Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Saturday Meeting and Brill Article Follow-Up


In a follow up to Jon Stewart's extended interview with Steven Brill of Time Magazine on health care costs, Stewart did this one on other media following up on Brill's piece.   HealthCare for All PA has an economic impact study which projects that a single payer system could save the state about $17 billion per year.  Past Pennsylvania Public Health Association President Walter Tsou discusses the study at length below.

This Saturday the SW PA chapter will have a meeting to discuss how to promote the study and the Single Payer bill (SB 400) this Saturday, May 18 at 10 AM.  It will be at the Murray Ave office.  See the Contact Healthcare for All PA/PUSH tab above for directions.




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Friday, May 10, 2013

Julie Sokolow Has a Video Entered Into a Competition at Challengepost



Julie Sokolow of Healthy Artists has produced a three minute video titled A Healthy Democracy which can be seen above.  She has also written many blog posts on Michael Moore's website on healthcare.  Her video is entered into a competition at challengepost.com

You can vote for her video and watch other submissions by clicking here.  Voting ends next Thursday May 16. 

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Thursday, May 2, 2013

Big News From Oregon--Not All of It Good

There is study in progress with a randomized control group design—the gold standard of evaluation research—to evaluate the effects of Medicaid expansion in Oregon. The second wave of results from that study were published yesterday. To summarize briefly, Oregon wanted to expand Medicaid but didn't have enough money. They invited anyone who was eligible to apply, and 90,000 people applied. They then randomly selected 10,000 of them to receive Medicaid, while the others became eligible for the control group. The first wave of results, with about 6000 adults in each group, showed that the Medicaid recipients were more likely to rate themselves in “good” or “excellent” health, were less likely to report a recent decline in their health, had more doctor and hospital visits, more preventive care, and fewer unpaid medical bills.

Unfortunately, the second wave study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, is gated, so I am relying on the abstract and a summary by Aaron Carroll and Austin Frakt in The Incidental Economist blog.

The corporate media are spinning the second wave study as showing Medicaid expansion to be a failure. For example the New York Times says:

It found that those who gained Medicaid coverage spent more on health care, making more visits to doctors and trips to the hospital. But the study suggests that Medicaid coverage did not make those adults much healthier, at least within the time frame of the research . . .

Later the article notes that Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act will be costly. “Health economists anticipate that new enrollees to the Medicaid program will swell the country's health spending costs by hundreds of billions of dollars over time,” it warns. If you go online and check the comments following any article about the study, you'll find that it has unleashed a torrent of criticism from the political right claiming that providing health care for the poor is a waste of money. The study is certain to be used by Republicans such as Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett to justify their opposition to Medicaid expansion.

So what does the second wave study actually show? First, the bad news. The three objective indicators of physical health, blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar level, were all lower in the Medicaid group than the control group, but the differences were not statistically significant. Here are the data. (HDL is “good” cholesterol, so the fact that there are fewer people with low HDL cholesterol in the Medicaid group is a good outcome. High hemoglobin A1c is high blood sugar.)


Now the good news. Medicaid reduced the incidence of depression by 30%, which was statistically significant. It also significantly increased preventive care, including a 50% increase in cholesterol monitoring, a doubling of mammograms, and an increased likelihood of being diagnosed with diabetes.

Finally, the economic news. Health care spending was 35% higher in the Medicaid group. Of course, Medicaid practically eliminates catastrophic medical costs. As a result, the Medicaid recipients were significantly less likely to report borrowing money or skipping other bills in order to pay medical expenses.

There are several reasons we should not accept the conservative rush to judgment that this study shows that Medicaid is not helpful.

  • Medicaid recipients were healthier on all three measures of physical health. The problem is that the differences were not statistically significant. There are several reasons why that might be the case, but the most likely is that the sample sizes were too small to detect the effect. The authors state:

      [O]ur power to detect changes in health was limited by the relatively small numbers of patients with these conditions; indeed, the only condition in which we detected improvements was depression, which was by far the most prevalent of the four conditions examined. The 95% confidence intervals for many of the estimates of effects on individual physical health were wide enough to include changes that would be considered clinically significant . . .

  • These data were collected only two years after the program began. The significant differences in preventive care suggest that greater differences in health might emerge in later waves of the study.

  • Mental health is also health, and significant differences in depression should not be dismissed as unimportant. Financial hardship also matters, and its absence may be related to the lower incidence of depression in the Medicaid group.

  • There is no comparable study of the health effects of private health insurance, so these data should not be used to infer that Medicaid is any more expensive or less effective than private insurance.

Let's do a thought experiment. Suppose you had a private health insurance policy, researchers did a study to evaluate its health effects that was comparable in size, duration and design to the Oregon study, and obtained identical results. That is, the policy holders' health was better, but not significantly better than people without insurance. Would you cancel your policy? One of the reasons people buy health insurance may be that they think it will make them healthier, but it is my guess that the primary reason people in this country buy health insurance is to guard against the financial consequences of catastrophic illness.

You may also be interested in:

Tom Corbett to PA's Working Poor: “Drop Dead!” Part 1. Medicaid improves Health and Saves Lives.

Tom Corbett to PA's Working Poor: “Drop Dead!” Part 3. What Medicaid Expansion Would Mean to Pennsylvania

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Tom Corbett: Conspiracy Theorist

Governor Tom Corbett traveled to Washington yesterday to participate, along with Governors Paul LePage of Maine and Scott Walker of Wisconsin, in a Small Business Summit sponsored by the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. Not surprisingly, the three Republican governors expressed a negative view of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

The ACA requires firms with 50 or more employees to provide health care coverage for their workers or pay a fine. Gov. LePage stated that he is actively encouraging Maine businesses to break the law in the hope that the ACA will fail. “I tell Maine businesses to pay the penalty,” he said. “It would be cheaper by just writing a check for the penalty and then let Obamacare fall on its own weight.” Gov. Corbett was more circumspect. He said he didn't have to encourage Pennsylvania businessmen to defy the law, as they had already arrived at that decision on their own.

Gov. Tom Corbett
The Governor went on to suggest that the ACA was designed to fail, the motive being to pave the way for a single payer health care system. “I see the whole thing collapsing and, potentially, in the long run that may have been the plan,” he opined. “I'm a prosecutor. I believe in conspiracies.”

A lot of us probably wish the Governor's speculation were correct. However, I've completed five weeks of an eight-week course, “Health Policy and the Affordable Care Act,” taught by Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, one of the architects of the ACA, now teaching at the University of Pennsylvania. If Dr. Emanuel is typical of the policy makers who wrote the bill—and I believe he is—they were a lot more interested in saving money than saving lives. Of course, they expect it to do both, but he emphasizes the fact that only two of the ten titles in the act deal with expanding access to health care. The majority of the bill is about improving efficiency and lowering cost. It is clear from his lectures that he expects the ACA to be successful, and that he has no interest whatsoever in moving the country to a single payer health care system.

In one respect, I agree with Gov. Corbett. I believe in some conspiracies, too. For example, I believe there was a conspiracy to delay the Jerry Sandusky indictment until after the 2010 gubernatorial election.

You might also be interested in reading:


Tom Corbett to PA's Working Poor: “Drop Dead!” Part 3. What Medicaid Expansion Would Mean to Pennsylvania.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

New YouTube video on Health Care for All PA



Rebecca Pruveadenti of Erie has written many articles, letters to the editor, and made many media appearances to advocate for single payer health care in Pennsylvania.  Here is her latest youtube video.

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Thursday, April 18, 2013

Vermont Green Mountain Plan Video



As demonstrations were held today in Pennsylvania to urge Governor Corbett to expand Medicaid under the affordable care act for 700,000 of Pensylvania's 1.2 million uninsured, DoctorsWeKnowVT has produced a 20 minute video on the status of it's single payer health care plan. 

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Monday, April 1, 2013

An Explanation of Washington Post Graphs on the Cost of Procedures




The Washington Post has come out with a post in Ezra Klein's blog titled 21 graphs that show America’s health-care prices are ludicrous.  Two of them are posted here showing how the average prices of angiograms and angioplasties are double those of the next highest country.  For example an angiogram costs an average $914 in the US while costing  an average $378 in the next most expensive country, Chile.  The graph also shows the range of costs in the US with the 25 percentile cost being $173 (between Spain and Switzerland, possibly at the Veteran's Administration) and the 95th percentile being $2,430.  Prices are set in the other countries.

Likewise the average cost of an angioplasty in the US is $28,182 while it is $14,366 in the next most expensive country, the United Kingdom of Great Britain.  At the 25th percentile in the US the cost is $16,533 which is close to Great Britain.  The upper end of the scale cost (95th percentile) is $61,649.  This is four times the cost of Great Britain.

There is a similar pattern in the other 19 graphs that are presented in the article.  The range in costs suggests that price gouging does not occur everywhere in the US system.  Stephen Brill has a good expose in Time Magazine on why medical bills are so high.  

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