Thursday, February 28, 2013

Winning Medicare for All? “I Like Our Chances”

Despite insights, Time magazine’s cover story falls short on remedy

In his recent Time magazine article, Steven Brill paints a vivid and rather depressing picture of the perverse malfunctioning of our health care system � overpriced and technology-addicted � and he acknowledges some of the advantages of Medicare.

Sadly, however, he shies away from an endorsement of the obvious solution: an improved Medicare for all, i.e. single-payer national health insurance.

I�ll come back to that a little later. However, let me first say that Brill masterfully illuminates much of what�s wrong with U.S. health care.

Take, for example, the �chargemaster� list: an archival, bizarrely hyper-inflated price list in each hospital based on some long-lost secret formulas and automatically inflated over time.

As a physician and health policy researcher, I�ve long known about the massive charges offered to non-contract payers (read: individuals not covered by a public or private insurer), charges that are completely meaningless for costing studies because they�re almost never paid in full and don�t represent the real resources used to provide care. However, what Brill lays out brilliantly (pun intended) is the following:

Some very poor (lower-middle income) people actually do pay the sky-high chargemaster rates. There is a cottage industry (growing, I�m sure, if nothing else due to this article) to help those hapless souls negotiate steep discounts on these ridiculous bills. Hospital administrators either refuse to discuss the chargemaster list or offer up the most heinous, transparently nonsensical justifications for using it. Perhaps worst of all, the CEOs of large not-for-profit providers are paid literally millions of dollars (OK, not tens of millions like big for-profit companies, but still �), thereby introducing into a supposedly public-good-oriented setting the compensation (and marketing) tone of for-profit industry. When these not-for-profits list their �charity� care they value it at the price levels in the chargemaster, even though the cost to produce those services is less than 10 percent of the chargemaster price.

In these and other instances, Brill performs an outstanding public service. However, he regrettably stops short (or his editors stopped him short) of explaining why a single-payer health care system is the only effective remedy for the mess we find ourselves in today. This despite the fact that much of what he says would lead you directly to that conclusion.

He goes so far as to quote others, including John Gunn, Sloan-Kettering�s chief operating officer, who says, �If you could figure out a way to pay doctors better and separately fund research � adequately, I could see where a single-payer approach would be the most logical solution. � It would certainly be a lot more efficient than hospitals like ours having hundreds of people sitting around filling out dozens of different kinds of bills for dozens of insurance companies.�

Yet Brill characterizes single payer, the most logical solution, as �unrealistic� and fraught with the danger of government overreach and intrusion, summarily dismissing it. Need we mention insurance-company overreach and intrusion in the doctor-patient relationship? Need we note the freedom of Medicare beneficiaries to choose their own doctor and hospital, something that would also characterize a single-payer system?

Incidentally, Brill sharply undervalues the government role in paying for health care. He says that the federal government pays $800 billion per year out of our $2.8 trillion health bill, with the remainder mainly picked up by private insurers and individuals.

The $800 billion federal spending on Medicare and the federal portion of Medicaid is right. However, when you add in other federal programs, the state portion of Medicaid, other state and local programs, health insurance for government employees, and tax subsidies, the total government contribution is over 60 percent of total health spending, and rising. Our government already spends enough to pay for universal single payer!

Single-payer health reform is clearly the answer. We need to create the meme and the momentum and the aura of inevitability to do the right thing � despite the opposition of individuals and organizations with massive vested financial interests in the private health industry. They can be overcome.

Think Lincoln and the 13th amendment. As he said (or at least Daniel Day-Lewis said in the movie), regarding prospects of passing the amendment out of Congress, despite doom-saying by his advisers � �I like our chances� (slight smile).

I like our chances on single payer because it�s now so obvious how irremediably broken our system is, and the house of cards will eventually fall. It�s all about perseverance and timing.

James G. Kahn, M.D., M.P.H., is a professor at the Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, Global Health Services, and the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, all at the University of California, San Francisco. He is also past president of the California chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program.

Will Your Long-Term Care Coverage Keep Up With Changing Times?

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Nine More Go to Jail for Single Payer

Following a pattern of civil resistance in Washington D.C. and around the country, citizens in Des Moines Iowa on Monday risked arrest to press for the creation of single-payer healthcare, the establishment of healthcare as a human right, and an end to the deadly practices of Iowa’s largest health insurance company, Wellmark Blue Cross Blue Shield.

Dr. Margaret Flowers, who has herself gone to jail for single-payer in our nation’s capital, was on hand to speak in Des Moines. She called me with this report. Nearly a month earlier, on June 19, 2009, Des Moines Catholic Workers had delivered a letter (PDF) to Wellmark addressed to its CEO John Forsyth requesting disclosure of Wellmark’s profits, salaries, benefits, denials and restrictions on care. The letter had not been acknowledged by Monday, and the Catholic Workers and their allies decided to take action again.

Thirty people arrived in the Wellmark lobby in Des Moines and asked to see Forsyth or any of the members of the board of directors or the operating officers. They were told that none were available, and instead the police arrived. Nine of the 30 refused to leave and were arrested. Flowers did not yet know what the charges will be but suspected trespassing. The nine latest supporters of single-payer to go to jail for justice are:

Mona Shaw, Renee Espeland, Frankie Hughes (age 11), and Frank Cordaro, all from Des Moines Catholic Workers; Leonard Simmons from Massachusetts; Robert Cook; Eddie Blomer from Des Moines; Kirk Brown from Des Moines; and Chris Gaunt from Grinnell, Iowa.

These nine and others like them around the country represent, I think, the incredible potential to energize the American public on behalf of a struggle for the basic human right of healthcare, a potential being blocked by the work of activist organizations that reach out from Washington to tell the public that single-payer is not possible, rather than reaching into Washington from outside to tell our public servants what we demand.

Here’s a blog from Digby acknowledging the reduction of the public option from where it started to next-to-nothing. It’s not clear whether Digby thinks it would have been smarter to start with single-payer, in order to end up with a better compromise than what you get by initially proposing the weakest plan you’ll settle for. But Digby argues that proposing single-payer from the start would not have given single-payer itself any chance of succeeding, and this is proven — Digby says — from the fact that the public option is having such a hard time succeeding.

I can’t prove this is wrong. Everything Digby writes is smart and to the point. But this does omit an important factor or two. Namely: single-payer turns an obscure wonkish policy mush into a clear and comprehensible civil rights issue. Even with it blacked out and shunned by the White House and astroturfing activist groups, single-payer still has people sacrificing and going to jail for it. Nobody goes to jail for a public option.* Nobody even knows what it is. Nobody will even know whether they got it if a bill is passed until experts debate the point for them — at which point it’s too late. Making healthcare a right rather than a legislative policy energizes people, and that potential has hardly been tapped and should not be written out of consideration.

John Nichols understands this, as does Glen Ford from Black Agenda Report.

Even defenders of a public option depict it as a step toward single-payer, while missing the potential of single-payer activism in the short term to improve the public option. So, all agree that in the long run a movement for single-payer is needed. It can begin with phone calls this week in support of these measures and with a massive presence on July 30 in Washington, D.C.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Healthcare for My Neighbors?

Our medical and medical insurance ethos sadly is that sick people are good for business. That health care should be a money making machine is the mentality of a nation tricked into believing for-profit health care and medical insurance are superior to national health care as practiced in every other industrialized nation. In contrast the ethos of national healthcare is to keep people healthy in order to save buckets of money. It works. Every nation with national health care delivers health care for all at a fraction of the cost Americans pay. The incentives of public health care are opposite to those of a for-profit system.

I am a WWII veteran. My response to conservatives who are certain government can�t do anything right is that I am grateful for VA health care and for Medicare, both run by �the government� and paid for in the same way we pay for public education and the fire department, i.e., through public taxation.

�In the box� thinking places profit over the health of the nation. It prevents Americans from having full medical insurance from day one. Unlike citizens of every other industrialized nation, Americans must wait until old age to get 80% rather than total coverage as in other nations.

We are the only industrialized nation in the world in which parents are forced to advertise in the local newspaper that an account has been set up at a local bank to accept donations to pay for treatment of a child with life threatening cancer. No Canadian, French, or English parent would need to �pass the hat� or to ask for charity in order to save the life of a child. In other nations it is never �charity�, but �healthcare with dignity.�

We are the only nation where private insurance companies can restrict services to a particular state forcing clients to travel thousands of miles for treatment, or dictate where a client can get a blood transfusion, or deny payment for a bone marrow donor search.

�Why should I pay for the health care of my neighbors?� is the outraged cry of conservatives. With national healthcare the answers are: (1) My neighbors pay for mine. (2) It is the ethical thing to do. (3) costs are half or less than half of what we pay now and would cover everyone.

Every other advanced nation pays a fraction of what the U.S. does. Canadians pay $3,000 per capita to cover everyone while the U.S. pays $7,000 per capita and leaves out 47 million plus an equal number of at risk underinsured souls. European nations pay a third of what we do with better outcomes.

A National health care system would make us feel good about ourselves. At last we could say with pride to the world, �We are willing to pay for the healthcare of our neighbors just like everyone else.�

Live in Oklahoma and want to get involved? Ron du Bois is one of the founders of Oklahomans for Universal Health Care and the convener of Stillwater Speaks Health Care Committee. Please contact Ron at (405) 377-2524 or duboisr@sbcglobal.net for more information.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Arizona Seeks To Balance Patients And Profits With Home Care

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Morning-After Pills Don't Cause Abortion, Studies Say

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

When Going Back To The Hospital Is Good News

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Justice Department Looks For Ways To Recruit Forensic Pathologists

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Why A Young Man Died In A Nursing Home, A State Away From His Mom

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Feds Outline What Insurers Must Cover, Down To Polyp Removal

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Morning-After Pills Don't Cause Abortion, Studies Say

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

How The Sequester Could Affect Health Care

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Few Public Family Planning Centers Accept Insurance, Yet

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Why The Hospital Wants The Pharmacist To Be Your Coach

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Opening Day Crowd Shows Growing Support for Single-Payer in Oregon

An Oregon house bill sponsored by Rep. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, is not expected to pass, but advocates claim momentum

Nearly a thousand people swarmed the front of the Oregon Capitol Building for the opening session Monday, demanding that Oregon become the second state to enact single-payer healthcare legislation, which would set up a government financing system to pay for and provide health care coverage and access for all Oregon residents.

Protestors at the Health Care for All Oregon rally hoisted signs, listened to speeches, heard woeful tales of the current health care system, and sang along to bluesman Norman Sylvester: �I don�t care what party you�re in, Democrat or Republican, we don�t need to fight, healthcare is a human right.�

�The brother said we don�t need a fight, but they�re going to fight us,� said Rep. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, leading the crowd. Dembrow is the chief sponsor of the single-payer legislation, House Bill 1914. �We don�t necessarily need to fight back, we need to organize. Let�s go forward and organize this state, everybody in, nobody out.�

Dembrow said HB 1914 and companion legislation in the Senate already had 19 co-sponsors, all Democrats � eight more sponsors than its predecessor from the last session, HB 3510.

One of those new sponsors, Rep. Jennifer Williamson, D-Portland, said she supported the legislation because her sister was one of the thousands of Oregonians who each year file for bankruptcy under the weight of medical bills.

�I�ve been a legislator for three weeks now,� Williamson said. �The first bill I signed onto as chief legislator was a bill for universal healthcare.�

Dr. Paul Gorman, a member of Physicians for a National Health Program, said he ran a free clinic where a man came in complaining of pain in his abdomen. The man had no insurance and he put off seeing a doctor for a long time, allowing his pain to get worse and worse. �By the time he came to see us, his liver cancer was advanced, and he died.� Gorman said 500 Oregonians die each year because they don�t have insurance.

Health Care for All Oregon argued that while the Affordable Care Act signed into law by President Obama in 2010 does improve access for some people � expanding Medicaid and offering private health insurance subsidies to others � the single-payer advocates said the reforms were inadequate and would do little to rein in skyrocketing costs.

Single-payer healthcare would work similar to Medicare, with a single government fund paid for through taxes rather than paying premiums to several private companies.

HB 1914 isn�t expected to pass the Legislature or even come to the floor for a vote this session. But Dembrow expected to double the number of legislative sponsors and asked everyone in the crowd to lobby their representatives to support single-payer, hoping to find three more legislators by the end of the day.

The number of sponsors didn�t immediately grow to the goal of 22 legislators, but Marissa Johnson, an aide for Dembrow said they hoped to exceed that goal by the end of the week.

�We have interest from more than a handful of representatives and [Dembrow] will be following up with them today,� Johnson said.

Dembrow said at the rally he expected a million votes would be needed to pass a statewide measure while withstanding millions of dollars of negative advertising from groups like the for-profit private health insurance industry, which would be cut out of healthcare under the proposed system.

�The real work is not going to be done inside this building,� he said. �It�s going to be solved by a million people in Oregon, organized.�

�I think it�s going to take a lot of people stepping outside their comfort zones,� said Rio Davidson of Newport, who volunteered at the end of the rally handing out lists of legislators and asking people to contact their representatives. �Unfortunately, a lot of people who want single-payer are working low-wage jobs.�

Longtime advocate Betty Johnson said afterward that 60 organizations had been involved in the Health Care for All Oregon rally, and the group had recently hired a full-time field organizer. �Absolutely we are growing. We are organizing a number of chapters throughout the state,� she said.

Gov. John Kitzhaber has not shown support for single-payer, putting his energies instead into implementing a private health insurance exchange and transforming the healthcare delivery system through coordinated care organizations. Despite his position, Johnson said she hoped he would meet with single-payer advocates to discuss how it could work in tandem with the CCO model.

�He�s strengthening the delivery system,� Johnson said. �We really want to change the financing system. When we pass single-payer, the CCO system will work alongside it.�

Dembrow said there are restrictions in the federal Affordable Care Act that prevent states from passing single-payer laws without special permission before 2017. He lamented the added restriction, but said it also gave single-payer supporters three years to build support, get better organized, and develop a plan that would work for Oregon.

The state of Vermont enacted single-payer legislation in 2011 to cover all of its residents, but funding mechanisms are still being worked out and the state will also have to wait until 2017 to receive federal waivers.

Dembrow is introducing a second bill this session that would call on the Legislature to support a formal study of how single-payer would work in Oregon. Activists on Monday called on supporters to ask their legislators for public money, but Johnson said Dembrow believes the study could be paid for with private money.

Choosing Ryan Defines Health Care For GOP Ticket

August 12, 2012

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Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., speaks Saturday in Norfolk, Va., after being named Mitt Romney's vice presidential running mate.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., speaks Saturday in Norfolk, Va., after being named Mitt Romney's vice presidential running mate.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

One thing Republican Mitt Romney's choice of Rep. Paul Ryan as his running mate will certainly do is elevate issues like Medicare and Medicaid to the top of the election agenda.

As the nation gets closer to Election Day, Ryan's addition to the GOP ticket will present the public with a dramatic choice about the role the government should play in health care.

One thing the Wisconsin congressman never does is apologize for thinking big.

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"We also think we have a moral obligation to try and fix this country's big problems before they get out of our control," Ryan said in February on ABC's This Week.

Ryan is referring, among other things, to the budget plan he wrote and helped muscle through the House � twice. His plan would cut taxes, create private accounts for Social Security and, perhaps most notably, make major changes to the Medicare and Medicaid health programs.

The Medicare changes in particular are dramatic. Starting a decade from now, seniors would get a set amount of money rather than automatic coverage. They could use that to choose from a range of health plans.

"Doing it this way harnesses the power of choice and competition," Ryan said at a news conference last December. "Our goal here is to have the senior citizen, the beneficiary, be the nucleus of this program."

The amount of money the senior gets, however, wouldn't necessarily go up as fast as medical costs. Ryan and those who support his idea say that choice and competition would maintain the benefits. Others, including President Obama, aren't so sure.

"It says instead of guaranteed health care, you will get a voucher," Obama said in a speech last spring in which he blasted Ryan's budget plan. "If that voucher isn't worth enough to buy the insurance that's available in the open marketplace, well tough luck, you're on your own."

On Medicaid, Ryan's proposal would give states far more flexibility to decide how and who to cover, but also less money to do it with. In an appearance on PBS Newshour, Ryan said that what they're trying to do is couple Medicaid reforms with reforms in other programs such as food stamps, housing assistance, education and job training.

"We are trying to couple these things by sending them back to the states in block grants so the states can combine these dollars and reform the tattered social safety net," he said.

Analysts, however, say the cuts would be so large � about a one-third reduction over 10 years � states would have no choice other than to cut benefits or drop people from the rolls. Obama has said that this could put some elderly and poor people at risk.

At least one thing that's clear about Ryan's vision for health care compared to Obama's is that they're different. No one will mistake one for the other, says Aaron Carroll, a pediatrician and professor at the Indiana University School of Medicine who blogs on health economics. He says this campaign should give voters a clear choice.

"I think what Ryan puts forward is a vision of much less government involvement in things like Medicare and Medicaid, especially from the federal level," Carroll says.

What's less clear, however, Carroll says, is whether the nation really is ready to have what Ryan likes to refer to as an "adult conversation" about how to control entitlement spending.

"We probably can, but not in politics," he says. "Because in politics, of course, people want to win, and you win by scaring people into thinking [about] what the other side will do."

In 2010, Republicans tried to scare seniors about Obama's health law and Medicare. This time around, it will be the Democrats who will try to turn the tables.

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Growth of Health Care Spending Remains at Historic Low

Today, we got some very good news when the official numbers for health care spending were released.� New statistics from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services show that the overall growth in health spending was at a historic low for the third year in a row.� According to the annual Report of National Health Expenditures, total U.S. health spending grew 3.9 percent in 2011.� That�s the same rate of growth as in 2009 and 2010, and in all three years spending grew more slowly than in any other year in the 51 year history of the report.

As a share of our nation�s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), overall health care spending also remained the same as in the previous two years�17.9 percent.� This contrasts sharply with the pattern of the last thirty years, when health spending as a share of GDP grew by about 0.3 percent per year.

A number of provisions in the health care law that will help control costs and spending are still being implemented, but the statistics show how the Affordable Care Act is already making a difference. Growth in total private health insurance premiums remained low in 2011 at 3.8 percent. And the net cost ratio (which takes into account overhead and profits) for individual health polices declined thanks in part to the new 80/20 rule, which requires insurers to spend at least 80 percent of premiums on health care or provide rebates to their customers.�

The health care law takes other steps to save money for consumers. One provision of the law, called rate review, prevents insurance companies in all states from raising rates with no accountability or transparency. �These new standards ensure that insurance companies justify their actions if they want to raise rates by 10 percent or more.� So far, rate review has helped to save Americans an estimated $1 billion on their premium bills. �

But there is still more to do.� I strongly urge the states, our partners, to continue the work to hold insurance companies accountable by reviewing and building the capacity to deny unreasonable health insurance rate increases.� The Affordable Care Act made $250 million available to states for this important work, and 43 states, the District of Columbia and five territories have started to put this funding to good use.� The next deadline to apply for these valuable resources is February 1, 2013, and I encourage states to take advantage of this opportunity so we can all work to save consumers money and bring more transparency, competition, and accountability to health insurance markets.

The Affordable Care Act helps us to avoid the runaway growth in health care spending of the last decade, keep down costs for consumers, and ensure better health and better access to health care for millions of Americans.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

The Health Care Law Is Saving Americans Money

The Affordable Care Act holds insurance companies accountable and puts more money back into the pockets of Americans across the country. According to a new report, consumers saved over $2 billion because of new rules that protect people from insurance industry abuses.

As a former Insurance Commissioner, I�m familiar with how alone consumers can feel when dealing with their insurance companies.� �Under the health care law, insurers are finally being held accountable to their policyholders.� For the first time ever, new rate review rules in the health care law prevent insurance companies in all states from raising rates with no accountability or transparency.� Forty-five states and the District of Columbia have received $160 million in grants to increase their oversight of premium hikes.�

Some states, like Nevada, are using the funds to better educate consumers about the resources available to them.� Others � like Mississippi and South Dakota � have used the money to add new consumer protections. �In these states, officials can not only review rate hikes, but can also reject those hikes that are not justified.�

And more improvements in states around the country are on the way.

Last September, we also put in place new rules that ensure that every single rate increase of 10 percent or more is �reviewed on either the state or federal level.� For the first time, we have been able to guarantee Americans that no matter what state they live in, insurers will no longer be able to raise their rates by double digits without justification.

These rules make the insurance marketplace more transparent and more competitive. And today�s report shows that these rules are beginning to work.� Of the double digit rate hikes that have been reviewed, half of them have been reduced or withdrawn altogether.� That�s saved nearly 800,000 Americans an estimated $148 million.

When you look at all reductions to proposed rate hikes, including those below 10 percent, consumers have saved an estimated $1 billion.

And that only begins to capture the effect of the law�s new protections.� For example, these numbers don�t count the countless additional rate hikes that insurance companies decided not to try, knowing they could no longer do so �without increased scrutiny.

These rules work hand in hand with other provisions of the law that save money for consumers. Thanks to the law�s 80/20 rule, 13 million Americans will benefit from an additional $1.1 billion in rebates.� That rule sets a maximum amount of Americans� premiums insurers may spend on overhead like marketing and bonuses and requires them to pay their customers the difference if they exceed that limit.�

Added together, these reforms have saved consumers an estimated $2.1 billion in the last year.

What today�s report documents is a health insurance market that�s finally starting to work for consumers the way markets are supposed to.� Instead of being able to raise rates without any consequences, insurers are being forced to offer more competitive prices.� And consumers are getting more information to help them shop around for the best deal.

For today�s report, visit here.

Giving Women Control Over Their Health Care

Women deserve to have control over their health care.� Aug. 1, 2012, ushers in a new day for women�s health when, for the first time ever, women will have access to eight new services at no out-of-pocket cost to keep them healthier and to catch potentially serious conditions at an earlier, more treatable stage. This benefit will take effect for millions of adult and adolescent women over the course of the next year�and it�s just one of many benefits of the health care law that let women and their doctors, not insurance companies, make decisions about a woman�s care. �

When it comes to health, women are often the primary decision-maker for their families and the trusted source in circles of friends. Women often take care of their families first and put off their own health care needs. Too often, they have gone without preventive services, worrying about what even a $20 insurance copay would mean to their families� budgets and choosing to pay for groceries or rent instead. �

But now, thanks to the health care law, many women won�t have to make that choice. �

Because of the Affordable Care Act, women in private plans and Medicare already have received potentially life-saving services, such as mammograms, cholesterol screenings, and flu shots at no extra cost. Today, the law builds on these benefits, requiring new, non-grandfathered private health plans to offer eight additional screenings and tests for adolescent and adult women at no extra charge. These include:

Well-woman visits.Gestational diabetes screenings that help protect the mother and her child from one of the most serious pregnancy-related diseases.Domestic and interpersonal violence screening and counseling.FDA-approved contraceptive products, which have proven health benefits like a reduced risk of cancer and protecting against osteoporosis.Breastfeeding support, supplies, and counseling.HPV DNA testing, for women 30 or older.Sexually transmitted infections counseling.HIV screening and counseling.

According to a new report, about 47 million women are eligible for these new additional preventive services that address their unique health care needs. �Instead of letting insurance companies decide what care women receive, the health care law requires insurers to cover these preventive services in new plans beginning Aug. 1. Because these changes take effect at the beginning of a new plan year, the requirement may go into effect later in the year. Ask your insurance company when the new benefits will take effect for you.

Women�s health decisions shouldn�t be made by politicians or insurance companies. Rather than wasting time refighting old political battles, this Administration is moving forward and putting women in control of their own health care. If women are going to take care of their families and friends, they have to take care of themselves. The Affordable Care Act is making it easier for women to do that by making health care more accessible and affordable for millions of American women and families.

To learn more about the health care services you are eligible for at no extra charge under the Affordable Care Act, go to http://www.healthcare.gov/prevention.

To see a video of what people are saying about preventive services go to http://youtu.be/lKejT13Jh9g

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Health Care Spending In America, In Two Graphs

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Businesses Sue Government Over Birth Control Mandate

More From Shots - Health News HealthShortage Of Brain Tissue Sets Autism Research BackHealthQuick TB Test Builds Up Arsenal Against Drug-Resistant BacteriaHealthNovartis Recalls Triaminic And Theraflu Cough SyrupsHealthWhite House Tries Again To Find Compromise On Contraception

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Sunday, February 3, 2013

Treating Everybody With HIV Is The Goal, But Who Will Pay?

More From Shots - Health News HealthQuick TB Test Builds Up Arsenal Against Drug-Resistant BacteriaHealthNovartis Recalls Triaminic And Theraflu Cough SyrupsHealthWhite House Tries Again To Find Compromise On ContraceptionHealthAre NFL Football Hits Getting Harder And More Dangerous?

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Lesson Learned: A Curb On Drugmakers' Gifts To Medical Students

More From Shots - Health News HealthQuick TB Test Builds Up Arsenal Against Drug-Resistant BacteriaHealthNovartis Recalls Triaminic And Theraflu Cough SyrupsHealthWhite House Tries Again To Find Compromise On ContraceptionHealthAre NFL Football Hits Getting Harder And More Dangerous?

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Health Insurers Raise Some Rates by Double Digits

Health insurance companies across the country are seeking and winning double-digit increases in premiums for some customers, even though one of the biggest objectives of the Obama administration�s health care law was to stem the rapid rise in insurance costs for consumers.

Particularly vulnerable to the high rates are small businesses and people who do not have employer-provided insurance and must buy it on their own.

In California, Aetna is proposing rate increases of as much as 22 percent, Anthem Blue Cross 26 percent and Blue Shield of California 20 percent for some of those policy holders, according to the insurers� filings with the state for 2013. These rate requests are all the more striking after a 39 percent rise sought by Anthem Blue Cross in 2010 helped give impetus to the law, known as the Affordable Care Act, which was passed the same year and will not be fully in effect until 2014.

In other states, like Florida and Ohio, insurers have been able to raise rates by at least 20 percent for some policy holders. The rate increases can amount to several hundred dollars a month.

The proposed increases compare with about 4 percent for families with employer-based policies.

Under the health care law, regulators are now required to review any request for a rate increase of 10 percent or more; the requests are posted on a federal Web site, healthcare.gov, along with regulators� evaluations.

The review process not only reveals the sharp disparity in the rates themselves, it also demonstrates the striking difference between places like New York, one of the 37 states where legislatures have given regulators some authority to deny or roll back rates deemed excessive, and California, which is among the states that do not have that ability.

New York, for example, recently used its sweeping powers to hold rate increases for 2013 in the individual and small group markets to under 10 percent. California can review rate requests for technical errors but cannot deny rate increases.

The double-digit requests in some states are being made despite evidence that overall health care costs appear to have slowed in recent years, increasing in the single digits annually as many people put off treatment because of the weak economy. PricewaterhouseCoopers estimates that costs may increase just 7.5 percent next year, well below the rate increases being sought by some insurers. But the companies counter that medical costs for some policy holders are rising much faster than the average, suggesting they are in a sicker population. Federal regulators contend that premiums would be higher still without the law, which also sets limits on profits and administrative costs and provides for rebates if insurers exceed those limits.

Critics, like Dave Jones, the California insurance commissioner and one of two health plan regulators in that state, said that without a federal provision giving all regulators the ability to deny excessive rate increases, some insurance companies can raise rates as much as they did before the law was enacted.

�This is business as usual,� Mr. Jones said. �It�s a huge loophole in the Affordable Care Act,� he said.

While Mr. Jones has not yet weighed in on the insurers� most recent requests, he is pushing for a state law that will give him that authority. Without legislative action, the state can only question the basis for the high rates, sometimes resulting in the insurer withdrawing or modifying the proposed rate increase.

The California insurers say they have no choice but to raise premiums if their underlying medical costs have increased. �We need these rates to even come reasonably close to covering the expenses of this population,� said Tom Epstein, a spokesman for Blue Shield of California. The insurer is requesting a range of increases, which average about 12 percent for 2013.

Although rates paid by employers are more closely tracked than rates for individuals and small businesses, policy experts say the law has probably kept at least some rates lower than they otherwise would have been.

�There�s no question that review of rates makes a difference, that it results in lower rates paid by consumers and small businesses,� said Larry Levitt, an executive at the Kaiser Family Foundation, which estimated in an October report that rate review was responsible for lowering premiums for one out of every five filings.

Federal officials say the law has resulted in significant savings. �The health care law includes new tools to hold insurers accountable for premium hikes and give rebates to consumers,� said Brian Cook, a spokesman for Medicare, which is helping to oversee the insurance reforms.

�Insurers have already paid $1.1 billion in rebates, and rate review programs have helped save consumers an additional $1 billion in lower premiums,� he said. If insurers collect premiums and do not spend at least 80 cents out of every dollar on care for their customers, the law requires them to refund the excess.

As a result of the review process, federal officials say, rates were reduced, on average, by nearly three percentage points, according to a report issued last September.

In New York, for example, state regulators recently approved increases that were much lower than insurers initially requested for 2013, taking into account the insurers� medical costs, how much money went to administrative expenses and profit and how exactly the companies were allocating costs among offerings. �This is critical to holding down health care costs and holding insurance companies accountable,� Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said.

While insurers in New York, on average, requested a 9.5 percent increase for individual policies, they were granted an increase of just 4.5 percent, according to the latest state averages, which have not yet been made public. In the small group market, insurers asked for an increase of 15.8 percent but received approvals averaging only 9.6 percent.

But many people elsewhere have experienced significant jumps in the premiums they pay. According to the federal analysis, 36 percent of the requests to raise rates by 10 percent or more were found to be reasonable. Insurers withdrew 12 percent of those requests, 26 percent were modified and another 26 percent were found to be unreasonable.

And, in some cases, consumer advocates say insurers have gone ahead and charged what regulators described as unreasonable rates because the state had no ability to deny the increases.

Two insurers cited by federal officials last year for raising rates excessively in nine states appear to have proceeded with their plans, said Carmen Balber, the Washington director for Consumer Watchdog, an advocacy group. While the publicity surrounding the rate requests may have drawn more attention to what the insurers were doing, regulators �weren�t getting any results by doing that,� she said.

Some consumer advocates and policy experts say the insurers may be increasing rates for fear of charging too little, and they may be less afraid of having to refund some of the money than risk losing money.

Many insurance regulators say the high rates are caused by rising health care costs. In Iowa, for example, Wellmark Blue Cross Blue Shield, a nonprofit insurer, has requested a 12 to 13 percent increase for some customers. Susan E. Voss, the state�s insurance commissioner, said there might not be any reason for regulators to deny the increase as unjustified. Last year, after looking at actuarial reviews, Ms. Voss approved a 9 percent increase requested by the same insurer.

�There�s a four-letter word called math,� Ms. Voss said, referring to the underlying medical costs that help determine what an insurer should charge in premiums. Health costs are rising, especially in Iowa, she said, where hospital mergers allow the larger systems to use their size to negotiate higher prices. �It�s justified.�

Some consumer advocates say the continued double-digit increases are a sign that the insurance industry needs to operate under new rules. Often, rates soar because insurers are operating plans that are closed to new customers, creating a pool of people with expensive medical conditions that become increasingly costly to insure.

While employers may be able to raise deductibles or co-payments as a way of reducing the cost of premiums, the insurer typically does not have that flexibility. And because insurers now take into account someone�s health, age and sex in deciding how much to charge, and whether to offer coverage at all, people with existing medical conditions are frequently unable to shop for better policies.

In many of these cases, the costs are increasing significantly, and the rates therefore cannot be determined to be unreasonable. �When you�re allowed medical underwriting and to close blocks of business, rate review will not affect this,� said Lynn Quincy, senior health policy analyst for Consumers Union.

The practice of medical underwriting � being able to consider the health of a prospective policy holder before deciding whether to offer coverage and what rate to charge � will no longer be permitted after 2014 under the health care law.