A Slowing Economy--What Impact Will It Have On The Health Care Sector?
Friday, February 29, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 3:04 PM
Health care is considered a business that tends to be resistant to economic downturns. Brian Klepper returns with a post asking just what the impact of a slowing economy will have on the health care sector. He specifically points to changes in real wages and home prices.Health Care and The Gathering Stormby Brian KlepperHere are two very interesting and frightening charts that my good friend
Another Government Study Questions the Medicare Advantage Business
Posted by Unknown at 10:18 AM
You can now add the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to MedPAC and the CBO as highly respected government agencies who have issued reports questioning the cost effectiveness of the private Medicare program.This time, the GAO said:Insurers will receive $86 billion this year for the private Medicare plan--Medicare Advantage.Last year the government paid the private plans $8.3 billion more
Drug Patents and "Pay-For-Delay"--Drug Industry Payoffs That Need To End
Thursday, February 28, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 4:00 AM
I call your attention to a recent op-ed by a member of the Federal Trade Commission, Jon Leibowitz, in the Washington Post.Commissioner Leibowitz writes about the growing practice of "colluding with competitors to keep lower-cost generic alternatives to prescription drugs off the market."The Hatch-Waxman Act made it easier for generic drugs to enter the market once a name brand drug's patent has
Health Insurance Industry "Racing to Defuse a Growing Furor Over Retroactive Policy Cancellations"
Wednesday, February 27, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 7:46 AM
That was the lead line in a Wall Street Journal story on the recent health insurance policy rescission controversy. The controversy is over a health insurance company's right to cancel a health insurance policy when the insured made a misstatement on the original application.Some insurers have held they can cancel a policy even when the misstatement was not material. For example, forgetting a
Give Cuomo and the Physicians What They Say They Want--Show the Patient Just What the Doc Is Accepting From Everyone Else
Tuesday, February 26, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 11:01 AM
New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo says that health plans are using the "Prevailing Healthcare Charges System" to "defraud" consumers and "manipulate" the system.He points to the example of an insurer refusing to pay a physician's $200 bill--the insurer said that $77 was more appropriate.In an earlier post, I pointed out that an examination of my own family's health insurance "explanation of
How Profitable is Medicare Advantage? The United/Humana Deal in Las Vegas Says a Lot
Posted by Unknown at 8:28 AM
UnitedHealth and Humana have announced that Humana will acquire UnitedHealth's Las Vegas Medicare Advantage business for $185 million.The transaction was important for United in order to get Justice Department approval of UnitedHealth's acquisition of Sierra Health Systems.That $185 million gets Humana only another 25,000 seniors--at a price of $7,400 a customer.
The Argument for Specialty Hospitals
Monday, February 25, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 8:20 PM
The growth of specialty hospitals has always concerned me. Too often these niche players looked to be siphoning off the most profitable parts of the business leaving the big hospital to charge payers more for their less profitable services--creating higher prices overall.David Whelan recently called my attention to an article he just did at Forbes making a strong argument in favor of
Hillary Clinton Criticizes Barack Obama's Health Care Plan Saying It Would Not Cover Everyone--Is She Right?
Friday, February 22, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 3:00 PM
This is a repost of an original that addresses Hillary Clinton's claim, repeated in this week's Texas debate, that only her health plan accomplishes universal coverage because it has a individual mandate and Barak Obama's does not. Senator Clinton goes so far as to say she would garnish wages to enforce her mandate that everyone buy health insurance.Hillary Clinton has gone on the attack in
A "Health Care Fed" and Obama
Thursday, February 21, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 8:20 PM
An idea that has been floating around for some time is that a "Health Care Fed" needs to be created as a means to control health care costs.I first heard of the concept in a conversation I had with former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop a few years ago. Later, the idea showed up as a centerpiece in the National Coalition's plan to reform the health care system.And in both cases, I have supported
Health Wonk Review Is UP
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 7:05 PM
This week's review of the best health care blog posts is up over at Merrill Goozner's, "Gooznews.com." The former foreign correspondent, economics writer, investigative reporter for the Chicago Tribune, as well as teacher and researcher, always has interesting things to say on his blog.
The Usual and Customary Controversy--Who's Cheating Whom?
Posted by Unknown at 4:00 AM
New York AG Andrew Cuomo recently announced an investigation into how insurers pay for out-of-network services. He charged that consumers were being "defrauded" by insurers who were "manipulating reimbursement rates."Cuomo used the example of a charge for an office visit of $200 that the insurer cut back to $77--the insurer claimed the lower amount was reasonable and the maximum that should be
Bush Administration Now Willing to Increase SCHIP Spending by $19 Billion Only Weeks After Vetoing a Bipartisan Compromise
Tuesday, February 19, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 11:01 AM
At a February 7th Senate Finance Committee hearing, HHS Secretary Leavitt testified about the 2009 Bush budget request.This time, the Bush Administration is asking for $19.3 billion more for SCHIP over the next five years.Just a few weeks ago, President Bush vetoed the $35 billion bipartisan SCHIP extension yet again. Bush and Leavitt maintained all of last year that the program should be
Lifetime Health Care Costs For the Obese and Smokers Lower Because They're Dead Sooner
Posted by Unknown at 10:41 AM
This was the impressive conclusion of a study published by the Public Library of Science Medicine. The study was sponsored by the Dutch Ministry of Health Welfare and Sport.Obese people had the highest health care costs between the ages of 20 and 56. Obese folks and smokers were found to have a higher rate of heart disease than others.However, the authors found that the obese and those who smoke
Mom, Dad, the Kids and Medicare––Would an Obama Presidency Energize Young Adults to Demand Entitlement Reform?
Monday, February 18, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 4:00 AM
Barack Obama has made this election-year different. Not since the 1960s have young voters been so energized. One college town after another has voted big for him.On entitlement issues like Social Security and Medicare, the political debate has always been dominated by what senior voters want. They have been the big and effective voter block that have managed to insulate these programs from any
Haley Barbour or Hillary Clinton?
Friday, February 15, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 10:41 AM
Here's a test.Who just proposed the following, Hillary Clinton or Haley Barbour:A government authorized health insurance purchasing exchange program for the purpose of marketing health insuranceRun as a not-for-profit clearing house from which consumers could purchase health insuranceTarget the uninsuredAvailable to workers in small businessesDesigned to reduce the overhead costs of small group
Employers Finally Figuring Out They Can Shift Retiree Costs to Medicare
Thursday, February 14, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 10:18 AM
Employers are finally showing signs that they have figured out they can take advantage of the generous Medicare payments to Medicare Advantage plans.With Medicare Advantage plans paid 13% more than for the same beneficiary under traditional Medicare, many seniors have figured out the benefits are better in the private plans. Private Fee-For-Service (PFFS) plans even get more than that.What is
No One Ever Did Understand "Customary and Reasonable"
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 11:01 AM
New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo is suing Ingenix over its operation of the longtime "customary and reasonable" database.In the days before provider networks, insurers relied on this survey of insurance company claim data to determine an appropriate payment level. It was a survey of what all participating insurers paid by service in a particular market thereby ensuring that any one payer
Bush Budget Dead On Arrival But It Underscores the Trouble With Entitlements and The Choices That Must Be Made
Tuesday, February 5, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 4:00 AM
President Bush is calling for $560 billion in cuts from Medicare over the next decade.He would make these cuts by reducing the payments doctors and hospitals would have received.What is amazing about the Bush budget numbers is that the administration is only trying to cut Medicare's annual growth rate from 7% to 5%. At one level, that ought to be easy. After all we aren't talking about reductions
When it Comes To Health Care Policy It Really Doesn't Matter Which Democrat Or Which Republican Wins Their Nomination
Monday, February 4, 2008 Posted by Unknown at 4:28 AM
With "Super Tuesday" upon us, I am once again bringing back a post that argues there is little difference among the candidates in each of their respective parties.My suggestion is that you not cast your caucus or primary vote for a candidate based upon their health care reform plan.From “thirty thousand feet” the leading Republicans are offering much the same health care policy ideas—a more
"Plumpy"––A Reminder That Good Policy Works on Many Fronts
Posted by Unknown at 4:00 AM
Brian Klepper joins us again today with a post that reminds us that good health care policy doesn't have to be complicated health care policy and can work for us on many fronts at once. Plumpy'nut by Brian KlepperThe NY Times recently had an important op-ed by Susan Shepherd, a pediatrician and medical advisor to Doctors Without Borders. The core of her message is that as the farm bill progresses
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