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  • One person's thoughts on HealthCare and the govt..

    =============

    The Keckley Report
    January 30, 2017

    The Terms We Use to Confuse

    Public understanding about how our health system operates is woefully low: surveys show only one in five adults has functional knowledge about how to choose a physician, hospital or insurance plan, or compare treatment options. The lexicon we use in our industry lends to this confusion: powerful words and phrases that convey something different depending on the user’s intent.

    As we debate the replacement for the Affordable Care Act, it might be worthwhile to ask lawmakers to clarify what they mean when they use them and examine our own uses in tandem:

    Quality: In U.S. healthcare, quality is not defined by a consistent set of metrics that address diagnostic accuracy and clinical outcomes. Physicians associate it with access to a clinician; insurers associate it with necessary care; employers with provider network scale and premium costs and the public thinks it’s about scheduling and parking, not results. There are a dozen websites where information about the quality of care in hospitals and medical practices is available, but each has its own methodology and results vary widely. As a result, every hospital and every physician affirms they deliver “high quality care” and every insurer tells its enrollees, groups and regulators its plans are “high quality”. Little wonder quality is confusing.

    Affordability: Healthcare affordability is an abstract concept: in the U.S., it’s theoretically a relationship between total out of pocket payments as a percent of household income for premiums, co-pays, deductibles, and over the counter therapies. But there’s no consensus about what constitutes an acceptable level of affordability. In the Affordable Care Act, a threshold above 9.5% was deemed appropriate for employer-sponsored insurance premium affordability, but insurance premiums vary widely based on what’s covered and much isn’t. And is affordability when applied to healthcare spending a different calculus when compared to housing and food expenditures which seem more straightforward?

    Access: Does giving individuals the opportunity to purchase an insurance plan or see a specific physician that’s out of their reach financially constitute accessibility? In the Veteran’s Health Administration, a standard for access to primary care is 30 days or less and vets have no co-pays: it’s a straightforward standard for access. There are no standards for access to physicians, hospitals, therapies or other time-sensitive products and services in our system. Should there be?

    Value: The most over-used word in our lexicon is value. Each stakeholder calculates the costs and outcomes of their output differently and conveniently each result is “high value”. In the Affordable Care Act, value was codified for hospitals around the Hospital Value Based Purchasing Program that specified metrics for determining hospital value. Each sector in healthcare opines about its value proposition offering metrics that are prone to self-preservation.

    Costs: Policy-makers calculate health spending in the U.S. based on what’s spent for providers, drugs, facilities, technologies, insurance and administration concluding the U.S. system is the world’s most costly. But our pluralistic payer system combined with the 10% whose care is paid for by others means providers, especially hospitals, end up providing social services that are calculated differently in other systems of the world. As a result, total spending on healthcare, as a percent of GDP, is actually higher in France, Sweden, Switzerland, Germany and the Netherlands than in the U.S. And in all of these, the total is well above 25% of their GDP.

    And there are many other terms and phrases that play key roles in healthcare shorthand: accountable care, comparative effectiveness and evidence-based care, healthcare consumerism, physician-patient relationships and patient centered care, precision medicine, alternative health and many more. Each of these mean something different to the users, and rarely is there consistency in implied intent.

    Regrettably, after seven years of debate about the transformation of the health system, the public’s still confused by our lingo. The era of social media and 24/7 news cycles lends to soundbites that obfuscates understanding. Just as “fake news” and “alternative facts” are now part of our political discourse, so is our dependence on terms and phrases that mislead or confuse.

    Maybe as we engage in Health Reform 2.0, we should develop a glossary of key words and phrases so we aren’t lending to the public’s confusion about what we mean. It’s worth the effort.

    Paul

    P.S. Some common themes are emerging from the GOP’s efforts to repeal the affordable care act. First, the process will involve executive orders, legislation and new regulations all on the table by the end of this year. Suspension of the individual and employer mandates will be among the first wave of these orders. Second, implementation will be phased over a 2-3 year period, with much of the responsibility shifting to states for Medicaid, insurance coverage and more. Three, it’s unlikely Medicare reforms, in the form of a premium support replacement, will get thru Congress, but limits on supplemental coverage and expansion of Medicare Part C plans are likely to advance. Fourth, insurance coverage permitting purchases across state lines in tandem with expansion of high risk pools will be on the table. Lawmakers will make concessions to insurers including a requirement for continuous coverage for those with pre-existing conditions, and income-based tax credits so lower income individuals can purchase coverage will continue. Stay tuned. The question is this: how will the campaign promises by President Trump, the cost cutting appetite in the Freedom Caucus and the looming Campaign 2018 battle factor into the final product?
    Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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    • It's a small world sometimes...Iranian economist and GC holder who was detained for hours at JFK lives in a Trump condo

      [ame]https://twitter.com/KateDavidson/status/826093166881337344[/ame]

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      • [ame]https://twitter.com/jimsciutto/status/826097943254024196[/ame]

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        • After reading the EO, I'm not clear at all how green cards were ever an issue. It seems clear they aren't. But, whatever.
          That was my impression too. News this morning is that 109 people were affected out of 325,000, and the 109 situations have been resolved.

          There is evidently an "anonymous rumor on the internet" that tax reductions will not be introduced until 2018. This sent the market down roughly 1% this morning. I see the hand of Paul Ryan.

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          • so.. after talking with Trump, SA is now going to help with refugees. For all the mess up Trump has made the past 5 days and all the unnecessary churn, this actually is a positive..
            Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

            Comment


            • According to Rueters, the US is pulling out of a global pact to reduce emissions.
              2012 Detroit Lions Draft: 1) Cordy Glenn G , 2) Brandon Taylor S, 3) Sean Spence olb, 4) Joe Adams WR/KR, 5) Matt McCants OT, 7a) B.J. Coleman QB 7b) Kewshan Martin WR

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              • lovely
                Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                Comment


                • The Paris Agreement has zero enforceable emission limits on the United States (or any other signatory). That's why Obama was able to sign w/o the Senate ratifying as a treaty. It's largely symbolic.

                  The EO that will have teeth is when DJT takes on the EPA's decision to treat carbon dioxide -- a gas necessary to, you know, the life cycle -- as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. Obama tried to pass a cap and trade bill, but failed. So he then had the EPA shoehorn carbon dioxide into the CAA. The courts let it go because of Chevron deference. If they were looking at it with no deference I'm fairly certain it would get struck down.

                  In any event, that's the emissions thing that matters.
                  Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
                  Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

                  Comment


                  • it may not matter, but it's another unnecessary poke. Then again, maybe that's trump's plan.. distraction.

                    wait, never mind. There is no plan..
                    Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                    Comment


                    • Well, right -- as it matter not in substance, it's technically unnecessary. But, it'll clearly be a nod to his supporters and, for that matter, more follow through on campaign promises.

                      This can't possibly come as a surprise to anyone. This isn't random and, IMO, is very much part of his plan to deliver on as much as he can as soon as he can.
                      Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
                      Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by iam416 View Post
                        The Paris Agreement has zero enforceable emission limits on the United States (or any other signatory). That's why Obama was able to sign w/o the Senate ratifying as a treaty. It's largely symbolic.

                        The EO that will have teeth is when DJT takes on the EPA's decision to treat carbon dioxide -- a gas necessary to, you know, the life cycle -- as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. Obama tried to pass a cap and trade bill, but failed. So he then had the EPA shoehorn carbon dioxide into the CAA. The courts let it go because of Chevron deference. If they were looking at it with no deference I'm fairly certain it would get struck down.

                        In any event, that's the emissions thing that matters.
                        I am probably misreading this but surely you are not saying that there should not be caps on Carbon Dioxide and business/cars should be allowed to pump as much CO2 as they want into the environment right?
                        2012 Detroit Lions Draft: 1) Cordy Glenn G , 2) Brandon Taylor S, 3) Sean Spence olb, 4) Joe Adams WR/KR, 5) Matt McCants OT, 7a) B.J. Coleman QB 7b) Kewshan Martin WR

                        Comment


                        • If you want to cap carbon dioxide emissions -- the stuff humans emit and plants need to exist -- then pass legislation to do so. Period. Congress has not.
                          Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
                          Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

                          Comment


                          • One last thing on the rise of Bannon...the NY Times article suggested it has come at the expense of Flynn, the second most disturbing individual in the Administration, so that's almost a wash for me. Leaks to the TImes suggest Trump is getting tired and annoyed by Flynn, who tends to talk too much and is constantly abrasive.

                            The administration’s latest executive order gives Trump’s chief strategist, Steve Bannon, a permanent position on the National Security Council. This unprecedented move puts the former Breitbart News executive on the same level as Flynn, Trump’s national security advisor. Bannon, like many in Trump’s circle, is obviously unqualified for the position. His background as a former naval officer, inves...

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                            • Talks too much and is abrasive? Sounds like they're brothers.
                              "The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is sometimes hard to verify their authenticity." -Abraham Lincoln

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                              • little more on the 7 countries

                                President Donald Trump is expected to sign an executive order Friday that would impose a 30-day ban on entry to the United States for visa holders from seven Muslim-majority countries: Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.  After word…


                                whether they be Mexicans or muslims or Canadians or martians closing the borders to conserve assets is the prudent thing to do

                                if you cant afford to take care of yourself then you shouldn't be allowed here --too few taking care of too many as it is

                                kinda starting to think the same about medicine --there comes a time where we the oldsters have to start thinking about the younger generation

                                you get lung cancer or need dialysis and are over a certain age or continue to smoke like a chimney or weigh 400 pounds and expect the government to take care of your copd or your diabetes screw that

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