This latest addition to the CT Health Policy Project
Book Club should be required reading for everyone. I’ve been a health
policy analyst for over twenty years and I learned something new on every page.
I couldn’t read it in one shot – I kept throwing it down in disgust. The author
is a former ER physician, former NY Times reporter, and now editor of Kaiser
Health News. She lays out the problems with our broken health care system --
sector by sector. But she doesn’t leave us there. The second half of the book
is full of very specific actions for consumers to protect themselves, with
resources, and realistic, meaningful policy changes that can start healing our
broken health system. For more reading, visit the CT Health Policy Project
Book Club.
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
CMS finalizes important patient-friendly informed consent payment proposal
CMS has finalized their proposed
Medicare rule (regulation) for how hospitals are paid that includes a new
measure assessing the quality of hospital informed consent documents given to
patients before elective procedures. (The relevant section, Potential Inclusion of the Quality of Informed
Consent Documents for Hospital-Performed, Elective Procedures Measure starts
here
on p. 373 of the pdf file – p. 38362 of the Federal Register Rules and
Regulations 82:155, 8/14/17). The rule will make an important difference in supporting
patient-centered care in hospitals across the US. The current state of hospital
informed consent documents is embarrassingly poor. Under this rule, the 4,700
US hospitals that treat Medicaid members will be paid, in part, based on the
quality of their informed consent documents. The measure may also be included
in public quality comparisons such as Hospital Compare, allowing patients to
use this measure in choosing between hospitals for their care. Many thanks to
all who submitted supportive public comments to the proposed rule.
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Survey of state legislators’ values for health reform finds strong differences by party but some encouraging overlap
Both Democratic and Republican state legislators from across
the US agree on the need to control health care costs, according to a new
survey published
in the American Journal of Public Health. However, other top priorities
between the parties differ strongly. Republicans prioritized smaller government
along with reducing costs while Democrats prioritize improving health equity
with cost control. Republicans were split among themselves between prioritizing
improving overall health and reducing government involvement in health care.
The authors suggest that this reflects a split in the party between moderates
and conservatives. There was no difference between legislators based on
geography or legislative chamber. The results suggest opportunities for
bipartisan progress on health reform, especially on controlling costs, and
messaging for advocates. The survey was supported by the Commonwealth
and Milbank Memorial Funds.
Monday, August 21, 2017
DPH launches website comparing CT quality and cost of hospital and nursing home care
Last week, CT’s Department of Public Health unveiled MONAHRQ, a
web tool allowing consumers and other health care decision-makers to compare
the quality, outcomes, utilization and costs of health care in our state. For
example, Only three of CT’s 24 general hospitals are above average in patient
ratings – Greenwich, Middlesex and Milford. Sadly, most (17) rank below average
and seven are average. Another report from the web tool finds that New Haven
county has the dubious distinction of the highest per capita rate of avoidable
hospitalizations in the state. We have a
lot of room for improvement.
Thursday, August 17, 2017
State policymakers hear how bioscience is generating jobs with health innovation
The growing Bioscience industry holds great potential to
improve the region’s economy and health , according to speakers at “Bioscience
Initiatives: Improving Health and Growing the Economy” at this week’s CSG-ERC Annual Meeting in CT. Panelists
included Mostafa
Analoui, PhD, Executive Director, UConn Venture Development, Mike Hyde, Vice President,
External Affairs, The Jackson Laboratory, and Jon Soderstrom,
Ph.D., Managing Director of the Office of Cooperative Research, Yale University.
The Northeast has a unique bio-medical ecosystem with considerable capacity to spawn
innovative new bioscience companies and to meet those companies’ need for
talented workers. Bioscience has attracted hundreds of millions of dollars in
private equity and venture capital funding to CT alone. New companies are
driving research, developing new drugs and treatments, and leading cutting edge
fields such as genomic medicine. UConn has created a Technology Incubation
Program supporting dozens of new bioscience ventures across industries. The
88-year old nonprofit scientific research institute, Jackson Labs, has brought 320
well-paying jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars to their new CT site. Yale
has created 40 new biotech companies in the Greater New Haven area and more are
forming.
State health policymakers get the latest from DC and options to respond
At this week’s CSG-ERC
Annual Meeting in CT, state policymakers from across the Northeast got
updates from experts on the federal health care landscape, state options to
adapt. CT’s Lieutenant Governor Nancy
Wyman pulled it all together describing CT’s progress toward health reform.
Mitchell Stein gave a detailed summary of federal activity including CHIP
reauthorization (ends Sept. 30 without action), tax bills and raising the debt
limit which all could impact Medicaid and/or the Affordable Care Act. He
re-capped ACA repeal efforts and the status of insurance exchanges including
cost-sharing reduction payments, underserved counties, premium levels and
degradation of the risk pool. It’s estimated that about half of premium rates
for next year are due to uncertainty about ACA implementation. He outlined what
is likely to happen this fall and potential state responses including reinsurance
waivers and creating a Medicaid buy-in option.
Policymakers then heard from Chris Koller,
President of the Milbank Memorial Fund, on the big picture and states’ capacity
to address the quickly changing environment. He reminded policymakers about the
importance of social services in health outcomes and America’s poor performing
health system that costs more and delivers less than other countries. He
outlined concerns about slow economic growth’s impact on the health of poorer
populations and government’s ability to address that stress, rising health
disparities, and political changes. Probably his most popular slide described
the results of a Milbank survey of state legislators finding that Democrats and
Republicans have very different goals and values for health reform. Republicans
are most interested in reducing costs while Democrats prioritize improving
health and equity. The federal government is delegating more health policymaking
to states, while Medicaid costs rise, crowding out other priorities. In good
news, he highlighted Georgia’s progress in reducing infant mortality, and
Delaware’s success in addressing chronic illnesses, with lessons learned. He
emphasized that states need to get creative in building state health policy
capacity and shared a roadmap to get there.
Lieutenant
Governor Nancy Wyman ended the meeting by recapping what we heard and
describing CT’s long history of success in reforming health care and expanding
access. She outlined work creating AccessHealthCT, outreach efforts that cut
CT’s uninsured rate in half, Medicaid reforms, and support for primary care and
prevention with the state employee plan’s Health Enhancement Program.
This was followed by a lively question and answer discussion
touching on the relationship between health care industries and jobs, state
options to create a reinsurance program and/or require all individual coverage
be sold on the insurance exchange, the role of 1332 waivers, the role of family
caregivers, end of life care costs, and comparisons with the Canadian system.
More information on state reinsurance programs and Medicaid
buy-in options will be coming.
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
The Future of Medicine in the Human Genome Genomics -- Making a difference in patients’ lives / By Mary Branham
From CSG-ERC’s
Annual Meeting in Connecticut
Mapping the first human genome in 2000 cost about $4
billion; today, it costs about $1,000.
The cost has come down because of investment, and because of
the important role genomics is playing in medicine today, according to Dr.
Murat Gunel, a professor of neurosurgery, genetics and neuroscience at Yale
University, who spoke during Sunday’s luncheon plenary, “Genomics and Precision
Medicine: Investing in the Future of Health Care.”
“We have all recognized the power of genomics,” Gunel said.
“This is clinical. This is making a difference in our patients’ lives
everyday.”
Plus, he said, “this is the new Internet race.” Various
nations are investing in the research, recognizing the main race now is
learning how to decode the genomic makeup of people to understand their
diseases. It is one of four areas in which China is making multi-billion dollar
investments. The U.S. also has made significant investments in the area,
starting with the 2000 investment in mapping the first genome.
“You can imagine the impact it will have on our health care
system if you can predict a disease before it starts,” he said.
Now, for the most part, while the ability to diagnose
disease is evolving, treatments are often a best guess based on effectiveness
over a general population. Genomic testing will allow for precision—also
referred to as individualized—medicine to treat patients based on many factors.
But, Gunel cautioned, “genomics in isolation does not mean
much.”
He said that information must be combined with what is known
about the quality of the air or water in a person’s environment or about how
much they exercise, for example.
Having that information for individuals can help them tailor
their lifestyles to improve their health. Even so, Gunel said a bigger purpose
would be to use that information in population health. Precision medicine has
already seen some success, such as addressing newborn diseases, prenatal
diagnosis, pharmacogenomics and individualized treatment for cancer, he said.
That’s because genomic testing has increased the number of
genes that can be tested. Gunel said cancer patients are looked at with regard
to their genomic makeup. That ability has helped bring a 30 percent cure rate
for metastatic melanoma, he said.
It’s changing the way diseases are treated. For instance,
now everyone diagnosed with lung cancer is given the same treatment, according
to Gunel. With genomic testing, physicians are able to understand the baseline
risks individuals have and make specific lifestyle recommendations to help prevent
the diseases. Then, if the disease occurs, “we could diagnose it faster and
give more effective and more individualized treatments.”
While precision medicine will have major impacts on health
care, Gunel said it could also bring $1 trillion in economic growth. That could
impact the development of things like new medicines and the creation of new
fields to fill such roles as genetic counseling and computational biology—the
people who can run the artificial intelligence (AI) in the data center.
“We think the number of people we are going to need in that
field is going to ramp up tremendously,” said Rich Lisitano, vice president at
Yale-New Haven Hospital.
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