Tuesday, 8 May 2012

Princess Health and Lessons in battling obesity can be learned from the anti-tobacco movement, but there are big differences.Princessiccia

To make real headway in battling the obesity epidemic, lessons can be learned from the war on smoking � though the two public-health issues have certain unique challenges. Judith Graham, reporting for Kaiser Health News in collaboration with USA Today, delves into the similarities and differences.

Her piece deserves to be read in its entirety, which can be done by clicking here, but here's a summary of her analysis:

Children are central. The majority of people start using tobacco as teenagers, with one-third of kids who smoke daily set to die prematurely of tobacco-related illnesses. Likewise, overweight children are at a greater risk of a vast array of health problems, including diabetes, liver disease and obesity in adulthood.

Protecting children as at the heart of both the anti-tobacco and anti-obesity efforts. "First let's protect our children," said Dr. David Ludwig, a child-obesity expert at Harvard Medical School

Changing social norms is the goal. While smoking in a hospital or airplane has become inconceivable, the same shift in social norms is required to fight childhood obesity. "Our (eating and physical activity) tastes, our preferences and our behaviors are learned and can be changed," said Dr. Jeffrey Koplan, former head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and vice president for global health at Emory University in Atlanta. It won't be easy, but at least "we're dealing with a population that would like to be thinner and that works in our favor."

We can't "just say no" to food. "Tobacco we can get rid of entirely," said Dr. David Katz, director of Yale University's Prevention Research Center. "But we have to eat to live and make terms with food as the enemy."

That makes fighting childhood obesity much more difficult, since the message can't be "stop, don't do this." It has to instead be "make good choices, set boundaries," which is more difficult to convey and adhere to, Graham reports.

Our biology works against us. "While smoking is highly addictive, the biological responses attached to eating food are even more deeply rooted in human evolution," Graham reports. Evolutionarily speaking, humans are "built" to eat food when it's available and "we're very good at storing calories and defending calories once we've got them," said Dr. Stephen Daniels, chair of the department of pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. 

Shame and denial are greater among the obese. A person's self-image is tightly tied to his or her body weight in a way that isn't true of smoking. That can provide a compelling reason to stop over-eating, but people don't tend to think of themselves as obese. "Obesity is seen as a pejorative term that people don't connect with," said Dr. William Dietz, director of the division of nutrition, physical activity and obesity at the CDC. "They think, 'I'm just 30 or 40 pounds overweight, but I'm not obese.'"

There are more food products available. "Tobacco is a single substance," Graham reports. "By contrast, the food and beverage industry is enormous and makes a huge array of goods that extend into every home, restaurant, convenience store, and grocery store in America."

There is no second-hand smoke equivalent. "The notion that my behavior as a smoker can have an effect on you and can make you sick was critically important in accelerating people's intolerance of smoking and their willingness to see the government take action," said Michael Eriksen, director of the Institute of Public Health at Georgia State University. "Your being obese does not affect me in the same direct way."

The role of the food industry is less clear. While Big Tobacco was able to be demonized, "with obesity (as compared to tobacco) there's a much more nuanced relationship with industry," said Dr. James S. Marks, director of the health group at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Princess Health and 4 of 5 Kentuckians think child obesity is a problem, and more than half favor a statewide smoking ban, poll finds.Princessiccia

Princess Health and 4 of 5 Kentuckians think child obesity is a problem, and more than half favor a statewide smoking ban, poll finds.Princessiccia

More than four out of five Kentuckians think too many children are overweight, and more than half want a statewide smoking ban. These are two of key findings of the Kentucky Health Issues Poll, which also asked respondents about prescription drug abuse, depression and access to health care.

Poll findings are available by clicking here. Findings have been broken down by region: Western Kentucky, greater Louisville, greater Lexington area, Northern Kentucky and Eastern Kentucky.

Statewide, the poll found 54 percent of Kentuckians favor a statewide smoking ban, up from 53 percent the year before. In 2010, Kentuckians were split down the middle, 48 percent to 48 percent.

A whopping 84 percent of Kentuckians feel childhood obesity is a problem, which is timely since 33 percent of children, 60 percent of women and 80 percent of men in Kentucky are overweight or obese, "Shaping Kentucky's Future: A Community Guide to Reducing Obesity" reports.

The poll also found more than one in three Kentuckians know someone who has misused prescription drugs; 65 percent of adults dispose of their prescription drugs in an unsafe way; nearly half keep guns in their homes; and 1 in 2 Kentuckians have a family member or friend with a serious problem of depression. Nearly 90 percent of people asked favor providing access to affordable, quality health care for all Americans.

"The Kentucky Health Issues Poll provides an excellent snapshot of how various health related issues are viewed throughout the commonwealth," said Dr. Susan Zepeda, CEO of the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, which helped fund the poll. "The survey's methodology lets us compare responses and learn about regional differences in Kentucky views about health."

The poll was also funded by The Health Foundation of Greater Cincinnati. It was conducted Sept. 27 to Oct. 27 by the Institute for Policy Research at the University of Cincinnati. A random sample of adults across Kentucky were interviewed, including 1,313 landline interviews and 308 cell-phone interviews.

Princess Health and Report looks at ways Kentucky communities are battling obesity.Princessiccia

Winchester residents walk the Traveling Trail, a walking
path meant to encourage residents to exercise.
A new report takes a hard look at obesity in Kentucky and highlights what individual communities are doing to combat the problem.

"Shaping Kentucky's Future: A Community Guide to Reducing Obesity" could be useful to readers, officials and advocates interested in effecting change, with some efforts relatively easy � and cheap � to implement.

Statewide, 33 percent of children, 60 percent of women and 80 percent of men are overweight or obese, ranking Kentucky's third highest in the country for children and sixth highest for adults. Health care costs attributable to obesity in Kentucky are estimated to be $2.3 billion in 2013.

The report highlights community efforts in:
� Berea, for its effort to make the city more accessible to pedestrians.
� Winchester, for mowing a walking trail on land owned by the community hospital.
� Louisville, for supporting breast-feeding mothers; selling healthy food at urban markets
� Madisonville, for Hopkins County's wellness program for its 150 county employees.
� Lexington, for serving the Better Bites menu at several pools and city facilities, rather than unhealthy meals and snacks.
� Hopkinsville, for its farmers' market being one of the first to accept SNAP nutrition assistance benefits.
� Tyner, for building a commercial kitchen so residents can process local food and package it for sale.
� Buckhorn, Lexington and Shelbyville, for opening up schools for exercise venues.

The report, which was funded by the Kentucky Department for Public Health, the Shaping Kentucky's Future Collaborative and the Tides Foundation, also looks at success stories in schools, from an effort at Science Hill in Pulaski County to the Healthy Monday program in Covington, which includes walking the Monday Mile and eating the Monday Meatless Meal. (Read more)
Princess Health and 'Health for a Change' webinar training series starts May 16, with session on where to find and how to use health data.Princessiccia

Princess Health and 'Health for a Change' webinar training series starts May 16, with session on where to find and how to use health data.Princessiccia

How to find county-specific health data and how to use it to make community changes will be the focus of an hour-long webinar May 16.

The free session is the first in the 2012 "Health for a Change" training series, meant to advance today's health issues in Kentucky. It is sponsored by the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky. "We have procured excellent speakers to present best practices and proven models of these skills in a combination of electronic webinar format and in-person workshops," a foundation press release says.

The June 20 workshop will provide training on building and maintaining a local health coalition. Other webinars this summer will help identify differences between advocacy and lobbying, discuss evidence-based policies and programs, give instruction on budgeting and teach how apply for grant funding.

The May 16 webinar will be held from 3 to 4 p.m. To register for it or the entire "Health for a Change" series, click here.

Monday, 7 May 2012

Princess Health and Cabinet must 'wield the stick' to get managed care under control, state auditor says.Princessiccia

Though the state has a solid contract "filled with all the mechanisms you need for enforcement, from the carrots to the sticks," the Cabinet for Health and Family Services has to be more aggressive in cracking down on the managed care organizations (MCOs) that run the state's $6 billion Medicaid system, state Auditor Adam Edelen says.

Edelen, who has been in office a little over four months, discussed managed care with Ryan Alessi, host of cn|2's "Pure Politics." Edelen is reviewing the new system and submitted 10 recommendations for improvement to the cabinet in February.

"The issues have been enormous � providers not being paid in a timely manner, a lack of communication between the cabinet and the MCOs and the providers, has created a system in which there is a lot of uncertainty and a lot of people are being squeezed out," Edelen said.

Couple that with the fact that Appalachian Regional Healthcare, which serves more than 25,000 Medicaid patients, sued two of the three MCOs in charge of the state, claiming they are owed $18 million for services that have been provided. Last week, ARH and MCO CoventryCares came to an agreement after being ordered by a federal judge to negotiate.

Edelen pointed out the broader ramifications of the situation. "If our largest Medicaid provider in the part of the state that needs it most for some reason is not able to operate within the system because they can't manage their relationship with Coventry or vice versa, that represents a structural threat to the system," he said. "We've got to figure out a way to make it work."

In order to do so, Edelen said "the cabinet has got to be willing to wield the stick" and is able to do under the terms of its contracts with the MCOs, which allow the cabinet to cancel contracts, "sanction and punish" the MCOs and make changes to the system. He said new cabinet Secretary Audrey Haynes has a tough job ahead and said "strong leadership" is critical.

When asked if his review looks into what work is being accomplished by the state's 200 employees who used to handle Medicaid � work that is now being managed by the MCOs � Edelen said it hasn't. (Read more)

Meanwhile, the Lexington Herald-Leader weighed in on the lawsuit between ARH and CoventryCares, saying in an April 24 editorial, "Coventry should keep working with Haynes and ARH on solutions. The editorial also stated, "Beshear, a former corporate lawyer, should bring the weight of the governor's office to bear and get busy making his Medicaid managed care contracts work." (Read more)

Saturday, 5 May 2012

Princess Health and New oral health coalition expected to spur changes in state.Princessiccia

By Tara Kaprowy
Kentucky Health News

For the past 30 years, Dr. Fred Howard of Harlan has been seating patients in his blue dental chair and telling them to open up. When they do, he's seen all kinds of scenarios, from toddlers whose teeth are already rotten from sucking on bottle filled with soft drinks to 20-year-old adults with no teeth at all. On some occasions, children walk in with such a severe abscess in their mouth their eyes are swollen shut.

Though the view can be grim, Howard said he has seen some improvements in his decades of practice, but with new changes in Medicaid managed care, the overwhelming prevalence of children and teens drinking soda pop and an embedded cultural belief in some areas that "teeth are just something to get rid of," Howard concedes that making headway can feel like one step forward and two steps back.

Enter the newly re-established Kentucky Oral Health Coalition, a statewide force whose goal is to ensure Kentuckians have happy, healthy smiles.

Dozens of organizers and stakeholders met in March to discuss the coalition's aims, and a membership drive is underway to build financial momentum. The coalition will promote oral health education, statewide partnerships statewide and advocate oral-health legislation. "I think they will turn into the advocacy group for dental change," said Dr. Julie McKee, dental director for the state Department of Public Health. "They're working hard to come up with a plan. They've got their heads on straight."

One of the major issues facing the dental profession is possible expansion of the scope of practice for mid-level providers, such as dental therapists who can assess, clean teeth, replace sealants, provide fluoride as well as fill cavities and extract teeth. As nurse practitioners do in the medical field, having such providers could help address shortages in rural areas, said Dr. Jim Cecil, former state dental director and coalition steering committee chair. The concept is in practice in 54 other countries, but the only U.S. states with it are Minnesota and Alaska, mainly because of opposition form dentists.

Andrea Plummer, coalition member and senior policy analyst for Kentucky Youth Advocates, acknowledged that scope-of-practice issues "can be a very tense subject" and "there would have to be buy-in" from members of the committee, who include dentists, but discussion is ongoing. Cecil said the issue is "something we'll need to look at and take a stand on eventually."

Howard (pictured with Gov. Steve Beshear at signing of the bill that requires dental exams for students starting school) favors the expansion, but doesn't feel Kentucky's oral-health problems can be solved just by putting more boots on the ground.

"The bottom line is: We can have twice as many dentists, have more dental hygienists, but if we don't change the mindset, if we don't provide the education, I don't think we're going to solve the problem," he said.

To that end, the coalition is also investigating ways to expand school-based health and dental education, either by finding funding, collaborating with groups that are already in place or advocating legislation changes, Plummer said.

A recently enacted state law requires children to get a dental screening before entering kindergarten, but there is little else in the way of legislation that requires schools to offer services to help students with dental problems, Plummer said. "Kentucky law says that students' health does affect their learning and schools should take steps to affect their learning but it's fairly broad," she said.

An analysis by KYA last year showed school districts spend less than 1 percent of their budgets on school health services.

Examining how to get more dentists to accept Medicaid patients is another hot-button issue. Of about 2,200 dentists statewide, only about 600 are enrolled in Medicaid, Cecil said, and "They feel like they're working for free" because of the program's low reimbursements. "In many cases, they're really not meeting overhead."

The administrative burden that comes with these patients has also gotten worse since Medicaid transitioned to managed care, Cecil said. "Everything they do has to be pre-authorized," he said. "That delays approval, delays treatment, delays payment."

Under managed care, Howard said, patients now need to come in twice to get a full complement of X-rays and radiographs done, which can not only make it hard on dental practices, but for patients as well. "The more times they have to come, that gives them more opportunities to miss appointments," Howard said.

The Oral Health Coalition also sees a need for "quality, updated data," Plummer said. Getting data was one of the successes of the first coalition, formed in 1990. Run by volunteers and funded by the dental schools at the University of Kentucky and University of Louisville, it was formed after the General Assembly told the schools that they either needed to work together or one could "risk being shut down," Plummer said. The group had several successes, including working with the state to conduct an oral health survey, lobbying legislators for oral-health measures and holding an annual symposium. But after more than 15 years, "It kind of just fizzled out a little bit," Plummer said. The group went inactive in 2006 but had some assets that the new group will take over.

The group's rebirth began in 2009, when Kentucky Youth Advocates was approached by the DentaQuest Foundation, which is connected to DentaQuest, one of the largest managed-care organizations in the country that administers dental benefits. DentaQuest officials were interested in seeing the coalition resurrected and offered $80,000 to KYA so it could provide the manpower to run it, Plummer said. It was the first time the coalition had funding to back it up. The KYA talked to state stakeholders and discovered "there really did seem to be an interest in putting a coalition back together," Plummer said. Planning began in earnest and in January the steering committee drafted by-laws. In March, 70 people showed up to the first meeting.

That gathering was not just made up of dentists, oral-health advocates and experts, Howard said. Members of the media were present, along with parents, health department officials, school nurses, students and educators. That made all the difference to Howard, who said he is inspired by what changes might occur and what education can take place. "When we have people from all these different venues, we have more of an opportunity to make a difference," he said.

The coalition's next meeting will be July 25. Those interested in attending or becoming members of the coalition can contact Andrea Plummer at aplummer@kyyouth.org or 502-895-8167. Dues for individual members are $25. Government organizations pay $100, nonprofit organizations pay $250 and for-profit organizations pay $500.

Kentucky Health News is a service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, based in the School of Journalism and Telecommunications at the University of Kentucky, with support from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky.

Princess Health and Coventry agrees to keep covering ARH patients until June 30.Princessiccia

After a two-hour hearing in federal court, managed-care firm CoventryCares agreed yesterday to keep paying Appalachian Regional Healthcare for treating Medicaid patients at its hospitals through at least June 30 while negotiations continue.

"Coventry officials said 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 Lexington Herald-Leader reports. "Blaming the state, Coventry had notified ARH that it was going to terminate its contract Friday. About 25,000 Medicaid recipients in the ARH service area would have been affected."

ARH then sued Coventry in U.S. District Court and asked for an injunction to continue coverage, which Coventry had said it would end yesterday. The state ordered it to maintain coverage for 30 days, and Senior Judge Karl Forester ordered ARH and Coventry to negotiate.

After yesterday's hearing, the adversaries and the state "all said the goal was for patients to continue receiving care through Appalachian Regional Healthcare's hospitals in Eastern Kentucky on a long-term basis," the Herald-Leader reports. "If the health care chain and Coventry reach an impasse, cabinet officials said procedures could be expedited with Coventry's cooperation. That would allow Coventry members to switch to another insurance provider and continue receiving services at ARH, considered the largest health care chain in Eastern Kentucky." (Read more)

ARH has hospitals in Harlan, Hazard, Hindman, McDowell, Middlesboro, West Liberty and Whitesburg, as well as three in West Virginia, including Williamson, on the Kentucky border.