Sunday, June 30, 2013

As Doctors Leave Syria, Public Health Crisis Looms

Listen to the Story 4 min 54 sec Playlist Download Transcript   Enlarge image i

Refugees fill cans with water inside a camp in Baalbek, Lebanon, for Syrians who have fled the fighting in their country.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Refugees fill cans with water inside a camp in Baalbek, Lebanon, for Syrians who have fled the fighting in their country.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

The death toll in Syria's ongoing civil war may now be as high as 100,000. As the violence mounts, another emergency is looming: a public health crisis across the region.

That's the conclusion of a new study published by the British medical journal The Lancet. Syria's health care system is near collapse. Outbreaks of disease are on the rise in the country, and refugees sheltered beyond the border are also at great risk.

One medical clinic in a poor neighborhood in Beirut is always busy. The two-story building is up a narrow street of cinder-block homes. Syrian refugees have moved in, adding to the crowding and the caseload, Dr. Abdul Kader Abbas says. He says he's treated 758 Syrian families here � many already sick when they arrived in this densely packed neighborhood.

"With the additional numbers," Abbas says, "we are afraid that any disease could spread easily in such circumstances." That's the same warning spelled out in the latest Lancet report.

Seventy percent of Syria's medical professionals have fled the country. Public health researchers Dr. Adam Coutts and Dr. Fouad Fouad say there has been a dramatic rise in communicable disease.

For example, Coutts says, there were 7,000 cases of measles in northern Syria in the past few months after a vaccination program was disrupted by war, and the list is growing to include TB, leishmaniasis, typhoid and cholera, which will come up during the summer months.

Leishmaniasis is spreading so fast among the displaced people inside of Syria that it is now called the "Aleppo boil" � for the running skin sores transmitted by sand fleas. Fouad says with the collapse of Syria's health care system, many Syrians have not had any medical care or medicine for more than two years.

When you consider chronic diseases like diabetes, Type 1 and 2, and cancer, Fouad says, you start to see that more people are dying of disease rather than war.

Disease moves easily across boundaries along with the refugees. Coutts and Fouad warn this could lead to a public health crisis for the entire region. By the end of this year, the Syrian refugee population is expected to reach more than 3 million.

In Jordan, the patient load in hospitals has jumped 250 percent in the past five months. Lebanon's health system is under strain with more registered refugees than any of its neighbors.

Parallels War Correspondent's Unflinching 'Diary Of A Very Bad Year'

"With this huge influx of refugees now in Lebanon," Fouad says, "the number will come to change the whole system."

One expected change is in the school system. U.N. officials estimate that when school starts in the fall, Syrians will outnumber Lebanese kids in the country's public schools. That worries Hayda Mohammed Al Jeeshi, the nurse at the health care center.

She says many Syrian kids missed childhood vaccinations before they fled to Lebanon and that puts Lebanese children at much greater risk. The measles outbreak that started in northern Syria is now showing up among the refugee community in Lebanon.

Scrambling to care for one of the world's largest refugee populations is another burden of the Syrian war. The U.S. government has upped its contribution to host countries to more than $800 million, with an additional $300 million pledged this month for food, shelter and health care.

"Diseases don't care whether you're for Assad, or against Assad, or uninterested in politics," says Anne Richard, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for refugees, who was in Lebanon this week. "It strikes everyone, as an equal opportunity."

Share Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From Middle East NewsEgypt: Morsi Rejects Calls To Step Aside As Protests BuildDivided Leadership Hurts Palestinian Peace ProspectsNewsAmerican Killed At Protest In Egypt ID'd As Kenyon StudentEgyptian Protests Grow Violent

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Administration Clarifies Insurance Rules For Contraceptives

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Could LeBron and RGIII Help Sell The Affordable Care Act?

More From Shots - Health News Health CareCould LeBron and RGIII Help Sell The Affordable Care Act?HealthDoctors Say It's OK To Wait Before Treating Kids' Sinus InfectionsHealthProposed Changes In Organ Donation Stir Debate HealthGloomy Thinking Can Be Contagious

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Could LeBron and RGIII Help Sell The Affordable Care Act?

More From Shots - Health News Health CareCould LeBron and RGIII Help Sell The Affordable Care Act?HealthDoctors Say It's OK To Wait Before Treating Kids' Sinus InfectionsHealthProposed Changes In Organ Donation Stir Debate HealthGloomy Thinking Can Be Contagious

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Ohio Family-Planning Services At Mercy Of Budget Bill

Listen to the Story 11 min 29 sec Playlist Download Transcript   Enlarge image i

Family-planning clinics would be pushed down the list of health services receiving funding from the state if a budget bill moving through the Ohio Legislature is signed into law.

iStockphoto.com

Family-planning clinics would be pushed down the list of health services receiving funding from the state if a budget bill moving through the Ohio Legislature is signed into law.

iStockphoto.com

Working its way through the Ohio Legislature is a state budget bill that has major implications for the way family-planning services are provided. The Ohio budget contains language that puts family-planning clinics at the bottom of the list to receive funding.

Family Planning Association of Northeast Ohio operates several independent family-planning clinics. They do not provide abortions and have no affiliation with Planned Parenthood, but the clinics are still at the end of the line under a new tiered system because they give referrals.

Ahead of the facilities are local health departments, places like emergency rooms and free clinics. Family Planning's executive director, Mary Wynne-Peaspanen, says if there's any money left over � which she says is not likely � "then they could consider applications from independent, specialty clinics like my organization and like Planned Parenthood."

The budget bill from the Republican-controlled Legislature could well put the nonprofit out of business. Since 1970, it has served primarily low-income women, but it's facing an anticipated 40 percent hit to its funding.

"They've been very clear about the fact � at the General Assembly � that their target is Planned Parenthood. But that doesn't change the fact that there are other organizations that will be impacted by this funding," Wynne-Peaspanen tells Jacki Lyden, host of weekends on All Things Considered.

National Trend

In Ohio and elsewhere, family-planning clinics typically provide a range of women's health services, like cancer screenings, blood pressure tests and contraceptive services.

Judy Waxman, vice president for health and reproductive rights at the National Women's Law Center, says the vast majority of women who are sexually active have used contraception at some point in their lives.

"So on one level, we as a nation have recognized that contraceptives are not only what everybody uses, but they also are very important for women's health," she says. "There is, however, a minority of politicians who try to use any issue related to 'sex' to make some kind of political hay out of it."

Waxman says a handful of states are looking at centers that receive Medicaid or state funding for family-planning services � and some are cutting the budgets. Those states include Indiana, Arizona, Wisconsin and now Ohio.

The Anti-Abortion Lobby

Michael Gonidakis is the president of Ohio Right to Life, one of the groups that lobbied hard for the current legislative approach. He admits the ultimate objective is a straightforward one.

Related NPR Stories Shots - Health News FDA OKs Prescription-Free Plan B For All Ages, Ending Battle Shots - Health News Family Doctors Consider Dropping Birth Control Training Rule Shots - Health News Few Public Family Planning Centers Accept Insurance, Yet

"Our goal is to find a way to end abortion. Not make it illegal, but to end it," he says. "We're big proponents of adoption reform, foster care reform, and we want to find ways to continue to help women who find themselves in unintended pregnancy, to realize that they can have their baby, that there's support services there for them to keep their child."

He doesn't expect that women will have less access to family planning, not even those who are low-income.

"There's nowhere � and I repeat, nowhere � in the state of Ohio where there won't be other options in a very close walking proximity to ... a clinic that may go out of business," he says. "We're doing some good things here in Ohio, and there's access to these types of services and care for low-income women across the state."

But it still worries Jess Locher, a 28-year-old uninsured cosmetologist in Chardon. She went to the local branch of the Family Planning Association as a teenager. Ten years later, the mother of two still goes to the same clinic because she can't afford anything else.

"If they took family planning away, I wouldn't be getting the female care that I need because my job doesn't offer me insurance, so I couldn't afford to go to a gynecologist," Locher says.

Take Texas, For Example

Ohio is on the verge of making decisions that would alter the way family planning is funded. Texas started down this road two years ago.

"When the Tea Party wave came through Texas in 2010, there was a big movement to oust Planned Parenthood from all of the state health programs," says journalist Becca Aaronson.

Aaronson, who covers health care for the Texas Tribune, says state lawmakers took a three-pronged approach to cutting family-planning funds. They cut family-planning funding, then set up a tiered financing system prioritizing comprehensive health clinics. Third, they prohibited any group affiliated with a provider that performed abortions from participating in the Medicaid women's health program.

More than 50 clinics throughout Texas closed their doors. As the dust settled, the consequences of this policy started to become apparent, Aaronson says.

"The state estimates that roughly 24,000 babies are going to be born as a result of these changes, and that's because women don't have as much access to birth control," she says.

The spike caused enough of a stir in Texas for state legislators to restore some of the funding to family planning.

"They decided to put an extra $100 million toward primary care for women's health, so that many uninsured women of all ages could get cancer screenings, diabetes treatment and family-planning access," Aaronson says.

Waxman of the National Women's Law Center considers the Texas legislation "a failure for women in the state."

"It's possible in some circumstances that women could go somewhere else, but many other health centers don't provide family-planning services because they know Planned Parenthood is available to do that," she says.

Stay Tuned

Waxman says the issue is an ideological one. "I can only hope that those people that are really outliers on this issue not continue to erode and really hurt the women in their states," she says.

Who's hurt and who's helped by laws on access to family-planning services is in part, of course, a matter of deeply held opinion and even religious faith.

In Ohio, Wynne-Peaspanen at the Family Planning Association is bracing herself.

"I've been with the agency for 27 years. And funding cuts happen and, you know, funding increases happen. But this is ... the most serious," she says.

Gonidakis from Ohio Right to Life says he's confident things will be just fine.

"I do not foresee any situation whatsoever where a woman's going to be denied services because of the availability of so many other clinics in the state of Ohio," he says.

Share 1Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From Health HealthOhio Family-Planning Services At Mercy Of Budget BillHealth CarePolitical Fight Jeopardizes Medicaid In MississippiHealthObesity Is A 'Disease.' Now What?BarbershopHumble Pie And Doughnut Burgers In The Barbershop

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Ohio Family-Planning Services At Mercy Of Budget Bill

Listen to the Story 11 min 29 sec Playlist Download Transcript   Enlarge image i

Family-planning clinics would be pushed down the list of health services receiving funding from the state if a budget bill moving through the Ohio Legislature is signed into law.

iStockphoto.com

Family-planning clinics would be pushed down the list of health services receiving funding from the state if a budget bill moving through the Ohio Legislature is signed into law.

iStockphoto.com

Working its way through the Ohio Legislature is a state budget bill that has major implications for the way family-planning services are provided. The Ohio budget contains language that puts family-planning clinics at the bottom of the list to receive funding.

Family Planning Association of Northeast Ohio operates several independent family-planning clinics. They do not provide abortions and have no affiliation with Planned Parenthood, but the clinics are still at the end of the line under a new tiered system because they give referrals.

Ahead of the facilities are local health departments, places like emergency rooms and free clinics. Family Planning's executive director, Mary Wynne-Peaspanen, says if there's any money left over � which she says is not likely � "then they could consider applications from independent, specialty clinics like my organization and like Planned Parenthood."

The budget bill from the Republican-controlled Legislature could well put the nonprofit out of business. Since 1970, it has served primarily low-income women, but it's facing an anticipated 40 percent hit to its funding.

"They've been very clear about the fact � at the General Assembly � that their target is Planned Parenthood. But that doesn't change the fact that there are other organizations that will be impacted by this funding," Wynne-Peaspanen tells Jacki Lyden, host of weekends on All Things Considered.

National Trend

In Ohio and elsewhere, family-planning clinics typically provide a range of women's health services, like cancer screenings, blood pressure tests and contraceptive services.

Judy Waxman, vice president for health and reproductive rights at the National Women's Law Center, says the vast majority of women who are sexually active have used contraception at some point in their lives.

"So on one level, we as a nation have recognized that contraceptives are not only what everybody uses, but they also are very important for women's health," she says. "There is, however, a minority of politicians who try to use any issue related to 'sex' to make some kind of political hay out of it."

Waxman says a handful of states are looking at centers that receive Medicaid or state funding for family-planning services � and some are cutting the budgets. Those states include Indiana, Arizona, Wisconsin and now Ohio.

The Anti-Abortion Lobby

Michael Gonidakis is the president of Ohio Right to Life, one of the groups that lobbied hard for the current legislative approach. He admits the ultimate objective is a straightforward one.

Related NPR Stories Shots - Health News FDA OKs Prescription-Free Plan B For All Ages, Ending Battle Shots - Health News Family Doctors Consider Dropping Birth Control Training Rule Shots - Health News Few Public Family Planning Centers Accept Insurance, Yet

"Our goal is to find a way to end abortion. Not make it illegal, but to end it," he says. "We're big proponents of adoption reform, foster care reform, and we want to find ways to continue to help women who find themselves in unintended pregnancy, to realize that they can have their baby, that there's support services there for them to keep their child."

He doesn't expect that women will have less access to family planning, not even those who are low-income.

"There's nowhere � and I repeat, nowhere � in the state of Ohio where there won't be other options in a very close walking proximity to ... a clinic that may go out of business," he says. "We're doing some good things here in Ohio, and there's access to these types of services and care for low-income women across the state."

But it still worries Jess Locher, a 28-year-old uninsured cosmetologist in Chardon. She went to the local branch of the Family Planning Association as a teenager. Ten years later, the mother of two still goes to the same clinic because she can't afford anything else.

"If they took family planning away, I wouldn't be getting the female care that I need because my job doesn't offer me insurance, so I couldn't afford to go to a gynecologist," Locher says.

Take Texas, For Example

Ohio is on the verge of making decisions that would alter the way family planning is funded. Texas started down this road two years ago.

"When the Tea Party wave came through Texas in 2010, there was a big movement to oust Planned Parenthood from all of the state health programs," says journalist Becca Aaronson.

Aaronson, who covers health care for the Texas Tribune, says state lawmakers took a three-pronged approach to cutting family-planning funds. They cut family-planning funding, then set up a tiered financing system prioritizing comprehensive health clinics. Third, they prohibited any group affiliated with a provider that performed abortions from participating in the Medicaid women's health program.

More than 50 clinics throughout Texas closed their doors. As the dust settled, the consequences of this policy started to become apparent, Aaronson says.

"The state estimates that roughly 24,000 babies are going to be born as a result of these changes, and that's because women don't have as much access to birth control," she says.

The spike caused enough of a stir in Texas for state legislators to restore some of the funding to family planning.

"They decided to put an extra $100 million toward primary care for women's health, so that many uninsured women of all ages could get cancer screenings, diabetes treatment and family-planning access," Aaronson says.

Waxman of the National Women's Law Center considers the Texas legislation "a failure for women in the state."

"It's possible in some circumstances that women could go somewhere else, but many other health centers don't provide family-planning services because they know Planned Parenthood is available to do that," she says.

Stay Tuned

Waxman says the issue is an ideological one. "I can only hope that those people that are really outliers on this issue not continue to erode and really hurt the women in their states," she says.

Who's hurt and who's helped by laws on access to family-planning services is in part, of course, a matter of deeply held opinion and even religious faith.

In Ohio, Wynne-Peaspanen at the Family Planning Association is bracing herself.

"I've been with the agency for 27 years. And funding cuts happen and, you know, funding increases happen. But this is ... the most serious," she says.

Gonidakis from Ohio Right to Life says he's confident things will be just fine.

"I do not foresee any situation whatsoever where a woman's going to be denied services because of the availability of so many other clinics in the state of Ohio," he says.

Share 2Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From Health HealthOhio Family-Planning Services At Mercy Of Budget BillHealth CarePolitical Fight Jeopardizes Medicaid In MississippiHealthObesity Is A 'Disease.' Now What?BarbershopHumble Pie And Doughnut Burgers In The Barbershop

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Universal Healthcare and Economic Freedom Go Hand-in-Hand

One of the most pernicious myths of the past half century is that guaranteeing healthcare for all Americans would strike a mortal blow against this country’s system of free enterprise.

That claim has been made endlessly in the context of the Affordable Care Act, and Obamacare critics are now ramping up their predictions of doom as implementation of the law grows near.

But as Robert Frank explained this weekend in the New York Times, the lived experience of other countries like Sweden with national healthcare systems doesn’t bear out the fears.

In fact, you don’t need to take the word of a progressive economist like Frank on this point. The Heritage Foundation’s research indicates the same thing.

Consider Heritage’s “Index of Economic Freedom,” which measures how friendly countries are to business, investors, and property rights.

The countries that rank the highest on the list are: Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland, Canada, Chile, Mauritius, Denmark, and the United States.

Of those ten countries, nearly every one has a universal healthcare system or mandates that individuals pay into medical savings accounts. Australia and Canada both have single-payer systems. Denmark’s system is pretty much government controlled. Switzerland’s system is similar in many ways to Obamacare. Among the top twenty nations on the list are Ireland, the U.K., Germany, Sweden, and Finland — other countries that also have universal healthcare systems.

There are some good reasons why such systems might go hand-in-hand with economic freedom. For one thing, as Robert Frank noted, these systems help keep down healthcare costs:

The United States spends more than $8,000 a person per year on health care, well more than twice what Sweden spends. Yet health outcomes are far better in Sweden along virtually every dimension.

Lower healthcare costs mean that business and individuals can channel more money into productive uses that foster a vibrant and globally competitive market economy.

Universal healthcare systems also make it easier for people to be entrepreneurs or self-employed. While we think of the United States as a place where people are uniquely likely to strike out on their own, this is largely a myth. The U.S. actually has a much lower self-employment rate than most developed countries. Australians, Brits, Germans, Swedes, and so on all are more likely to work for themselves than Americans.

It’s hard to say how much universal healthcare insurance determines self-employment rates, but common sense suggests you’re more likely to go out on your own if you’re not worried about losing your health insurance.

Now, does all this mean that Obamacare will produce more economic freedom in America? Not necessarily. Ironically, government run healthcare system are better for free enterprise than those — like the ACA — which impose mandates on employers.

I say ironically because, of course, such a truly “socialized” system was off the table during the healthcare debate thanks opposition by supposed defenders of economic freedom.

Outbreak In Saudi Arabia Echoes SARS Epidemic 10 Years Ago

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Infections From Contaminated Injections Can Lurk Undetected

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Patients Lead The Way As Medicine Grapples With Apps

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

How To Make Museums More Inviting For Kids With Autism

More From Shots - Health News HealthFDA Backs Off On Regulation Of Fecal TransplantsHealthHouse Passes Bill That Would Ban Abortions After 20 WeeksHealthPatients Lead The Way As Medicine Grapples With AppsHealthHow To Make Museums More Inviting For Kids With Autism

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How To Make Museums More Inviting For Kids With Autism

More From Shots - Health News HealthFDA Backs Off On Regulation Of Fecal TransplantsHealthHouse Passes Bill That Would Ban Abortions After 20 WeeksHealthPatients Lead The Way As Medicine Grapples With AppsHealthHow To Make Museums More Inviting For Kids With Autism

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Monday, June 17, 2013

FTC Can Sue Firms In 'Pay For Delay' Drug Deals, Court Rules

More From The Two-Way EuropeNigella Lawson's Husband Cautioned By Police For AssaultThe Two-WayNavy Football Players To Be Charged In Sex Assault CasePoliticsObama Would Veto House's Farm Bill, White House SaysThe Two-WaySentenced To Death At 16, Indiana Woman Is Now Free

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Commentary: On Being Young and Wanting Health Insurance

Ed. note: This blog was first published on BET. You can see the original post here.

I'm a 24-year-old server and bartender in Philadelphia, an uncle, and a father figure to my sister's three children. And I'm one of the millions of young Americans who can't afford health insurance.

Until recently, that never struck me as a big deal. �When you're young and healthy, you don't really think about health insurance-or at least you don't think about it until something goes wrong and you need it.

Not too long ago, I hurt my foot pretty badly, and thought that I may have fractured a bone.� It was the sort of injury that if I had insurance I would've gotten checked out, but since I wasn't covered and couldn't afford to go see a doctor, I ended up just working through the pain.

That experience made me think about the consequences that a really serious accident could have on the rest of my life.� Without insurance, one injury could just turn my future upside down.

That's why I'm looking forward to the new Health Insurance Marketplaces being created thanks to the health care law.� This October, I'll be one of the people checking out affordable health plans on HealthCare.gov.� I'll figure out which plan is the best fit for me and for my wallet, and I'll find out if I can get additional help covering costs from the new tax credits the law is making available.

Having health insurance is all about peace of mind-it means somebody's got your back in case anything happens to you.� And having that worry off my shoulders is going to make things so much easier for me as I work toward my goals, whether that ends up meaning going back to school or maybe looking for a better job.

Just because I'm young and healthy now doesn't mean I shouldn't be looking out for my future.� That's why I'll be visiting the Marketplace on October 1 to choose a health insurance plan.

You can learn more about the Marketplace and what you need to do to prepare for October.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Scientists Go Medieval To Solve Ancient Leprosy Puzzle

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Scientists Go Medieval To Solve Ancient Leprosy Puzzle

More From Shots - Health News HealthDoctors To Vote On Whether Cheerleading Is A SportHealthScientists Go Medieval To Solve Ancient Leprosy PuzzleHealthHaiti Moves A Step Closer Toward Eradicating ElephantiasisShots - Health NewsSupreme Court Gene Ruling Splits Hairs Over What's 'Natural'

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

New York Hospitals Shelve Rivalries For Proton Beam Project

More From Shots - Health News HealthHaiti Moves A Step Closer Toward Eradicating ElephantiasisShots - Health NewsSupreme Court Gene Ruling Splits Hairs Over What's 'Natural'HealthJudge Reluctantly Approves Government Plan For Morning-After PillHealthPrevention Pill Cuts HIV Risk For Injecting Drug Users

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Judge Reluctantly Approves Government Plan For Morning-After Pill

More From Shots - Health News HealthHaiti Moves A Step Closer Toward Eradicating ElephantiasisShots - Health NewsSupreme Court Gene Ruling Splits Hairs Over What's 'Natural'HealthJudge Reluctantly Approves Government Plan For Morning-After PillHealthPrevention Pill Cuts HIV Risk For Injecting Drug Users

More From Shots - Health News

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Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

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Tuesday, June 11, 2013

GOP Hospital Executive Calls For Single-Payer

After spending 25 years in the health care field, most of it related to making hospitals more efficient and effective, I have become skeptical of many of Washington�s reform efforts, especially by my party, the GOP.

One of the biggest problems with health care is escalating, uncontrolled expenditures, taking a larger and larger proportion of our GNP. However, what Rep. Paul Ryan and the GOP want to talk about is the federal budget and cost-shifting via Medicare and Medicaid.

Experts in health care economics differ on many things. But one thing they all agree on is that raising the age for Medicare will do virtually nothing to reduce the overall cost of health care in this nation.

Under the Affordable Care Act, everyone must have insurance or be taxed. Medicare has a 3 percent administrative overhead while the private sector has run 28 percent, coming down to 20 percent as required by the ACA. Raising the Medicare age simply shifts the insurer from the government to less efficient private providers. This dumps the extra cost into the lap of the senior, who at 65 is probably unemployed and unemployable. There are no overall cost savings via efficiencies with Ryan�s Medicare �voucher� proposal.

Dr. Gerald Friedman, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts, was in Charlotte recently for the launching of a physician advocacy group, Health Care Justice. Friedman indicated that U.S. per capita health care cost is $7,920. That compares with $3,323 in Sweden, $2,984 in Finland and only $2,686 in Italy. He points out that people in these countries are healthier than in our country and things are getting worse here. In 2001 among the non-elderly, 14 percent did not see a doctor for needed medical care. The figure rose to 26 percent in less than a decade.

Friedman pointed out that the most basic financial problem with U.S. health care is the for-profit insurance system. Insurance company profits have increased 250 percent in the last decade, Friedman said. The head of Cigna made a whopping $29 million in 2009 while health care premiums and increased deductibles are eating up more and more of workers� wages.

He further pointed out that the administrative cost of health care insurance is one of the major drivers of escalating health care costs from 1980 to 2005. According to Friedman, the administrative cost of private insurance will be $200 billion in 2013. In the U.S. billing costs run $83,975 per doctor per year versus only $22,205 in Ontario.

This is waste, pure and simple. Although the Affordable Care Act pushed through by the Democrats does not do enough to solve the issue, the current GOP proposals totally ignore it.

A related area is prescription drugs. We pay 60 percent more than other countries. Our nation is in effect providing a subsidy to all the others. Why should we pay more to develop drugs that are used elsewhere, not just here?

What is the best course of action to provide better health care and reduce the growth of national health care expenditures? Dr. Friedman�s cure is to move to single payer.

Single payer would drive down costs because Medicare (or a utility-like private single payer insurer) would have leverage to keep costs down. With no other game in town, providers would be forced to operate more efficiently. Drug companies would be pressured to give Americans the same drug pricing that is found elsewhere.

Friedman pointed out that in multiple state studies (independently done by several groups), single payer turns out to save money. In his own studies, he has shown savings of around 20 percent for North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts, and even more in Colorado and Maryland.

According to Friedman, a national single payer system would produce enormous savings, $18.7 billion per year. Surely, at a time when wage earners are being faced with ever increasing premiums and higher deductibles, we should at least consider Medicare for all or a similar single payer system.

The real question is whether either party is willing to stand up to the drug and insurance lobbies and do what is best for America.

Jack Bernard is a retired health care executive, former Jasper County, Ga., commission chairman and former chairman of the Jasper County Republican Party.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Celebrating Innovation at the Fourth Annual Health Datapalooza Conference

Three years ago, the Department of Health and Human Services kicked off the Health Data Initiative with 45 people gathered in a conference room.� This week marks the fourth edition of what has come to be known as �Datapalooza,� which has grown to include nearly 2,000 tech developers, health care professionals, researchers, policy makers, and business leaders from around the world.

The conference is a forum that features the newest and most innovative uses of health data.� The idea behind Datapalooza is that if the government provides the public with health data it has already collected on things like hospital quality and prices and clinical trials, innovators will turn it into new tools that advance health and lower costs across the system.

In a recent New York Times column, Obamacare�s Other Surprise, Thomas L. Friedman writes how this data is �creating a new marketplace and platform for innovation � a health care Silicon Valley � that has the potential to create better outcomes at lower costs.�

We sat down with the innovators behind Friedman�s column to hear their stories.

High definition video clips are available for download at http://hhs.tv/Media/PublicResources.aspx

Celebrating Innovation at the Fourth Annual Health Datapalooza Conference

Three years ago, the Department of Health and Human Services kicked off the Health Data Initiative with 45 people gathered in a conference room.� This week marks the fourth edition of what has come to be known as �Datapalooza,� which has grown to include nearly 2,000 tech developers, health care professionals, researchers, policy makers, and business leaders from around the world.

The conference is a forum that features the newest and most innovative uses of health data.� The idea behind Datapalooza is that if the government provides the public with health data it has already collected on things like hospital quality and prices and clinical trials, innovators will turn it into new tools that advance health and lower costs across the system.

In a recent New York Times column, Obamacare�s Other Surprise, Thomas L. Friedman writes how this data is �creating a new marketplace and platform for innovation � a health care Silicon Valley � that has the potential to create better outcomes at lower costs.�

We sat down with the innovators behind Friedman�s column to hear their stories.

High definition video clips are available for download at http://hhs.tv/Media/PublicResources.aspx

Saturday, June 1, 2013

D.C. Agency Approves 2 High-Tech Cancer Centers

More From Shots - Health News Health D.C. Agency Approves 2 High-Tech Cancer CentersHealthSurvivor Of Boston Marathon Bombings Has Long Road AheadHealthYoung Women With Breast Cancer Opting For MastectomyHealth CareProton Beam Therapy Sparks Hospital Arms Race

More From Shots - Health News

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Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

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