Thursday, April 30, 2009
Economy Tanks; Hospitals, Patients Hardest Hit
Health Wonk Review now online!
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Risk Analysis: Ends and Means vs The Flu
Have you Twittered your Entitlements?
When was the last time you Twittered your entitlements? Has it been that long? Oh, my.
Now you can Twitter to your heart's content about all government handouts you may be missing.
Visit GovBenefits.gov and put your tax dollars to work! Connect with 1,000+ government benefit programs for your family, your job, your home, your health.Amazing.
It's as if they can't give away our money fast enough already.
Seems I was a bit hasty. Stop me before I Twitter again!!!
Even more Twittering of tax dollars.
(Re)Stating the Obvious: Health Insurance vs Health Care
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Obligatory Swine Flu Post
D'Oh! Who Didn't See THIS Coming?
Yummy Grand Rounds
Monday, April 27, 2009
COBRA/ARRA: Ohio Update [UPDATED]
Play Some (Virtual) Golf, Help Some (Very Real) Kids
Viagra Rub
Not a problem.
Scientists at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine have been testing a Viagra rub on mice.
Of the seven rats treated by the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, five showed signs of arousal, according to results presented to the American Urological Association (AUA).Good to know.
The new treatment would likely have fewer side effects than Viagra, which is taken orally and been shown to cause headaches and facial flushing.
Researchers also believe that the nanoparticle therapy could work much more quickly than Pfizer's market-leading drug, which takes up to an hour to kick in.
Life Insurance as ATM: Deconstructing the Myth
This Week's Carnival of Personal Finance now online...
Top 10 Health Top 10 Lists
Lists are one of the most popular article types on the internet. They seem to be everywhere, and we are as guilty as anyone else of using the list format. The List format is so widely used as it is offers and concise and fun way to impart information. Our main topic of health has its fair share of lists and we thought that we would highlight ten of our favourite top 10 lists with a health-related slant.
- 10 Things I've Learned From Grocery Shopping on a Budget - A great list from Wisebread that should act as an inspiration to your next shopping trip. Amongst the best advice is "It's true that a lot of the cheap food is unhealthy. But a lot of the healthy food is cheap."
- Top 10 Antioxidant Foods - Diet.com contains a wealth of food related lists, and this is one of the more interesting of them. Antioxidant foods are vital to our diets - this list explains exactly why.
- 10 High-Tech Health Breakthroughs Coming Soon to Your Body - Popular Mechanics is a fascinating website with facts and insight into every subject imaginable. This list details sme of the medical innovations that we can expect in the near future, including Targeted Delivery and Magnetic Brain Stimulation.
- Top 10 Bad Things That Are Good For You - This list from Livescience.com provides comfort for those who like to enjoy life a little. The list includes some of your favourites - Beer, Coffee, Red Wine and Chocolate and why consuming them in moderation can be beneficial to your health.
- 10 best foods for your heart - Nice top 10 list from CNN with foods that are good for your heart - Oatmeal, Salmon, Olive Oil, Nuts and Berries all recieve a mention.
- Top 10 truth about superfoods - Channel 4 health list on the truth behind so called Superfoods.
- Top 10 Anti-Cancer Superfoods -
- Top ten places to de-stress - More of a travel story from shape.com but pertinent nonetheless - we all need a break from time to time - these are the best places to get away from it all.
- Top 10 beauty foods - These are the foods that will keep you looking young and fill you with vitality.
- Top 10 Health Trends of 2009 - The Doctors TV with a guide to what the big trends in health could be in 2009 including 'Oxygen in a can' and 'Maggot Therapy' - we don't fancy that much!
Thats ten of our top ten health lists - if you know of any health related lists that we should be aware of then please get in touch with us.
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Medical insurance or medical care?
“The bottom line is medical care. But the rhetoric and the talking points are about insurance.”
Isn't that the truth? But happily, more and more people are beginning to grasp this simple fact with all its profound implications - as well as the adverse implications for failure to acknowledge the fundamental difference between medical insurance and medical care.
You'll be glad if you read it all - because reading Dr. Sowell is always SO refreshing!
Friday, April 24, 2009
COBRA Crunch
But when you are out of work and without a paycheck, even the employer subsidized COBRA premium can be beyond reach.
Danna Walker of Humble, Texas lost her job at DHL and along with it her health insurance. The bi-weekly unemployment check of $688 is not enough to cover the family's COBRA premium of $1360 ($467 after the COBRA subsidy).
Like many others, the Walkers live on a knife's edge of risk. Without insurance to cover her high blood pressure or his diabetes, they defer doctors' visits when possible and obtain their prescriptions - nine between the two of them - for $4 apiece at Wal-Mart.When you lose your job and COBRA is an option, each family member has COBRA rights independent of the other. It is rare that all family members would face insurability options, and when possible, the healthy ones should be separated from those who need coverage from the group insurance plan.
But their primary concern has been finding insurance for Jake, who, after four operations, two stem cell transplants and round after grueling round of chemotherapy, has been cancer-free for a year.
He continues to face a significant threat of recurrence and requires regular monitoring for at least two years. His twice-a-year CT scans cost $3,000 each, and quarterly blood tests and X-rays run more than $1,000.
Other things, such as asking your doctor to change medication to something less expensive such as generics or older brand names is a good start. But the COBRA subsidy will run out in 9 months (some times sooner, depending on the size of the group) and COBRA will expire as an option after 18 months. Most states have risk pools and all have provisions for HIPAA eligible individuals to continue their coverage.
Late last month, in a race against the clock, the Walkers obtained a short-term policy for Jake through Oklahoma State University, where he is a junior studying animal science on a scholarship. Doing so could be crucial to his future insurability because federal law allows insurers to deny coverage for pre-existing conditions when there has been a gap in coverage of at least 63 days.That may or may not have been the right thing to do. Some states do not recognize STM (short term medical insurance) plans as creditable coverage and not all STM plans meet the criteria of creditable coverage. Many of the plans offered through universities are little more than a mini-med health plan with limited benefits and will not preserve their HIPAA rights.
Our health care Resource (Patient Charity) page is a popular starting point for those who are unemployed or uninsured. People can find taxpayer subsidized health care programs along with a number of charitable organizations that provide assistance.
When Danna was employed at DHL she paid $426 per month for health insurance, DHL paid the rest. Their coverage with Cigna covered roughly $2,000,000 for the cost of Jake's cancer treatment.
Cancer is not just an old person's disease. Jake is only 21.
Roughly 35 states have a high risk pool for uninsurables. (Sadly, Georgia is not one of them). The Texas risk pool wants $414 for a $1,000 deductible plan to cover Jake but the Walker's say they can't afford it.
Even with help all around it is not enough when you cannot find work. The ripple effect of the housing meltdown created by government intervention in the free market is still claiming new victims. So where are those 6,000,000 jobs that would be saved or created with taxpayer "stimulus" money?
Apparently not in Humble, Texas.
Most folks who are out of work can find affordable health insurance. We get calls almost daily from people looking for solutions and most of the time we are able to find a solid plan at a price that fit's their budget.
Cancer Without the Lump
Laura Vickers of Sandy Springs has cancer. Not just any cancer, but a rare form of breast cancer called IBC (Inflammatory Breast Cancer).
IBC accounts for 1 - 5% of all breast cancer cases and the survival rate is lower than for other forms of breast cancer.
You can follow Laura Vickers story on her blog. More information on IBC can be found at IBC Research, the Mayo Clinic, and the American Cancer Society.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
COBRA/ARRA Update: No Kidding? We Called It
From the Mailbag: Painful Mandates
I'll Drink to That! (Or Maybe Not)
MRSA Questions and Resources
Why did the MRSA hospital bug become so dangerous?
The infection of ordinary Staphylococcal bacteria (which nearly all of us have living on our skin and membranes of our nose and throats) mutated and became resistant to available antibiotics. Hospital patients being weaker, older and sicker than the general population are more vulnerable to MRSA infection. Cramped conditions in hospitals are an ideal environment for the transmission of infections such as MRSA, which can easily be spread by hospital staff who fail to wash their hands at regular intervals.
If hospitals just need cleaned them to get rid of MRSA why dont they do it?
MRSA, amongst other hospital bacteria, has become resistant to methicillin and other antibiotics used in hospital cleaning products, making it very difficult to treat. In the past, skin cleaning amongst hospital staff has been infrequent and ineffective, facilitating the spread of MRSA and other superbugs. However, the NHS is making efforts to counter the spread of hospital bugs by educating it’s staff through its Clean, Safe Care campaign.
Those wishing to discover more about MRSA can find some excellent MRSA resources on the web, including:
- The NHS website, which has expert insight into the infection
- A simple guide to MRSA from the Department of Health
- MRSA UK website has a great deal of insight and information
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Five Top Health Links for April
- 25 things you probably didn't know about your body and health - Great fun article from MSN Health and Fitness. There are bound to be some facts on here that will amaze you - for example, did you know that Baking Soda can help whiten teeth?
- Drinking Hot tea linked to Cancer/Walnuts may help prevent it - we've had a couple of 'good food', 'bad food' stories over the past couple of weeks, these two were two of the more intriguing.
- USA Today: Young adults health worse than 10-15 years ago - worrying report on the poor state of health of the 50 million 18-29 year olds in America. Research from the National Centre of Health Statistics suggests that about one-third of this age group are obese, and 30% do not have health insurance. Would these statistics be relatively similar in the UK?
- An outgoing nature could help you live longer - On a lighter note is this inspirational post from Health.com stating that being open and outgoing can help to mange stress and increase life expectancy. Cheer up - its good for you!
- Bacon Sandwiches can help cure hangovers - Researchers from Newcastle University have claimed that eating a Bacon Sandwich after a night out can help by "boosting the level of amines - which clear the head". Elin Roberts told Marie Claire:
‘Food doesn't soak up the alcohol but it does increase your metabolism helping you deal with the after-effects of over indulgence. So food will often help you feel better.‘Bread is high in carbohydrates and bacon is full of protein, which breaks down into amino acids. Your body needs these amino acids, so eating them will make you feel good.’
Cavalcade of Risk #76 is up!
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Couch Potato's Cause Global Warming
Global warming is not caused by cars, factories or aerosol cans. It is caused by fat people.
"Moving about in a heavy body is like driving in a gas guzzler."Define thin.
Each fat person is said to be responsible for emitting a tonne more of climate-warming carbon dioxide per year than a thin one.
The scientists say providing extra grub for them to guzzle adds to carbon emissions that heat up the world, melting polar ice caps, raising sea levels and killing rain forests.Sounds like the making of a good Randy Newman song. "Fat people got more body to love . . ."
A staggering 40 per cent of Americans are obese, among 300 million worldwide.Obesity also contributes to almost two thirds of illness that could be prevented.
Grand Rounds is up...
Monday, April 20, 2009
COBRA/ARRA: Misinformation Abounds
"Compassionate" Gummint Care
Carnival of Personal Finance is up...
Friday, April 17, 2009
Health Insurance Monopoly?
Government alternatives already exist for most people. Medicare for the elderly and disabled, Medicaid for the poor, SCHIP for children and most states have risk pools for those who have severe health issues. All of these programs are free (to the beneficiary) or highly subsidized by taxpayer dollars.
More government intrusion is in play now thanks to the ARRA amendment to COBRA. Employers are now required to subsidize 65% of the cost of COBRA for terminated employees. This subsidy can last for up to 9 months and creates and undue financial strain on companies feeling the pinch of a government induced recession.
So why do we need a government monopoly on health insurance? Think Fannie Med.
If you think health insurance is expensive now, just wait until the government takes charge. Trillion dollar deficits passed on to your children and grandchildren will become common place.
Just another stupid government trick.
Cavalcade of Risk #76: Call for Submissions
■ Your post's url
■ The post's trackback URL (if available)
■ A (brief) summary of the post
Thursday, April 16, 2009
COBRA/ARRA: The State Fair Edition
From the P&C Files: Insuring Piracy?
Health Wonk Review: Health Care Carousel of Progress! is up...
Aged between 40 and 74? - Get ready for a health MOT
If you are aged between 40 and 74 and live in England then you should have recieved your invitation from the government to take part in a free health check. This mass testing programme is being introduced to asses the levels of risk that people may have when it comes to the 'big four' of Heart Disease, Stroke, Kidney Disease and Diabetes.
Five yearly check ups
These health checks are to take place every five years. Tests that will be undertaken include measuring weight, cholesterol levels, levels of sugar in their blood and blood pressure. In addition, patients will be also asked if they have any family-inherited medical issues and whether they have smoked at any point in their life.
Assesing the risk
When these tests have been completed, patients will be given an overview of their health status. The level of risk will be indicated and any course of action that needed to be taken in order to combat these symptoms will be suggested. Those at lower-risk are to be provided general healthy living advice, they may also be given a dietary plan. Higher risk patients will be prescribed statins (Cholesterol/Blood Pressure lowering drugs).
Preventing the major diseases
The Department of Health hopes that the health checks will save 650 lives a year and prevent up to 1,600 heart attacks and strokes. A reduction of 4,000 fewer people developing diabetes annually is also a target.
The medical tests are likely to be run from GP surgeries, health centres and pharmacies. It is hoped that they may be offered in supermarkets to target those people who are perhaps not registered with a doctor. The government has said that it expects a 75% take up of the scheme.
All this is obviously going to require a great deal of administration, and its thought that the scheme will be fully operational by the year 2013. It may be some time after that that you recieve your first check up. This leaves plenty of time to adjust your diet and get in shape!.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Not Your Mother's Tea Party
COBRA . . .ARRA . . . Gotcha!
Just when you thought it was safe . . . the land shark is at your door.
So you thought the Porkulus Bill and the ARRA (American Recovery and Redundancy Act) was a good deal for those who opt for COBRA, right? After all, your employer is required to pay 65% of your COBRA premium for up to 9 months so life should be good.
Not so fast Sparky.
By any chance did you have a Flex (FSA) plan in place for your group health insurance? If so, there may be a gotcha.
According to the folks at Conexis, this little goody is buried in the law according to a recent release from your friends at the U.S. Treasury.
COBRA premium reduction is available for any group health plan EXCEPT . . . vision only, dental only, mini-med plans, and . . . those administered under Section 106(c) as part of a flex spending plan. (See the bottom of page 3 and top of page 4 of the linked document).
Having fun?
I knew you were.
UPDATE:
Some have commented and emailed regarding the interpretation (above) of Treasury notice 2009-27, indicating perhaps Conexis missed the mark. Here is a direct quote from that notice.
Q-27. Is the premium reduction available for COBRA continuation coverage under a vision-only or dental-only plan?
A-27. Yes. The premium reduction is available for COBRA continuation coverage of any group health plan, except a flexible spending arrangement (FSA) under section 106(c) offered under a section 125 cafeteria plan. This includes vision-only or dental-only plans and “mini-med plans,” whether or not the employer pays for a portion of the costs for active employees. The premium reduction is not available for continuation coverage offered by employers for non-health benefits that are not subject to COBRA continuation coverage, such as group life insurance.
You be the judge.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
DNA vs PAP
Monday, April 13, 2009
More Spendulus Fallout: EMR ASAP