum.

It is usually a good idea to avoid the use of slang and jargon. Use language that is day-to-day vocabulary tailored to the ability of the particular patient and their family to understand and feel comfortable with. Resist the temptation to interrupt or paraphrase when communicating. Take time and make extra effort to allow someone to finish asking questions or offering information when answering questions. Let them describe the reasons for their visit including symptoms in their own words. Relax and be flexible. Studies have shown that when allowed to “tell their story” patients typically take only two and one-half minutes!

Close doors to exam rooms to ensure the privacy and quiet necessary for clear and comfortable communication. Don’t read too much into the lack of eye contact, which is not favored in some cultures. Ask permission before examining or touching the patient. Concentrate on explicit signals and be sensitive to implicit cues. Be aware that nonverbal gestures account for about half of interactive communication.

Verbalize and be sure you and the patient establish common goals for the visit. Encourage feedback about what you feel you are told by the patient or family member to allow for correction and adjustment of the message. Listen attentively to questions and responses.

Lastly, remember that empathetic understanding and appreciating the worldview of others can be a powerful influence on the degree of success you will have interacting with almost anyone. Quite simply, treat others as you would want you or your loved ones to be treated."

ccp

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But headlines very misleading of course
prices negotiated on medicines that cost Medicare 50 billion (I presume to the penny!)
prices negotiated down by 38- 79 %!!!
Wow, but not so fast
This is before other discounts etc .
and it would save taxpayers "6 billion" (to the penny!)
which is only 12%
and it "could" save up to 1.5 billion (to the penny!)
which even if true or even close to accurate is only 3%.  In other words, your drug that cost $300 is not only $291 .

Big deal  :roll:

Yet looking at the headline that the media will run across the goal line it sounds like a lot.
Gaslighting !

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/white-house-says-deals-struck-090414809.html

ccp

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NJ Governor cancels 100 million in health care debt
« Reply #1911 on: August 21, 2024, 05:58:30 AM »
« Last Edit: August 21, 2024, 06:31:34 AM by ccp »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Politics of Health Care
« Reply #1912 on: August 21, 2024, 07:52:26 AM »
Yes, AND there is a lot of deranged madness out there too.   

I once went for a flu shot at my neighborhood Fast Care place.  There were out so they sent me elsewhere, where I did get the shot, AND a bill for $900!!! 

ccp

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Re: The Politics of Health Care
« Reply #1913 on: August 21, 2024, 08:58:41 AM »
flu shots are free with Medicare I thought.
I have a plan G supplement but don't pay anything at Walmart pharmacy.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Politics of Health Care
« Reply #1914 on: August 21, 2024, 04:10:18 PM »
I wasn't Medicare at the time.