Thursday, December 1, 2011

Health Care and the Mayan Prophecy


I have a neighbor — a really lovely person — who believes we already have entered the early stages of the Mayan prophecy that the world will transition from one “world age” to another by December of 2012. It won’t end, it just will end as we know it today, and it is our choice whether this transition brings a better, more peaceful future or a cataclysmic one.

While the Mayan prophecy deals with a global view, and is time-specific, this general expectation really applies to all parts of everyday life, including health care. We can all work together to find ways of making care more cost-effective and of higher quality, or we can continue to worry about protecting our own turf, whatever the price tag. Of course, how to bring about a transition in health care is a matter of heated debate as 2011 ends. Health care now occupies more than 17 percent of our Gross Domestic Product. We certainly can’t afford to ignore it, as that percentage will continue to rise with an aging population.

What will 2012 bring? As the health care debate continues, it is our choice as to how productive — or cataclysmic — its outcome will be.

Happy Holidays.

Nancy Tomich

Monday, October 17, 2011

Why is Health Care Reform so Hard?



Harold M. Koenig, MD
Vice Admiral, Medical Corps, United States Navy, Retired

America has been struggling with how to reform its health care system for several decades now.  The principal arguments made for why we need reform are:
·       Costs, we spend more on health care per capita than any other nation
·       The uninsured, 15% of our population historically has had no health insurance coverage
·       Shorter life expectancy than many other highly developed nations that spend much less per capita on health care than we do
Since the end of WW II health care inflation has exceeded the general cost of inflation and in recent decades has exceeded it by 2.5 - 3 times.  Soon it will consume 20% of our Gross Domestic Product.  Many believe this is not sustainable. 
Before WWII and during the Great Depression people paid cash, or bartered, for their health care.  If they couldn’t pay or barter for it, they usually went without.  During WW II there was a wage/price freeze. Employers could provide better benefits to attract and retain workers, so health care and pension benefits were offered. 
After the war employers continued to provide health care benefits.  Soon nearly two-thirds of Americans had employer provided health insurance.
Those who weren’t in the work force either paid for health care out-of-pocket, they got “charity” care or they just didn’t get it.  Amongst this latter group were many of the nation’s elderly. As part of the Great Society program of the Kennedy-Johnson administration, a program to pay for hospital care for those over 65, Medicare, was started in 1965.  Since then Medicare has been expanded with a cost-shared program to help pay for doctor bills (Medicare B), a managed care option (Medicare C) and most recently, a prescription drug benefit (Medicare D).  Today there are 40 million people over 65 enrolled in Medicare and another 8 million enrolled in another addition to the program for the disabled.  Between 1946 and 1964, 76 million Americans were born, known as the baby-boomers,  and they are beginning to retire.  Medicare costs will soon increase dramatically and with it the nation’s total health care bill.
Medicare coverage, employer provided coverage and those who pay for their own health insurance still leaves the nation with many without coverage.  Medicaid is a federal-state program for low-income individuals that meet certain criteria.  The State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) – more commonly known as the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) – is a program administered by the United States Department of Health and Human Services that provides matching funds to states for health insurance to families with children. The program was designed with the intent to cover uninsured children in families with incomes that are modest but too high to qualify for Medicaid.
Even with all these programs we still have ~ 15% of people without coverage.  How to cover them is another major part of the financing problem.
That Americans have a shorter life expectancy than people living in over 40 other nations and that we pay more per capita for health care is often used as a reason why we need health care reform.  But a better understanding of these statistics is necessary before relying on them.  According to the US Census Bureau there are 308 million of us living in America now.  That’s over 100 million more than were here when the Great Society program got underway less than fifty years ago – meaning we’ve been adding about two million people a year.  Much of that population growth has not been from our indigenous birth rate; it is from people immigrating here.  Our fertility rate has been barely, and is probably now, insufficient to maintain our population numbers.  Today one of every eight of us living in this country was not born here – that’s forty million people.  Most of those people came here for the same reasons our ancestors did, they are looking for a better life for themselves and their families, and most of them hopefully will find it.  They carry with them the burden of disease brought from their homeland, and that takes a toll.  Most of them don’t live as long as we who were fortunate enough to be born here do.  They count in our life-expectancy statistics.  Over a million of them come here every year, and most stay.  No other nation has immigration like this, in fact, many have the opposite, emigration and a lot of their emigrates are heading here.
We also have regional differences in life expectancy, which we have a fair degree of understanding about, as we do gender and ethnicity differences.  Most of the explanation for these differences is because of cultural and educational differences rather than health care availability.  Better access to health care is not going to increase life expectancy near as much as are improvements in education.
One short comment about physicians.  When I graduated from medical school I did so along without about 8,000 others.  When the Great Society program was being built one of the elements in it was to double the output of physicians because the designers knew that it was going to take a lot more doctors to take care of all the elderly – older people need a lot more medical care.  So, over the next decade the number of medical school graduates doubled – to 16,000 a year.  Today we graduate about 17,000, not near enough.  We need another massive increase in physician output to take care of the 40 million people who don’t have health care insurance today and all the others heading our way.
So, this is why it’s so hard to do health care reform.  It is going to cost a whole lot of money, and we haven’t figured out how to convince the population of this great nation that we have to do this.  We need to educate people about why this is important and what it is going to take to do it.  That is the task before us.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Reducing Hospital Costs


By Harold M. Koenig, MD
Vice Admiral (Ret.) Harold M. Koenig is former Navy surgeon general and currently serves as chief medical officer of AwarePoint, which develops RTLS systems.

For several decades America has been alarmed about rapidly rising health care costs that have been increasing at triple the overall rate of inflation.  Hospital care is the biggest single component of health care costs.  This rate of health care inflation is unsustainable and hospitals must do something about it.  Some suggestions are made at the end of this post, but first a quick review of how we got here.

Approaching the second decade of the new century economic headwinds brought a financial slow down, recession, rising unemployment, financial institution failure and even threats of sovereign default.  Retrospectively the reasons for much of this are clear.  For decades we bought too much on credit, then sold the credit as bundled derivatives to other nations.  Interest is now due, payable and growing on this debt.

America’s housing bubble deservedly receives much of the blame for these economic problems, but there is plenty to spread around.  Traditional lending standards had been relaxed so much that just about anyone could get credit.   The diligence was not done to determine if borrowers would realistically ever be able to pay back their loans.
Warnings were sounded by traditionalists, but the cacophony from those enjoying new homes, autos, electronic gadgets and nice vacations drowned them out.  Many people believed we were in a new economy that would continue to only grow and never contract.  Recessions were thought to be a historical relic.

At the same time demographics were as always, destiny.  The baby-boom generation was rapidly approaching retirement, and promises for pensions and healthcare benefits exceeded the investments to finance them.  Government at all levels and private enterprises were faced with the reality that keeping these promises was a conundrum.

The 2010 census showed that of the 310 million people in the USA 15% lacked financed health care.  That is equivalent to the population of Spain.  This was an issue of national shame and international embarrassment.

In January of 2009 the new administration and congress put getting financed health care for all in this country at the top of their legislative agenda and passed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA).  It is now going through the inevitable court challenges and its legality will ultimately be determined in the Supreme Court, probably in 2013, but implementation has already started.   Built into PPACA is a requirement that the government start collecting money to pay for benefits before they are provided.  PPACA isn't like buying something on credit; it's more like the long-gone consumer "lay-away" plans.  So, when benefits under PPACA become available there should be money to pay for them.

PPACA was made affordable so enabling legislation could be passed by identifying areas where costs could be reduced.  Medicare is a large part of healthcare costs, so $500 billion (that's a half-trillion) was removed from its budget over the next decade.  The biggest part of Medicare spending is for hospital care so huge reductions in hospital reimbursement are coming.  Medicare now provides over half of most private sector hospital's revenue.  Medicare is first payer for military retirees receiving care under Tricare for Life, so Medicare reimbursements to the Military Health System will also decrease.  Health care costs in Veterans Administration hospitals have been increasing, so though not receiving reimbursement from Medicare, they will also be under pressure to reduce costs.

Federal hospitals have only one way to cope with the coming decrease in financial resources, become more efficient.  The sooner they start the better off they will be.  Real Time Location Systems (RTLS) are a new technology that can help hospitals become more efficient, safer and reduce costs.

Here are some links explaining how RTLS can help:


Sunday, September 4, 2011

WeBlog: Can We Get It All Together?


An intriguing piece by Dr. John Halamka, who co-chairs the national HIT Standards Committee, suggests that a “golden age” of electronic medicine is dawning — and “just in time.” http://www.technologyreview.com/business/38473/?mod=chfeatured

The good news, he says, is that while health care reform is a contentious topic in policy circles, the need for reform of information technology in health care is widely embraced:

This is medicine today. A sea of paper and fax machines, information silos, privacy barriers, and unconnected data. And yet, we know the public is ready for a better system. According to a 2010 Harris Poll, four in five Americans believe any doctor treating them should have instant access to their medical record online.”
Dr. Halamka gives his predictions for major developments in health IT over the next five years, including migration to the cloud — “the only way to rapidly implement electronic health records” — by a wave of software innovation, and development of novel ways that individual genomic data can speed diagnosis and improve treatment.
Meanwhile, reports of ways in which IT is changing health care continue to pour forth. A few examples:
Ø  A report on NPR, “Cellphones Could Help Doctors Stay Ahead Of An Epidemic. http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2011/08/31/140065855/cell-phones-could-help-doctors-stay-ahead-of-an-epidemic
Ø  A report in Healthcare IT News, “Facebook app to help track how viruses spread” http://healthcareitnews.com/news/facebook-app-help-track-how-viruses-spread
Ø  The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has issued a final rule on e-prescribing https://www.cms.gov/erxincentive/04_Statute_Regulations.asp
Ø  A study shows better diabetes outcomes with electronic health records http://www.medpagetoday.com/clinical-context/Type2Diabetes/28346

The challenge is to bring the data silos together, so that we don’t keep duplicating what already has been done and can share information without sacrificing privacy. Tablet computers, social networking and a constant stream of new apps undoubtedly will help move us toward this goal.
Know of some good apps or technologies that can help us reach health IT nirvana? Please give us your comments.

Nancy Tomich

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Dr. Saralyn Mark on Peace of Mind

PEACE OF MIND

Dr Saralyn Mark is a consultant for NASA.

I saw the Dalai Lama a few weeks ago-up close and personal with 10,000 of my friends on the lawn of the Capitol. On a very hot summer morning under a bright blue sky with the iconic landmarks of Washington, DC in the background, the Dalai Lama had an intimate conversation with all of us. A jovial, funny and warm-hearted soul, he shared his wisdom and insights on world peace and the search for inner happiness.

Not far from the stage, I sat down on a plastic sheet on the lawn offered to me by a woman in formal dress from her native land of Bhutan. Her family had been killed when she was a child in Tibet. From Bhutan, she made it to India and then on to San Francisco and was now a nurse in a intensive care unit at Stanford. She generously shared her sunscreen and her knowledge of buddhism, the tibetan language and costumes. As I was melting into the plastic, I was mesmerized by the diverse and respectful audience. People stood when they should, clapped when it was appropriate, shared their water and their books on traditional prayers. I felt quite safe and transfixed as if I had entered a new land, a new culture far from my home which was only 10 miles away.

We all eagerly awaited the arrival of the Dalai Lama-the spiritual leader of Tibet who recently resigned as the political leader saying it was hypocritical thinking that one could do both. The event was moderated by Whoopie Goldberg who did a lovely job of using humor and sincerity-you could tell that she was in awe of her new position.

When the Dalai Lama came onto the stage, we all rose and then very quietly sat down to listen to this wise man with a delightful smile and  an easy going manner. He said that he did not prepare any remarks-in fact, he never liked to prepare remarks and then he embarked on a brilliant one hour discourse on how and why it is important to achieve inner peace. Love, compassion, trust, warm-heartedness are the hallmarks of a healthy mind and life.

When one faces adversity and people who make life difficult, accept that these are opportunities to practice patience and tolerance. I know that this is a tough lesson to accept, but it does make sense and changes one's outlook on life. He said that no one is immune from troubles, but all of us are destined for happiness. The 2 major events in life are birth and death and the rest we do with people. We are social beings-each one of us can change the world and by doing that, peace can be achieved. Inner beauty is what is important, the rest is window dressing (my words) and fleeting.

My new book 'Stellar Medicine: A Journey Through the Universe of Women's Health" (Brick Tower Press) will be released soon. One of my chapters, '"The Stardust Connection" which discusses faith, spirality and healing, is one of my favorite chapters for book readings. The messages in this chapter, namely, that we are all connected from the beginning of time since we are stardust and that spirituality is as important to health as the physical elements that we can measure. I have shared that chapter with the senior echelon of medicine, military and government women, and the general public and have seen that these messages resonate with all audiences.

What I found so inspiring is that I came to my beliefs out my own experiences not from reading nor studying others' works. So when I heard the Dalai Lama share the same insights that I do in my book, I was delighted. He calls it "secular spirituality"- a belief that is not based in religion nor faith, but on our divine right and ability to find inner happiness, a calm mind, and a generous spirit to connect with others. Through this, our health can improve and wellness can be achieved. He mentioned that he spoke to scientists who confirmed that blood pressure can decrease and even recovery from surgery can be influenced. I believe in this wholeheartedly.

There are moments in life that are transformative and this was one of them for me. Peace of mind-so simple, so divine!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Stand Down for Veterans

IFHC initiates a series of occasional guest blogs with these observations from former Navy surgeon general Vice Adm. Harold M. Koenig (Ret.) about the Stand Down for veterans that took place in San Diego in mid July.

Stand Down for Veterans

In war zones combat units come off the battlefield to a place of relative safety to rest and recover. At home, Stand Down refers to community-based programs to help homeless veterans cope with life on the street.

Veteran’s Village of San Diego (VVSD) organized the first community-based Stand Down in 1988. I started attending Stand Down seven years ago, when I joined the VVSD Board of Directors. The first several years, I attended the Saturday morning VIP event where local politicians appeared, made some (hopefully brief) comments and shook some hands. On Sunday morning, along with other board members, I’d help serve breakfast to 700 or so homeless vets.

I don’t listen to the politicians speak anymore, and I don’t serve breakfast. I watch.  This year I took a 23-year-old newly commissioned Navy Ensign along with me, as another set of eyes. I’ll call him James, more from him later. I noted that things are changing fast. No longer are there new faces from the Vietnam era — the youngest person who served then is now in his or her mid-50’s.

What I see now are many more 20- and 30-year-old men and women. Smart, well-trained, motivated young adults looking for work — and they can’t find it. Some live out of the back of their car, if they still have one. This year 1,003 vets came through our chow lines, and we served 13,600 meals. We had plenty of donated food and volunteers to serve it.  

There were about four volunteers to provide services for every homeless vet. Clothing was offered to all who attended, starting with underwear and socks, shoes and a warm coat for winter and everything in between, and, yes, it does get cold at night during winter in San Diego. Over half had eye exams, a third got prescription lenses and a quarter got reading glasses. The VA refilled prescriptions; the Navy filled teeth or pulled them if necessary. Hair got cut, beards were trimmed, there were perms for the 56 women vets — they are attending in increasing numbers. 

Many vets got massages, and alternative medical arts were available. Various twelve-step groups held meetings for anyone needing to attend. The line was long at the veteran’s court, complete with judges, bailiffs and counsel to assist in dealing with the problems homeless vets encounter when they slip over the line and are cited. This is a universal part of life on the street. Placements were made, 25 vets enrolled in the residential rehabilitation program at VVSD, 8 went to our residential program in Escondido, 30 went to Father Joe’s and 5 to other programs — in summary 63 came off the streets.

Why has there been a 50% increase in the numbers of vets attending Stand Down since I started attending? It isn’t just because Stand Down got national exposure when it was featured on 60 Minutes last Fall and CBS ran it again the week before this year’s Stand Down. It’s because there are many young vets leaving active duty after serving in our now decade-long wars. The skills they learned in the military don’t always match up with those needed in our currently depressed economy.

After seeing all this James asked, “Why don’t you do this more than once a year?” 

It’s because, it takes resources, money and people to do this. Besides, we have to get ready for winter, when from December to April we operate a Winter Shelter providing a warm bed, a hot dinner and breakfast for 150 homeless veterans every night. If you add up all the programs VVSD operates in San Diego County, during the coming winter months there will be 475 vets under shelter and being fed every night. Next year the number will be over 500. 

That keeps us really busy, consumes our available resources — and is why we do Stand Down only once a year.