Friday, July 31, 2015
Appeals court upholds doctor-patient gun law | Miami Herald
Local leaders disagree on how far Medicaid coverage should go as program celebrates 50 years
Republican governors buck party tenets to seek expanded Medicaid - Baltimore Sun
Prevention Task Force Recommends Depression Screenings For Pregnant Women, New Moms | Kaiser Health News
Thursday, July 30, 2015
First Read: Think Prenatal Ultrasound and Newborn Pulse Oximetry Screening Will Find All Neonatal Coarctations? Think Again!
Pentagon gets ready to award big contract for electronic medical records - The Washington Post
Certain Antibiotics Linked to Hearing Loss, Mouse Study Finds
Emory University Hospital names Dr. Bryce Gartland CEO - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Milestone: 50 years of Medicare and Medicaid | Georgia Health News
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Autism Care Costs Could Hit $500 Billion by 2025: Study
Then & Now: Medicare and Medicaid Turn 50 - The New York Times
Big Push: Hospitals Turn To ‘Laborists’ For Safer Deliveries | Kaiser Health News
Doctors Press for Delay in Health IT Standards
Doctors Press for Delay in Health IT Standards
By Melissa Attias, CQ Roll Call
A strong lobbying push by medical providers to delay minimum government standards for using electronic health records could influence a Senate panel’s work to address widespread concerns about the effectiveness of the information systems.
The American Medical Association, American Hospital Association and others want the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to hold off on finalizing a March proposal outlining criteria that providers must meet to receive payments and avoid penalties under what are known as "meaningful use" programs. The proposed rule would require providers serving Medicare and Medicaid recipients to begin the third and final stage of the effort in 2018.
The Alliance of Specialty Medicine, a coalition of groups representing specialty physicians, brought the issue to Capitol Hill last week. Its members asked lawmakers to push the agency for a delay. Spokesman Alex Valadka, a neurosurgeon, said in an emailed statement that the Alliance met with members and staff of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee and found them sympathetic to the concerns.
The panel has made electronic medical records a focus of hearings – another is scheduled for Thursday – and convened a working group earlier this year to identify problems that can be addressed legislatively or administratively. Recommendations could move as part of a medical innovation package that Chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., plans to release in the fall.
Asked if a delay of stage three is being considered in the working group, an Alexander aide wrote in an email that the committee is listening to input as it works to find solutions “that help make the failed promise of electronic health records something that physicians and providers look forward to instead of something they endure.”
The House’s so-called 21st Century Cures bill (HR 6), which may ultimately be combined with the Senate innovation package, included language that aims to improve the interoperability of electronic health records rather than delay the meaningful use requirements. The measure passed the House earlier this month in a 344-77 vote.
Some House members still want to respond to concerns about the incentive programs. Rep. Renee Ellmers, R-N.C., is expected to introduce legislation next week that would delay the release of the final rule governing the third stage of the program until at least 2017, according to an aide. The bill is also anticipated to prescribe a 90-day reporting period regardless of the stage, expand a hardship exemption for providers that do not routinely interact with patients and address reporting requirements and the interoperability of state vendor products.
Provider Complaints
Although providers typically say they support the broad goals of the meaningful use programs, which were created in the 2009 stimulus package (PL 111-5), they maintain the efforts are being implemented in an unworkable fashion.
In an issue brief, the Alliance of Specialty Medicine said many members are struggling to meet the requirements because the measures aren’t relevant to specialists and their unique patient populations. The requirements in the stage three proposal include measures and thresholds that will be “virtually impossible” for specialists to meet, the coalitions says, adding that it should be delayed until a majority of providers are successful in earlier stages and CMS has studied participation barriers.
Only about half of eligible doctors participate in the incentive programs, and a small fraction have satisfied stage two, according to the Alliance brief.
At a town hall meeting Monday night in Atlanta, AMA President Steven J. Stack said the influential doctors' lobby would use anecdotes about doctors' experiences with the programs to communicate with the legislative and executive branches. Physicians at the event said their electronic health records systems have slowed down their productivity while requiring extra hours of work.
House Budget Chairman Tom Price, an orthopedic surgeon, attended the meeting and spoke briefly about the meaningful use requirements, maintaining that he thinks “we’re on the path to an unmeaningful and oftentimes useless product.” But he also pointed to the successful replacement of Medicare’s physician payment formula in April (PL 114-10) as a reason for hope, noting that no one in the room – not even Price himself – initially believed it would be repealed this year.
“That happened because of your engagement, your involvement, the participation of state medical societies across this country and the participation of the AMA,” said the Georgia Republican. “I want you to always remember that there is a light at the end of the tunnel and it isn’t necessarily an oncoming train.”
Stack said the AMA thinks the administration should “pause” stage three of the meaningful use program so that it lines up with new payment delivery models and rulemaking can occur as other rules for a new performance-based incentive program are set up under the physician payment law.
Shawn Martin, vice president of advocacy and practice advancement at the American Academy of Family Physicians, said in a blog post earlier this month that his organization has called for a delay in stage three to align the requirements with those in the new law. He also said the AAFP will be launching an advocacy campaign to delay the penalties for the second and third stages so that improvements can be achieved at a time when providers are not facing cuts.
In a letter responding to the stage three proposal, American Hospital Association Executive Vice President Rick Pollack urged CMS to hold off on finalizing the rule, citing insufficient experience with stage two of meaningful use. “Instead, the agency should evaluate the experience in Stage 2 while accelerating the availability of mature standards and the infrastructure needed for efficient and effective health information exchange,” he wrote.
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Risk of death from shaken baby syndrome could be identified with new tool - Medical News Today
Adolescent e-cigarette use boosted by friend and family approval - Medical News Today
Weight at First Pregnancy Linked to Complications Next Time
Are Hospitals Overusing Neonatal Intensive Care?
Early Birth Linked to Introversion, Neuroticism in Adult Life
Monday, July 27, 2015
Guidelines on Nutrition Management in Autism Issued - MPR
Study: Some new moms get too little advice from doctors
New Gene Test Speeds Diagnosis of Stomach Bug That Strikes Kids
Why the 2010 Health Care Law Led to Insurance Merger Mania - The New York Times
Anthem-Cigna Deal Tied to Rival Mergers in Antitrust Review - Bloomberg Business
Sunday, July 26, 2015
School's Out, Fattening Behaviors Are In
CURE Childhood Cancer funding $1.7M in research projects at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Emory University in fiscal 2015 - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Mega-merger would bolster Blue Cross here | Georgia Health News
Anthem to Buy Cigna Amid Wave of Insurance Mergers - The New York Times
Thursday, July 23, 2015
High Soda Intake May Boost Diabetes Risk, Even Without Obesity
Stillbirths Now Outnumber Infant Deaths in U.S.
WellStar in talks to buy Tenet’s hospitals in state | Georgia Health News
Anthem Said to Be Close to Deal to Buy Cigna for $48 Billion - The New York Times
Some public hospitals win, others lose with Obamacare | Reuters
Health officials kill proposal to curb mercury dental fillings | McClatchy DC
American Teen Use Of Morning-After Pill is Climbing | TIME
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
U.S. Teens Waiting Longer to Have Sex: CDC
Teen Drinking, Smoking on the Decline, U.S. Study Finds
Hormone Linked to Social Difficulties With Autism, Early Study Finds
Hormone Linked to Social Difficulties With Autism, Early Study Finds
Pediatric quality survey tool captures inpatient care experience - FierceHealthcare
Bibb County ranks near bottom of state for children living in poverty | Local & State | Macon.com
States may tap hospitals to help pay for Medicaid expansion in 2017 - Modern Healthcare
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Misconceptions Among Parents About Antibiotic Use Continue, More Common Among Parents of Children Insured Through Medicaid
Special Report Lists Top 5 Newborn Tests and Procedures that Are Overused
Poverty May Hinder Kids' Brain Development, Study Says
Doctors May Play Big Role in Antibiotic Overuse: Study
Scientists Test Universal Flu Vaccine in Mice
A revolution in how doctors are paid isn’t really changing how doctors are paid - The Washington Post
Utah Medicaid plan could pave way for other states, lawmakers say | Deseret News
Monday, July 20, 2015
Could Antibiotics Raise a Child's Risk for Juvenile Arthritis?
Too Much TV, Too Little Exercise When Young May Hasten Mental Decline Later
Antibiotics Myths Still Common Among Parents
Sandra Deal Promotes Childhood Immunizations In Sandy Springs | Sandy Springs, GA Patch
MEDICAID ENROLLMENT SURGES, STIRS WORRY ABOUT STATE BUDGETS
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Use of More Distinct, Temporary Names For Newborns Decreases Wrong Patient Errors
Only Half of Children Receive Appropriate X-Ray to Detect Possible Child Abuse
Many Obese Teens Don't Think They're Fat, Study Shows
When Teens 'Tweet' About Pot, It's Typically Positive
UnitedHealth Tops Street 2Q Forecasts, Raises Forecasts - The New York Times
Over Objections of Legislature, Alaska’s Governor Says He Will Expand Medicaid - The New York Times
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Soccer players heading balls 'at increased risk of concussion' - Medical News Today
Consumer Reports Takes Liquid Detergent Pods Off 'Recommended' List
Insured Americans Up to 3 Times Likelier to Get Preventive Care: CDC
Big insurance deal raises questions, fears | Georgia Health News
Report: ACA plans have a third fewer providers than employer-based plans - The Washington Post
Medicaid turns 50 mired in controversy
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Child development may be affected by early antibiotic use, study finds - Medical News Today
Antidepressants linked with risk of birth defects - Medical News Today
Cost of Hospital Birth Varies by Nearly $10,000 Across U.S.
Diabetes Drug Given to Obese Moms-to-Be Won't Keep Baby's Weight Down
The maternal death tragedy: Facts come into better focus | Georgia Health News
The App Will See You Now, But May Not Get The Diagnosis Right | Kaiser Health News
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Many Overweight or Obese Teens Don't See the Problem
Day care centers for fragile children to close | Georgia Health News
On Medicaid Expansion, a Question of Math and Politics
Montana Could Face Tough Bargaining With Federal Officials On Medicaid Expansion Plan | Kaiser Health News
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
Asbestos Found in Kids' Crayons, Toy Kits: Report
Area school systems take precautions for high-risk athletes | Rockdale Citizen
Child abuse mandatory reporter responsibilities clearer in HB 268 | Henry Daily Herald
Lawmakers call for major changes to new fireworks law | www.wsbtv.com
A good omen for Georgia Medicaid waiver plan? | Georgia Health News
Aetna-Humana deal being driven by intensified price competition - Modern Healthcare
CVS Health Quits U.S. Chamber Over Stance on Smoking - The New York Times
Big tests ahead for Montana Medicaid expansion plans : Politics
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
Insurance companies must now provide coverage to families with autistic children | savannahnow.com
Ga.’s Transportation, Medicaid Funding Challenges Not Unique | WABE 90.1 FM
White House eases up on new medical code | TheHill
Indiana's Medicaid experiment offers a conservative take on health reform - LA Times
Monday, July 6, 2015
Epilepsy Linked to Risks During Childbirth, Study Finds
More Parents See Benefits of Vaccines, Poll Finds
Study backs critics of state benefit plan | Georgia Health News
With Merging of Insurers, Questions for Patients About Costs and Innovation - The New York Times
Anti-Vaccine Trend Has Parents Shunning Newborns' Vitamin Shot
FDA weighs warning labels, child-resistant packaging after surge in liquid nicotine poisonings - The Washington Post
Georgia teachers, state employees, pay big for health coverage | www.ajc.com
Childhood Trauma Tied to Migraine Risk as Adult
Health Insurance Companies Seek Big Rate Increases for 2016 - The New York Times
Could a 'sniff test' lead to early autism diagnosis? - Medical News Today
Many New Teen Drivers 'Crash' in Simulated Driving Task
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Children with Autism Respond Differently to Smells: Study
Study Finds Doctors Order Fewer Preventive Services For Medicaid Patients | Kaiser Health News
AAP report emphasizes importance of pediatrician in preventing obesity
FAAP helps change California vaccine law
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Obese Teens Less Likely to Use Birth Control
Extracurricular Sports May Give Kids' Academics a Boost
Are Too Many Young Americans Getting Antipsychotics for ADHD?
Unapproved Ear Drops Targeted by FDA
Record low growth in healthcare expenditures in 2013: 12 statistics
California’s Tough New Law Overcomes Decades-Old Distrust Of Vaccines | Kaiser Health News
Guinea Pigs Are Autistic Child's Best Friend - The New York Times
Health News Articles | News for Physicians
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