If You, a Friend, or a Relative Live in New Jersey

Money-Driven Medicine, a film produced by Alex Gibney (best known for Enron: the Smartest Guys in the Room), will be screened Tuesday night (Nov. 10) 5:00 – 6:30 p.m. at the New Jersey State Museum Auditorium, 205 West State Street, Trenton, New Jersey.

Following the film, I’ll be answering questions about health care reform.

Admission is free.

Money-Driven Medicine
is one of the strongest documentaries I have seen in years and could
not be more timely.  The more people who see and talk about it, the
more likely we are to get serious and true health care reform.”

 Bill Moyers

If You Haven’t Seen Money-Driven Medicine, the Film . . .

Based on my book (Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care
Costs So Much) , produced by Academy-Award winning documentary
film-maker  Alex Gibney (best known for “Enron: The Smartest Guys In
the Room”), a free streaming video of the 90-minute documentary is available throughout the month of November.

 Go to www.moneydrivenmedicine.org,
see “Watch-In for America’s health in the upper-right hand corner,
scroll down a few inches to “To learn more and participate in the
Watch-In click here.”  If you would like to buy the DVD, It’s now available for home use at an affordable price. Go to www.moneydrivenmedicine.org
and on the left hand side of the page, see “Buy, rent, screen” or call
877-811-7495.  Special prices for high schools and libraries as well as
hospitals and universities.

(Neither I nor The Century Foundation makes any profit on these sales. The film’s distributor, California Newsreel is also a non-profit. )

Intermountain Healthcare — Proof That U.S. Hospitals Can Improve

(We Should Not Scoff at the Medicare Pilot Programs in Reform Legislation)

I urge everyone to read this story by David Leonhardt in this Sunday’s (November 8) New York Times.  (Thanks to HealthBeat reader Lisa Lindel for spotting it. )
Leonhardt
profiles Intermountain Healthcare, a network of hospitals and clinics
in Utah and Idaho that President Obama and others have described as a
model for health reform.

Leonhardt concludes:

“If
you simply looked at Intermountain’s overall results — the good
outcomes and low costs — you might be tempted to dismiss them as a
product of the environment
. Utah has the youngest population of
any state, as well one of the lowest rates of alcohol and tobacco use.
More than half of the state’s residents are Mormons. This homogeneity
creates a noticeable sense of community, even a sense of mission, among
many Intermountain doctors and nurses.

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More on how The House and Senate Bills are “Ambitious”: “Not Perfect—but Ambitious”

Over at the New America Foundation, blogger Joanne Kenen elaborates on how the House and Senate Finance bills can lead to providing better end-of-life care.  As As Kenen points out, these proposals are all about giving people choices—including the parents of children who are seriously ill. Finally, these proposals would reduce health care costs by making sure that people who don’t want to die in an ICU don’t wind up there by default.

“After all the sound and fury of last August, we're pleasantly surprised that the right hasn't risen again with all sorts of horror stories about the resurrection, so to speak, of the "death panels." Maybe because all that fear-mongering was finally discredited. Maybe we are finally getting just a little bit smarter.
The inevitable focus on the politics of health reform, and the disproportionate amount of attention paid to the public plan, sometimes obscures the many ways that the House and the Senate health plans are ambitious. Not perfect. Ambitious. I've heard experts, people I like and respect, say the legislation does "nothing" to advance the cause of quality of end of life care in America. They are wrong. The House and Senate bill each contain measures that would advance that cause — not fix it completely, far from it, but they will take us important steps in the right direction. It's too soon to know which of these measures – if any — will survive a final melding of House and Senate legislation. But let's look at them here because, except for the end of life consults which got way too much of the wrong kind of attention, they haven't gotten adequate attention. In an accompanying guest post. Dr. Ira Byock, director of palliative medicine at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in New Hampshire, talks about what these changes can mean for his patients and their families.

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Breaking News from AP: Reform Moves Forward as AARP Endorses House Bill

Many reformers have been uncertain as
to whether they could rely on the Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
to support progressive health care reform.
  After all, AARP has close ties to the insurance industry.

But
this evening, the Associated Press (AP) reported that “In a coup for
House Democrats, AARP will endorse sweeping health care overhaul
legislation headed for a history-making floor vote

“An
announcement from the 40-million member group is expected Thursday
[tomorrow], said officials with knowledge of the group's decision. They
spoke on condition of anonymity because the endorsement is not official
yet.

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A New Health Bill Means Renewed Opposition from Abortion Foes

Conservatives have argued that abortion has no place in a health care bill—I couldn’t agree more (although for completely different reasons…). In fact, I think individual insurers should be the ones to decide whether or not it makes sense for them to offer the benefit to women. We are wasting far too much time and political capital on an issue that has little to do with the overall goals of reform.

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Heath Care Reform– Looking at the Glass Half-Full

What Has Been Accomplished; What Still Must Be Done

These days, many progressives are expressing deep disappointment with the health reform legislation now moving through Congress. Some suggest that some legislators made deals with lobbyists and let them write the bills. Others complain that both the subsidies and the penalties are too low. Still others don’t like the fact that states can “opt out” of the public insurance option, and decide not to offer Medicare E. Finally, many ask: “Why can’t everyone sign on for the public plan in 2013? Why do we have to wait until 2013? Why can’t they roll out universal coverage next year?”

Normally, I would be among the first to critique the bills. By temperament and training, I’m both a skeptic and a critic.

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For-Profit Hospitals Poised to Take Market Share From Non-Profits

Non-profit hospitals have been spending, hand-over-fist, on new construction and new wings, adding rooms that most communities don’t need, while investing in the same multi-million dollar medical equipment that five hospitals in a three-mile radius already have. On HealthBeat, I’ve been writing about the investments in hotel-like amenities for more than two years.

Hospitals were borrowing in order to build – interest rates were low; money was available—why not?  Inevitably, the recession would bring an end to all of that. I have predicted that many hospitals would find themselves running out of money in the middle of projects. Other are now saddled with debt, and struggling to hold onto market share.  

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Lieberman Defects While Public Support for Medicare E Grows

Joe Lieberman is no Olympia Snowe (R-ME). Many progressives admired Olympia Snowe’s stance (even if they disagreed with her). By contrast Lieberman’s  announcement that he may join the Republicans in a filibuster that aims to block letting the health care reform bill come to the Senate floor is merely vintage Lieberman. He’s an opportunist. I knew him many years ago, back in Connecticut, when a reform candidate was challenging the Democratic machine. Lieberman wavered on the sidelines, waiting to see who was going to win. He didn’t want to risk picking a losing team.

Today, as Lincoln Mitchell points out on Huffington Post: “By wavering between the two parties while never fully abandoning the Democratic Party, Lieberman has made himself far more important than he should be. If he were to formally switch parties, he would suddenly be of little interest to the Republicans as he would be just another member of the minority who would probably be suspect because his right wing credentials would not be strong enough for the Limbaugh-Palin wing of the party.”

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Who Would Be Eligible For A Public Option? Far more than “10%” of the Population

Very likely you have heard that only a “tiny group” of Americans will be eligible for the public plan. But if you read the House bill approved by three House committees (HR 3200) carefully, (this is the proposal that provides the most detail on the public option) it appears that 20 percent to 25 percent of all Americans would be eligible to sign up for the public plan in 2013. In the years that follow, the Exchange will be open to all Americans.
 
The notion that only “10 percent of the population” will be eligible to enter the Insurance Exchange and choose between private sector insurance and Medicare for Everyone is fast becoming an urban myth. Some commentators are using the number to minimize the importance of the public plan.

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