Alaska Health Policy Review

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The Innovation Center at One Year

One year ago, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation was launched to find new ways to reduce costs and improve the quality of health care. In a new blog post, Mark Zezza, Melinda Abrams, and Stuart Guterman of The Commonwealth Fund review the Innovation Center’s performance to date and point to areas for future development. “The Innovation Center is off to a good start, but it needs to build on its momentum as it attempts to move the country toward a new health care delivery system,” the authors write.

You can also view the archive of a Nov. 30 webinar on the Innovation Center, cosponsored by The Commonwealth Fund and AcademyHealth, which looked at the Innovation Center’s priorities, explored how it can best conduct rigorous, rapid-cycle evaluation, and examined the role of health care providers in identifying and rolling out innovations.

Read More at the Commonwealth Fund

Source: Exerpted From The Commonwealth Fund 12/5/11

Filed under: Alaska, General

Upcoming North Health Care Action Coalition Meeting

Commonwealth North Health Care Action Coalition,

Our next meeting will be Thursday, September 29 from 7-9am in the newly constructed Health Sciences Building located at 3795 Piper St. in the WWAMI conference room located on the third floor. We will be joined by Bruce Lamoureux, Providence Hospital, Jim Jordan, Alaska State Medical Association, and Mark Foster, Mark A Foster and Associates. We will be discussing Medicaid and how we may be able to preemptively find solutions to this growing problem. The number of Alaskans on Medicaid is projected to increase while already costing the state over a billion dollars. Each of our speakers will address Medicare from their own perspective and what they see the greatest potential to tackling this issue in Alaska.

If you would like to call into this meeting the call in number will be 907-276-4900.

<For additional information, check under the cut.>

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Alaska, General

Congressional Progressive Caucus Health-Care Briefing: “Single Payer and Containing Health-Care Costs 101″

From Congressional Progressive Caucus, Representatives Conyers and McDermott:

Please join the Congressional Progressive Caucus on Wednesday, September 14 from 10:30am-11:30am in Rayburn 2237 for Part 1 in a new series of educational briefings on single-payer health care and its ability to contain health-care costs.  It is well known that rising health-care costs are causing a national crisis, putting unprecedented strain on personal, institutional, and governmental budgets.  Single-payer health care is one of the most promising solutions to this cost crunch.  While the United States already employs a single-payer framework to cover limited segments of the population (e.g. Medicare), our fragmented multi-payer system as a whole consumes far more resources as a percentage of GDP than most other developed countries that use a single-payer approach.  The briefing series will explore a variety of topics, including whether Vermont’s recently enacted single-payer law could be a viable model for future proposals.

Our guest speaker for the September 14 briefing is Stephanie Woolhandler, M.D., M.P.H.  A former professor at the Harvard Medical School, Dr. Woolhandler is a national leader in health policy, as well as a practicing family physician.  Dr. Woolhandler is a professor at the City University of New York School of Public Health and visiting professor at Harvard Medical School. She is co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, an organization of 18,000 doctors who support single-payer national health insurance, an improved Medicare for All. She worked in 1990-91 as a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation health policy fellow at the Institute of Medicine and the U.S. Congress. She is a principal author of many PNHP articles published in the JAMA, the New England Journal of Medicine and other professional journals, and has frequently testified before Congress. In 2009, she was co-author of an article in the American Journal of Public Health that found 45,000 deaths annually are linked to lack of health insurance, another in the American Journal of Medicine that found 62 percent of personal bankruptcies are linked to medical bills and illness. She has dedicated her career to improving health care for the underserved and advocating for national health insurance for all Americans, and is considered one of the nation’s foremost experts on single-payer universal health care and rising health-care costs.

Dr. Woolhandler will speak about the ability of a health-care system administered by a single payer to reduce the overwhelming costs of our current system—a topic she has studied extensively in her scholarly work documenting the relationship between medical costs and personal bankruptcy. Representatives of Reps. Conyers and McDermott will also be on hand to discuss the two principal single-payer health-care bills pending in the 112th Congress: the Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act (H.R. 676), and the American Health Security Act of 2011 (H.R. 1200).

The CPC single-payer briefing series is designed to educate members and staff, increase awareness of the many benefits of single-payer health care, and reintroduce single-payer health care into the national dialogue in the era of the Affordable Care Act.  The CPC believes that despite the significant advances in coverage and access achieved in the Affordable Care Act, the goal and ultimate destiny of U.S. health care is a publicly-financed, privately-delivered health system.

Filed under: General, Insurance related

Young Adults Back-to-School Toolkit & Week of Action (9/19-9/23)

From the Universal Health Care Action Network:

Expanded health insurance coverage for young adults is one of the early successes of the Affordable Care Act. Young Invincibles, the organization known for getting the word out to young adults and their parents, has put together a downloadable Back-To-School Toolkit to help students get coverage, know their options, and stay healthy. As part of this initiative, the toolkit has state-specific resources available to download as well: http://www.YoungInvincibles.org/Back2School. Or, text “Toolkit” to 69866 to have it sent to you. A one-page flyer is available to post or send with the toolkit at: http://younginvincibles.org/Back2School/back2schoolFlyer.pdf.

Young Invincibles is working with lots of groups all over the country to make September 19 – 23 THE big week for campus events and social media around young adults, parents and health care education.  One of the highlights of the week will be a big social media day of action on 9/21 or 9/22 designed to really get people talking and continue the momentum.  This is a great outreach and organizing opportunity for state groups.  To get involved and help plan and/or participate in a campus event or the social media day of action in your city or state, contact:

Aaron Smith, Executive Director, Young Invincibles

Email:  aaron.smith@younginvincibles.org

Tel: 202/339.9334

Filed under: General, Insurance related

NIH Research, Employment, and Alaska

United for Medical Research released a new report detailing the economic impact of NIH spending in health research sectors.

In 2010, NIH investment resulted in 487,900 new jobs as well as $68.035 billion in new economic activity. Extramural research, economic expansion, and medical innovations that result from such investments are arguably valuable to the struggling U.S. economy.

In terms of NIH investment impact on Alaska, Alaska has received extramural research money ranging from a low of 3.6 million in 2000, a high of 15.4 million in 2005, and most recently 11.3 million in 2010. For FY2010, an estimated 1,334 Alaskan jobs were supported by NIH funding.

To access the full report, click here and find the link to the article on the right hand side of the website.

 

 

Filed under: General, Legislature related

KidsWell Campaign- A new perspective for healthcare reform

KidsWell is a national and state campaign that advocates for health care reform on behalf of children.

The website is designed to help provide support and resources to child health advocates. It includes weekly updates, a searchable database of related information, the ability to track health reform throughout the U.S., and information on opposition activities.

To check out the website, click here.

Filed under: General, Of interest

ALPHA Health Summit Changes Date

From Sandra Woods, President, Alaska Public Health Association:

Dear ALPHA Members,

I want to tell you of the Board’s decision to hold the ALPHA Health Summit in January 2011 instead of the “traditional” December.  The next ALPHA Health Summit will be at the Hotel Captain Cook January 10-12, 2011. We know you are looking forward to this event just as you have in the past.

The Board made this change in dates to be able to have the Summit at a hotel that is not under a boycott or strike situation. The Board felt strongly about supporting the hospitality employees’ boycott and spent the last 3 months looking at all our options. We do not anticipate any significant cost increases by having the event at the Hotel Captain Cook, but are asking your support for the Summit if we do have to raise any of the fees associated with the Summit. We are confident that we are doing the right thing by switching venues and are looking forward to a great Health Summit in January.

If you have any questions about the switch of venue to the Hotel Captain Cook, please do not hesitate to contact me.  Jennifer Meyer, Summit Chair, is busy with the Planning Committee and will be putting out notices and a call for proposals very soon. We appreciate your input to the upcoming Health Summit and hope to hear from you.

Again, I thank you for your support.

Sandra Woods, RN-C, MS

ALPHA President

[Source: Electronic communication received March 2010]

Filed under: General

The Growing Financial Burden Of Health Care: National And State Trends, 2001–2006

The financial burden of health care—the ratio of total out-of-pocket spending for health care services and premiums to total family income—continues to increase nationally. As a result of this trend, more people have been exposed to high costs and lack essential services. This study examines trends nationally and among selected states between 2001 and 2006.

The results show considerable state-to-state variation associated mainly with differences in family income and, to a lesser extent, out-of-pocket spending for insurance premiums. Nationally, middle- and higher-income people with private insurance experienced the largest increases in financial burden. Moreover, almost 30 percent of the U.S. population either had a high financial burden of health costs or were uninsured. These facts underscore that escalating health care costs affect all socioeconomic strata, not just the poor. Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: General, Insurance related, Of interest

Navigating Health Insurance Data Just Got Easier

New Online Tool Allows Easy Access to Health Coverage Estimates and the Ability to Build Customizable Charts and Graphs

Using currently available sources of health insurance data can be time consuming and cumbersome for both policymakers and researchers. In addition, tracking these estimates over time is an outright challenge. A new web-based tool, developed by researchers at the State Health Access Data Assistance Center (SHADAC), allows quick and easy access to health insurance coverage estimates and trends. The SHADAC Data Center, being released today, allows users to:

  • access U.S. Census Bureau data quickly and easily;
  • utilize coverage trend data from 1987 to present, available for the first time using SHADAC’s exclusive enhanced estimates;
  • translate data into customized tables and graphs that can be easily downloaded; and
  • export data for use quickly, without the hassle of downloading new software.

Filed under: General, Insurance related

Your Comments Wanted: Healthy People 2020

HEALTHY PEOPLE 2020: HELPING DEFINE U.S. GOALS

As a crucial part of the medical/public health community, you  are encouraged to help shape the direction of the Healthy People 2020 objectives. Healthy People provides science-based, 10-year, national objectives for promoting health and preventing disease. Healthy People 2020 will reflect assessments of major risks to health and wellness, changing public health priorities, and emerging issues related to our nation’s health preparedness and prevention. Those wishing to comment may submit online

http://www.healthypeople.gov/hp2020/Objectives/TopicAreas.aspx

The Healthy People 2020 <http://www.healthypeople.gov/hp2020/Comments/default.asp

The process remains on track, with an anticipated roll-out date of early 2010. Release likely will coincide with the President’s fiscal year 2011 budget request for the Department of Health and Human Services. Soliciting input from the public, the HHS Secretary’s Advisory Committee on National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives for 2020 has held fifteen meetings since January 2008. The next meeting is a Dec. 11 Webcast open to the public.  Check the web link for details.

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Filed under: General

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