Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Princess Health and Has Obesity Research Failed?. Princessiccia

Princess Health and Has Obesity Research Failed?. Princessiccia

I frequently encounter the argument that obesity research has failed because it hasn't stopped the global increase in obesity rates. According to this argument, we need to re-think our approach to obesity research because the current approach just isn't working.

Grant funding for obesity research keeps increasing in the US, and the prevalence of obesity also keeps increasing*. What gives? Maybe if we just scrapped the whole endeavor we'd be better off.

Let's take a closer look at this argument and see how it holds up.

Why Do Research?

There are two fundamental reasons why we do research:
  1. To gather accurate information about the natural world. This information is intrinsically valuable because we like knowing how the world works, and it may eventually have practical value that's not immediately obvious.
  2. Practical applications. We want to solve problems and improve our lives.
If we want to determine whether or not obesity research has failed, we should evaluate it using those two metrics.

Has Obesity Research Gathered Accurate Information?

Read more �

Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andSteven J. Stack will be second Lexington physician in three years to lead the American Medical Association.Princessiccia

Dr. Steven J. Stack, an emergency physician in Lexington, is the new president-elect of the American Medical Association, the nation�s largest organization for physicians

Stack, at 43, is the youngest president of the organization in a century, Laura Ungar reports for The Courier-Journal. He is the first board-certified emergency physician elected to the post, which he will fill in June 2015.

�It�s an immense honor and a total joy and a thrill,� Stack told Ungar.

Stack will be the second Lexington doctor in three years to hold the office. AMA's immdiate past president is Dr. Ardis Dee Hoven, an infectious disease specialist.

�It�s a fluke of history,� Stack told Ungar.

Stack is a practicing physician and former medical director for emergency departments at St. Joseph East in Lexington and St. Joseph Mt. Sterling.

Stack's experience as the chair of the AMA�s Health Information Technology Advisory Group from 2007 to 2013 and also as a member of the federal advisory groups for the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology puts him in a position to help further one of the many goals of the Affordable Care Act�to expand information technology.

Stack told Ungar he also plans "to work on improving medical education, reducing diabetes and pre-diabetes in the population and helping ensure doctors are satisfied with their jobs so they can better help patients."

Stack came to Lexington with his wife Tracie, a pediatric allergist, and their 9-year-old daughter in 2006, Ungar writes. He has been active in the AMA for years and has held several offices. He has also been a legislative voice for local Kentucky issues, such as prescription drug abuse and medical liability reform. (Read more)

Monday, 9 June 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andNational poll finds many who need health coverage didn't even shop for it because they didn't think they could afford it.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andNational poll finds many who need health coverage didn't even shop for it because they didn't think they could afford it.Princessiccia

By Melissa PatrickKentucky Health News

The top two reasons people gave for getting health insurance under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act were compliance with the law and a desire to see a doctor, according to a recent survey by PerryUndem Research/Communication for Enroll America, a group promoting the law.

The poll also found that many people needed health coverage but didn't even shop for it because they thought they couldn't afford it. UPDATE, June 14: "Convincing Americans that they could afford insurance was the White House's biggest challenge in making Obamacare work," Ezra Klein reports on Vox.

Four in 10 of those surveyed who did enroll that they might not have signed up if the 2010 law hadn't required them to do so. Mike Perry of PerryUndem told Louise Radnofsky of The Wall Street Journal that the poll suggested that "The mandate was a big factor even if it wasn't politically popular."

The survey also found there was a high demand for health insurance during the first open enrollment period, which ended in April. Kentucky also found this to be true, said Gwenda Bond, assistant communications director for the Cabinet For Health and Family Services.

"In Kentucky, we definitely experienced high demand from the beginning of open enrollment Oct. 1, which continued to increase right up through the end of the open enrollment period," Bond said in an e-mail.

Kentucky ended up providing coverage to about 420,000 people in the state, with about three-fourths reporting they did not have insurance before signing up through Kynect, the state's health-insurance exchange.

Despite the demand,the national poll found that 61 percent of those who did not enroll still wanted coverage and the main reason they did not even look for it was because they thought they couldn't afford it.

Some of these people may not have been aware that they could qualify for free coverage through Medicaid. Almost 25 percent of the newly enrolled cited "I qualified for Medicaid" as a reason they enrolled, and over half of that population said it was the main reason.

Kentucky is working on this issue of affordability perception, Bond said. "We will be working to make it easier for individuals and small businesses to get information or a quote up front that estimates the amount of subsidies or discounts they may qualify for, before they ever begin an application,"she said in the email.

More than eight out of 10 surveyed nationally said they will consider enrolling next time.

The poll surveyed 671 newly enrolled people and 853 who remained uninsured. It was conducted April 10-28. The margin of error for the total sample is plus or minus 2.9 percentage points.

Other key findings in the poll included: 69 percent of the newly enrolled thought the process was "easy," especially if they enrolled in person instead of the phone; 74 percent of those in private plans felt confident they can afford their premiums, and many more think their plans have enough doctors than not (56 percent vs. 13 percent). The self-reported health status of those who enrolled and those who didn't was similar.

Princess Health and Princess Health andDoctors in emergency rooms say they are busier since Obamacare began; hospitals struggle to handle extra patients.Princessiccia

Nearly half of emergency-room doctors say their ERs have seen an increase in patients since health reform went into effect, and 86 percent say they expect the increase to continue, according to a poll by the American College of Emergency Physicians. Of the 1,845 completed surveys, 9 percent said ER visits had increased greatly and 37 percent said they had increased slightly. When asked what they think will happen over the next three years, 41 percent said visits will increase greatly and 45 percent said they will increase slightly. (ACEP graphic)

"Dr. Jay Kaplan, a member of ACEP's board of directors, said he wasn't surprised by the findings given the large influx or Medicaid enrollees and the difficulty in locating primary-care doctors who will see those patients," Paul Demko reports for Modern Healthcare. Kaplan told him, �When people get insurance, they feel like they deserve healthcare. When they deserve health care, and there's nobody else they can see, they come to us.�

77 percent of respondents
said their ER is not prepared
for an increase in patients
But some hospitals say many patients are going to the ER for ailments that are not emergencies, Laura Ungar reports for The Courier-Journal. Lewis Perkins, vice president of patient care and chief nursing officer at Louisville's Norton Hospital, said the emergency room is seeing 100 more patients per month, an increase of 12 percent. "We're seeing patients who probably should be seen at our (immediate-care centers)," he told Ungar. "And we're seeing this across the system."

ER visits at the University of Louisville Hospital are up 18 percent, while Dr. Ryan Stanton of Lexington, president of the Kentucky chapter of the ER physicians' group, said ER services are up 7.5 percent in that city. He told Ungar, "It's a perfect storm here. We've given people an ATM card in a town with no ATMs." (Read more)

Phil Galewitz of Kaiser Health News reports that a study in Massachusetts following its Obamacare-like expansion showed an initial surge in ER use followed by a decline over several years. Hospital officials around the country told him that the biggest impact of the expansion of Medicaid is that patients can now go to a primary-care doctor instead of the emergency room for routine care.
Princess Health and Princess Health andIn selling proposed limits on CO2, Obama administration emphasizes health improvement, not climate-change fight.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andIn selling proposed limits on CO2, Obama administration emphasizes health improvement, not climate-change fight.Princessiccia

By Melissa Landon and Al Cross
Kentucky Health News

As it announced its plan to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from power plants by 30 percent by 2030, the Obama administration emphasized the health angle, not climate change, which has been the driving force for the proposed regulations but is a more controversial cause than improving health.

"For the sake of our families' health and our kids' future, we have a moral obligation to act on climate," EPA administrator Gina McCarthy said in her announcement.

Juliet Eilperin and Steven Mufson note in The Washington Post that when a climate bill stalled in the Senate four years ago, environmental and public health activists began pressuring Preisdent Obama to mandate carbon limits. Opponents to the measure include coal producers, some utilities and many Republicans, who say that the EPA has not proposed a plan that can work using current technology.

Under the new rules, states would use different strategies�such as energy efficiency, shifting from coal to natural gas, investing in renewable energy and making power plant upgrades�to achieve state-by-state goals. The reductions will be measured from 2005 levels; Environmental Protection Agency data reveal that power plants in the U.S. have already diminished carbon dioxide emissions by almost 13 percent since 2005, The Associated Press reports.

EPA estimates the rules will prevent as many as 6,600 premature deaths, 150,000 asthma attacks in children, up to 490,000 missed work and school days�saving $93 billion, Connie Hedegaard writes for EurActiv. The federal Centers for Disease Control reports that "exposure to particle pollution may cause worsening asthma symptoms, breathing problems, adverse birth outcomes, lung cancer and early death," Healio reports.

The new rules are intended to assist Washington in achieving international obligations to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions deemed responsible for global warming, but Obama is focusing on the human health benefits to encourage Americans to adopt the movement, Jeff Mason wres for Reuters.

Although federal law has been employed to regulate other pollutants�such as soot, mercury and lead�this is the first time it has been applied to greenhouse gases, Fox News reports, quoting Obama: "We limit the amount of toxic chemicals like mercury, sulfur and arsenic that power plants put in our air and water. But they can dump unlimited amounts of carbon pollution into the air. It's not smart, it's not safe, and it doesn't make sense."
Princess Health and Princess Health andSafety-net hospitals, haven for the uninsured, are seeing more covered patients since the expansion of Medicaid.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andSafety-net hospitals, haven for the uninsured, are seeing more covered patients since the expansion of Medicaid.Princessiccia

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

Hospitals that most often treat the poor and uninsured  are seeing fewer uninsured patients since the new health law's expansion of Medicaid, Phil Galewitz reports for Kaiser Health News. Kentucky's safety-net hospitals have also seen a drop in their uninsured patients.

Safety-net hospitals, which are often not paid for the billions of dollars it costs to care for the disproportionate share of poor and uninsured people they care for, will benefit most from the health law's expansion to more than 13 million people this year, Galewitz writes.

Hospitals across the country had expected this outcome, but told Galewitz in interviews that it has happened "faster and deeper" than anticipated -- "at least in the 25 states that expanded Medicaid in January."

Kentucky is one of the states that agreed to the Medicaid expansion and has expanded health coverage to some 413,000 people, with 75 percent of them reporting that they did not have coverage before signing up on Kynect, the state's health insuance exchange.

Michael Rust, president of Kentucky Hospital Association, said figures from his members won't be available until July, but "Anecdotally, I can tell you that more people do have coverage," adding later that "most are on Medicaid."

The University of Kentucky has seen a decrease in uninsured patients. �The number of uninsured patients seeking care at UK HealthCare since Medicaid expansion took effect in January has decreased,� said Mark D. Birdwhistell, UK vice president for health system administration. �Even though we have seen a double-digit increase in the number of services provided, request for financial assistance is down when compared to this period last year.�

Investor-owned hospitals are also being affected by the expansion of coverage. HCATenet Healthcare Corp.Community Health Systems, some of which own safety-net hospitals, told Galewitz "they saw their rates of uninsured patients drop by as much as a third in the first quarter of 2014 in hospitals located in Medicaid-expansion states," he writes.

"An Urban Institute study published in the May edition of Health Affairs estimated the costs of uncompensated care to hospitals were as high as $45 billion in 2013, with government programs defraying an estimated 65 percent of those costs," Galewitz reports. That made the hospital industry one of the first to support the Affordable Care Act, he notes, agreeing to take funding cuts "exceeding $150 billion over a decade" in return for more paying patients.

However, because the Supreme Court ruled that states could not be forced to expand Medicaid, hospitals in the 24 states that didn't are suffering the funding cuts, without the "corresponding reduction in uncompensated care," Galewitz writes.

Hospital officials told Galewitz that the biggest impact of the expansion of Medicaid is that patients can now go to a primary-care doctor instead of the emergency room for routine care. Kentucky ERs have reported a surge in patients since the law took effect. Galewitz notes that a study in Massachusetts following its Obamacare-like expansion showed an initial surge in ER use followed by a decline over several years.
Princess Health and Princess Health andSuccess of Kynect puts both Senate candidates in a pickle.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andSuccess of Kynect puts both Senate candidates in a pickle.Princessiccia

"The early success of Kentucky�s health care exchange, Kynect, is creating quandaries for both Mitch McConnell and Alison Lundergan Grimes as they address Obamacare" in Kentucky's U.S. Senate race," James R. Carroll reports for The Courier-Journal.

"For McConnell, the Senate minority leader, continued attacks on Obamacare � i.e., the Affordable Care Act � pose risk because the law�s implementation under Kynect has produced 421,000 enrollees in the Bluegrass State, and more public support than opposition," Carroll writes. "For Grimes, the issue is whether to fully embrace the exchange�s success as she tries to rally key elements of the Democratic base that is largely for the health-care law � while still separating herself from President Obama, who is unpopular in the state."

Carroll quotes Susan Zepeda, president of the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky: �Campaign politics does not lend itself to a deep-dive into the complexities of multifaceted issues of what access to health care and payment for health care means to Kentucky communities and to Kentuckians,� so the debate is more complicated than �repeal Obamacare� or �support Kynect,� Carroll writes, in a story that goes on to explain it all.