U.S. Health Care Policy

December 17, 2007

Academy Health Offers Health Policy Fellowship

Filed under: Health Care Career, Health Care Fellowship, Policy Research — Tags: , — fashiondesignmaven @ 2:06 pm

Academy Health Header

Deadline for Academy Health’s 2008-2009 Health Policy Fellowship will creep up on you right after the holidays. So mark your calenders and apply!

January 7, 2008
Deadline for proposal submission
April 1, 2008
Announcement of selected a junior and senior level fellow
Early September 2008
Commencement of fellowships

Essential criteria for application
- Pry analysis and conclusions based on the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) data sets.
- Propose relevance and usefulness to health policy or health service research (of course!)

Here is a photo list and associated credentials of past fellows. Guess who is the junior and who is the senior. Their project sound interesting

2002
To Examine How the Effects of Managed Care Market Penetration on Nurse Staffing in Hospitals Affect AMI Patient Mortality

2003
Organizational Determinants of Disparities in Hospital Care
Firms’ Demand for Health Benefit Generosity

2004
Effects of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) on Children’s Health Insurance Coverage, Access to and Utilization of Health Services, and Health Outcomes

2005
Estimating the Effects of Health Insurance on Quality Adjusted Life Years
Depression Symptoms, Poverty, and Single-Parenthood: Effects of Maternal Factors on Children’s Use of Preventive Health Services

2006
Recipients of Work Disability: Who, When, and For How Long?
Trends of Integrating Clinical Preventive Services Into Primary Care

2007
Functional Decline Among the Elderly: The Impact of the 1997 Balanced Budget Act
Hospital Admissions from the Emergency Department: National Trends and Variation Between Hospitals

Good luck!

December 16, 2007

Hot of the RWJ Press: To Improve Health and Health Care Vol XI

Filed under: Health Care Literature — Tags: , — fashiondesignmaven @ 7:03 pm

To Improve health and Health Care Volume XI

Just received my Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Anthology To Improve Health and Health Care, Volume XI. The website for the book is not even up yet, but here are the past volumes:

To Improve health and Health Care 1997

After 2001, the foundation changed the associated years to volumes. Perhaps because with each year, there is marginal improvement in health and health care that all the ideas begin to sound the same from year to year. A volume label will help readers understand that there really has not been a monumental change. Because of the health care beast, inching improvements are subtle and easily awash with a slightly bigger issue, like the war. The illustrations all portray a look of somber wishful thinking and hopeful future outlook but with a big * sigh *. So I hope to read the most recent volume and be caught up with the last few volumes.

December 14, 2007

What more can we do?

Filed under: Health Care Rant — Tags: , , — fashiondesignmaven @ 1:10 pm

“I don’t understand how children who are living poverty, who have nothing but the sandals that are three sizes too small on their feet, a T-shirt full of holes, and the three pieces of candy that they will try to sell on the street later that night for money, smile all day long. It doesn’t make sense how two siblings whose parents have both died from AIDS, who don’t have a place to go home at night, have the strength to hold each other’s hands and walk down the dirt road after school is over for the day. It blows my mind to watch 96 children who haven’t eaten for over 24 hours be so patient as to help the youngest children get their meal for the day before they get their own.” -Lindsay Cottrell, MHSA Candidate 2009; Assistant Direct of The Olevolos Project

Quote from Ah-Ha! in FINDINGS, Volume 23, Number 1 Fall/Winter 2007, a University of Michigan School of Public Health publication

 So what are you whining about in life? Channel that energy into projects that eliminate sad quotes and create a balance between the selfless and the selfish.

Shake Down in Organization Management

Filed under: Health Care Management — Tags: , , — fashiondesignmaven @ 12:55 pm

Scenario A
Professor John Griffith, Andrew Patullo Collegiate Professor, Department of Health Management and Policu

“There’s only one reason why we work here.”
“What’s that?” I said, the perfect nerdy straight man.
“The paycheck,” he said, and walked away.

“What I learned that conformity was highly prized, appearance was more important than substance, and managers always stayed till 5:05.” - University of Michigan Health Management and Policy Professor John Griffith’s experience in management published in  Ah-Ha! in FINDINGS, Volume 23, Number 1 Fall/Winter 2007, a University of Michigan School of Public Health publication

Scenario B
Peter Thiel

Prestige was measured “by how few people there were above you who could prevent you from doing what you wanted to do.”

“The all-hands open-book session. Customer logs, revenue flow, fraud losses, burn rate; He’d display it all for every employee to see. This access to information coupled with the lack of offices, created a flat structure where any idea could win the day.”

“You didn’t measure where you were in the organization by how many people you’re managing.” he says. -Peter Thiel of the PayPal Mafia

Commentary 
The health care system is burdened by too many wage earners under scenario A. It’s time to cut the real losses, human resources that use their employment to sustain their own life and none others, to stroke their own egos at the expense of their peons, and to only think of today instead of living to learn, excel, and change. It is time to shake down people’s attitudes and hire people with compassion, competence, and competitive spirit in the health care industry. Let’s challenge people’s stodgy notions, starting from the education system.

Photo Credits: Peter Thiel from Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Professor John Griffith from the University of Michigan, School of Public Health, Health Management and Policy

December 13, 2007

Retro Actively Ineligible for Insurance

20071213-california-insurance-commissioner-steve-poizner.gif versus California Blue Shield

California Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner is slapping California Blue Shield on the back of their hand with a $12.6 million fine. Surely, this figure would not even rustle the feathers of many tech start ups, but when the 2004 average health care expense per capita in California was $4,638, this fine may cover the annual health care bill of about 2,700 persons.

Recall in Sicko when this insured lady had gone through medical treatment, and a few weeks later her health insurance company retro actively cancelled her insurance coverage. She was left with thousands of dollars in medical bills, which she thought she only had to pay a reasonable co-insurance or copay for. Her insurance company yanked her coverage because of lack of full medical history disclosure. Of a yeast infection, specifically. It was completely unrelated to her medical treatment. Who knew a treatable and fairly common infection could pull a startling surprise and pummel another American into deeper and insurmountable financial debt.

Health insurance companies claim that by leaving out any miniscule detail of one’s medical history is a path to coverage fraud. Surely, medical history disclosure at the time of application is the common commercial insurance practice to keep away people already known to seek expensive treatments. The incentive to make profit off of premiums is to not pay out claim expenses. Insurance companies rely on the applicant to list all previously diagnosed illnesses, common, severe, and even cured from. Then the company begins cherry-picking their applicants only to admit the healthiest applicants.

(You know you are guilty of cherry picking too. You pick the shiniest, reddest, and plumpest cherry. Oh this rule applies to lemons and apples too. Your entire grocery trip in fact.)

With all the administrative hoops to prove one’s identity in order to get indecipherable medical records in person, people often rely on their fallible memories to collect an entire medical history to apply for insurance. Most people do not have the intention of bilking insurance companies of coverage fraud.

How often will a woman recall her yeast infection from her wild, sexy, and roaring twenties? Yeast infections are so common that self-diagnosis and over-the-counter medicine will prevent mars on perfect medical histories.

The incentives appear to reward the healthiest, the sickest that never seek professional diagnosis and treatment, or the smart evasive ones that get cures from over-the-counter drugs or from a doctor friend with a loose prescription pad. Truly sick, indeed.

 In case you are curious of the 2004 per capita health care expense ranked by State:

United States—–$  5,283

1     Utah—–$  3,972
2     Arizona—–$  4,103
3     Idaho—–$  4,444
4     New Mexico—–$  4,471
5     Nevada—–$  4,569
6     Georgia—–$  4,600
7     Texas—–$  4,601
8     California—–$  4,638
9     Colorado—–$  4,717
10   Virginia—–$  4,822
11   Arkansas—–$  4,863
12   Oregon—–$  4,880
13   Oklahoma—–$  4,917
14   Hawaii—–$  4,941
15   Louisiana—–$  5,040
16   Michigan—–$  5,058
17   Mississippi—–$  5,059
18   Montana—–$  5,080
19   Washington—–$  5,092
20   South Carolina—–$  5,114
21   Alabama—–$  5,135
22   North Carolina—–$  5,191
23   Wyoming—–$  5,265
24   Illinois—–$  5,293
25   Indiana—–$  5,295
26   South Dakota—–$  5,327
27   Iowa—–$  5,380
28   Kansas—–$  5,382
29   New Hampshire $5,432
30   Missouri—–$  5,444
31   Tennessee—–$  5,464
32   Kentucky—–$  5,473
33   Florida—–$  5,483
34   Maryland—–$  5,590
35   Nebraska—–$  5,599
36   Wisconsin—–$  5,670
37   Ohio—–$  5,725
38   Minnesota—–$  5,795
39   New Jersey—–$  5,807
40   North Dakota—–$  5,808
41   Pennsylvania—–$  5,933
42   West Virginia—–$  5,954
43   Vermont—–$  6,069
44   Rhode Island—–$  6,193
45   Delaware—–$  6,306
46   Connecticut—–$  6,344
47   Alaska—–$  6,450
48   New York—–$  6,535
49 Maine—–$  6,540
50 Massachusetts—–$  6,683
51 District of Columbia—–$8,295

December 11, 2007

Health Care Revolution

Filed under: Professional Development — Tags: , — fashiondesignmaven @ 12:31 pm

Wow, I have been MIA for several months. Yet when I read the California Health LineKaiser Family Foundation report, or San Francisco Chronicle health care articles, the issues are still the same ones discussed from months prior. No additional Federal funding for the Children’s Insurance Program, growing numbers of the uninsured, lack of comprehensive coverage for the uninsured, improper incentives for managed care companies, lack of physician accountability, the D in Medicare Part D stands for donut hole disaster, and the list drones on and on.

These are the same issues we faced 5 years ago. How are we going to move forward in health care? Unfortunately the health care beast is not agile, is inflexible, and is tumbling down a narrow tunnel of thought, deeply rooted in antiquated processes, and plagued with technological costs and capital investments that have not become sunk.

How discouraging. Even the optimistic and savvy Esther Dyson puts out her technological passion for making a difference in our lives no matter in what kind of bull or bear economy, but her Huffington Post blog on Health2.1 — Afterthoughts on the Wonderful Health 2.0 Conference was ferociously attacked.

How discouraging. The bright eyed bushy tail Health Management and Policy graduate is jaded by our health care system. And that is the reason for my lack of updates.

What is encouraging is the feeling ones gets from awakening from the discouraged funk. What does not kill you with words or sticks and stones can only make you stronger. I have an idea to revolutionize the health care system. I just need to bounce it off the right people that do the right thing at the right time and have the energy to do so. Although, I do need reality checks, please do so in the most constructive manner. I will soon share…

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