GOP Senators Introduce New ACA Repeal-and-Replace Bill

https://goo.gl/gbE884

A group of Republican senators introduced a bill Wednesday to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA) as the timeline for getting such a bill passed this year continues to wind down.

The yet-to-be-named measure, introduced by senators Bill Cassidy, MD (R-La.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Dean Heller (R-Nev.), and Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) would give money annually to states in the form of a block grant, which could be used "to help individuals pay for healthcare," Cassidy's office said in a press release posted on the senator's website.

The amount of money each state would receive is based on a complicated formula which starts with the amount of money each state receives from Medicaid expansion, ACA tax credits, CSR subsidies, and basic health plan funds. "By 2026, at base rate, every state will be receiving the same amount of money for each beneficiary in the 50-138% federal poverty level range," according to an FAQ on Cassidy's website. "This ensures that high-spending states and low-spending states come to parity at the end of the time frame."

The measure would also repeal the ACA's individual and employer mandates as well as its medical device tax, and would "strengthen the ability for states to waive Obamacare regulations," the release continued. It also would "protect patients with pre-existing medical conditions."

The American College of Physicians (ACP) opposed the bill. "We believe that the substantial cuts to Medicaid authorized by this legislation would cause a significant increase in the number of uninsured patients and that it would undermine essential benefits provided for patients insured under current law," Jack Ende, MD, president of the ACP, wrote in a letter to Graham and Cassidy.


What Harvey Is Teaching the Health Care Sector About Managing Disasters

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The damage inflicted by Hurricane Harvey has posed enormous health challenges in Houston and neighboring areas hit hard by the storm. As regional medical director of emergency medicine for the Houston Methodist Hospital System, one of us (Neil) has been on the front lines of the medical response. The other (Ranu) has been involved in responses to such public health disasters as the Ebola crisis in Africa, Hurricane Katrina in Louisiana, and the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. The response to Harvey is ongoing, but there are early lessons that could help governments and health systems in dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Irma and other major catastrophes down the road.

Deploy existing resources creatively to address unforeseen challenges. All health systems have contingency plans and run drills for emergencies like a hurricane. However, the challenges wrought by a disaster can confound even the best-laid plans, and responding effectively requires using available resources in ways not previously considered.

Think twice before closing smaller medical facilities. Communities rely on a wide array of medical facilities to stay healthy, including smaller hospitals, physician offices, dialysis centers, nursing homes, and pharmacies. Severe flooding and damaged infrastructure made roads impassable and, along with power outages and water supply contamination, caused many of these facilities to shut down. (About 40% of dialysis centers in the area closed.) When any one of these medical contact points closed, patients did not know where to go for their routine, ongoing health needs. Consequently, many people developed complications from uncontrolled diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic conditions.

Schedule medical staff and give them time off to avoid burnout. When facing a crisis, there is a tendency to go to an all-hands-on-deck mode from the outset. However, creating a schedule to ration capacity and energy is indispensable for sustaining response efforts over the days and weeks required. Making sure teams have adequate time to sleep, eat, and rest while caring for patients is often overlooked, but hospitals that did not enforce downtime for frontline staff saw a downturn in morale, energy, and cognitive awareness even within the first 24 hours.

Establish clear and trusted sources of information. Amid any crisis comes hysteria that can lead to rapid dissemination of unconfirmed hearsay. During Harvey, rumors abounded about impending road closures, water shutoffs, and worsening conditions that influenced people’s decisions on when and where to seek care. When a disaster is imminent, public authorities should establish sources of accurate information that the public can be made aware of in advance. When rumors begin to spread, especially on social media, they need to be refuted so that people can make urgent decisions for themselves and their families with clarity.

Don’t underestimate the human spirit. At a moment of heightened polarization nationally, one of the most remarkable things that occurred in the area struck by Hurricane Harvey was that people facing hardship and tragedy worked together to care for one another. The number of ordinary people who stepped up with extraordinary acts of kindness are too numerous to count but have been the linchpin of the response so far.


The Power of ADAPT

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I’ll always think of the summer of 2017 as the summer of ADAPT.

ADAPT is a national disability rights organization in the United States that played a crucial role in stopping the GOP healthcare bill that would have decimated Medicaid. While ADAPT is known currently and historically for their direct actions, the usage of social media was another tool that spread their message far and wide. I got a chance to interview three members of ADAPT who were involved in their communications and social media activism: Marilee Adamski-Smith, Laura Halvorson, and Dominick Evans. The responses below have been condensed for space.

Tell me a little about yourself and your involvement in ADAPT 

Dominick: Earlier this year I was invited to help out with the media team and since then, I have been a regular part of National ADAPT and regional ADAPT actions! I basically help call the media and let them know about ADAPT actions as they are happening, and I also follow the people on the ground, and make sure what they are posting on social media is both posted on the national ADAPT Facebook and Twitter, but also signal boost things through my own personal accounts…I’m also constantly in contact with Marliee, and the other members of the media team, filling in where I need to, if they need to take a break or eat. We really have each other’s backs, so that we are not completely ignoring our own needs, during the action. Sometimes it is impossible not to.

I also recently brought together Ohioans, and people from nearby states, to form Ohio ADAPT. When I am running media for Ohio ADAPT, I often  am listed as one of the media contacts. Sometimes I have to handle press specifically, by answering questions and making sure the action is being represented properly, and the press has the right information about what is going on or why we are protesting. I also help coordinate and plan ideas for actions, and recruit Ohio ADAPT members to go on those actions, since I cannot.

Laura: I’m one of the new kids on the block and got involved in ADAPT fairly recently. Since there was not a chapter in DC when I moved here in 2015 I helped out when other chapters came to town with things involving the Disability Integration Act. Then in 2016 myself and Kings Floyd were asked to help restart the chapter in DC. I now am one of the contact persons for DC Metro ADAPT and am in the media word group. In my time in the media work group I have helped make strides at making our content accessible to all ADAPTers and allies.

Marilee: My first ADAPT Action that I went to was when I was in college, 1996, Atlanta, GA. I took a break for some years and coincidentally when I started again it was during the ADAPT’s My Medicaid Matters Rally.


Physicians Say Up to 30% of Treatment Unnecessary

https://goo.gl/RDoi1z

Despite years of industry emphasis on curbing costly and potentially harmful unnecessary care, physicians believe that overtreatment remains an ongoing problem, according to a research from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine published this week in the journal PLOS ONE.

The findings, based on a survey of more than 2,000 physicians, revealed that most physicians surveyed (64.7%) believe that at least 15% to 30% of medical care is unnecessary. Those surveyed were from a subgroup of the American Medical Association’s Physician Masterfile.

The top three culprits cited include:

“Unnecessary medical care is a leading driver of the higher health insurance premiums affecting every American,” says Martin Makary, MD, MPH, professor of surgery and health policy at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the paper’s senior author.


Nazi disabled victims memorial unveiled in Berlin

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A glass monument has been publicly opened in Berlin to 300,000 victims of the Nazis with mental and physical disabilities or chronic illnesses.

The 24m-long (80ft) blue, glass wall is in front of the Berlin Philharmonie building, where the office housing the Nazi "euthanasia" programme once stood.

It is the fourth monument in the German capital to victims of the Nazis.

In the past 10 years, memorials have been erected to Jewish, Roma (Gypsy) and gay victims.

Under Adolf Hitler's initial programme, the Nazis killed more than 200,000 people from early 1940 to August 1941, focusing on patients in mental health clinics and care homes.

It was known as T4, after the Tiergartenstrasse 4 office from which it was directed.

The T4 programme continued covertly for another four years, with gas chambers and killing centres used in Germany and Austria.

It was considered a precursor to the Holocaust in which six million Jews were murdered.