Wednesday, October 30, 2013

The Long List Of Health Apps Features Few Clear Winners

More From Shots - Health News HealthOnline Advice Can Hurt Teens At Risk For Suicide, Self-HarmHealthNotices Canceling Health Insurance Leave Many On EdgeHealthThe Long List Of Health Apps Features Few Clear WinnersHealthWhy Insurers Cancel Policies, And What You Can Do About It

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Obama Vows HealthCare.gov Problems Will Be Fixed 'ASAP'

More From The Two-Way TechnologyDell: 'Manufacturing Process' Made Laptops Smell Like Cat UrinePoliticsU.S. Budget Deficit Falls Under $1 Trillion; Lowest Since 2008Health CareObama Vows HealthCare.gov Problems Will Be Fixed 'ASAP'SportsGame 6 Of The World Series: What You Need to Know

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Monday, October 28, 2013

Some Health Screenings May Harm More Than Help

More From Shots - Health News HealthUnlikely Multiple Sclerosis Pill On Track To Become BlockbusterHealth CareMore Technical Issues For Obamacare, But Good News For MedicareResearch NewsEeek, Snake! Your Brain Has A Special Corner Just For ThemHealthSome Health Screenings May Harm More Than Help

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Saturday, October 26, 2013

PR Experts: Obamacare Message (Not Just The Site) Needs Fix

More From It's All Politics Health CarePR Experts: Obamacare Message (Not Just The Site) Needs FixPolitics'Ready For Hillary' SuperPAC Gains Backing From SorosPoliticsFriday Morning Political Mix: Monkeys, Donkeys and the NSAPoliticsTeen Drinking Party Leaves Md. Attorney General With Headache

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PR Experts: Obamacare Message (Not Just The Site) Needs Fix

More From It's All Politics Health CarePR Experts: Obamacare Message (Not Just The Site) Needs FixPolitics'Ready For Hillary' SuperPAC Gains Backing From SorosPoliticsFriday Morning Political Mix: Monkeys, Donkeys and the NSAPoliticsTeen Drinking Party Leaves Md. Attorney General With Headache

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PR Experts: Obamacare Message (Not Just The Site) Needs Fix

More From It's All Politics Health CarePR Experts: Obamacare Message (Not Just The Site) Needs FixPolitics'Ready For Hillary' SuperPAC Gains Backing From SorosPoliticsFriday Morning Political Mix: Monkeys, Donkeys and the NSAPoliticsTeen Drinking Party Leaves Md. Attorney General With Headache

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Enrollments For Health Care Exchanges Trickle In, Slowly

More From Shots - Health News HealthWant Your Daughter To Be A Science Whiz? Soccer Might HelpHealth CareDoctors Enlist Therapists To Deliver Better, Cheaper CareHealthOnline Insurance Brokers Stymied Selling Obamacare PoliciesHealthHow Health Law Affects Fertility Treatment, Health Savings Accounts

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The HealthCare.gov 'Tech Surge' Is Racing Against The Clock

More From All Tech Considered Digital LifeOnline Dating Is On The Rise (But There Are Still Haters)TechnologyThe HealthCare.gov 'Tech Surge' Is Racing Against The ClockScienceWhat's Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?BusinessCredit Cards Under Pressure To Police Online Expression

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Monday, October 21, 2013

Enrollments For Health Care Exchanges Trickle In, Slowly

More From Shots - Health News Health CareHow Long Do They Really Have To Fix That Obamacare Website?HealthScientists Grow New Hair In A Lab, But Don't Rush To Buy A CombHealthFirst Polio Cases Since 1999 Suspected In SyriaHealthBreast Milk Bought Online Has High Levels Of Bacteria

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Friday, October 18, 2013

Why Scientists Are Trying Viruses To Beat Back Bacteria

More From Shots - Health News HealthWhy Scientists Are Trying Viruses To Beat Back BacteriaHealthTo Prevent HIV Infection, Couples Try Testing Together HealthPainkiller Overdose Deaths Strike New York City's Middle ClassHealthHow The GOP's Shutdown Over Obamacare Fell Short

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Why Scientists Are Trying Viruses To Beat Back Bacteria

More From Shots - Health News HealthWhy Scientists Are Trying Viruses To Beat Back BacteriaHealthTo Prevent HIV Infection, Couples Try Testing Together HealthPainkiller Overdose Deaths Strike New York City's Middle ClassHealthHow The GOP's Shutdown Over Obamacare Fell Short

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Friday, October 11, 2013

Single-Payer Prescription for What Ails Obamacare

�We apologize for the inconvenience. The Marketplace is currently undergoing regularly scheduled maintenance and will be back up Monday 10/7/3013.� You read it right, 3013. That was the message on the homepage of the New York state health insurance exchange website this past weekend.

Yes, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), popularly known as Obamacare, is going through difficult birth pains, as the marketplace websites went live only to crash. The government is not giving out numbers, but informed observers speculate that very few people have succeeded in signing up for any of the plans so far.

The ACA rollout occurred as Republicans shut down the government in their attempt to defund Obamacare. But their strategy backfired. Had there been no shutdown, all of the attention would have been on the disastrous rollout. The fundamental issue, at the core of the health-care dispute, is typically ignored and goes unreported: The for-profit health-insurance industry in the United States is profoundly inefficient and costly, and a sane and sustainable alternative exists�single-payer, otherwise known as expanded and improved Medicare for all. Just change the age of eligibility from 65 to zero.

�When Medicare was rolled out in 1966, it was rolled out in six months using index cards,� Dr. Steffie Woolhandler told me Monday. �So if you have a simple system, you do not have to have all this expense and all this complexity and work.� Woolhandler is professor of public health at CUNY-Hunter College and a primary-care physician. She is a visiting professor at Harvard Medical School and the co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, or PNHP. PNHP is an organization with 17,000 physicians as members, advocating for a single-payer health-care system in the U.S.

What is single-payer? Critics denounce it as �socialized medicine,� while ignoring that single-payer is already immensely popular in the U.S., as Medicare. A 2011 Harris poll found that Medicare enjoyed 88 percent support from American adults, followed closely by Social Security. Woolhandler explained that with a Medicare-for-all system, �you would get a card the day you�re born, and you�d keep it your entire life. It would entitle you to medical care, all needed medical care, without co-payments, without deductibles. And because it�s such a simple system, like Social Security, there would be very low administrative expenses. We would save about $400 billion [per year].� Dr. Woolhandler went on, rather than �thousands of different plans, tons of different co-payments, deductibles and restrictions�one single-payer plan, which is what we need for all Americans to give the Americans really the choice they want … not the choice between insurance company A or insurance company B. They want the choice of any doctor or hospital, like you get with traditional Medicare.�

Monthly premiums in most cases are expected to decrease with Obamacare�s health-exchange systems, which will enhance the transparency and ease of comparison for people shopping for a health-insurance policy. If and when the technical problems are eliminated from the online health insurance exchanges, and people can easily shop, there will likely be a huge number of people buying policies for the first time. The ACA offers important advances, which even single-payer advocates acknowledge: subsidies for low-income applicants will make insurance affordable for the first time. Medicaid expansion also will bring many poor people into the umbrella of coverage. Young people can stay on their parents� insurance until the age of 26. People with so-called pre-existing conditions can no longer be denied insurance.

While the ACA was deemed constitutional by the Supreme Court, the opinion gave states the option to opt out of the Medicaid expansion, which 26 states with Republican governors have done. A New York Times analysis of census data showed that up to 8 million poor people, mostly African-Americans and single mothers, and mostly in the Deep South, will be stranded without insurance, too poor to qualify for ACA subsidies, but stuck in a state that rejected Medicaid expansion.

So, while partisan bickering (between members of Congress who have among the best health and benefits packages in the U.S.) has shut down the government, the populace of the United States is still straitjacketed into a system of expensive, for-profit health insurance. We pay twice as much per capita as other industrialized countries, and have poorer health and lower life expectancy. The economic logic of single-payer is inescapable. Whether Obamacare is a pathway to get there is uncertain. As Dr. Woolhandler summed up, �It�s only a road to single-payer if we fight for single-payer.�

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Employers Trim Health Costs By Cutting Coverage For Spouses

More From Shots - Health News HealthWhy Scientists Held Back Details On A Unique Botulinum Toxin HealthEven Mild Strokes Take A Toll On Quality Of LifeHealthActivists Sue U.N. Over Cholera That Killed Thousands In HaitiHealthNobel Goes To Scientists Who Took Chemistry Into Cyberspace

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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Is Obamacare Enough?

Without Single-Payer, Patchwork U.S. Healthcare Leaves Millions Uninsured

From Democracy Now –

Despite helping expanding affordable insurance, “Obamacare” maintains the patchwork U.S. healthcare system that will still mean high costs, weak plans and, in many cases, no insurance for millions of Americans. We host a debate on whether the Affordable Care Act goes far enough to address the nation�s health crisis with two guests: Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, a primary care physician and co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program; and John McDonough, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and former senior adviser on national health reform to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Between 2003 and 2008, McDonough served as executive director of Health Care for All in Massachusetts, playing a key role in the passage of the 2006 Massachusetts health reform law, known as “Romneycare,” regarded by many as the model for the current federal healthcare law.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

'Navigator' Helps ER Patients Who Don't Need Emergency Care

Listen to the Story 6 min 49 sec Playlist Download Transcript   Enlarge image i

New York City's Montefiore Medical Center, located in the Bronx, has one of the busiest emergency rooms in the nation.

Robert Benson

New York City's Montefiore Medical Center, located in the Bronx, has one of the busiest emergency rooms in the nation.

Robert Benson Enlarge image i

Nurse Wendy Shindler helps people who show up at the Montefiore Medical Center emergency room. The vast majority of the patients have Medicare or Medicaid coverage.

Courtesy of Wendy Shindler

Nurse Wendy Shindler helps people who show up at the Montefiore Medical Center emergency room. The vast majority of the patients have Medicare or Medicaid coverage.

Courtesy of Wendy Shindler “ This job is so amazing because I'm advocating for the patients. I'm like a GPS system, where I go north, south, east, west, and I figure out a plan for the patients.- Patient Navigator Wendy Shindler Each week, Weekend Edition Sunday host Rachel Martin brings listeners an unexpected side of the news by talking with someone personally affected by the stories making headlines. Wendy Shindler, a nurse, works in the waiting room of New York City's Montefiore Medical Center's emergency department, where she identifies patients waiting for services who don't actually need emergency room-level care. The program is an intervention aimed at improving care at the busy Bronx hospital while reducing costs. "The ER was admitting everybody, and they weren't getting paid � Medicare wasn't paying them for everything," Shindler tells NPR's Rachel Martin. "And they said, we have to figure out a way to help the community so they can stay out of the hospital." So, Shindler, who had ER and case management experience, became the hospital's patient navigator. Not everyone was on board with the change at first. "The doctors in the emergency room, they were concerned because they thought they needed to admit everybody," says Shindler. Obviously, there's a liability concern when a patient with chest pains is referred to a cardiologist the next day, instead of being admitted. "What I did was, I gave them feedback from the cardiologist the next day," says Shindler, "and said, 'Listen, the patients did go and they're getting good care and they're doing OK in the community.'" And, she points out, the patients were happier, too. After about a year and a half, the doctors came around. "I still remember when they said to me, 'Wendy, you're part of the team. You made it. We see what you can do for us.'" Join Our Sunday Conversation Should emergency rooms be able to turn more people away? Tell us on Weekend Edition's Facebook page, or in the comments section below.

Share Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From The Sunday Conversation WorldWife Works To Free Pastor From Iranian PrisonHealth Care'Navigator' Helps ER Patients Who Don't Need Emergency CareAuthor InterviewsNFL Veteran Recounts The Bruises And Breaks Of Life In The League.Around the NationCompensation Funds For Victims Of Tragedy A 'Small Solace'

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Part-Time Workers Search New Exchanges For Health Insurance

More From Shots - Health News HealthShifting Resources To Front Lines Could Protect Polio WorkersHealthMany Teens Admit To Coercing Others Into SexHealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthVeterinarians Say Health Law's Device Tax Is Unfair To Pets

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Lessons For The Obamacare Rollout, Courtesy Of Massachusetts

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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Monday, October 7, 2013

From Therapy Dogs To New Patients, Federal Shutdown Hits NIH

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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Insurance Brokers Look For Relevance As Health Exchanges Grow

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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'Navigator' Helps ER Patients Who Don't Need Emergency Care

Listen to the Story 6 min 49 sec Playlist Download Transcript   Enlarge image i

New York City's Montefiore Medical Center, located in the Bronx, has one of the busiest emergency rooms in the nation.

Robert Benson

New York City's Montefiore Medical Center, located in the Bronx, has one of the busiest emergency rooms in the nation.

Robert Benson Enlarge image i

Nurse Wendy Shindler helps people who show up at the Montefiore Medical Center emergency room. The vast majority of the patients have Medicare or Medicaid coverage.

Courtesy of Wendy Shindler

Nurse Wendy Shindler helps people who show up at the Montefiore Medical Center emergency room. The vast majority of the patients have Medicare or Medicaid coverage.

Courtesy of Wendy Shindler “ This job is so amazing because I'm advocating for the patients. I'm like a GPS system, where I go north, south, east, west, and I figure out a plan for the patients.- Patient Navigator Wendy Shindler Each week, Weekend Edition Sunday host Rachel Martin brings listeners an unexpected side of the news by talking with someone personally affected by the stories making headlines. Wendy Shindler, a nurse, works in the waiting room of New York City's Montefiore Medical Center's emergency department, where she identifies patients waiting for services who don't actually need emergency room-level care. The program is an intervention aimed at improving care at the busy Bronx hospital while reducing costs. "The ER was admitting everybody, and they weren't getting paid � Medicare wasn't paying them for everything," Shindler tells NPR's Rachel Martin. "And they said, we have to figure out a way to help the community so they can stay out of the hospital." So, Shindler, who had ER and case management experience, became the hospital's patient navigator. Not everyone was on board with the change at first. "The doctors in the emergency room, they were concerned because they thought they needed to admit everybody," says Shindler. Obviously, there's a liability concern when a patient with chest pains is referred to a cardiologist the next day, instead of being admitted. "What I did was, I gave them feedback from the cardiologist the next day," says Shindler, "and said, 'Listen, the patients did go and they're getting good care and they're doing OK in the community.'" And, she points out, the patients were happier, too. After about a year and a half, the doctors came around. "I still remember when they said to me, 'Wendy, you're part of the team. You made it. We see what you can do for us.'" Join Our Sunday Conversation Should emergency rooms be able to turn more people away? Tell us on Weekend Edition's Facebook page, or in the comments section below.

Share Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From The Sunday Conversation WorldWife Works To Free Pastor From Iranian PrisonHealth Care'Navigator' Helps ER Patients Who Don't Need Emergency CareAuthor InterviewsNFL Veteran Recounts The Bruises And Breaks Of Life In The League.Around the NationCompensation Funds For Victims Of Tragedy A 'Small Solace'

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Part-Time Workers Search New Exchanges For Health Insurance

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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In Florida, Insurer And Nonprofits Work On Enrollment

More From Shots - Health News HealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates SayHealthThe Last Word On Hormone Therapy From the Women's Health Initiative

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Exchange Shopping Starts Now, But No Need To Rush

More From Shots - Health News HealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates SayHealthThe Last Word On Hormone Therapy From the Women's Health Initiative

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Questions Rise As Health Care Exchange Draws Near

Enrollment in the Affordable Care Act health exchanges is set to begin Oct. 1. But many eligible Americans still have questions.

Tell Me More reached out to listeners via Facebook and Twitter in an attempt to help answer their questions about the law. Host Michel Martin spoke with Mary Agnes Carey, a senior correspondent at Kaiser Health News � a news service not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

On searching for other affordable care options

Listener Caitlin Stevenson: "When the Affordable Care Act goes into effect, if I'm already covered by an employer's health plan, am I still eligible to shop for more affordable care? The plan that my job offers costs more than $350 a month for my husband and me � that's more than a car payment! Will we � healthy adults, 26 and 31— be able to find a plan that costs less than this?"

Carey answers: "Anyone can shop on the exchange. The question here is whether or not they can qualify for a subsidy of purchased coverage. ... In order to qualify for a subsidy, two things have to happen. No. 1: The ... health insurance offered by her husband's employer has to cost more than 9.5 percent of their household income or the plan, if it covers at least 60 percent of the covered medical expenses. [What] I mean is that if it pays for 60 percent of the medical expenses, they could not get into the exchange. So it either costs more than 9.5 percent of the income or it doesn't pay for 60 percent of the covered services. If one of those things happen, they might be able to qualify for a subsidy."

On options for graduating students

Graduate student Lorrie Guess: "I obviously don't know yet if I'm going to have a job that offers me coverage and I don't want to pay a fine if I don't buy the coverage in case I get a job that offers me health insurance. On the other hand, I don't want to buy coverage only to get a job that ends up covering me and then find out that I'm paying for no reason."

Carey answers: "Well here's a couple of ideas. No. 1, is there any way to extend her student health insurance for a period of time after graduation as she decides where she's going to go and what job she has and whether or not she has coverage? That's one thing. Secondly, while the enrollment period for the first year of the Affordable Care Act ends at the end of March, there are things called qualifying life events � you lose your insurance at work, you get married, you have a child. I think graduating from college would be one of these. ... [And she] could get coverage on her parents' health insurance plan for a period of time. As we know, the Affordable Care Act allows that up to age 26."

On mental health options

Carey says, "As part of the Affordable Care Act ... there will be more coverage of mental health services. ... And also there has to be parity between what a plan offers on health services and what they offer on mental health services. But this is an area where I would urge caution, for people to look at and see how parity is defined, how it's implemented in a particular policy. Because this has been a concern � the mental health parity law passed a few years ago, [and while] some of the regulations have come through with it others have not. But it's definitely an area worth watching for people that are enrolling in the exchange coverage."

Share Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From Health Care HealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates SayPoliticsGovernment Shutdown? 'This Is Democracy In Action'HealthDespite Many Warnings, Antibiotics Are Still Overprescribed HealthPart-Time Workers Search New Exchanges For Health Insurance

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