Saturday, 13 June 2015

Princess Health and The 2015 PharmedOut Meeting. Princessiccia

Princess Health and The 2015 PharmedOut Meeting. Princessiccia

The 2015 PharmedOut.org meeting is now in the history books.  It featured many presentations and considerable formal and informal discussion about issues relevant to Health Care Renewal, including adverse effects of drugs, manipulation and suppression of research, deceptive marketing, disease mongering, etc.  The schedule is here.  The abstracts are here.  The new PharmedOut.org video makes some of the main points with some irony and humor.  It is available on their main page, and below



The new PharmedOut.org promotional video,


Princess Health and Seniors get a lot of anti-anxiety drugs, sometimes in dangerous combination with narcotics; Ky. ranks third in the nation in that.Princessiccia

When Medicare's drug program, called Part D, was put into place more than a decade ago, Congress decided to not pay for anti-anxiety medications. In 2013, when Medicare started paying for them, the program went from spending nothing for these medications to paying more than $377 million, Charles Ornstein and Ryann Grochowski Jones report for ProPublica, a nonprofit, investigative news organization.

Using anti-anxiety drugs in combination with narcotics increases the risk of overdoses, but Kentucky has many doctors who prescribe a lot of both. More than 100 Kentucky doctors each wrote at least 1,000 prescriptions for both types of drugs in 2013, according to data compiled by ProPublica.

That ranked Kentucky third in the nation, trailing only Florida and Alabama. Other southeastern states dominated the top 10. California, the nation's most populous state, ranked eighth; Tennessee was fourth and Ohio was ninth.

ProPublica has an application that lets you look up, by doctors' names, cities or ZIP codes, the number of Medicare claims they filed in 2013, the amount of money, the number of patients and the number of prescriptions for brand-name drugs.

The anti-anxiety drugs, some known as benzodiazepines, include popular tranquilizers such as Valium, Xanax and Ativan. 

Lawmakers initially chose to keep them out of Medicare Part D because they had been linked to abuse and an increased risk of falls among the elderly. Doctors kept prescribing them to Medicare enrollees, who found other ways to pay for them.

In 2013, the year Medicare started covering benzodiazepines, it paid for nearly 40 million prescriptions, ProPublica found. Generic versions of Xanax (alprazolam), Ativan (lorazepam) and Klonopin (clonazepam) were among the top 32 most-prescribed medications in Medicare Part D that year.

The American Geriatrics Society "discourages the use of benzodiazepines in seniors for agitation, insomnia or delirium because they can be habit-forming and disorienting and their effects last longer in older patients." The society does say the drugs "are appropriate to treat seizure disorders, severe anxiety, withdrawal and in end-of-life care," ProPublica notes.

One geriatric psychiatrist told ProPublica that the drugs are a "very real safety concern" for the elderly, and that he and others in his field don't use them as a "first-, second-, or third- line of treatment." Some geriatric psychiatrists have voiced concerns that these drugs are now being used instead of antipsychotics, since Medicare has pushed to reduce the use of antipsychotics, particularly in nursing homes, because of their risks.

Several doctors who rank among Medicare's top prescribers of the drugs told ProPublica that any risks of anti-anxiety drugs are outweighed by their benefits. One said that the drugs worked well for his patients, many of whom were trying to kick addictions to narcotics, but struggled with anxiety and depression.

However, ProPublica also found that some doctors appear to be prescribing benzodiazepines and narcotic painkillers to the same patients, which increased the risk of misuse and overdose. That's where Kentucky ranked third.

Dr. Leonard J. Paulozzi, a medical epidemiologist at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, co-authored an analysis showing that benzodiazepines were involved in about 30 percent of the fatal narcotic overdoses that occurred nationwide in 2010, ProPublica reports.

Friday, 12 June 2015

Princess Health and Louisville opens first needle exchange in state; officials predict rural counties will be slow to follow.Princessiccia

Photo by Scott Utterback, The Courier-Journal
Louisville Metro Public Health & Wellness opened its mobile needle-exchange program Wednesday, June 10, making Louisville the first place in Kentucky to implement such a program.

Lexington and Northern Kentucky are expected to follow soon, but officials say that establishing needle exchanges in much of Kentucky will be "more politically complex," Mike Wynn reports for The Courier-Journal.

"We're going to see some parts of our state where this is available and others where it is not," Scott Lockard, president of the Kentucky Health Departments Association, told Wynn. "Rural areas are opting for a slow and deliberate approach, heavy on education and dialogue," he said, and some communities won't even consider a exchange because of "seemingly endless hoops to jump through."

Bullitt County, south of Louisville, is a prime example. There, officials told Wynn that they plan to do a needs assessment and host a community forum with input from law enforcement and mental health experts.

"It's a work in progress," Public Health Director Andrea Renfrow told Wynn. "We are not able to go as quickly as Louisville Metro."

One critic, Magistrate Joe Laswell, told Wynn that he had talked to many voters who are against the exchanges and want to know why police wouldn't arrest addicts when they show up to swap out dirty needles. "I believe in charging and incarcerating," he said, apparently unaware that the addicts would need to have drugs in their possession to be charged.

Lockard, who heads the Clark County Health Department, told Wynn that he won't ask his board to take a vote until August and that he can't predict the political outcome when it goes to city and county officials.

In three other Bluegrass counties, Scott, Harrison and Nicholas, the board of the Wedco District Health Department wants to start a needle exchange, reports The Cynthiana Democrat, but can't proceed in any of the counties without approval of the fiscal court.

So, despite the two-year debate that just ended in Frankfort over the law, it's not really over.

Democratic state Rep. John Tilley of Hopkinsville, the legislature's biggest proponent for needle exchanges, told Wynn that giving city councils and fiscal courts final authority over the programs was necessary to sooth critics and pass a comprehensive heroin bill this year.

Opponents of the law say the exchanges promote drug use, while proponents cite evidence that doesn't support those claims, but instead "help prevent the spread of deadly and expensive diseases and pull addicts into treatment programs while keeping dirty needles out of parks and off the streets," Wynn writes.

A Lexington Herald-Leader editorial wrote about needle exchanges: "Congressional critics rely on a gut feeling that providing needles endorses drug use, but 20 years of research argues otherwise." Listing that where there are syringe exchange programs:
  • Participants are five times more likely to get treatment.
  • HIV and hepatitis C declines among drug users.
  • Participants can get referrals to substance abuse treatment, disease prevention education, vaccinations, condoms, counseling and testing for communicable diseases.
  • Costs are more than recaptured. A 2011 European study found that $1 spent on needle-exchange programs yielded $27 in health-care cost savings, prompting an international report to call needle exchanges "one of the most cost-effective public health interventions ever funded."
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently reported that new cases of hepatitis C more than tripled in Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia between 2006 and 2012, mainly from the use of dirty needles. Officials fear an outbreak of HIV and AIDS will follow.

Thursday, 11 June 2015

Princess Health and Common heartburn medications are linked to heart attacks.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Common heartburn medications are linked to heart attacks.Princessiccia

Research made possible by data mining reveals evidence that a common group of heartburn medications is associated with a greater risk of heart attack, according to Stanford University researchers, Lenny Bernstein reports for The Washington Post.

The heartburn drugs in question are known as proton-pump inhibitors, such as Nexium, Prilosec and Prevacid. Bernstein writes that "they are some of the most widely used drugs in the world and that an estimated 113 million prescriptions for the drugs are written for them around the world each year."

Bernstein notes that the Stanford study, published in the online journal PLOS One, recognizes that it was not designed to show cause and effect, and agrees that a large, prospective clinical study could establish whether the drugs are actually causing more heart attacks.

But one of the authors of the study, Nicholas J. Leeper, an assistant professor of cardiovascular medicine and vascular surgery at Stanford, told Bernstein that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration "should be aware of these findings" and "we do think patients should think about their risks and benefits and should discuss their risk with their doctor."

Nigam Shah, lead author of the research, cautioned that because some of these drugs are now available over the counter, it is important to tell your physician if you are taking them.

The research combed through 16 million electronic records of 2.9 million patients in two separate databases (one database was from hospital patients and the other from private office or clinic patients) and found that people who take the medication to suppress the release of stomach acid are 16 to 21 percent more likely to have a heart attack, Bernstein reports.

The research theorizes that proton pump inhibitors may reduce production of nitric oxide from cells that line the inside of the circulatory system, including the heart. Lower levels of nitric oxide have long been associated with cardiovascular problems, Leeper told Bernstein. This theory is being tested in the lab.

The Stanford study found no association between medications that combat heartburn by blocking histamine production, like Zantac and Pepcid, and increased risk of heart attack.

Princess Health and Bevin says he will end all Obamacare programs in Ky., including Medicaid expansion that has added more than 400,000 to rolls .Princessiccia

Matt Bevin, the Republican nominee for governor, has made clear that if elected he would end the Medicaid expansion that has provided free health coverage for more than 400,000 poor Kentuckians.

During his primary campaign, Bevin never made that quite plain, saying he would close the state's health-insurance exchange, Kynect, because it would cost "hundreds of millions of dollars." Kynect is paid for by insurance companies, so Bevin was alluding to to the state's projected cost of expanding Medicaid, which enrolls through Kynect.

The Washington-based publication Politico reported on June 10, after interviewing Bevin, that he would not only close Kynect but roll back the Medicaid expansion: �You may or may not have access to Medicaid going forward,� he said. �People are not on it for extended periods of time. It�s not meant to be a lifestyle. It really isn�t. The point of it is to provide for those who truly have need.�

Democratic nominee and Attorney General Jack Conway, with Gov.
Steve Beshear; GOP nominee Matt Bevin (AP photos via Politico)
Gov. Steve Beshear "is furious" about Bevin's plan, Politico reported. �I am not going to allow someone to become governor of this state who wants to take us back to the 19th century,� the governor said in a telephone interview. �For a serious candidate for governor to be advocating a simple repeal of the whole program without offering any kind of alternative which will continue health care for these people is irresponsible.�

Beshear expanded the eligibility rules for Medicaid as part of implementing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, raising the income limit to the law's required 138 percent of the federal poverty level, from the state's previous level of 69 percent.

The federal government is paying the entire cost of the newly eligible Medicaid recipients though next year. In 2017, the state would begin to pay 3 percent, rising to the reform law's cap of 10 percent by 2020. A study by Deloitte Consulting and the Urban Institute at the University of Louisville  � "which Republican critics have rejected as spin," Politico says � has said the expansion more than pays for itself through 2020 by expanding health-care jobs and generating tax revenue.

Jobs are growing as projected by the study, according to the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, which handles Medicaid.

Cabinet spokeswomnan Jill Midkiff said the study estimated that 32,000 jobs would be created through 2015 as a result of the expansion. "U of L projected this growth would primarily be in the areas of retail trade, finance and insurance, administrative services, health and social services, accommodations and food services and other services," Midkiff said. "These sectors were estimated to account for more than 28,000 of the 32,000 jobs created." She said the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics figures show that "these sectors have grown by more than 29,000 jobs from 2013 until April 2015. Therefore, the most recent BLS numbers indicate that UofL�s estimates are on target to meet projections."

Politico says a Bevin victory could "blot an Obamacare bright spot," since Kynect has "worked virtually glitch-free." Through April, 106,000 Kentuckians had obtained tax-subsidized, private insurance coverage through Kynect, which is also the portal for enrolling in Medicaid.

Bevin says he would move those people to the federal exchange, which has been marred by technological issues and charges insurance companies much more to use it than Kynect does. But that plan would not work if the U.S. Supreme Court rules this month that the tax subsidies are not legally available through the federal exchange.

"That doesn�t worry Bevin," Politico reports, quoting him: �You�re worrying about a hypothesis. Let�s let the Supreme Court rule.�

And what about the new Medicaid recipients who would lose their benefits if Bevin wins? He "insists that Obamacare is coverage in name only � that Kentuckians still lack access to high-quality health care, partly because Medicaid pays doctors such low rates, partly because he says too many people rely on emergency rooms," Politico reports, quoting him: �Just having health insurance doesn�t mean you�re going to get health care.�

Attorney General Jack Conway, the Democratic nominee, declined Politico's request for an interview. Campaign spokesman Daniel Kemp said, �Jack wants to make sure that the hundreds of thousands of Kentuckians who now have health insurance through Kynect, especially kids, keep their health insurance � not play politics or push an ideology that�s out of touch with Kentucky�s values.�

Politico observes, "Conway is in the tricky spot of embracing Kynect while trying to keep his distance from Obama and Obamacare, a term that still generates ire among Kentucky residents. A September 2014 Marist [College] poll found that 61 percent of registered Kentucky voters had an unfavorable impression of Obamacare. Only 17 percent had negative feelings about Kynect."

Princess Health and New license plate would promote outdoor recreation, support environmental education programs; 900 buyers needed to start.Princessiccia

A new "Let's Go Outside" license plate is being offered to give Kentucky motorists the opportunity to promote the health and environmental benefits of outdoor recreation.

First Lady Jane Beshear unveiled the license plate June 10. She said that encouraging children to play outside will help improve their health and noted that "Kentucky has one of the highest childhood obesity rates in the nation," reports to The Lane Report.

Proceeds from the specialty plate will support the work of the Kentucky Environmental Education Council, including coordinating the Kentucky Green and Healthy Schools program and certifying professional environmental educators.

�Kentuckians have said in surveys that children not spending enough time outside is a major concern,� KEEC Executive Director Elizabeth Schmitz said. �One of our goals is to encourage children to embrace the outdoors and to teach them the importance of a clean environment for our health and preservation."

The Kentucky Environmental Education Council needs 900 applications, each accompanied by a $25 donation, before any plates will be manufactured.

Submitting the application does not obligate you to purchase the plate, but your donation will be credited toward the purchase of a plate once they are in production. If not enough applications are received, your $25 will be considered a tax-deductible donation.

A link to download the application is available at www.keec.ky.gov/LetsGoOutside.

Wednesday, 10 June 2015

Princess Health and Newspapers' data analysis finds that Kentucky's seniors on Medicare are among the sickest in U.S.; local data available.Princessiccia

Red counties are over 21%. For map with data, click here.
The top 10 Kentucky counties with the highest percentage of seniors on Medicare who have six or more chronic conditions are also in the nation's top 50 for sick seniors, according to government data analyzed by USA Today and The Courier-Journal. Nine of the top 10 counties are in Appalachia.

"That's not surprising," Fran Feltner, director of the University of Kentucky Center of Excellence in Rural Health, told The C-J's Laura Ungar. "And when you're having breathing problems, high blood pressure problems and other problems, to me it seems like you're waging a daily battle against the chronic diseases. It's hard to fight the battle ... and as you get older, it's harder."

The top 10 Kentucky counties ranked by percentage of the 65-and-older Medicare population with six or more chronic conditions are Clay, 27.1 percent; Breathitt, 26.3 percent; Johnson, 26.2 percent; Knott, 25.1 percent; Perry, 24.6 percent; Letcher, 24.2 percent; Bell, 24 percent; Floyd, 23.8 percent; Wolfe, 23.7 percent; and Taylor, 23.6 percent. Taylor County (Campbellsville) is not in Appalachia but borders three non-coal Appalachian counties.

Beve Cotton (C-J photo by Mark Mahan)
Beve Cotton, 81 and with a long list of chronic diseases, is one of those seniors. He lives in Manchester, the seat of Clay County, which ranks 12th among more than 3,100 counties nationally for the percentage of seniors on Medicare with six or more chronic conditions, Ungar reports.

"I'm a mess," said Cotton, who gets around in a power chair and wears a full set of dentures after losing all his teeth. "I'm not able to do things. I'm an accomplished cook, but I can't do that anymore ... I can't drive. My legs don't cooperate. ... It's very hard."

Ungar reports that Clay County, population 21,147, has many of the factors that combine to cause poor health.: "Nearly 38 percent of residents live below the poverty level, compared with a state average of 19 percent, according to the Census Bureau. Median household income is about $22,000 a year, about half the state average.Access to health care, especially specialists, is limited, and there are few well-stocked grocery stores or safe places to exercise. Smoking and obesity rates are sky-high."

Carmen Webb, who directs the senior center in Manchester, told Ungar that many seniors struggle with being able to afford staples, let alone healthy food and also the high cost of transportation, making it difficult to get to doctors appointments to manage their illnesses.

Cotton, who grew up in Manchester, told Ungar that he depends on others for rides, frequently to doctors' appointments, including many at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Lexington, about 100 miles away. Webb noted that public transportation in the area costs $1.50 per mile.

Feltner added that many seniors in the area don't know how to prevent chronic disease, some have fatalistic attitudes and because many of them are on multiple medications, they face the dangers of drug interactions and side effects, Ungar reports.

Experts say that such high levels of illness hurts communities, "hastening a downward economic spiral locally and requiring huge portions of Medicare budgets," Ungar writes. It also overtaxes the medical communities in rural counties even thinner.

"These patients need to be seen frequently by doctors, and they need much longer visits. ... These folks need intense care," Dr. Michael Karpf, executive vice president for health affairs at UK, told Ungar. "Given the shortage of primary care in Appalachia, this kind of patient just exacerbates that shortage."

"The real issue is prevention � weight control, exercise, food habits," Karpf said. "But it's hard. Fast food is cheaper than wholesome, healthy food, and (the way people eat) is partly cultural. Those things are hard to change. It's a generational process."