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Thursday, October 15, 2009

QD: News Every Day--legislative tricks, treat the underserved and banning sick kids ... from hospitals

ACP Internist's daily digest of internal medicine in the news continues with a look at legislative tricks for health legislation, a medical school that sends students into poor neighborhoods as part of their training, and hospitals that are enacting bans on minor visitors to avoid spreading H1N1.

Health care reform
Senates are seeking a bill that increases Medicare fees by $247 billion in the next decade. Because it will raise the deficit, Senators are trying a two-bill approach, a bit of legislative sleight-of-hand, to let them claim that health care reform won't cost more. At stake is a 21% reduction in Medicare reimbursement that was is scheduled to take effect in January.

In another bit of having one's cake while eating it, too, seniors will pay more for Medicare Advantage when costs increase from an average of $32 to $39 per month next year. Insurers are cutting plans that have no premiums--a federal requirement. Also being scrutinized are the free perks meant to entice traditional Medicare patients into private Medicare Advantage policies. But free to patients means paid for by the government--or sometimes hidden as higher co-pays and additional fees.

Investor's Business Daily points out a looming fight between primary care and specialty medicine. Legislation in the Senate gives primary care doctors a 10% bonus if they work in a Health Professional Shortage Area and 60% of their services are primary care. Half of the funding for the bonus comes from across-the-board cuts for specialists, who are refusing support.

Primary care shortage
Federally qualified clinics could treat more than 20 million patients this year, 2 million more than last year, the AP reports. The increase comes at a time that states are cutting their health care budgets.

To serve this need, Florida International University curriculum will send medical students to poor neighborhoods as part of their training. TIME profiles the program (and quotes ACP president Joseph W. Stubbs, FACP in the process.)

Finally, an emergency room doctor wrote an open letter to President Obama, making the points that:
--people without health care head to ER for treatment,
--medical training is expensive and causes primary care shortages, and
--legislators would discuss the space program without involving astrophysicists, so it's time to get doctors involved in health care reform.

These are all familiar points, but the letter is worth a read.

In case you missed it ...
To avoid spreading H1N1 influenza, hospitals have begun banning visitors less than 18 years old. These are children's' hospitals, too. M.D. Anderson followed suit, as well.

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