Thursday, 31 May 2012

Princess Health and Coventry, ARH at impasse over Medicaid; state says service will not be interrupted for 25,000 affected.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Coventry, ARH at impasse over Medicaid; state says service will not be interrupted for 25,000 affected.Princessiccia

Though negotiations between Appalachian Regional Healthcare and Coventry Cares appear to be futile, the state is taking steps to make sure there won't be an interruption in care for the Medicaid recipients who will be affected by the impasse.

"The cabinet will assure the judge that, in the event that a notice is received from Coventry that ARH will not be in their network as of July 1, members will be able to call the Department for Medicaid Services to switch" to another managed-care organization, said Jill Midkiff, spokeswoman for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services.

Coventry Cares is one of four companies chosen by the state to provide care to Medicaid recipients. The move to managed care � intended to save money � has been rocky, with providers complaining about delayed payments from the companies and cumbersome pre-approval processes for treatments. ARH sued Coventry, and another managed-care company, saying they owed the hospital chain more than $18 million for services. But Coventry says the state allowed another managed care company not to include ARH in its network, which means a lot of higher-risk, higher-cost patients covered by Coventry.

ARH operates eight hospitals and health clinics in Eastern Kentucky and serves 25,000 Medicaid patients, reports Valarie Honeycutt Spears for the Lexington Herald-Leader. Coventry agreed to extend its contract with ARH until June 30, but will likely not extend it again. A Coventry document filed in court last week says "it appears unlikely that these differences can be bridged." (Read more)


Princess Health and Improvements to Rx monitoring systems worth the expense, study finds; using systems influence doctors' prescribing decisions.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Improvements to Rx monitoring systems worth the expense, study finds; using systems influence doctors' prescribing decisions.Princessiccia

A plan for an ideal prescription drug monitoring system was published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, with its authors concluding spending more money to improve systems is worth the expense.

To improve databases, the paper's authors recommended "standardization of the type of information submitted to the databases, and a move toward the use of bar-coded prescription paper to more quickly log entries, or a robust e-prescribing system that would eliminate paper and the resulting prescription fraud and 'doctor shopping' that contributes to illicit use of these controlled substances," reports research-reporting service Newswise. (Read more)

Forty-three states, including Kentucky, now have databases to monitor prescriptions for pain relievers and another five states have passed laws to create them, reports Mary Wisniewski for Reuters. Part of the reason for the push is prescription drug abuse is an increasingly big problem, with more people dying from prescription drug overdoses each year than cocaine and heroin combined. Kentucky is a hot spot, with nearly 1,000 people dying from prescription drug overdoses in 2010.

On July 12, a new law will take effect in Kentucky that will make it mandatory for a physician to consult the state drug-monitoring system before writing a prescription for certain drugs for a new patient. Doing so can influence how a doctor chooses to prescribe. A study by the emergency department of the University of Toledo's College of Medicine found "doctors or pharmacists who reviewed state prescription data changed how they managed cases 41 percent of the time," Wisniewski reports

The study found 61 percent of prescribed either no opioid medicine, or less than originally planned, while 39 percent decided to prescribe more. (Read more)

Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Princess Health and Significant management improvements at Passport Health Plan, audit finds.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Significant management improvements at Passport Health Plan, audit finds.Princessiccia

Passport Health Plan has improved significantly since a 2010 audit uncovered wasteful spending and other problems, a new audit has concluded.

The managed care organization that cares for Medicaid recipients in Jefferson and 15 surrounding counties "has made significant improvements in accountability and financial record-keeping," a press release from Audrey Tayse Haynes, the new secretary of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services. "Patient satisfaction with the health care provider remains high," she states.

"The audit is a follow-up to former State Auditor Crit Luallen's scathing report of November 2010 in which Luallen found lavish spending by Passport's former executives on travel, meals and other expenses," reports Tom Loftus for The Courier-Journal. "It also questioned transfers of about $30 million of reserve funds to the major health-care organizations represented on Passport's board of directors."

Gov. Steve Beshear ordered a plan to correct the problem, which involved replacing Passport's executives, among other changes. Though there has been improvement, "after having exclusive rights to the region for about 14 years, Passport will have to bid against other managed care organizations if it wants to be among those that will serve it in 2013," Loftus reports.

Still, since the state has switched to managed care for the rest of the state and severe problems have surfaced with the three companies that have been hired to serve those recipients, Passport's reputation has improved substantially. State Auditor Adam Edelen said in February the state was unprepared for the quick transition to managed care in the rest of the state. (Read more)
Princess Health and Task force to consider middle-school sports regulation.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Task force to consider middle-school sports regulation.Princessiccia

A task force made up of legislators, educators and athletic officials will examine what guidelines should be in place for sports at the middle school level, which are not regulated in Kentucky.

The task force was created by the 2012 General Assembly to "discuss 'best practice' guidelines for middle school sports and to take into consideration non-profit organizations that oversee some individual teams," reports Valarie Honeycutt Spears for the Lexington Herald-Leader.

"It remains to be seen" what the task force could recommend, Rep. Bob Damron, D-Nicholasville, told Spears. But Damron, who sponsored the resolution creating the task force, said "in the long run that's probably a good direction to have one entity standing for middle school athletics."

The Legislative Research Commission will name task force members by Aug. 1. Recommendations to legislative committees are expected by Dec. 7. (Read more)

Princess Health and New treatment first offered in Louisville is helping asthma sufferers.Princessiccia

Shannon Denson, who has severe asthma, gets bronchial
thermoplasty. Courier-Journal photo.
Asthma sufferers can now benefit from an innovative treatment that was first offered at University Hospital in Louisville.

Patients like Shannon Denson are seeing improvement thanks to bronchial thermoplasty, "a minimally invasive, three-step procedure using heat to open airways in adults with severe asthma so they can breathe more easily," reports Laura Ungar of The Courier-Journal.

"Over the years, airways become very narrow. This opens them up," said Dr. Tanya Wiese, an interventional pulmonologist with University of Louisville Physicians, which partnered with UH to offer the treatment.

The treatment is not a cure but it does improve the condition of the lungs, which is good news since asthma rates are high in Kentucky. In the Ohio Valley, almost 15 percent of Kentucky adults said they had asthma, making it the seventh-highest rate in 2010, a survey by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found. (Read more)

Sunday, 27 May 2012

Princess Health and.Princessiccia

H+P Sucess Story

H+P athlete Dale just started into running in late 2011.  He wanted to pursue a new hobby and a higher level of fitness in the process.  After following through with a few beginner running groups, Dale ran his first 10km in January 2012 in a time of 54 minutes.

Not bad for just starting out in the sport of running!  But Dale was not satisfied.

After following through with the H+P Monday Night Interval Sessions and Coach Sean's Personal Training Plan, Dale set out to race the Yonge Street 10K on April 22nd, 2012.

With a goal time of running sub-50 minutes, Dale completely exceeded expectations running an amazing 43:43, taking over 10 minutes off his personal best over the course of 4 short months.  

Dale also placed just inside the top 10 percent of a field just under 6000 runners, and placed 25th in the very competitive 50-54 AG category.

Congratulations Dale, way to make the entire team proud!

Dale finishing the 2012 YS10km in a PB time of 43:43

Friday, 25 May 2012

Princess Health and U of L profs get $6.3 million to continue spinal cord research.Princessiccia

Susan Harkema, a University of Louisville professor, talks
about epidural spinal stimulation. Courier-Journal photo.
Two University of Louisville professors have received a $6.3 million grant to continue their work helping paralyzed patients restore movement by using electrical stimulation.

The grant was awarded to Susan Harkema and Dr. Jonathan Hodes from the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust.

Last year, they received much acclaim when they published a study in the journal The Lancet "showing that the use of continual, direct, electrical stimulation of a patient's lower spinal cord using technology designed for pain relief can allow a person using a wheelchair to stand and bear weight," reports Laura Ungar for The Courier-Journal.

With these new grant funds, Harkema said they will "be able to built a stimulator that will allow the individual to take advantage of these advances in their homes and communities."

One of the initial case studies involved Rob Summers, a former baseball player from Oregon who was paralyzed below the chest after a car accident. After the therapy, he was able to get to a standing position and stand as long as four minutes. "He was also able to take steps with help and move his toes, ankles, knees and hips." Harkema said he continues to improve.

Nationwide, more than 5 million Americans live with some type of paralysis, and more than 1.3 million have spinal-cord injuries. (Read more)