Monday, October 31, 2011

Medical Schools Say Magazine’s Ratings Get An Incomplete – Capsules - The KHN Blog

Medical Schools Say Magazine’s Ratings Get An Incomplete – Capsules - The KHN Blog

Less Invasive Anesthetic Methods Better For Endovascular Aneurysm Repair

Less Invasive Anesthetic Methods Better For Endovascular Aneurysm Repair

Number of Laparoscopic Bariatric Procedures Continued to Rise Between 2003-2008

News from the American College of Surgeons: News from JACS: Number of Laparoscopic Bariatric Procedures Continued to Rise Between 2003-2008

Through-The-Nipple Breast Cancer Therapy Shows Promise In Early Tests

Through-The-Nipple Breast Cancer Therapy Shows Promise In Early Tests

Medical liability: Cutting costs from the bench :: Oct 31, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Medical liability: Cutting costs from the bench :: Oct 31, 2011 ... American Medical News

CMS redesigns Medicare ACOs to be more appealing to physicians :: Oct 31, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: CMS redesigns Medicare ACOs to be more appealing to physicians :: Oct 31, 2011 ... American Medical News

Friday, October 28, 2011

ACS Expert Panel Addresses Duty Hour Restrictions

ACS Daily 2011

Tax exemptions keep nonprofit hospitals under the spotlight - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

Tax exemptions keep nonprofit hospitals under the spotlight - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

Study adds credence to physician practice quality tracking - FiercePracticeManagement

Study adds credence to physician practice quality tracking - FiercePracticeManagement

Doctors, nurses out of touch with patient expectations - FierceHealthcare

Doctors, nurses out of touch with patient expectations - FierceHealthcare

Congratulations to GSACS Immediate Past President James Elsey, MD FACS On His Election to the ACS Board of Regents

ACS Daily 2011

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Blood Vessel Mapping Reveals Four New "ZIP Codes"

Blood Vessel Mapping Reveals Four New "ZIP Codes"

General Surgery News - Umbilical Hernia Patch Provides Good Early Results, Ease of Use

General Surgery News - Umbilical Hernia Patch Provides Good Early Results, Ease of Use

Insurance exchange leader gets health post

Insurance exchange leader gets health post

Link Between Heavy Alcohol Consumption And Lung Cancer

Link Between Heavy Alcohol Consumption And Lung Cancer

State rejects challenge to WellStar facility

State rejects challenge to WellStar facility

ID theft ring tied to Emory patients

ID theft ring tied to Emory patients

Monday, October 24, 2011

New Strategy To Accelerate Blood Vessel Maturation Has Therapeutic Potentials For Ischemic Diseases

New Strategy To Accelerate Blood Vessel Maturation Has Therapeutic Potentials For Ischemic Diseases

Risk For Endometrial Cancer Increased By Significant Weight Gain In Adulthood

Risk For Endometrial Cancer Increased By Significant Weight Gain In Adulthood

: Lawmakers told Medicare reform begins with elimination of SGR :: Oct. 24, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Lawmakers told Medicare reform begins with elimination of SGR :: Oct. 24, 2011 ... American Medical News

Residents' desire for hospital employment poses recruiting challenge for practices :: Oct. 24, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Residents' desire for hospital employment poses recruiting challenge for practices :: Oct. 24, 2011 ... American Medical News

CMS spotlights physician-friendly changes in final ACO rule :: Oct. 20, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: CMS spotlights physician-friendly changes in final ACO rule :: Oct. 20, 2011 ... American Medical News

Friday, October 21, 2011

Obesity & Kidney Disease

Obesity & Kidney Disease

These 50 Apple iPad apps top the list for physicians | Articles

These 50 Apple iPad apps top the list for physicians | Articles

Radiotherapy Nearly Halves Breast Cancer Recurrence After Breast Conserving Surgery

Radiotherapy Nearly Halves Breast Cancer Recurrence After Breast Conserving Surgery

When Is It Safe To Send Your Bariatric Patient Home?

General Surgery News - When Is It Safe To Send Your Bariatric Patient Home?

No Survival Benefit For Mastectomy Over Lumpectomy

General Surgery News - No Survival Benefit For Mastectomy Over Lumpectomy

General Surgery News - Robotic Surgery in Rectal Cancer: Hype or Next Best Thing?

General Surgery News - Robotic Surgery in Rectal Cancer: Hype or Next Best Thing?

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Liability premiums hold steady, but state disparities linger :: Oct. 17, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Liability premiums hold steady, but state disparities linger :: Oct. 17, 2011 ... American Medical News

Medicare sign-up question about accepting new patients becomes optional :: Oct. 6, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Medicare sign-up question about accepting new patients becomes optional :: Oct. 6, 2011 ... American Medical News

Docs to get smaller raises in 2012; groups fare better - FiercePracticeManagement

Docs to get smaller raises in 2012; groups fare better - FiercePracticeManagement

2 Percent Medicare Cut Nothing To Sneeze At – Capsules - The KHN Blog

2 Percent Medicare Cut Nothing To Sneeze At – Capsules - The KHN Blog

10 Notorious Healthcare Execs in 2011 - FierceHealthcare

10 Notorious Healthcare Execs in 2011 - FierceHealthcare

Grady under inspection after patient’s fatal fall

Grady under inspection after patient’s fatal fall

New HHS regs to save providers billions, less paperwork - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

New HHS regs to save providers billions, less paperwork - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

Are nonprofit hospital execs paid too much? Seven 7-figure paychecks - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

Are nonprofit hospital execs paid too much? Seven 7-figure paychecks - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

Hospitals spend little on charitable care, yet evade taxes - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

Hospitals spend little on charitable care, yet evade taxes - FierceHealthFinance - Health Finance, Healthcare Finance

Halo Effect: Family Members Of Gastric-Bypass Patients Also Lose Weight, Stanford Study Finds

Halo Effect: Family Members Of Gastric-Bypass Patients Also Lose Weight, Stanford Study Finds

SUPREME COURT NOTEBOOK: Both sides aiming for late March hearing on health care overhaul - The Washington Post

SUPREME COURT NOTEBOOK: Both sides aiming for late March hearing on health care overhaul - The Washington Post

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients Have Higher Risk Of Post Operative DVT And Pulmonary Embolism

Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients Have Higher Risk Of Post Operative DVT And Pulmonary Embolism

Obese Women Have Higher Risk Of Suffering Breast Cancer

Obese Women Have Higher Risk Of Suffering Breast Cancer

Supreme Court hears lawsuit challenging Medicaid rate cuts :: Oct. 17, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Supreme Court hears lawsuit challenging Medicaid rate cuts :: Oct. 17, 2011 ... American Medical News

4 priority strategies for hospitals of the future - FierceHealthcare

4 priority strategies for hospitals of the future - FierceHealthcare

Olympia Snowe breaks from GOP on health care - Matt DoBias - POLITICO.com

Olympia Snowe breaks from GOP on health care - Matt DoBias - POLITICO.com

Massachusetts Looks at ‘Global Payments’ to Lower Health Cost - NYTimes.com

Massachusetts Looks at ‘Global Payments’ to Lower Health Cost - NYTimes.com

WellStar breaks ground on Acworth health park

The Marietta Daily Journal - WellStar breaks ground on Acworth health park

Gainesville Hospital named tops in cardiac care

Hospital named tops in cardiac care

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

70% hospitals, health systems plan more physician employment - FierceHealthcare

70% hospitals, health systems plan more physician employment - FierceHealthcare

Laws to consider in hospital-physician co-management agreements - FierceHealthcare

Laws to consider in hospital-physician co-management agreements - FierceHealthcare

Feds find state’s insurance reviews lacking | Georgia Health News

Feds find state’s insurance reviews lacking | Georgia Health News

Fear of lawsuits, little time with patients lead to more aggressive care :: Oct. 10, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Fear of lawsuits, little time with patients lead to more aggressive care :: Oct. 10, 2011 ... American Medical News

Fear of lawsuits, little time with patients lead to more aggressive care :: Oct. 10, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Fear of lawsuits, little time with patients lead to more aggressive care :: Oct. 10, 2011 ... American Medical News

MedPAC Approves Physician Payment Plan, Overlooking Concerns About Offsets

MedPAC Approves Physician Payment Plan, Overlooking Concerns About Offsets

By Rebecca Adams, CQ HealthBeat Associate Editor

Despite overwhelming provider opposition, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission voted 15-2 to recommend a draft proposal last Thursday to junk the physician payment formula that has caused problems for a decade and offset the costs to fix it with other Medicare cuts.


Even the American Medical Association (AMA), whose top priority is to eradicate the flawed formula, opposes MedPAC’s proposed fix.


“Offsetting part of the cost of repeal through drastic cuts and long-term freezes to physicians falls far short of what is needed to preserve patients’ access to care,” AMA President Peter W. Carmel said in a written statement.


Almost all health policy experts agree that the physician payment formula, known as the sustainable growth rate (SGR), does not work as intended. Congress has repeatedly staved off scheduled cuts in physician rates that were set by the formula. But the cost of permanently fixing the problem grows with every temporary reprieve. In January, the formula would result in a nearly 30 percent payment cut for physicians if Congress does not vote to prevent it.


The MedPAC recommendation would replace the problematic SGR formula with a 10-year fee schedule that would freeze primary care payment rates and cut rates for other providers by 5.9 percent for three years before freezing those payments as well. MedPAC included a list of offsets totaling $220 billion over a decade that Congress might consider to pay for the new physician payment rates. About 34 percent of the funding for the changes would come from the drug industry; 21 percent from post-acute care, such as skilled nursing facilities and home health agencies; 15 percent from higher cost-sharing by beneficiaries; and 11 percent from hospitals.


Representatives of medical providers — who packed the room so tightly that a number of people had to stand — were not happy with the proposed cuts. They had expressed concerns about the proposal when it was unveiled. Several groups had written letters also opposing the plan.


Only two commissioners — Karen Borman, director of the Surgical Residency Program of Abington Memorial Hospital in Pennsylvania and Ronald Castellanos, a urologist with Southwest Florida Urologic Associates — voted against the MedPAC recommendation.


Castellanos noted that under the plan, a nurse practitioner would be eligible for higher Medicare payment rates than a physician specialist, a prospect that he called “extremely disturbing” because he said the average urologist has undergone about 17,000 hours of training while a nurse practitioner has had no more than 1500 hours.


Castellanos said that specialists who face a growing number of government regulations and declining payment rates are going to ask themselves: “Is it worth it for me to stay in practice?
“I think there are going to be a lot of doctors like myself who are going to say it’s just not worth it anymore,” he added.


During the deliberations on the plan, many commissioners expressed reservations about the proposal, especially the offsets.


Several said that the list of offsets should not be seen as a recommendation from MedPAC that Congress consider those specific policies to reduce spending growth. In fact, some said they had problems either with some of the precise offsets or with the overarching idea that all of the cuts should come from Medicare rather than other types of government spending. But all of those who voted to approve the recommendation said the time had come to finally stop passing one-year changes to the physician payment formula, and that goal overcame their reservations about the offsets.
In a PowerPoint presentation, MedPAC staff noted, “Offsetting the cost within Medicare compels difficult choices — both in offsets and in fee reductions — that MedPAC may not support outside of the context of repealing the SGR system.”


After the vote, lobbyists and other representatives of physicians and other medical professionals lined up to express their unhappiness. Even though most of them expressed support for ditching the current SGR formula, they argued that the costs should not be borne by Medicare providers. Many types of providers are already preparing for other cuts that were in the 2010 health care overhaul (PL 111-148, PL 111-152) and may face additional cuts if Congress passes them this year as part of legislation to reduce the deficit. Two speakers said the medical profession should not pay for higher-than-scheduled payment rates for physicians because providers did not create the flawed formula — Congress did.


“For almost everyone in this room, it’s been kind of a disheartening morning,” said Barbara Tomar, director of federal affairs for the American College of Emergency Physicians, in a comment that seemed to resonate with the rest of the crowd.


The draft recommendations were:


• “The Congress should repeal the sustainable growth rate and replace it with a 10-year path of statutory fee schedule updates. This path is comprised of a freeze in current payment levels for primary care and for all other services, annual payment reductions of 5.9 percent for three years, followed by a freeze. The commission is offering a list of options for the Congress to consider if it decides to offset the cost of repealing the SGR system within the Medicare program.” Approved 15-2.


• “The Congress should direct the secretary [of Health and Human Services] to regularly collect data — including service volume and work time — to establish more accurate work and practice expense values. To help assess whether Medicare’s fees are adequate for efficient care delivery, the data should be collected from a cohort of efficient practices rather than a sample of all practices. The initial round of data collection should be completed within three years.” Approved 17-0.


• “The Congress should direct the secretary to identify overpriced fee-schedule services and reduce their RVUs accordingly. To fulfill this requirement, the secretary could use the data collected under the process in recommendation 2. These reductions should be budget neutral within the fee schedule. Starting in 2015, the Congress should specify that the RVU reductions should achieve an annual numeric goal — for each of five consecutive years — of at least 1 percent of fee-schedule spending.” Approved 16-1.


• “Under the 10-year update path specified in draft recommendation 1, the secretary should increase the shared savings opportunity for physicians and health professionals who join or lead two-sided risk ACOs. The secretary should compute spending benchmarks for these ACOS using 2011 fee-schedule rates. Approved 15-1, with one abstention.”

Monday, October 10, 2011

‘Lifesaving’ alerts — right in my pocket | Georgia Health News

‘Lifesaving’ alerts — right in my pocket | Georgia Health News

Short-staffed Grady Memorial Hospital probed after patient fell from window - FierceHealthcare

Short-staffed Grady Memorial Hospital probed after patient fell from window - FierceHealthcare

Hospital employment inches up - FierceHealthcare

Hospital employment inches up - FierceHealthcare

Strong finances at Children's Healthcare support system's vast programs  | ajc.com

Strong finances at Children's Healthcare support system's vast programs | ajc.com

Surgeons tout Twitter use at hospitals to enhance training - FierceHealthcare

Surgeons tout Twitter use at hospitals to enhance training - FierceHealthcare

OIG: HHS to target hospitals in continued fraud crackdown - FierceHealthcare

OIG: HHS to target hospitals in continued fraud crackdown - FierceHealthcare

Pain management for practice breakups :: Oct. 10, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Pain management for practice breakups :: Oct. 10, 2011 ... American Medical News

36.6% Of Americans Of Normal Weight, The Rest Are Overweight Or Obese, Gallup Poll

36.6% Of Americans Of Normal Weight, The Rest Are Overweight Or Obese, Gallup Poll

Georgia's independent hospitals hurting  | ajc.com

Georgia's independent hospitals hurting | ajc.com

Limits on supplemental Medicare plans eyed | Reuters

Limits on supplemental Medicare plans eyed | Reuters

End-of-life surgery may not reflect seniors’ needs, study finds | The Salt Lake Tribune

End-of-life surgery may not reflect seniors’ needs, study finds | The Salt Lake Tribune

Medical News: Washington Week: MedPAC Votes to Scrap SGR - in Washington-Watch, Washington Watch from MedPage Today

Medical News: Washington Week: MedPAC Votes to Scrap SGR - in Washington-Watch, Washington Watch from MedPage Today

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Hospitals offering alternative medicine tripled, based on patient demand - FierceHealthcare

Hospitals offering alternative medicine tripled, based on patient demand - FierceHealthcare

Patient location, gloves, worker type predict hand hygiene compliance - FierceHealthcare

Patient location, gloves, worker type predict hand hygiene compliance - FierceHealthcare

10% of hospitalists work as locum tenens - FierceHealthcare

10% of hospitalists work as locum tenens - FierceHealthcare

DCH hosting focus groups for Medicaid/PeachCare redesign

e-News from MAG - 10/04/2011

AMA wants supercommittee to limit malpractice suits - The Hill's Healthwatch

AMA wants supercommittee to limit malpractice suits - The Hill's Healthwatch

- Information exchange pilot will change cancer care

RN-T.com - Information exchange pilot will change cancer care

Report Warns of Prescription Drug Abuse by Medicare Beneficiaries - NYTimes.com

Report Warns of Prescription Drug Abuse by Medicare Beneficiaries - NYTimes.com

Monday, October 3, 2011

In New Term, Supreme Court To Take On Hot-Button Issues : NPR

In New Term, Supreme Court To Take On Hot-Button Issues : NPR

Docs admit hospital VIPs get faster care in the ER - Health - Health care - msnbc.com

Docs admit hospital VIPs get faster care in the ER - Health - Health care - msnbc.com

Blue Shield of California Won’t Cover Breast Cancer Drug - NYTimes.com

Blue Shield of California Won’t Cover Breast Cancer Drug - NYTimes.com

Fake patients train as performers, help future doctors learn skills (video) | Georgia Health News

Fake patients train as performers, help future doctors learn skills (video) | Georgia Health News

New job is familiar territory for new Grady CEO  | ajc.com

New job is familiar territory for new Grady CEO | ajc.com

HHS wants to give patients test results straight from lab :: Oct 3, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: HHS wants to give patients test results straight from lab :: Oct 3, 2011 ... American Medical News

Editorial - Antitrust rules handcuff physician-led delivery models :: Oct 3, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Editorial - Antitrust rules handcuff physician-led delivery models :: Oct 3, 2011 ... American Medical News

Explaining residents' role in surgery may keep patients from consenting :: Oct 3, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Explaining residents' role in surgery may keep patients from consenting :: Oct 3, 2011 ... American Medical News

Life after lawsuit: How doctors pick up the pieces :: May 16, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Life after lawsuit: How doctors pick up the pieces :: May 16, 2011 ... American Medical News

Economic pressures prompt increase in hospital mass layoffs :: Sept. 29, 2011 ... American Medical News

amednews: Economic pressures prompt increase in hospital mass layoffs :: Sept. 29, 2011 ... American Medical News