Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Princess Health and Appalachian Regional Healthcare asks federal judge to make managed-care firm keep it under contract.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Appalachian Regional Healthcare asks federal judge to make managed-care firm keep it under contract.Princessiccia

Appalachian Regional Healthcare, a hospital chain in Eastern Kentucky and southern West Virginia, is seeking an emergency injunction by a federal judge ordering Coventry Cares to let its Kentucky members continue receiving services from the hospitals, and to avoid widespread layoffs the chain says will happen if the judge doesn't intervene, reports Bill Estep of the Lexington Herald-Leader. Coventry Cares is one of three state-approved companies to provide managed care services through Medicaid. It said it would cancel its ARH contract after Friday, which would affect about 25,000 Medicaid recipients.

With a few exceptions, Coventry members would lose access to treatment or have to travel long distances to get to other facilities approved by the company, which ARH and officials in affected counties say would be difficult for most because they don't have money or reliable transportation to make the trip. Coventry spokesman Matthew Eyles said the company would continue paying for some services at ARH hospitals, including ob-gyn services to women who are more than 12 weeks pregnant and have a relationship with an ARH doctor.

The state switched to managed-care last year as a way to save money, but as Estep reports, the move has been "rocky." Providers have complained about delayed payments from the companies and their cumbersome pre-approval processes for treatments. ARH sued Coventry and Kentucky Spirit, another provider, claiming the companies owed more than $18 million for services ARH had provided.  Estep notes, "The state allowed another managed care provider not to include ARH in its network, which meant a lot of higher-risk, higher-cost patients ended up covered by Coventry, the company said." The company also said the state failed to implement a method to assess risks that would adequately compensate managed-care providers who have more high-risk patients."

ARH and its Coventry patients think the company is trying to get more money out of the state. Many of ARH's patients are covered by Coventry, and ARH spokeswoman said about 300 to 400 jobs would be cut if Coventry cancels its contract. State officials are encouraging continues negotiation between ARH and Coventry. (Read more)

Meanwhile, Bardstown pediatrician and Passport Health Plan board member James Hendrick wrote a letter to the editor of The Courier-Journal offering Passport's services to "help the state get Medicaid back on track." He said he's been very impressed with the nonprofit's "strong and engaged provider network, and an intense focus on delivering services at a cost that doesn�t diminish quality," adding that because Passport is a nonprofit, it's not concerned with appeasing shareholders. Passport has been managing Medicaid in the Louisville region for several years.

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Princess Health and Meds-for-meth bill drew record lobbying expenses, not even including radio and newspaper ad campaigns.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Meds-for-meth bill drew record lobbying expenses, not even including radio and newspaper ad campaigns.Princessiccia

Makers of over-the-counter drugs spent more than any lobbying interest ever had during a single Kentucky legislative session in their effort to defeat a bill requiring prescriptions for the key ingredient in methamphetamine, Bill Estep reports for the Lexington Herald-Leader.

"The Consumer Healthcare Products Association spent $457,053 on lobbying activities in the first three months of this year's legislative session, according to reports filed with the state Legislative Ethics Commission," Estep writes. "The group's lobbying effort was so dominant that it spent more than the next five groups combined in that period, January through March, according to spending reports."

And the figure doesn't even included hundreds of thousands of dollars that the trade group spent on radio and newspaper campaigns, because the lobby-reporting requirements do not apply to messages aimed only at the general public. The group did report spending on "a phone-bank operation to put people in contact with legislators to voice concerns about legislation to require a prescription for medicine containing pseudoephedrine, which is now available over the counter," Estep writes.

Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2012/04/30/2170495/makers-of-cold-medicines-set-new.html#storylink=cpy

The efforts, dating back to 2010, were partly successful. The legislature passed a bill "that will require a doctor's prescription for pseudoephedrine, but only after someone has bought 24 grams of the medicine a year," Estep notes. "A 48-count box of the generic medicine with 30-milligram pills contains 1.44 grams of pseudoephedrine. The bill excludes limits on gel caps and liquid pseudoephedrine." (Read more)

The lobbying effort wasn't only about Kentucky. The makers of Sudafed and other pseudoephedrine preparations are trying to stave off similar efforts in other states, and viewed Kentucky as a sort of firewall after seeing prescription-only laws pass in Oregon and Mississippi.

Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2012/04/30/2170495/makers-of-cold-medicines-set-new.html#storylink=cpy
Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2012/04/30/2170495/makers-of-cold-medicines-set-new.html#storylink=cpy
Princess Health and Managed-care firm blames state for problems leading to impending end of contract with ARH hospitals.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Managed-care firm blames state for problems leading to impending end of contract with ARH hospitals.Princessiccia

In the face of a lawsuit that alleges it did not pay claims promptly, Coventry Health and Life Insurance Co. blamed the state for problems that have surfaced since managed care was implemented. Coventry has canceled its contract with Appalachian Regional Healthcare, which has sued the company as well as Kentucky Spirit Health Plan Inc., reports Nola Sizemore for the Harlan Daily Enterprise.

"The current crisis would have never occurred except for the commonwealth's failure to make timely and reasonable decisions on three major issues," Coventry Executive Vice President Timothy Nolan said in a letter to ARH President Jerry W. Haynes. The issues are "a failure to implement a risk adjustment methodology, failure to find a solution to the supplemental hospital payment issue and errors in the original data book and failure to ensure all MCOs meet the same robust standards for network adequacy," Sizemore reports. MCOs are managed-care organizations.

Conventry Health and Kentucky Spirit are two of three MCOs chosen to manage the state's Medicaid program. Since they took over Nov. 1, there have been repeated complaints about delayed payments, as well as burdensome rules requiring doctors to get pre-authorization from the companies before they can provide care.

ARH treats about 25,000 Medicaid patients at its eight hospitals. In the past six months, nearly 11,000 Medicaid visits have been made at the Harlan facility alone, with 7,800 of them covered by Coventry, said Mark Bell, community and patient advocate. This will "present a complex and serious crisis for everyone," he said. (Read more)


Monday, 30 April 2012

Princess Health and State prescription drug databases like KASPER cut back doctor shopping and drug abuse, new study shows.Princessiccia

Photo by iStockphoto
Research from the University of North Carolina indicates drug databases like the Kentucky All Schedule Prescription Electronic Reporting system do reduce doctor shopping and change prescribing behavior.

Another article showed state drug databases "facilitate a relative decrease over time in prescription drug misuse, despite state differences in program administration," reports Maggie Clark for Stateline, the freshly revised news service of The Pew Center on the States.

A 2010 evaluation of KASPER showed 90 percent of doctors who used the system found it effective in preventing drug abuse and doctor shopping. A new Kentucky law "mandates that all physicians and pharmacists who prescribe schedule II and III drugs, such as oxycodone and hydrocodone, check the patient's prescription records before writing or filling a prescription," Clark reports. Dispensers must also register prescriptions in the state database without 24 hours of writing or filling the prescription.

Clark points out the legislation change sparked a debate about "how to balance patient privacy and law enforcements needs in fighting a serious criminal and public health problem." Attorney General Jack Conway, who wanted KASPER put into his office's hands, lost that fight as part of the legislative compromise. It will remain the responsibility of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services and, by extension, the doctor-run Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure.

Privacy issues have likewise surfaced in Vermont. "The discussion really is about what kind of access the police will have to electronic personal health information," said Allen Gilbert, executive director of the Vermont Civil Liberties Union. (Read more)

Princess Health and Major newspapers publish reflections, reactions and details (including videos) on new law that will fight 'pill mills'.Princessiccia

Reflections on the new law to fight "pill mills" are in both of Kentucky's major metropolitan newspapers today.

The Courier-Journal, which rightly takes partial credit for focusing attention on the issue, has a story by Laura Ungar that summarizes what the bill will do and not do. In the Lexington Herald-Leader, Kentucky Medical Association President Shawn Jones has an opinion piece defending his organization's lobbying against key parts of the bill.

"Unfortunately, in a desire to pass something, many did not consider the details of proposed legislation, and many of the details were extremely troublesome," writes Jones, right. "Most troubling were the proposed infringements on patient privacy through access to the state's Kentucky All Scheduled Prescription Electronic Reporting, or KASPER, system, which contains what is essentially a log of all of the controlled substances an individual has bought. A controlled substance is not just what many people have characterized as 'pain medicine.' It also includes prescriptions for medicines for anxiety, depression or attention deficit disorder." (Read more)

Jones is among the people featured in videos posted with The Courier-Journal's story. Others include Dr. Greg Cooper of Cynthiana; attorney Fox DeMoisey, who represents physicians accused of malpractice; and Dr. Patrick Murphy, a pain-management physician, talking about the various responsibilities of doctors in his field.

Sunday, 29 April 2012

Princess Health and Tonsillectomies not necessary much of the time; among $158 billion spent each year on unnecessary health care.Princessiccia

Photo by Matthew Staver, Bloomberg
Tonsillectomies are the most common procedure for children requiring anesthesia. "The only problem is there's no evidence they work for most" kids, reports Sarah Cliff of The Washington Post.

"The procedure does show some benefits for those with really serious symptoms � very sore throats, fevers and other symptoms at least seven times in the past year � but no improvement for those whose indications are milder," Cliff reports.

Yet, more and more of the procedures are being performed. Between 1996 and 2006, the number of tonsillectomies increased by 74 percent.

"It's a silent epidemic of unnecessary care," said David Goodman of the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care. "In most instances, it's done for patients with much less recurrent symptoms than should be indicated. I think a lot of this is unbeknownst to providers."

Unnecessary health care costs about $158 billion every year, Cliff reports, and the sum is partly to blame on demanding patients, to whom doctors acquiesce. Because doctors are paid based on volume, there is also an incentive to provide more care, even if it's not necessary.

Goodman said the medical education system is one main culprit. "Medical schools and graduate schools are failing us deeply," he said. "We need to move some of these ideas about the evidence being uncertain into the beginning of education. There's been such little work on that." (Read more)

Thursday, 26 April 2012

Princess Health and Couple loses combined 347 pounds in 2 years, pretty simply; similar success stories are always compelling.Princessiccia

"When Art and Betty Halcomb look at each other, they still have a hard time believing how much weight they have lost," reports Nola Sizemore for the Harlan Daily Enterprise. Together, the couple has lost 347 pounds, a journey that started in April 2010.

Art weighed 384 pounds and Betty was 308. "We decided we were going to do everything we could do in a three-month period to see how much weight we could actually lose," Betty said. That included counting calories and daily exercise, which at first comprised for a half-mile of walking. Within two weeks, they were able to walk one mile.

"We did portion control with our meals, actually measuring out serving sizes," Betty said. "I was eating 1,200 calories per day and Art was eating 1,500 calories per day. We didn't limit ourselves to any certain foods. We wanted it to be a lifestyle change, not just another diet."

One of their major motivations was their daughter, Kristen Swanner, a two-time cancer survivor who has endured chemotherapy, radiation and a stem-cell transplant. To watch her "literally fight for her life and we were just throwing ours away, we felt so guilty," Betty said.

When they discovered Swanner was pregnant, after being told by doctors that she couldn't conceive, the couple had even more drive to shed the weight, knowing they were soon to be grandparents.

"Jesus says he wants us to have an abundant life," Betty said. "If we can do this, anyone can do it. Make that decision today to lose weight and live a more happier life. Don't give up � keep trying." (Read more)