Archive for December 31st, 2009
HEALTH REFORM: Democrats’ Actions Show Fear of Midterm Elections, Reform Legislation Has ‘Unhealthy’ Attributes
The pieces argue: The actions of Democrats during the reform process reveal that they are concerned about how the majority of U.S. residents will vote in the upcoming midterm elections. Current reform proposals in Congress have “unhealthy” arrogance behind their creation.
Editorial
Washington Times: “President Obama and Democratic leaders say they are counting on a health care victory to buoy their electoral prospects in 2010,” but actions by Democrats suggest otherwise, the editorial states. The editorial continues that Democrats are not revealing “the content of the health bills until the last moment so that it would be difficult to read and discuss what was in them,” and it suggests that “they know they are in big trouble when Americans go to vote in November” (Washington Times, 12/31/09).
Opinion Pieces
- Thomas Sowell, National Review: “The only thing healthy about Congress’ health insurance legislation is the healthy skepticism about it shown by most of the public, as revealed by polls,” Sowell, senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, writes. According to Sowell, “What is most unhealthy about this legislation is the raw arrogance in the way it was conceived and passed” (Sowell, National Review, 12/29/09).
- Gene Lyons, Salon: “Democrats fear that the party is both providing inadequate coverage” under current reform legislation “and setting itself up for voter backlash,” columnist Lyons writes. However, he continues, “Retreat now is unthinkable” because the bills at least establish universal coverage “in principle” (Lyons, Salon, 12/24/09).
- John Fund, Wall Street Journal: Sen. Ben Nelson’s (D-Neb.) “fall in public esteem is a direct reaction to his having voted for the [Senate] health care bill (HR 3590) as part of a deal in which Nebraska was exempted from the costs of new federal Medicaid mandates,” columnist Fund writes. According to Fund, the bill “was already unpopular enough in Nebraska but became even more so when state residents discovered they would be saddled with it anyway, plus exposed to national ridicule over Nelson’s sweetheart deal” (Fund, Wall Street Journal, 12/30/09).
- Stuart Butler, Washington Times: “The right thing for the Democratic majority to do” in regard to health reform “would be to recognize that it is trying to go too far, too fast,” writes Butler, vice president of domestic policy studies at the Heritage Foundation. He continues, “This would be a good time to sharply pare back” overhaul legislation (Butler, Washington Times, 12/31/09).
- Jeffrey Schaler/Richard Vatz, Washington Times: “The vast majority of U.S. residents are unaware of most of what is included” in current reform legislation, and they “will be in for a big surprise concerning parity mental health care coverage, covering mental problems comparably to physical problems,” writes Schaler, a professor at American University, and Vatz, a professor at Towson University (Schaler/Vatz, Washington Times, 12/31/09).
– compiled by Matthew Wayt
PATENTS: Senators Request Ban on ‘Pay for Delay’
Nine senators have asked Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to include a provision in final health reform legislation that would ban drug patent settlements, in which a brand-name drugmaker pays a generic drugmaker to keep less costly generics off the market, Reuters reports. The provision is included in the House reform bill (HR 3962) but not the Senate version.
Drugmakers have an incentive to make the deals because a branded medicine loses up to 80% of its revenue once a less expensive generic floods the market, according to Reuters. The Federal Trade Commission estimated the deals cost U.S. residents $3.5 billion annually.
“These ‘pay for delay’ agreements between brand-name and generic drug companies deny consumers the benefits of generic drug competition,” the senators wrote in a letter to Reid dated Dec. 24. Democratic Sens. Byron Dorgan (N.D.), Al Franken (Minn.), Amy Klobuchar (Minn.), Herb Kohl (Wis.) and Jeanne Shaheen (N.H.) are among those who signed the letter (Reuters, 12/30).
– compiled by Ryan Holeywell
HEALTH IT: CMS Issues Standards Defining ‘Meaningful Use’ of EHRs
CMS officials on Wednesday released proposed regulations defining the “meaningful use” of electronic health records as part of a wider government effort to spur the adoption of health information technology to improve medical care and cut costs, Reuters reports. The regulations are included in the 2009 economic stimulus package, which provided about $19 billion in Medicare and Medicaid incentive payments to eligible health care providers who demonstrate meaningful use of health IT (Wutkowski/Heavey, Reuters, 12/30/09).
According to the 700-page plan, the proposed requirements for demonstrating meaningful use of health IT will be phased in over three stages between now and 2013. The criteria released on Wednesday mark the first stage, while the second stage is slated to be issued by the end of 2011. The third stage will be issued by the end of 2013, Government Health IT reports (Mosquera, Government Health IT, 12/30/09). “Such a phased approach encompasses reasonable criteria for meaningful use based on currently available technology capabilities and provider practice experience, and builds up to a more robust definition of meaningful use, based on anticipated technology and capabilities development,” the document states (Monegain, Healthcare IT News, 12/30/09).
The first stage of criteria will focus on gathering data electronically — which can be shared between providers and patients — and reporting the measures to the government, National Coordinator for Health IT David Blumenthal said during a briefing on Wednesday. The second stage of criteria will focus on structured information exchange and continuous quality improvement. Stage three will focus on decision support for “national high priority conditions” and population health, Blumenthal added (Simmons, HealthLeaders Media, 12/31/09).
Under the proposed rules, health care providers who use EHR technology for at least 80% of their medical instructions would be eligible for the incentive payments, according to the AP/New York Times. Providers also must give patients paper copies of their medical data and use computers to check for potential drug interactions. Hospitals would have to file at least 10% of their orders electronically to be eligible for incentive payments (AP/New York Times, 12/30/09).
ONC Releases Interim Final Regulation for Health IT
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT at HHS on Wednesday also issued an interim final rule outlining the technical standards and features that providers must implement in their EHR systems to comply with the standards and certification of meaningful use. Blumenthal said the criteria “are very specifically linked to the definition of meaningful use” outlined in CMS’ proposed regulations, adding, “This initial set of standards begins to define a common language to ensure accurate and secure health information exchange across different EHR systems.”
According to Government Health IT, the rule also explains:
- The standard formats for clinical summaries and prescriptions; and
- Standard terms to describe clinical problems, procedures, laboratory tests, medications and the secure transportation of the data online (Government Health IT, 12/30/09).
Both regulations will be published in the Federal Register on Jan. 13, 2010, with a 60-day comment period effective at that time, Health Data Management reports. The rule will become effective 30 days after publication (Goedert, Health Data Management, 12/30/09). The final rule on the EHR adoption standards will be issued sometime in 2010, according to Reuters (Reuters, 12/30/09).
– compiled by Santosh Rao
MEDICAID: 13 State Attorneys General Challenge Legality of Nebraska Deal
Thirteen Republican state attorneys general sent a letter on Wednesday to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) demanding that a deal to pay the cost of Medicaid expansion in Nebraska included in the Senate’s reform legislation (HR 3590) be rescinded or they would file suit, The Hill‘s “Blog Briefing Room” reports (Fabian, “Blog Briefing Room,” The Hill, 12/30/09).
In order to secure the support of Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), a provision was added to the Senate health reform bill granting Nebraska increased funding for the cost of the proposed Medicaid expansion. However, the state attorneys general in their letter alleged that the deal is illegal.
“We believe this provision is constitutionally flawed,” South Carolina Attorney General Henry McMaster (R) wrote. The letter was co-signed by the attorneys general from Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Michigan, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Washington state (Kinnard, AP/San Francisco Chronicle, 12/31/09).
The letter continued, “As chief legal officers of our states we are contemplating a legal challenge to this provision and we ask you to take action to render this challenge unnecessary by striking the provision.” The letter also stated that the deal “violat[es] the most basic and universally held notions of what is fair and just,” as well as being “inconsistent with protections afforded by the United States Constitution against arbitrary legislation” (Isenstadt, Politico, 12/30/09).
Nelson Defends Vote
Nelson on Wednesday defended his vote for the Senate health bill in a 30-second television advertisement broadcast during the Holiday Bowl football game, which featured the University of Nebraska, the New York Times reports. After having received harsh criticism for casting the decisive 60th vote for the legislation, Nelson described the bill as “a common sense approach” to health reform, emphasizing that it is “not run by the government.” According to the Times, despite having a conservative voting record, Nelson’s vote for the health reform bill made many “painfully aware” that he is the only Democrat serving in a statewide office (Davey, New York Times, 12/31/09).
– compiled by Julia Moss
PUBLIC OPTION: Liberal Group Launches Campaign To Pressure Four Senators
The Progressive Change Campaign Committee is launching phone and advertising campaigns urging voters to ask Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) to vote against any health reform legislation that does not include a public option, The Hill‘s “Blog Briefing Room” reports. In addition, the group is planning to deliver petitions to Sens. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Al Franken (D-Minn.).
PCCC is hoping the campaign, called “Be a Hero,” will prompt one of the four senators to withhold their support unless some form of a public option is included during Senate and House negotiations. PCCC co-founder Adam Green said, “Bernie Sanders can be a hero at this historic moment by declaring that any final bill must have a public option to win his support. That would change the entire calculus in House-Senate negotiations and force President Obama to finally fight back against [Sen.] Joseph Lieberman’s (I-Conn.) threats” not to support a health bill that contains a public plan (Zimmermann, “Blog Briefing Room,” The Hill, 12/30/09).
– compiled by Julia Moss
CLASS ACT: Long-Term Care Program Likely To Survive Negotiations
A federal program that would fund long-term care for the elderly and disabled is poised to make it into the final health care reform bill, even though the majority of the Senate opposes it, the Los Angeles Times reports.

