Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Scathing article targets state welfare system | Georgia Health News

Scathing article targets state welfare system | Georgia Health News

New Rules Will Ban ER Debt Collections At Charitable Hospitals - Kaiser Health News

New Rules Will Ban ER Debt Collections At Charitable Hospitals - Kaiser Health News

Improved Diagnosis Of Metabolic Syndrome In Children

Improved Diagnosis Of Metabolic Syndrome In Children

Causes For High Rates Of Allergic Reactions In Children With Food Allergies Identified

Causes For High Rates Of Allergic Reactions In Children With Food Allergies Identified

Advising Mothers On Healthy Kids' Body Weights Is Effective

Advising Mothers On Healthy Kids' Body Weights Is Effective

Monday, June 25, 2012

Health insurers owe $19.8 million in rebates in Georgia - Atlanta Business Chronicle


Atlanta Business Chronicle   Date: Thursday, June 21, 2012, 12:08pm EDT
About 244,000 Georgia will get $19.8 million in rebates from health care insurers under a provision of the Affordable Care Act, also known derisively as “ObamaCare.”
The rebates will average $134 per family in Georgia, according to a report from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Latest from The Business Journals Follow this company .
The health care law generally requires insurance companies to spend at least 80 percent of consumers’ premium dollars on medical care and quality improvement. Insurers can spend the remaining 20 percent on administrative costs, such as salaries, sales and advertising.
Insurers have to notify customers how much of their premiums are spent on medical care and quality improvements, and companies that do not meet the 80/20 standard must provide a rebate to policyholders by Aug. 1. Insurers can send a rebate check through the mail, make a lump-sum reimbursement to the account that was used to pay the premium if it was paid by credit or debit card, or reduce future premiums. Employers who paid for health care insurance can also take those steps, or apply the rebate in a way that benefits employees, HHS said.
Across the U.S., insurers owe $1.1 billion in rebates to 12.8 million consumers, an average of $151 per family, HHS said.


The 80/20 Rule: Providing Value and Rebates to Millions of Consumers | HealthCare.gov

Doctors group vote indicates soda taxes could fight obesity - latimes.com

Doctors group vote indicates soda taxes could fight obesity - latimes.com

Shelp resigns as DBHDD commissioner | Georgia Health News

Shelp resigns as DBHDD commissioner | Georgia Health News

Insurers Pushing for Increased Use of Retail Clinics


Insurers Pushing for Increased Use of Retail Clinics
By Rebecca Adams, CQ HealthBeat Associate Editor

Insurers see retail clinics as one potential way to reduce costs and avoid emergency department visits, experts said Monday at an Alliance for Health Reform briefing that was co-sponsored by WellPoint Inc.

“Retail clinics will play a role as health care reform is implemented,” said WellPoint regional vice president Manish Oza. If the U.S. Supreme Court upholds the 2010 health care law, tens of millions of U.S. residents will gain insurance and presumably seek greater amounts of medical care. Oza and other officials suggested that since there may not be enough primary care physicians available to handle the demand, retail clinics could play a part in treating minor contagious ailments such as strep throat or pink eye.

Oza said that the insurance company had created a series of ways to inform patients about options besides emergency care departments, including retail clinics. The prompts include a print brochure, an online tutorial that explains which conditions do not require urgent care and emergency department wait times and a Google map that allows patients to type in their zip code and find a retail clinic or other low-cost alternative nearby. The insurer also has developed a smartphone version of the Google map but is still refining it.

RAND Corp. policy analyst Ateev Mehrotra said that the quality of care in retail clinics is the same or better than that in other settings, such as a physicians’ offices or urgent care centers. Mehrotra’s research also found that retail clinics prescribed antibiotics at about the same rate as professionals in other settings.

One concern about retail clinics has been that if patients visit a clinic instead of a primary care physician that they regularly see, then the patient-physician relationship could be disrupted and doctors may not know what types of medication or care their patients are receiving. However, Mehrotra found that this fear was overblown for a simple reason: most retail clinic customers don’t have a regular physician who oversees their care. Fewer than 40 percent of clinic customers reported that they routinely see a physician.

Experts on the panel were asked whether they agreed with new state laws that attempt to discourage patients from visiting emergency departments when they have minor sicknesses. For instance, Washington state announced in December that the Medicaid program will stop paying for unnecessary emergency visits.

But experts at the forum said that it is hard for patients to accurately judge when a medical concern is a true emergency and that the policy could backfire by discouraging patients who really do need emergency care from seeking it.

“I actually have a lot of concerns about that approach,” said Mehrotra. “It’s a little like Monday morning quarterbacking” to determine what was urgent and what was not.
Oza agreed that ”what Washington started is not the solution.”

Rick Kellerman, the chair of the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Wichita, said that physicians who feel threatened by retail clinics should alter their practices by operating later, when patients need care, or offering real-time advice in other ways, including emails. Kellerman said that the development of retail clinics is a symptom of a bigger problem — the “neglect of the primary care system in the United States.”

CT orders level off as awareness of radiation risk grows - amednews.com

CT orders level off as awareness of radiation risk grows - amednews.com

4 ways social media can improve your medical practice - amednews.com

4 ways social media can improve your medical practice - amednews.com

States still targeting Medicaid pay to contain costs - amednews.com

States still targeting Medicaid pay to contain costs - amednews.com

The Danger Of Magnets In The Home

The Danger Of Magnets In The Home

Self-Harming And Suicide In Young People - The Impact Of Social Networking Sites

Self-Harming And Suicide In Young People - The Impact Of Social Networking Sites

Friday, June 22, 2012

Medicaid’s future tied to court decision on health-care reform - The Washington Post

Medicaid’s future tied to court decision on health-care reform - The Washington Post

Report: Georgia has 5th highest number of residents who died due to lack of health insurance | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

Report: Georgia has 5th highest number of residents who died due to lack of health insurance | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

After-hours care doesn't have to drain practice's finances - amednews.com

After-hours care doesn't have to drain practice's finances - amednews.com

Asthma Risk In Kids Lowered By Having Pets

Asthma Risk In Kids Lowered By Having Pets

Less Than 50% Of Asthmatic Children Control Their Symptoms, Despite Available Treatments

Less Than 50% Of Asthmatic Children Control Their Symptoms, Despite Available Treatments

Informed Consent For Newborn Screening?

Informed Consent For Newborn Screening?

Monday, June 18, 2012

How gloomy is the prognosis for Medicaid in Georgia?


How gloomy is the prognosis for Medicaid in Georgia?

Revenue shortfalls have long been a fact of life for Georgia’s Medicaid program, and the problem is not going away anytime soon.
In a financial briefing for the state Board of Community Health last week, Vince Harris noted that major money shortages in Medicaid will need to addressed in the current state budget and for the next three or four fiscal years after that.
Harris, the chief financial officer for the Department of Community Health (DCH), said the projected deficit for the remainder of fiscal year 2012, which ends June 30, is $81.7 million for Medicaid and $8.9 million for PeachCare, a total deficit of $90.6 million.
The deficit is projected to expand in fiscal year 2013 to $295.1 million for Medicaid and $13.1 million for PeachCare – a total of $308.2 million.
“The budget numbers we have are pretty daunting,” DCH Commissioner David Cook said. “We will need $100 million in the supplemental budget just to catch up with this year.”
Beyond the upcoming fiscal year, the deficit could be aggravated even more by the requirement of the federal Affordable Care Act that Medicaid be expanded to cover an estimated 650,000 additional people, Harris noted.
That would add an estimated $79.6 million to the Medicaid shortfall for fiscal year 2014 and $224.9 million in fiscal year 2015.
However, the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule very soon on the constitutionality of the federal healthcare act, also known as Obamacare.
If a majority of the Supreme Court, as many legal observers expect, rules the act to be unconstitutional, then those numbers for fiscal years 2014 and 2015 presumably would no longer be a problem for Georgia.
Medicaid now provides health insurance coverage for about 1.6 million low-income Georgians. About 25 percent of that population consists of people in the ABD (aged, blind, disabled) category – but ABD recipients account for 54 percent of the program’s expenditures, Harris said.
In the proposed redesign of the Medicaid program, DCH is expected to move the ABD recipients away from fee-for-service coverage and into managed care programs administered by the CMOs that coordinate care for other Medicaid participants.
“There’s pretty broad agreement that when you coordinate care, you not only get better care but you save money,” Cook said.
The economic downturn of the last four years has had a significant impact on the percentage of the state budget that is spent on Medicaid services.
In fiscal year 2007, Medicaid expenditures made up 14.3 percent of total state revenues (excluding lottery funds and motor fuel taxes), Harris said.
Today, Medicaid accounts for 17 to 18 percent of the yearly budget, Harris said. DCH spends more than $2.7 billion a year in state funds on Medicaid.
© 2012 by The Georgia Report

Goal: Coverage that won’t soak taxpayers | Atlanta Forward

Goal: Coverage that won’t soak taxpayers | Atlanta Forward

State looks to increase school nurses » Local News » Tifton Gazette

State looks to increase school nurses » Local News » Tifton Gazette

Better behind the wheel: Teenagers drop some risky driving habits, but texting still an issue | Online Athens

Better behind the wheel: Teenagers drop some risky driving habits, but texting still an issue | Online Athens

Parents Can Improve Their Child's Asthma Treatment Via Website

Parents Can Improve Their Child's Asthma Treatment Via Website

FDA Approves Combo Vaccine For Deadly Bacterial Meningitis In Children

FDA Approves Combo Vaccine For Deadly Bacterial Meningitis In Children

The Effect Of The Autism Scare On U.S Childhood Vaccination Rates

The Effect Of The Autism Scare On U.S Childhood Vaccination Rates

Teen Drink Driving Reduced By Graduated Driving Laws

Teen Drink Driving Reduced By Graduated Driving Laws

Medicaid faces ‘daunting’ budget challenges | Georgia Health News

Medicaid faces ‘daunting’ budget challenges | Georgia Health News

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Synthetic pot a growing menace to Georgia’s youth | Georgia Health News

Synthetic pot a growing menace to Georgia’s youth | Georgia Health News

GAO: Medicaid Fraud Audits Cost 5 Times What They Recover | Legal & Regulatory Issues

GAO: Medicaid Fraud Audits Cost 5 Times What They Recover | Legal & Regulatory Issues

Signs of progress in a long, tough fight | Georgia Health News

Signs of progress in a long, tough fight | Georgia Health News

One rural doctor decides to close shop: ‘It’s just not sustainable’ - The Washington Post

One rural doctor decides to close shop: ‘It’s just not sustainable’ - The Washington Post

Contaminated Alcohol Pads Responsible For Illnesses In Colorado Children's Hospital

Contaminated Alcohol Pads Responsible For Illnesses In Colorado Children's Hospital

Social Isolation And Alcohol Abuse In Teenagers

Social Isolation And Alcohol Abuse In Teenagers

How Kids With Asthma Are Stigmatized By The Media

How Kids With Asthma Are Stigmatized By The Media

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

MinuteClinic may bring on more docs to expand services - FiercePracticeManagement

MinuteClinic may bring on more docs to expand services - FiercePracticeManagement

Apples to apples, female docs still earn less - FiercePracticeManagement

Apples to apples, female docs still earn less - FiercePracticeManagement

Medicaid spending to jump 3.4% in 2013 as enrollment, costs rise - FierceHealthcare

Medicaid spending to jump 3.4% in 2013 as enrollment, costs rise - FierceHealthcare

Geographic Variation in Access to Care — The Relationship with Quality — NEJM

Geographic Variation in Access to Care — The Relationship with Quality — NEJM

Childhood Headaches Activated By Stress - ENS 2012

Childhood Headaches Activated By Stress - ENS 2012

Life Skills Can Be Affected If Sleep Apnea Persists Into Teens

Life Skills Can Be Affected If Sleep Apnea Persists Into Teens

Monday, June 11, 2012

Can TV Undermine Self-Esteem In Children? Sometimes

Can TV Undermine Self-Esteem In Children? Sometimes

Children Living In Towns More Likely To Have Food Allergies Than Those Living In The Country

Children Living In Towns More Likely To Have Food Allergies Than Those Living In The Country

If ACA is Overturned: What Happens to Medicaid?

If ACA is Overturned: What Happens to Medicaid?

Ohio drops 2 for Medicaid contracts, adds 2 others


Ohio drops 2 for Medicaid contracts, adds 2 others 
Thursday June 7, 2012 8:15 PM
ANN SANNER
The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio officials dropped two managed care organizations Thursday that had been tentatively awarded new Medicaid contracts and picked two other plans after weeks of legal review and further examination over how each application was scored.

The decision came after five of six companies that lost bids for contracts filed formal protests with the state, claiming flawed and inaccurate scoring in the application process.
The eventual contract winners will provide health care services to more than 1.6 million poor and disabled people, or roughly two-thirds of the state's Medicaid population. The contracts provide billions in government work to the companies.

In April, the state selected the winning bidders: Aetna Better Health of Ohio, CareSource, Meridian Health Plan, Paramount Advantage and United Healthcare Community Plan of Ohio. The winning organizations were the highest-scoring applicants in the state's contract process.

The plans were judged on certain components, including experience, care management and clinical performance. The provider network was also a factor, but not as heavily weighted.

Ohio Medicaid Director John McCarthy said Thursday that a review of the applications changed how points were awarded, and meant Aetna Better Health of Ohio and Meridian Health Plan of Ohio would no longer get the contracts.

Instead, Molina Healthcare of Ohio Inc., a subsidiary of Molina Healthcare Inc., and Buckeye Community Health Plan, a subsidiary of Centene Corporation, were picked.

The contract awards are preliminary. The organizations must first pass an assessment, in which they must prove that they will be ready and able to provide care when enrollment begins in January.

"There were some specific areas that plans had pointed out that when we reviewed, we needed to make changes," McCarthy said.

For instance, the review found that Meridian should have been disqualified because it didn't have a necessary health-insuring corporation license or an application pending for one at the time of its bid. And Aetna lost a large amount of points for experience because it did not provide evidence of full liability for certain plans with other states.

McCarthy said he didn't know whether contract changes as a result of protest were unusual, only that they can happen.

About $5.1 billion in state and federal money was paid to all the managed care plans in the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2011, according to the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services. The state is restructuring its Medicaid contracts as part of a package of changes expected to save more than $1.5 billion over Ohio's two-year budget period.

Among other changes, state officials are raising performance expectations in the contracts by linking part of each Medicaid managed care plan's payment to standards aimed at making people healthier. The plans also will have to develop financial incentives for hospitals, doctors and other providers that are tied to improving quality and patients' health.

©2012 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

Absence of Reliable Data Hinders Effort to Curb Medicare, Medicaid Fraud


Absence of Reliable Data Hinders Effort to Curb Medicare, Medicaid Fraud

By Emily Ethridge, CQ Staff

A lack of reliable data from states is impeding the government’s efforts to improve prevention and detection of waste, fraud and abuse in Medicare and Medicaid, witnesses told a House subcommittee hearing Thursday.

Although the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has made improvements in monitoring Medicare for fraud and abuse, the agency still has far to go when it comes to Medicaid — and both programs remain vulnerable.

Edolphus Towns of New York, ranking Democrat of the House Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Government Organization, said that improper Medicare payments were estimated to be at nearly $43 billion in 2011, and $21.9 billion for Medicaid.
But problems with Medicaid have prevented some of CMS’s auditing programs from successfully identifying overpayments and abuse, according to witnesses from the Government Accountability Office and the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General (OIG).

Not only does each state have its own distinct Medicaid program, with varying rules that can confuse contractors, but states often provide inaccurate data to federal overseers.
“National Medicaid data are not current, they are not complete, and they are not accurate,” said Ann Maxwell, a regional inspector general at OIG. “We absolutely need national standardized Medicaid data to make these programs worthwhile.”

That lack of reliable data affects not only the National Medicaid Audit Program, but also the Medicare-Medicaid Data Match program, designed to help state and federal agencies analyze billing trends in both programs to identify potential fraud.

Maxwell said both audit programs have had a negative return on investments — returning less money to states and taxpayers than they spent trying to track down the fraud and abuse.
“Only limited results are trickling out,” she said.

Rep. James Lankford, R-Okla., questioned why $60 million was spent on the Medicare-Medicaid Data Match program, when it recouped only $58 million.
“That doesn’t seem like a great investment in the program,” he said.

Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., questioned why Medicaid data had not yet been added to CMS’s One Program Integrity System (One PI), a program meant to merge Medicare and Medicaid data. Since 2006, CMS has spent more than $100 million developing the system.
Although the collected Medicare data is largely reliable, the quality of the Medicaid data is far from matching it, said Peter Budetti, deputy administrator and director for the Center for Program Integrity at CMS.

He added that CMS does not expect the matching Medicaid data to be fully included in the system’s data repository until 2014.

“There is a complete lack of reporting, collection and verification of meaningful data in Medicaid. The same is not true of Medicare,” Bachmann said. She also announced plans to introduce a bill this month that would “hold CMS accountable” to ensure that audits of state data are conducted properly.

Subcommittee Chairman Todd R. Platts, R-Pa., questioned what CMS is doing now, when it doesn’t anticipate being able to use the Medicaid data in the One PI system until 2014.
“We can’t just sit and wait for those data to be available,” Budetti said. He noted that CMS is currently conducting a demonstration program with 10 states to help identify the pieces of information it needs, to help develop a new model for Medicaid data collection.

States actually have much more complete Medicaid data than they have been sharing with the federal government, he said, so CMS is now collaborating directly with the states.
Budetti hopes that engagement will help “so we’re not just dependent on the data that flow to us.”

In general, Budetti said Medicare oversight programs are “in good shape” and have adequate technologies and systems to conduct strong audits, but that CMS needs to “translate that advancement to the Medicaid side.”

Thursday, June 7, 2012

State Moves Decision Timeline on Medicaid Redesign | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

State Moves Decision Timeline on Medicaid Redesign | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

State may mandate heart defect test for newborns

State may mandate heart defect test for newborns

Emergency Departments, Medicaid Costs, and Access to Primary Care — Understanding the Link — NEJM

Emergency Departments, Medicaid Costs, and Access to Primary Care — Understanding the Link — NEJM

ACO-Type Models Growing in Medicaid


ACO-Type Models Growing in Medicaid
By Rebecca Adams, CQ HealthBeat Associate Editor

For the past couple of years, health policy makers have been developing new ways of delivering care in Medicare, most notably accountable-care organizations. But less attention has been given to similar models that are a growing trend in Medicaid.

Within the next week or so, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation is expected to announce a round of “innovation awards” that could support Medicaid demonstration projects that test out methods of coordinating care in a manner similar to accountable-care organizations (ACOs). Medicare ACOs require medical providers to coordinate care for patients. They then share in any savings from this new model of care and, depending on the amount of risk a group is willing to assume, they could face penalties for not meeting savings goals.

The Medicaid versions are not all labeled ACOs and, in keeping with the experimental state-by-state nature of Medicaid, do not all have identical features. But at least a dozen states have begun testing different types of programs that emphasize closer communication and shared budgets among providers. Many of the state-based models do not emphasize sharp payment reductions for medical providers in ACOs that do not meet cost savings targets.

However, as in the Medicare ACO models, reducing costs is one goal. State officials are interested in the ideas behind ACO-type payment models in part because many are facing difficult fiscal situations and hope to lower costs through more effective coordinated care.
The innovation center, which will have up to $1 billion in Innovation Awards to give out, may serve as a significant catalyst for the expansion of these types of arrangements. Demonstration projects that go through the innovation center are expected to be able to begin operating more quickly than those that go through Medicaid state plan amendment negotiations with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) officials.

The awards that will be announced this month will be the second round of Innovation Award funding. The goal of the center’s grants is to reduce costs while improving care for patients.
Among the applicants waiting for news on the awards is the Boston Medical Center (BMC), which hopes to work with community health centers and health plans in a three-year project that will prepare the integrated system to become a Medicaid ACO. About half of BMC patients are Medicaid beneficiaries.

Last summer, the health center had talked to White House officials about participating in a multistate Medicaid demonstration project that would have used global capitation rates. The demonstration project had been included in the 2010 health care law (PL 111-148, PL 111-152) with the help of Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. Officials in Boston had teamed with other health industry executives in Colorado, Florida and New York to push for the demonstration to proceed. They estimated that costs would decline by about 3 percent per year.
Federal officials did not move ahead with the five-state demonstration project but did tell the group about the innovation center awards. BMC and the Denver Health and Hospital Authority, another participant in last summer’s proposal for a demonstration project, both applied for the innovation center grants and are optimistic that their proposals will be funded.

“There is a hunger at the state level to do better,” said Kate Walsh, BMC’s president and CEO.
The Denver Health and Hospital Authority, an integrated system with a hospital and health plans, is already participating in a state-run Medicaid program known as the Accountable Care Collaborative (ACC). State officials divided Colorado into seven regions and is allowing an ACO-type program to start enrolling Medicaid patients in each region.
David Brody, the medical director of Denver Health’s managed-care plans, said funding from the innovation center could help build the type of infrastructure that is needed to expand capitated payment systems and hopefully improve patients’ care through more coordination.
Brody said it has been helpful to apply for the grant and better think through plans for the future. He said the current fee-for-service system doesn’t drive the right kinds of changes that are needed to improve patients’ care.

“Even if we don’t get the challenge grant funding we’re requesting, we’ve moved forward since we submitted our proposal,” said Brody. “As we look toward the future, I’m convinced that at some point we’ll move more patients into a capitated system of care.”

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Leavitt Talks Prevention, But Not Politics On Bipartisan Panel – Capsules - The KHN Blog

Leavitt Talks Prevention, But Not Politics On Bipartisan Panel – Capsules - The KHN Blog

Consumer Reports rates physician practice experience - FiercePracticeManagement

Consumer Reports rates physician practice experience - FiercePracticeManagement

State could consider a hybrid approach to caring for aged, blind and disabled Medicaid recipients | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

State could consider a hybrid approach to caring for aged, blind and disabled Medicaid recipients | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

New Method For Detecting Fetal Down Syndrome And Edwards Syndrome Shows Promise

New Method For Detecting Fetal Down Syndrome And Edwards Syndrome Shows Promise

Teenagers, Cigarettes And Alcohol: Survey Finds Usage By American Kids Lower Than In Europe

Teenagers, Cigarettes And Alcohol: Survey Finds Usage By American Kids Lower Than In Europe

Obesity Report Recommends Nutritional Guidelines for Babies, Toddlers




By Jane Norman, CQ HealthBeat Associate Editor

Recommendations in a new report on obesity issued Tuesday reach all the way down to babies and toddlers, as policy makers increasingly seek ways to prevent childhood obesity before it begins.

Two former Health and Human Services secretaries and two former Agriculture secretaries teamed up to back the report by the Bipartisan Policy Center that offers what its Democratic and Republican authors termed possible “real life” solutions to the very difficult problem of how to curb obesity in the United States. The 105-page report is titled “Lots to Lose.”

One recommendation is that the HHS and Department of Agriculture develop, implement and promote national dietary guidelines for the first 1,000 days of a child’s life, including for pregnant women and toddlers up to the age of 2. Current guidelines, which are published every five years, begin for children at the age of 2.

While the federal guidelines aren’t mandatory for individuals, they form the basis of federal nutrition and food assistance programs and also may influence state and local policies on taxation or limitations on food and beverages.

The center’s report wasn’t specific about how guidelines should be set or what they should consist of for this group of very young children. But former Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman said the discussion should begin because obesity among children has become so pervasive that there are predictions that today’s children may have lower life expectancies than their parents. Veneman and the other former secretaries attended Tuesday’s event where the center’s report was released.

Half of severely obese adults were obese as children, and one in five U.S. children is obese by the age of 6, with the number closer to one in three in Latino populations, said Veneman, who served in the George W. Bush administration.

Taste, habits and even metabolism are established very early on, and setting guidelines earlier in life could be important, she said. “Finding opportunities early in life to improve health outcomes is among the most strategic, humane and cost-effective ways to prioritize our resources,” Veneman said.

The U.S. lags behind other nations around the world when it comes to many health measures, she said, and spends more money per capita on health care with poorer outcomes. “One area where we lag behind is in our focus on nutrition in early childhood,” Veneman said, with the time between birth and age 2 “critical” for proper development.

On the same morning that the center’s report was issued, first lady Michelle Obama was present for an announcement by The Walt Disney Co. that food and beverage ads carried on its programming and products will meet nutritional guidelines tied to federal standards. A new “Mickey Check” icon will mark nutritious food and drink options in its stores, online and at Disney parks and resorts.

The Institute of Medicine recently issued a report on obesity, and HBO produced a documentary, so there’s been plenty said recently on the topic. But Dan Glickman, who served as Agriculture secretary in the Clinton administration, said what makes the center’s report different is that the four leaders of the effort represent both political parties. They also share concern over the national debt and its impact on health costs. “Those health care costs are the primary driver of the increase in our debt,” said Glickman.

The two other former secretaries involved with the report were Donna Shalala, secretary of Health and Human Services under Clinton, and Michael Leavitt, HHS secretary under George W. Bush.

The center’s other recommendations include that:
• National physical activity guidelines should be developed for children under age 6.
• USDA should ensure all its nutrition assistance programs reflect and support federal dietary guidelines.
• Hospitals, employers, communities and insurers should unite to support and promote breastfeeding.
• Schools should require 60 minutes a day of physical activity.
• The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should develop a database of exemplary workplace wellness programs and include a rigorous cost/benefit analysis.
• USDA should do more to figure out ways to increase the affordability of fruits, vegetables and legumes, including establishment of a generic fruit and vegetable promotion board.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Medical liability costs seen as a drain on innovation - amednews.com

Medical liability costs seen as a drain on innovation - amednews.com

EHR certification lacking usability factor, doctors say - amednews.com

EHR certification lacking usability factor, doctors say - amednews.com

Are Baby Wipes As Safe As Water On Infants? Researchers Say Yes

Are Baby Wipes As Safe As Water On Infants? Researchers Say Yes

Genetic Risk Scores And Obesity Later In Life Among Children

Genetic Risk Scores And Obesity Later In Life Among Children

New plan for Medicaid is weeks away | Georgia Health News

New plan for Medicaid is weeks away | Georgia Health News

State Moves Decision Timeline on Medicaid Redesign | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

State Moves Decision Timeline on Medicaid Redesign | Public Broadcasting Atlanta

Williams giving up Georgia Senate leadership post  | ajc.com

Williams giving up Georgia Senate leadership post  | ajc.com

Medicaid changes  | ajc.com

Medicaid changes  | ajc.com

Medicaid more than medical aid  | ajc.com

Medicaid more than medical aid  | ajc.com

Antioxidant May Reduce Irritability In Kids With Autism

Antioxidant May Reduce Irritability In Kids With Autism

Eating Disorders Predicted Earlier By What Girls Are Consuming When They Are Young

Eating Disorders Predicted Earlier By What Girls Are Consuming When They Are Young

Parents Should Be Aware Of Life-Threatening Accidental Acetaminophen Overdosing In Children

Parents Should Be Aware Of Life-Threatening Accidental Acetaminophen Overdosing In Children

Two Thirds Of New Mothers Have Trouble Breast Feeding

Two Thirds Of New Mothers Have Trouble Breast Feeding

Monday, June 4, 2012

Medicaid more than medical aid  | ajc.com

Medicaid more than medical aid  | ajc.com

Reshaping Medicaid care to affect many  | ajc.com

Reshaping Medicaid care to affect many  | ajc.com

Hill GOP leaders make new offer on student loans - Yahoo! News

Hill GOP leaders make new offer on student loans - Yahoo! News

New tactic in war on obesity: Attack portion size - The Washington Post

New tactic in war on obesity: Attack portion size - The Washington Post

Bill would turn to inactive, retiring docs to ease shortage - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare

Bill would turn to inactive, retiring docs to ease shortage - Healthcare business news and research | Modern Healthcare

Increased Survival From Treatment For Oxygen Deficiency At Birth

Increased Survival From Treatment For Oxygen Deficiency At Birth

Retinoid Pathways In The Developing Fetal Lung Disrupted By Maternal Smoking

Retinoid Pathways In The Developing Fetal Lung Disrupted By Maternal Smoking

New Community Approach Recommended To Lower Increasing Rates Of Childhood Obesity

New Community Approach Recommended To Lower Increasing Rates Of Childhood Obesity

Snacking On Raisins Controls Hunger, Promotes Satiety In Children

Snacking On Raisins Controls Hunger, Promotes Satiety In Children