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Healthcare : Open Letter to Patients, Physicians, and Lawmakers

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Open Letter to Patients, Physicians, and Lawmakers

February 14, 2016 By Sharon Jellinek MD

This is the first letter I’ve ever written to a political figure and I pray that someone on your staff will bring this letter to your attention. I have been a physician for close to 30 years. I am a second-generation pediatrician struggling to keep an independent solo practice alive. Not one politician has addressed what I feel is the major threat to health care…the physician-patient relationship. Without this, there is no quality of care no matter what you do. Physician patient relationships require time with the patient.Most of my diagnosis is derived from my patient-parent interview and a “hands on exam” of the child. You cannot possibly read a cookbook of medical questions and treatments and have the same result. The current insurance treadmill model of primary care makes this impossible. There is a hemorrhaging exodus of well-trained physicians unwilling to jeopardize this patient relationship. Insurance companies are pushing the small man (or woman), like myself, out and replacing us with cheaper, less qualified “health care extenders” i.e. nurse practitioners, physician’s assistants, pharmacists, or whomever they can place in a white coat for less money. This is at the expense of the patient and the profit of the insurance company.

I have done everything by the book. During my 12 years of postgraduate training I earned a degree in chemistry and biology, a Masters degree in Microbiology, and MD degree from Georgetown University Medical School where I also completed my pediatric residency. I am board-certified and recertified. I have a spotless record and a loyal patient following. I am not saying this to fluff my feathers but to emphasize my dedication to my calling. It is not just a job to me. This is what I was meant to do, and I will only do it the correct way.

Coming from generations of physicians, I take my job very seriously. My father was also a pediatrician and started his office in the basement of our home. I know what quality care is, and what it is not. I grew up knowing that medicine can exist without the interference of insurance companies. At that time, people paid a fair price for an office visit and had catastrophic hospital coverage for hospitalization and procedures. (My father actually was the physician who saved John F. Kennedy’s son, John John. His name is Dr. Ira Seiler M.D. It is a true story accessible through the archives. He also attended John F. Kennedy’s inaugural ball and parade).

My father instilled in me a respect for the patient-physician relationship without which there is no quality care. Insurance companies have continued to decrease our payments knowing that we will need to see more patients in a shorter amount of time to make up for the decreasing reimbursement rates. You do not have time to foster a relationship. This may result in more medical mistakes but ultimately bring in more money to the pockets of the insurance company. This is a very dangerous game, and I have refused to play it. For that I have been threatened and penalized.

I am trying desperately to keep my small practice alive. I spend at least 30 minutes with each patient, they have access to me via my personal cell phone 24/7. I have no wait times, will always see a sick patient that day, try to avoid ER/Urgent Care visits by seeing the patient after hours myself ( to avoid medical mistakes since after hours clinics usually are not staffed by pediatricians and I end up correcting the mistakes at 3am for free anyway). Many times I’ll bring a chart home and research a condition and if I don’t know something I will find out. And for this I am listed as a physician that is not cost effective, or in other words I spend too much time per patient, which results in less revenue to the insurance company.

Medicine is not a 9-to-5 job, it is a calling and my greatest fear is that no one is going to want to do this job for a salary of $6000 a year, which after all my office expenses, I earned. And that is not from poor business skills or lack of patients. It is from decreasing reimbursement rates and higher overhead. This is why most physicians have left private practice to join hospital settings or larger groups. Many people don’t know that I have to pay not one but two malpractice payments in the state of Pennsylvania, licensing and board fees, rising medical and office supply fees which total @ 15,000 a month. I have one nurse, a receptionist, myself and one part-time relief doctor who is amazing, having trained at both Duke and Northwestern. I have not taken a paycheck in 8 months.

I continue to do this job because that’s what I was meant to do and I don’t want to give up on my patients. I should not be subject to prejudice for practicing good medicine. I am scared who will take care of these children or my family when those like me are finally forced out completely.

I am not a “healthcare provider”.  I am a physician and there is a very big difference. I hope that you will think about this in your fight to fixthe problems in healthcare, because it’s more than just repealing Obamacare. It is putting medicine back into the hands of the patient, consumer, and the physician. Insurance companies are for profit companies, parasitizing my expertise and exploiting your savings. If they are getting paid for my expertise and training, maybe the CEO’s of these insurance companies should try doing the surgeries and treating the patients themselves.

Sincerely,

Sharon S. Jellinek M.D.

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Garrett Votes to Put Americans back in Charge of their Health Care Choices

scott garrett in wyckoff

Feb 5, 2016
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Scott Garrett (NJ-05) issued the following statement after voting for H.R. 3762, the Restoring Americans’ Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act, Objections of the President Notwithstanding:

“Today I voted to override the president’s veto of the ObamaCare repeal bill because Washington bureaucrats have no place standing between hardworking families and their health care choices. ObamaCare forces American families out of their insurance, skyrockets the cost of care, and stifles the ability of businesses to create jobs. I will continue to fight for families and their right to make their own health care decisions.”

In October Garrett pushed for the Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act , “The last thing New Jersey families need is an unaccountable Washington bureaucrat driving a wedge between them and their doctors or limiting their access to quality health care. Today I supported the Restoring Americans’ Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act because Americans deserve the repeal of ObamaCare’s most onerous and costly mandates, and they deserve to be put back in charge of their own health care choices.”

Despite the media hype the disaster that is Obamacare has been well documented . Here are just a few real examples off of social media posts .

“A gentlemen Im friends with was paying 300 a month for insurance on a family of 4. Now because of Obamacare It went to 700 a month and now cant afford it and dropped it and doesnt have it, when he filed taxes was fined 900 dollars because he was unable to provide for his family paying a total of 8400 a year for insurance, kinda seems that they want working people to pay for their family , as well as another family that wont work , an if they dont they pay a fine. Does anybody remember what our great politicians said about this program ? All lies ” David H”I said it two years ago and I will say it again, Obamacare is an epic fail for this country. I couldn’t afford insurance 2 years ago and things have increased since then. My girls insurance premiums have doubled and their deductibles have tripled. Not only that this plan that is supposed to be “AFFORDABLE” covers NOTHING…NOTHING until my deductible is met. I pay full price for doctors visits, x-rays, medication, specialist until the deductible is met. So basically I am required to pay the premium and pay for everything on top of it. Honestly I just need to quit working, reduce my income by 1/2 and get all this stuff for free. Health care is affordable if your rich or if your poor. The people in the middle that are grinding it out every day get screwed….again.”  Jake C

” I was getting FREE MEDS from Johnson & Johnson because I have a life threatening Pancreas Condition. As soon as ObamaCare kicked in first my Doctor was changed to one I dont know and who does not even have my medical records. I had to fight and 3 times they tried to change my Doctor to one who is 25 miles away. I REFUSED EACH TIME! Then Obamacare stopped me from getting my Pancreas pills and I was told I had to take different pills which did not work causing me great stomach pain. With Obamacare you dont get the best meds you get the cheapest ones possible and many times they have side effects or dont work. I have had to fight the effects of ObamaCare many times. I went to the Senior Citizen Center when I became 65 and they helped me find a Health Care provider who will supply my Pancreas pills. Out of 50 available only 1 would pay for my meds. I READ OBAMACAREBEFORE IT WAS MADE A ILLEGAL LAW. I knew what is contained. I tried to tell others and they would not listen. I had to wait 3 years for the people to find out themselves. ObamaCare is CRAP! The only ones being helped are those who had previous medical conditions and those who could not afford health care coverage. So 20 % are being helped by ObamaCareand 80% are paying the huge price.” Mary M
see more real feedback  : https://mychal-massie.com/premium/speak-out-your-obamacare/
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Looking at the larger picture : the Ridgewood teachers’ contract is one of the highest in the county

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Looking at the larger picture

FEBRUARY 5, 2016    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016, 12:31 AM
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Looking at the larger picture

To the editor,

As a former nine year member of the Ridgewood Board of Education I would like to recognize and thank the current five members of the Board for their service. Only a few of us fully understand the position that they find themselves in during the time of teacher negotiations.

These five community members are up against the most powerful union in New Jersey. While their conversations are with representatives of the Ridgewood Education Association, the NJEA is right behind the curtain. At the same time each member when they were sworn into office, they took an oath. The oath was pretty much their commitment to play by the established rules. Public education is a regulated industry. Knowing the five members of our Board, I have no doubt that they are doing everything possible to reach a settlement with the REA within the established constraints and what is feasible for all parties. I can understand that the REA may not like those constraints.

I know the fact finder is scheduled to come to Ridgewood, shortly. Unfortunately, it is not one of those situations that after a few hours of meetings the fact finder will appear on the steps of the Education Center and make a declaration of the facts. However, those financial facts will probably rule the day in a report issued weeks later.

Looking at the larger economic picture, we know that the salary guide in the Ridgewood teachers’ contract is one of the highest in the county. We know that the offered state health benefit plan is one of the best, if not the best available in the program. For those of us employed outside of the teaching profession, we have seen stagnant salaries for a number of years and have experienced job insecurity. As to health benefits, we may be contributing the same percentage to our health care premiums, but the plan in which we are enrolled is probably a lot different today than it was a few years ago. The days of $10 copays have been replaced with high deductible plans.

I know teachers have and will continue to express their views at the microphone during public comment of BOE meetings. They have every right to do that. But, does not every issue have two sides? I firmly believe our Board is doing everything possible.

Bob Hutton

Ridgewood

https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/ridgewood-news-letter-looking-at-the-larger-picture-1.1506624

 

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Scott Garret Says NO to selling Out America

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Garrett: New Jersey families are frustrated with Washington because of spending bills like this one
Dec 18, 2015
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Scott Garrett (NJ-05), a senior Member of the House Budget Committee, issued the following statement after voting against the $1.1 trillion omnibus spending bill:

“While I strongly support provisions that provide health care to 9/11 first responders and address key vulnerabilities in how we issue visas to foreign visitors, this bloated $1.1 trillion spending bill doesn’t do enough to address our nation’s crippling debt, protect civil liberties, nor strengthen our national security and, therefore, I could not support it. New Jersey families are frustrated with Washington because of spending bills like this that are 2,000 pages long, include new surveillance provisions which were inserted in the middle of the night, lack adequate security from the threat of terrorists seeking to cross our borders, and add to the nearly $20 trillion national debt that is hindering our economy.”

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HEALTHCARE: WHY SINGLE PAYER IS NOT THE ANSWER

obamacare_theridgewood blog

 

Posted By MediChick in Health Care Reform

by Lee Kurisko, MD

We were promised that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act would “bend the cost curve down”, and yet health insurance premiums are expected to rise by as much as 60% in 2016. What should be done to solve this dilemma? A common refrain is that since the “free market” has failed, the United States needs a Single Payer healthcare system like Canada’s.

Being a Canadian physician now living in the Minnesota, I assure you that Canada’s healthcare system is not Utopia. In my former life as Medical Director of Diagnostic Imaging for Thunder Bay Regional Hospital in Canada, for a while our wait time for an elective MRI was 13 months and for CT it was seven months. I managed to convince the hospital administration to increase MRI operational hours, and we reduced the wait to 4 months becoming the envy of the province. Doctors from other regions attempted to send us their patients. We said no. We could not accommodate the extra work because we only had one scanner for a radius of about 500 miles because that was all that the government would allow. As payer for the system, it is inevitable that the government controls the system. The incentive is to control costs, not necessarily to care for patients.

The Fraser Institute monitors wait times in Canada. As of 2014, the average wait time for medically necessary specialty care is 18.2 weeks. In the province of New Brunswick, the wait time averages 37.3 weeks. In my hometown of Sault Ste. Marie, where I still own property, the average wait for a newcomer to town to get established with a family doctor is five years, unless you have insider ties to the system.

The standard response by single payer advocates is that Canada’s healthcare system is underfunded. According to the Fraser Institute, the average Canadian family is spending 12,000 dollars per year for health coverage (buried in taxes). According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Canada per capita healthcare expenses rank sixth highest amongst 192 ranked countries.

Another rejoinder of the single-payer advocates is that “outcomes” are better in Canada. For example, according to the World Health Organization, the average life expectancy in Canada is three years longer than in the US. Many factors affect life expectancy of which the health care system is only one. Racial background is very important. According to 1999 OECD data, an Asian-American male at birth can expect to live 80.9 years, a non-Hispanic white male can expect to live 74.4 years, and an African-American male has a life expectancy of 68.4 years. More homogeneously white, Canada is a less racially diverse country than the US contributing to a higher average life expectancy. According to Sally Pipes of the Pacific Research Institute, when allowing for deaths from violent crime and traffic accidents, Americans are the longest-lived people in the Western world. According to John Goodman in “Lives at Risk”, Americans fare better than any other country when looking at individual disease states such as myocardial infarction and various malignancies.

What happens in the doctor’s office or in the hospital pales in significance to the decisions that people make in their day-to-day lives. For example, Canadians are generally less obese than Americans and there is less gun-related crime. The relationship between health care systems and population outcomes is murky, and so we cannot conflate the efficacy of a health care system with average life expectancy.

Why is it that Canada’s single payer health care system is so constipated with an onslaught of patients waiting interminably for care? There are two basic reasons that are really two sides of the same coin. They are price controls and central planning.

https://www.medibid.com/blog/2015/11/why-single-payer-is-not-the-answer/

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School board must talk healthcare : Time for Teachers to Go on Obamacare

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Ridgewood NJ , School board must talk healthcare costs with union no truer statement has ever been said and since the teachers unions were overwhelming supporters of Obamacare for the rest of us ,its high time they participate in the “healthcare” they pushed on the rest of America .

OCTOBER 9, 2015    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015, 12:30 AM
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

BOE must talk healthcare costs with REA

To the Editor:

I am proud to say that I have been educating 6 and 7 year olds in this community for 32 years. Many of these children have gone on to become doctors, lawyers, actors, and most dear to my heart, teachers, as well as numerous other professions. The one thing they have in common is Ridgewood and the superior education they received here.

As I enter into my 33rd year of teaching, I look into the eyes of my current students, knowing the path in front of them will lead them to a successful future because of the dedicated teachers and administrators who work here.

Each year, teachers are asked to do more and more for less and less. We all understand the economic realities that face us today. Teachers are taxpayers, too, and we all have our own budgets to balance.

As a member of the REA, this is my 11th contract negotiation, and it is sad to observe that every negotiation has become more and more acrimonious; however, never in my 33 years has a Ridgewood Board of Education refused to discuss all of the topics that need to be negotiated, specifically healthcare.

Every day I come to work knowing both parents and administrators expect me to be keeping the best interests of my students in mind. I would like to think that the board is doing the same for my colleagues and me. My personal contribution in 2012 to our health benefit package was over $2,200. In 2015, I am now contributing almost $10,000, which is a 350 percent increase. However, my salary certainly did not increase that much. It actually increased by 4.9 percent over the same time period. Anyone retiring from Ridgewood within the next five years will not be able to make the same amount of money that he/she did in 2012. That is just wrong!

All that I am requesting of our Board of Education is to have respect for us as educators, professionals, and community members and to sit down with the REA to talk about the cost of our healthcare benefits.

Donna Pedersen

Ridgewood

https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/ridgewood-news-letter-school-board-must-talk-healthcare-costs-with-union-1.1428787

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CRITICS TAKE HORIZON TO TASK OVER OMNIA ALLIANCE, CITING LACK OF TRANSPARENCY

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I want to thank Senators Vitale and Gill for raising the red flag on the Blue Cross Horizon Omnia Plan. Any time a private company wants to merge and become bigger, we run the risk of having a monopoly that ultimately has the power to charge whatever it wants. “Care-coordination” and “value based approach” are meaningless buzz words.

The sickest and most vulnerable patients are at risk, as these plans have no real way to “keep people well.” Hospitals must be places of mercy and not revenue centers. This should be about care– not big business and mergers. If a hospital is unprofitable, it may just be doing its job, caring for those who are in need. Arbitrary “measurements of quality and cost efficiency” are not what the people need when choosing a hospital.

There is no price transparency in medical care as demonstrated by the recent $42,678 hospital bill for a normal uncomplicated delivery. “Insurance payments and adjustments” were $42,624.60. What exactly did that insurance company pay? What were the real costs and how can such a bill be justified? All of these charges, adjustments and payments behind closed doors suggest skulduggery, plain and simple.

We need to remember what real insurance was meant to be– a buffer to protect one’s assets against the cost of major medical events. Insurance cannot keep people well. We must reduce the power of these plans and have them serve the people, competing with other plans on cost, service and ability to negotiate and pay for major medical expenses. All hospitals should be included.

Let’s work together. Let’s clear the way for direct primary care, where people pay directly or become members of a local physician office for as low as $50/month. Let’s reserve insurance for the catastrophic and reduce the power of these big conglomerates. And let’s figure out how to provide real charity care to the poor without erecting a huge bureaucracy that amounts to a barrier to care. Alieta Eck, MD For Real Health Care Reform

 

ANDREW KITCHENMAN | OCTOBER 6, 2015

State senators to call on attorney general to block controversial tiered insurance plan before planned November launch

The traditional role of New Jersey’s state government in regulating the hospital and insurance industries has been to balance the needs of residents against the realities of the market, to ensure, among other things, equitable access to healthcare.

Then why are two leading senators on insurance issues — Nia H. Gill (D-Essex and Passaic) and Joseph F. Vitale (D-Middlesex) — arguing that the state has abdicated its responsibility in the case of the new OMNIA Health Alliance from Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey? And they’re not alone in claiming that Horizon’s secretive selection process has left hospitals that were shut out of the alliance facing a bleak future, one that could include going dark.

This situation helps explain why Gill and Vitale are calling for Acting Attorney General John J. Hoffman to step in and put a stop to the OMNIA rollout, at least until his office and legislators have more time to review the plans.

Both Horizon executives and critics of how OMNIA was put together attempted to build their cases during nearly eight hours of testimony before a joint meeting of Senate Commerce and Health, Human Services, and Senior Citizens Committee.

It’s a process that could play out again in legal proceedings, as those left out of the alliance are raising the possibility of going to court to block it.

That said, not everything about OMNIA is raising a red flag. Senators welcome the possibility of lower costs, as well as the improved care-coordination and value-based approach that the tiered insurance plan is supposed to deliver.

And OMNIA has its defenders. One of them, Dr. Jeffrey Le Benger, CEO of alliance member Summit Medical Group, said that Summit has already reduced the cost of providing care to Horizon members by 13 percent over a two-year period.

Ronald C. Rak, chief executive of New Brunswick-based St. Peter’s Healthcare System, is definitely not among OMNIA’s champions. He found a corollary to the actions of the state’s largest insurer in ancient Rome.

https://www.njspotlight.com/stories/15/10/06/critics-take-horizon-to-task-over-omnia-alliance-transparency/?utm_source=NJ+Spotlight++Master+List&utm_campaign=69e35f56a3-Daily_Digest2_5_2015&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_1d26f473a7-69e35f56a3-398635969

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Health Care Crisis is a Matter of Bureaucracy, taking government out of health care is key to lower costs

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FPANJ Women’s Group: Health Care Crisis is a Matter of Bureaucracy

Dr. Alieta Eck, founder of Zarephath Health Care Free Clinic and 2014 Congressional Candidate, tells FPANJ Women that taking government out of health care is key to lower costs

Upper Montclair, NJ – October 2015 – Financial Planning Association of New Jersey(FPANJ) has launched a Women’s Group and their inaugural event touched on a hot-button topic: health care costs and the Affordable Care Act.

The group invited Dr. Alieta Eck, M.D., to speak on “How Women Can Solve the Health Care Crisis” last week and her message was well-received among the financial professionals.

“Dr. Eck’s message of reducing costs resonated with our group, especially because we are always working with clients to manage their money, and recent changes in the health care system have proved challenging for many,” Trish Scott, Chairman of the Women’s Group said. “She shared a vision of positive change for the health care in the near future that was enthusiastically received.”
Dr. Alieta Eck pictured front row, second from left, with FPANJ Women’s Group Members and Nick Scheibner, FPANJ PR Chair.

Startling to most in attendance were the statistics comparing the rise in health administrators (more that 3500 percent) to doctors (approximately 100 percent) since 1970. It’s this addition to the health care bureaucracy that Dr. Eck points to for making affordable health care inaffordable for many patients.

“If you have a single mother who has to pay $268 per month for a premium, that’s a lot of money,” Dr. Eck explained. “But if you add a medical problem to that mix, most bronze plans require a $6000 deductible, which skyrockets those costs.”

She also explained that the measures of a good doctor between patients and bureaucracies are vastly different, much to the detriment of the patient-doctor relationship, saying, “Patients measure a doctor on their experience, how well they listen, how much they care. Bureaucracies focus on things like ‘clinical quality metrics,’ and maintenance of certification. In the end they view a good doctor as one who earns and spends less so the bureaucracy can earn more.”

Dr. Eck and husband Dr. John Eck founded the Zarephath Health Center, a free clinic for the poor and uninsured that currently cares for 300-400 patients per month utilizing the services of volunteer physicians and nurses. She explained they spend $13 per patient because of the volunteer staff, and is working with New Jersey lawmakers to pass theVolunteer Medical Professional Health Care Act in the Senate. The bill provides malpractice protection for doctors in their private practice if they volunteer four hours every week at a non-governmental free clinic such as Zarephath.

She contrasted these costs with the $13 billion Medicaid costs for New Jersey, which is approximately one-third of the state’s budget.

Dr. Eck explained the new law could also provide a way to “Help the poor without fleecing the public” with the cost of bureaucracy. The bill is co-sponsored by
Sen. Robert Singer, District 30; and Sen. Brian P. Stack, District 33.

More about Dr. Alieta Eck:

Dr. Eck’s topic “How Women Can Solve the Health Care Crisis,” stems from her interest in health care for the poor and her advocacy against the Affordable Health Care Act, testifying in opposition in 2011 at a U.S. Senate subcommittee hearing. She has campaigned twice for public office: first as a Republican nominee for U.S. Senate  in 2013, and again in 2014 to fill the temporary seat in New Jersey’s 12th District. These bids were unsuccessful, but she continues to be active in advocacy.

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Obamacare Actually Isn’t All That Affordable — Unless You’re Broke

obamacare_theridgewood blog

By Simon Constable

NEW YORK (TheStreet) — It’s time for the Affordable Care Act to join a long list of oxymorons. Why? Because rather like “military intelligence,” “cat proof,” “government organization,” and “simple calculus,” the law better known as Obamacare turns out to be an inherent contradiction. For a sizeable part of the population, anyway.

The ACA is just not affordable to a big chunk of those it was most meant to serve: The previously uninsured. In fact, many are worse off than before, according to a new study. That fact could also unravel part of the program’s foundation, which could be a problem for healthcare insurers.

“Many of the non-poor formerly uninsured are estimated to be worse off,” than without insurance, according to a September-dated working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research titled “The Price of Responsibility: The Impact Of Health Reform On Non-Poor Uninsured.”

https://www.thestreet.com/story/13298998/1/obamacare-actually-isn-t-all-that-affordable-unless-you-re-broke.html?utm_content=buffera24cf&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

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Blue Cross partners with N.J. doctors, hospitals on incentives to bring down costs

HUMC_theridgewoodblog

SEPTEMBER 9, 2015    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2015, 12:03 AM
BY LINDY WASHBURN
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

After years of managed-care wars between health care providers and insurance companies, New Jersey’s largest insurer is to announce Thursday an alliance with six hospital systems and the state’s largest physician group to get these erstwhile competitors on the same side. The plan is to work together to coordinate patient care, lower costs and use financial incentives to steer patients to its 22 member hospitals and affiliated doctors.

Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey will offer insurance plans for 2016 that will encourage members to use a select group of “Tier One” hospitals by offering a financial incentive — waiving the deductible and the coinsurance for some of the care they receive.

Members will still be able to use Horizon’s broader network — which includes all but three of the state’s hospitals and about 80 percent of its physicians — but will pay more in out-of-pocket expenses to do so. Patients who go to hospitals in other states will also pay more in out-of-pocket costs.

Details of the premiums and cost sharing are to be announced in October when the plans go on the market, a Horizon spokesman said.

They will not be available to Medicaid or Medicare patients but will be included as an option for state employees. Dudley Burdge, senior staff representative for the Communications Workers of America union local representing state workers, expects that premiums “will be 25 percent less than the most popular plan for state employees.”

The Tier One hospitals in Bergen County will be Hackensack University Medical Center, HackensackUMC North at Pascack Valley in Westwood and Englewood Hospital Medical Center — all part of the Hackensack University Health Network, one of the six health systems to join the newly formed Omnia Health Alliance.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/blue-cross-partners-with-n-j-doctors-hospitals-on-incentives-to-bring-down-costs-1.1406397

 

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Online symptom-checkers are often wrong

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By By Lisa Rapaport | Reuters – 10 hours ago

(Reuters Health) – Online symptom checkers often misdiagnose patients’ problems, often encouraging people to seek care for minor issues that don’t need immediate attention and other times incorrectly telling people with true emergencies that treatment can wait, a U.K. study suggests.

Researchers tested 23 online and mobile apps used by millions of people who are trying to find out if their symptoms are serious and what might make them feel better. The apps were imperfect at best, offering the correct diagnosis on the first try only about a third of the time.

For triage – assessing the urgency of the problem – the apps were too cautious in situations requiring only self-care: only 33 percent of the time, on average, were patients appropriately advised not to go to the doctor.

At the other extreme, symptom checkers typically missed the severity of the situation in one of every five cases requiring emergency treatment.

Overall, the computer programs offered accurate triage advice for 57 percent of the standardized scenarios that were used in the researchers’ tests.

“The risk is that people will be told to get care when they didn’t need it and bear the costs and inconvenience, or they will be told not to seek care when they have a life-threatening problem,” senior author Dr. Ateev Mehrotra, a health policy researcher at Harvard Medical School in Boston, said by email.

Because patients may not get much useful information from a long list of possible diagnoses, the researchers rated the symptom-checkers based on whether the programs spit out the right answer first, or somewhere lower down on a list of up to 20 possible alternative diagnoses.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/online-symptom-checkers-often-wrong-220336492.html

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Has Organized Crime Hijacked our Medical Delivery System?

Hacker_theridgewoodblog

Posted by Alieta Eck On July 11, 2015 0 Comment

By Alieta Eck, MD | The Save Jersey Blog

What is organized crime? The dictionary defines it as a means of generating income through bribery and threats of grievous retribution, often buying political patronage for immunity from exposure and prosecution. Perpetrators of organized crime typically use credible front organizations, such as hospitals and charities. These establishments do not tolerate competition and constantly fight for monopolization, or “market share.” When organized crime is involved, goods and services cost more.

So how does this apply to our current medical care delivery “system?” Since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, there is a concerted effort to put everyone into a highly organized “insurance plan,” despite the fact that the plan costs far more than the free market would dictate. The overpricing ensures a steady flow of revenue to be siphoned off to the administrators and government officials. Campaign or “foundation” coffers are regularly subsidized to ensure favorable treatment by elected officials. And the people pay a huge price for poorer access and diminished quality.

Insurance companies claim to provide “protection” against financial ruin by selling a card that promises access to high quality care whenever it is needed. But the protection is illusion, as the purported savings are often fictitious.

Here are two real life examples:

https://savejersey.com/2015/07/health-care-organized-crime/

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Scott Garrett to cosponsor bill that would provide continued health coverage and monetary compensation to rescue and recovery workers who were sickened at Ground Zero

Scott_Garrett_took5_a_break_from_DC_theridgewood-blog

Salute to a recruit to Zadroga Act 9/11 aid renewal
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Wednesday, May 13, 2015, 7:05 PM

An atta-boy to New Jersey Republican Rep. Scott Garrett for enlisting on Tuesday as a cosponsor of a bill that would provide continued health coverage and monetary compensation to rescue and recovery workers who were sickened at Ground Zero.

What with so much going on in Washington, Garrett had apparently overlooked the duty until that morning, when a reminder in this space noted that he was the only member of the New Jersey delegation without his name on the measure.

With Dan Donovan, sworn in that night to represent Staten Island and a nub of Brooklyn, Garrett joins budding GOP support for the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act.

Enacted in 2010 after entrenched Republican opposition, the law authorized spending $4.2 billion on specialized medical care for 9/11 responders, along with compensation. The sum was $3 billion short of the amount sought by Democrats and coverage was cut to five years.

Without congressional renewal, thousands of suffering Ground Zero laborers will lose critical health care assistance. In control of both the House and Senate, the Republicans will be crucial to preventing such a catastrophe.

That’s why having Garrett on board helps build momentum and why Donovan gets a thumbs-up for making co-sponsorship his very first legislative action.

https://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/editorial-salute-recruit-9-11-aid-renewal-article-1.2221301

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THE HUMAN UPGRADE : The revolution will be digitized

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Spearheaded by the flood of wearable devices, a movement to quantify consumers’ lifestyles is evolving into big business with immense health and privacy ramifications

In San Diego

From the instant he wakes up each morning, through his workday and into the night, the essence of Larry Smarr is captured by a series of numbers: a resting heart rate of 40 beats per minute, a blood pressure of 130/70, a stress level of 2 percent, 191 pounds, 8,000 steps taken, 15 floors climbed, 8 hours of sleep.

Smarr, an astrophysicist and computer scientist, could be the world’s most self-measured man. For nearly 15 years, the professor at the University of California at San Diego has been obsessed with what he describes as the most complicated subject he has ever experimented on: his own body.

Using their ideas and their billions, the visionaries who created Silicon Valley’s biggest technology firms are trying to transform the most complicated system in existence: the human body.

Smarr keeps track of more than 150 parameters. Some, such as his heartbeat, movement and whether he’s sitting, standing or lying down, he measures continuously in real time with a wireless gadget on his belt. Some, such as his weight, he logs daily. Others, such as his blood and the bacteria in his intestines, he tests only about once every month.

Smarr compares the way he treats his body with how people monitor and maintain their cars: “We know exactly how much gas we have, the engine temperature, how fast we are going. What I’m doing is creating a dashboard for my body.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/national/2015/05/09/the-revolution-will-be-digitized/

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Hackers access records for millions of Anthem customers

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Hackers access records for millions of Anthem customers

Feb 5, 11:23 AM (ET)

By TOM MURPHY

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Hackers broke into a health insurance database storing information for about 80 million people in an attack bound to stoke fears many Americans have about the privacy of their most sensitive information.

Anthem, the nation’s second-largest health insurer, said it has yet to find any evidence that medical information like insurance claims or test results was targeted or taken in a “very sophisticated” cyberattack that it discovered last week. It also said credit card information wasn’t compromised, either.

The hackers did gain access to names, birthdates, email address, employment details, Social Security numbers, incomes and street addresses of people who are currently covered or have had coverage in the past.

An Anthem spokeswoman said Thursday the insurer was working with federal investigators to figure out who was behind the attack. They had not pinned down the exact number of people affected.

https://apnews.myway.com/article/20150205/us–anthem-hack-a8b630345b.html