A state Senate committee has approved a $10 million expansion of the Iowa children's healthcare program and the measure is slated for debate in the full Senate next week. The measure by the Senate Human Resources Committee would bring an additional 30,000 children into coverage.
President Barack Obama named two women this week to lead his effort to overhaul the nation's healthcare system. One of them, Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas, began preparing for confirmation hearings. But the other woman, Nancy-Ann DeParle, can begin work right away, without outside review of her abilities or opinions. That is because DeParle holds the newly created post of "health czar"—one of several new "czar" positions that are within the White House and require no Senate review. Now, with the number of czars growing, some lawmakers and outside experts fear that Obama is concentrating too much policymaking and power within the White House—and also setting up the potential for conflict among his many advisers.
President Obama will convene a healthcare summit at the White House that he hopes will lay the groundwork for a major overhaul of the nation's healthcare system later this year. About 120 participants will attend the forum, which will feature small-group discussions, like the "fiscal responsibility" summit held last week.
Max Baucus, chair of the Senate Finance Committee, has raised a flag over the Obama administration's plan to partly fund health reform by lowering tax deductions for the wealthiest Americans. The Senate Finance Committee is going to be at the center of any health-reform plan that makes its way through Congress. Baucus said he's especially concerned about capping deductions at a lower rate.
Some new low-cost services have popped up on the Internet with the aim of providing basic healthcare consultations more cheaply and easily. The services are the next step in "telehealth," or the delivery of healthcare through the telephone, Web, or other telecommunications technologies. The new services offer the convenience of online consultations, but they still have their drawbacks.
Assisted suicide becomes legal in Washington on March 5, but dozens of hospitals are not expected to participate. Washington's law is essentially identical to the one in Oregon, the only other state that allows doctors to prescribe lethal medications. The law allows terminally ill patients who are 18 or older, and who have been found mentally competent, to self-administer lethal drugs under the prescription of a doctor. An opt-out provision for hospitals was included, partly for the sake of healthcare providers affiliated with religious groups, though many nonreligious hospitals have also invoked it.
The U.S. recession is dragging down almost every industry in almost every part of the country and businesses do not expect conditions to improve until late this year at the earliest, according to a Federal Reserve report. The Fed's "beige book," a compilation of anecdotal reports from businesses around the country published eight times a year, underlined how difficult it has become to find bright spots in the economy. Healthcare providers reported fewer patients in many parts of the country, as people declined elective procedures, the report found.
By allotting nearly $20 billion for health information technology, President Obama has set in motion a fundamental change to our entire healthcare system that many experts agree has been a long time coming. +
Consumer-directed health plans and disease management programs garnered the most support among health plan respondents in the HealthLeaders Media Industry Survey 2009. However, they also question whether CDHPs actually empower members and what are the most effective DM programs. +
Newly appointed HRSA Administrator Mary Wakefield says her background as a registered nurse will be as valuable to her new job as her years of experience and expertise in the healthcare policy arena. +
During his successful presidential campaign, candidate Barack Obama famously said federal leaders needed to use a scalpel—rather than a hatchet—to make budget cuts.
Now, less than two months into the Obama administration, the Illinois Democrat has set aside an instrument usually found on ER for one that stars on Ax Men. In the president's first budget proposal, Obama took aim at Medicare Advantage overpayments. That's not a surprise.
Obama and the Democrats are not fans of the Republican-backed program that costs about 14% more on average than Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries.
However, by using a chainsaw on Medicare Advantage, the president is also slashing payments to a subset of plans called special needs plans (SNPs). SNPs were created under the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 as a way to bring managed care to seriously chronically ill beneficiaries who are institutionalized, dually eligible, and suffer from severe and disabling chronic conditions. Congress has since established specific chronic condition SNPs that focus on such high-cost ailments as end-stage renal disease, chronic heart failure, dementia, cancer, HIV/AIDS, stroke, and chronic lung diseases.
SNPs are under the Medicare Advantage umbrella because the plans feature private entities (health insurers and disease management companies) that provide care coordination for chronically ill Medicare beneficiaries. One of the largest providers of SNPs is XLHealth, a disease management company based in Baltimore. XLHealth's Care Improvement Plus offers SNPs to chronically ill beneficiaries with diabetes, heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and end-stage renal disease.
Once a vendor that delivered DM services, XLHealth now offers SNPs exclusively. With experience in the Medicare population, XLHealth entered the SNP space because the company believed it had the system capabilities and understood how to care for chronically ill people, says Paul Serini, executive vice president at XLHealth.
Through its SNP programs, XLHealth combines its technology platform called XLCare, which aggregates data obtained through claims, pharmacy, face-to-face interactions, nurse calls, and visits with social workers, nurses, and doctors, with its regular outreach that helps care for beneficiaries medically, socially, and emotionally.
Now, after three years of providing SNPs, XLHealth faces an uncertain future under Obama's budget plan. Serini says company officials have spoken with CMS and Congress about the need to not lump SNPs in with Medicare Advantage cuts because reducing payments to Medicare fee-for-service levels would harm SNPs.
Serini says XLHealth isn't opposed to getting paid at the same level as fee-for-service providers, but CMS needs to rework the payment system so those providing services to chronically ill patients receive the right reimbursement. Currently, providers and insurers are underpaid by 12% to 18% for seriously chronically ill beneficiaries, says Serini.
The Medicare Trust Fund faces bankruptcy within the next 10 years given the wave of chronic care and baby boomers. For this reason, policymakers shouldn't cut programs that help chronically ill Medicare beneficiaries, but should test myriad solutions to see which work best.
The XL executive says one possible solution is Medicare-managed care—such as SNPs—which is a perfect fit for chronically ill patients. He believes this because Medicare managed care coordinates care across multiple providers, offers care management support, stabilizes medications for patients moving in and out of the hospital, and does transitional care planning between hospitals and nursing homes. All of these programs create a medical home for chronically ill patients, says Serini.
"We do think that managed care, managed Medicare in particular, when applied to the frail and chronically ill, is probably the best way to manage the costs of the chronically ill in the Medicare system," says Serini.
SNPs have not been around long enough to tell us whether managed Medicare programs can lower costs and improve patient health status in the long run. By cutting payments to SNPs, which will lead to insurers leaving the program, the president is in effect decimating programs that could ultimately be the best way to care for the highest-cost beneficiaries.
As President Obama looks for programs to cut, he needs to take his own advice and pick up the scalpel.
Les Masterson is senior editor of Health Plan Insider. He can be reached at lmasterson@healthleadersmedia.com.Note: You can sign up to receiveHealth Plan Insider, a free weekly e-newsletter designed to bring breaking news and analysis of important developments at health plans and other managed care organizations to your inbox.
In picking Nancy-Ann DeParle to champion an overhaul of the nation's health system, President Obama selected someone with deep roots in the Washington bureaucracy, an intimate familiarity with health policy, and respect on both sides of the political aisle. But he also chose to overlook DeParle's business ties to companies that have a direct stake in the healthcare debate.