American Medical Association opposes GOP ObamaCare bill

http://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/322889-largest-doctors-group-opposes-gop-obamacare-bill

American Medical Association opposes GOP ObamaCare bill

The nation’s biggest doctors group on Wednesday came out in opposition to the GOP’s ObamaCare replacement bill, warning that it would cause millions of people to lose coverage.

“As drafted, the AHCA would result in millions of Americans losing coverage and benefits,” said Dr. Andrew Gurman, president of the American Medical Association (AMA), referring to the American Health Care Act.

“By replacing income-based premium subsidies with age-based tax credits, the AHCA will also make coverage more expensive — if not out of reach — for poor and sick Americans. For these reasons, the AMA cannot support the AHCA as it is currently written.”

The opposition from the powerful doctors group adds to a range of objections from the healthcare industry to the GOP bill. The American Hospital Association on Tuesday also came out against the legislation.

The AMA also objected that the GOP bill bases its tax credits on someone’s age, not their income, giving less help to low-income people. The group warned of rolling back ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion, an area where some GOP lawmakers also have concerns.

The AMA also opposes a provision in the bill defunding Planned Parenthood.

“We encourage you to ensure that low and moderate income Americans will be able to secure affordable and adequate coverage and that Medicaid, [Children’s Health Insurance Program], and other safety net programs are maintained and adequately funded,” the AMA said in its letter to Congress. “And critically, we urge you to do all that is possible to ensure that those who are currently covered do not become uninsured.”

 

Editor’s Corner: Why are we still letting pharma pay physicians?

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/antifraud/editor-s-corner-why-are-we-still-letting-pharma-pay-physicians

Close-up of a doctor's white coat

Last month, W. Carl Reichel was acquitted of charges that he oversaw a kickback scheme designed to induce physicians to prescribe certain drugs manufactured by Warner Chilcott LLC.

The president and CEO of the pharmaceutical company was acquitted of those charges despite the fact that the company itself pleaded guilty to “knowingly and willfully” paying off physicians in the form of sham speaking fees and meals at high-end restaurants, and agreed to pay the government $125 million in civil and criminal fines.

He was acquitted even though prosecutors trotted out nearly a dozen witnesses who worked under Reichel to testify against him, some of whom admitted to participating in the scheme that used “medical education” events–including barbecues, picnics, parties and trips to a casino–to improve physician prescribing rates. The government also alleged that Reichel oversaw the whole thing by demanding sales reps engage in “business conversations” about “clinical experience,” which was code for a physician’s prescribing rate.

But most importantly, he was acquitted because his attorneys never denied that he oversaw any of these payments, or that he instructed sales staff to take physicians out “at least twice a week.” They merely argued that “relationship building” is “widely accepted conduct” in the medical community.

They aren’t lying–allowing pharmaceutical companies to pay physicians large sums of money is a widely accepted practice. The question we should be asking ourselves is, why?

 

The Threat From A New And Growing Anxiety In The United States Today: A Physician’s Perspective

http://www.forbes.com/sites/robertpearl/2017/02/16/the-threat-from-a-new-and-growing-anxiety-in-the-united-states-today-a-physicians-perspective/#7ce8667f6a92

Image result for fear and anxiety

This week I heard from a student in her third year of medical school. To date, she has borrowed more than $100,000 to fund her education. She is in the top 10% of her class, with honors in all of her subjects and high scores on her national exams. She would be a valued resident in the most competitive specialty training programs. Her goal is to become a primary care physician and offer her expertise to a diverse set of patients, leveraging the multiple languages she speaks fluently. But because she was born in a Middle Eastern country, she has a problem.

She wrote to me that she suddenly faces uncertainty about her status in the U.S. and about the possibility she will be forced to leave without completing her final year of medical school. Were that to happen, she would have wasted the time and the money she has already had invested. She accepted the reality that as someone from another nation, she would need to be exceptional to fulfill her dream. But now she worries that she could be required to leave no matter how well she performs.

And the same is true for nurses, laboratory technicians and doctors born in other countries but already established in practice in the U.S. The rules they will need to live by in the future are unclear and ever-changing. Which countries will be impacted? Will the requirements to leave apply to individuals on student visas and green cards and even to naturalized citizens?


How Anxiety Is Eclipsing Fear

Imagine how you would feel going to sleep at night worried about what you will read in the newspaper the next morning. Everything you value is at risk, including your health.

 

1K docs, nurses urge Cleveland Clinic to cancel fundraiser at Trump resort

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/healthcare/1k-docs-nurses-urge-cleveland-clinic-to-cancel-fundraiser-at-trump-resort?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWm1NMVpqTmpZbVpqWldFMSIsInQiOiJVZEpvenlWYkp2QW40NE1uNnZUWlZNcWhicE1sWEZrRmd5SVwvZGx0M3hGTUNpVWN3cFwvWnNCMlpoQ25ycTlUMnhnQ0ZGWmcyem5ZdXZ1SzhsMHB3MWU2TlNuQzJkbDNjNDlTbkNVdWN2Z0wyOXB6M1NnU1MwSUs3SFR4b3ptRXlxIn0%3D

Photo: Inside the Mar-a-Lago, courtesy of The Mar-a-Lago Club website.

More than 1,100 doctors, nurses and medical students are urging the Cleveland Clinic to cancel an annual fundraiser planned at a resort owned by President Donald Trump in the wake of his executive order on immigration.

Over the last three days, 1,141 medical professionals have signed an open letter to Cleveland Clinic President and CEO Toby Cosgrove asking him to cut the perceived ties to Trump in light of the executive order that led to a first-year internal medicine resident at the organization being detained and forced to return to Saudi Arabia because her visa was issued in Sudan, one of the countries on Trump’s list

Suha Abushamma, M.D., has sued the Trump administration, CNBC reports, and a federal judge has ordered the White House to explain why she shouldn’t be allowed to return to the United States.

The ban also had a direct impact on nine patients scheduled to receive care at the Cleveland Clinic over the next 90 days.

Many of the medical professionals who signed the letter are students at Case Western Reserve University, which runs the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine.

The letter asks Cosgrove to:

  • Reschedule the lavish fundraiser planned at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida
  • Release a public statement that condemns the immigration ban
  • Pledge to use his power to protect Cleveland Clinic employees from deportation and allow patients to continue to receive care
  • Emphasize that Cleveland Clinic values diversity and relies on immigrants to provide medical care

Summa CEO Thomas Malone resigns: What happens next at Summa remains unclear

http://www.ohio.com/business/summa-ceo-thomas-malone-resigns-what-happens-next-at-summa-remains-unclear-1.743267

malone27cut_02

Dr. Thomas Malone on Thursday announced his resignation as president and CEO of Summa Health, 21 days after more than 240 physicians signed a no-confidence letter calling for his departure.

Malone, 60, a Northeast Ohio native who began leading the health system two years ago, will continue to serve as CEO for up to 60 days while Summa’s board of directors conducts a search for his successor, the board said.

In a statement released Thursday, Malone said he had detracted from the health system’s mission.

“I care deeply about the future of Summa Health and am incredibly proud of all that we have accomplished together over the past two years,” Malone wrote. “However, as I thought about what would be best for our organization moving forward, it became clear to me that my presence may be a distraction from our goals. And that is unacceptable to me.”

Feds Allege Mass Forest Park Medical Center Kickback Scheme; 21 Indicted

http://healthcare.dmagazine.com/2016/12/01/doj-indicts-21-alleges-forest-park-officials-paid-40-million-in-kickbacks-for-patient-referrals/?utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=38578013&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9nq-_xFj_5ZsB5A4GXxtR4dmyVTHWn9cNkB_MTg2hapXhZT97fHccuUvHO0Xt0TZ00pj_4tk5lsYhA5hKfDHAVK1sDrw&_hsmi=38578013

(Credit: Justin Clemons)

A federal grand jury has returned indictments on 21 individuals allegedly involved in a massive kickback scheme through the defunct Forest Park Medical Center chain of luxury hospitals, which resulted in “well over half a billion dollars” in billed claims due to illegal bribes.

The 44-page indictment, unsealed Thursday, describes a vast, four-year conspiracy, fueled by $40 million in kickbacks funneled through a number of shell companies—consulting firms, commercial real estate firms, business services organizations—into the pockets of high-powered surgeons, some of whom have their faces on billboards throughout Dallas-Fort Worth.

The 21 suspects include two of the four physician founders of the hospital chain, including Dr. Richard Toussaint, the anesthesiologist who is awaiting sentencing on a separate fraud conviction; and Wade Barker, the bariatric surgeon who helped develop the idea for Forest Park. Other early adopters indicted in the scheme include Wilton ‘Mac’ Burt, a consultant who helped run the chain’s affiliated management company until he and his colleague, Alan Beauchamp, were bought out in 2015. Beauchamp was also indicted.

But the bribery scheme sailed far outside the doors of Forest Park’s grey and blue flagship at the corner of U.S. 75 and Interstate 635. Also indicted were prominent bariatric surgeons Drs. David Kim and William Nicholson as well as the minimally invasive spine surgeons Drs. Michael Rimlawi, Douglas Won, and Shawn Henry. Won, the DOJ alleges, was paid $7 million for his referrals. Rimlawi is accused of accepting $3.8 million. The feds argue that Kim and Nicholson, both of whom were investors in Forest Park, were paid $4.595 million and $3.8 million respectively. Reads the indictment: “The surgeons spent the vast majority of the bribe payments marketing their personal medical practices—which benefitted them financially—or on personal expenses such as cars, diamonds, and payments to family members.”

In all, the feds say Forest Park collected “in excess of two hundred million dollars in tainted and unlawful claims.” None of those named in the indictment have returned requests for comment. Sheryl Zapata, the chief development officer for the Texas Back Institute where Nicholson currently practices, said “TBI is not a part of this and we will not be commenting.”

“Medical providers who enrich themselves through bribes and kickbacks are not only perverting our critical health care system, but they are committing a serious crime,” read a statement from U.S. Attorney John Parker. “Massive, multi-faceted schemes such as this one, built on illegal financial relationships, drive up the cost of healthcare for everyone and must be stopped.”

Forest Park Medical Center was a chain of luxury hospitals that sprouted in Dallas, Fort Worth, Southlake, Frisco, and San Antonio. One in Austin was built but never opened, kneecapped due to nearly two dozen construction liens.

The model collapsed in on itself due to its reliance on high out-of-network charges that it would bill to insurance companies. The payers eventually balked, and the patient volumes dried up. The hospitals died one by one, each eventually entering bankruptcy and sold off to a health system. Because they were physician owned, they were barred by the Affordable Care Act from billing any public health insurance plan, such as Medicare, for fear of conflicts of interest regarding referrals. And despite this, it twice had to settle claims with the DOJ for paying kickbacks for Tricare patients and Department of Labor employees. The indictment alleges that this is exactly what happened: Beauchamp, Barker, and Kim, among others, “also attempted to refer patients with lower-reimbursing insurance coverage, namely Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, to other facilities in exchange for cash.”

California Reforms Target Workers’ Compensation Fraud

California Reforms Target Workers’ Compensation Fraud

Image result for Workers’ Compensation Fraud

California is cracking down on graft in the state’s system of medical care for injured workers with two bills recently signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown.

The reforms will prohibit medical providers who are felons from billing for workers’ compensation care and rein in a court-governed payment system that gave rise to hundreds of millions of dollars in unsanctioned treatment.

Lawmakers who introduced the bills cited an investigation by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting that examined more than $1 billion in alleged fraud in the medical system for injured workers.

Reviewing more than a dozen prosecutions and analyzing state data, the investigation found that alleged scams affected more than 100,000 injured workers. Many were monolingual Latinos who were targeted in aggressive marketing efforts in Southern California. They encountered everything from kickback-fueled spinal surgeries to fraudulent providers to $1,600 tubes of pain cream.

Alleged scammers included felons and doctors banned from billing Medicare for malfeasance. Many fraud defendants exploited a feature of California’s workers’ compensations system that let them file a “lien,” or a demand for payment, for services after insurers refused to pay. They included therapies like shock wave pain treatments or unwanted drugs, such as the pricey pain creams.

The new laws would ban certain medical providers with troubled pasts from treating injured workers and also aim to limit the avalanche of liens that clog the docket in two dozen workers’ compensation courts throughout the state.

Christine Baker, director of the Department of Industrial Relations, which administers workers’ compensation, said she hopes the laws improve care for people who seek help for an on-the-job injury.

“I think both abuses and fraudulent activities prey on the most vulnerable populations and we’re hopeful that appropriate treatment will be provided to workers when needed,” Baker said. The laws “should reduce costs, because a lot of costs are tied to fraudulent activity, and that frees up dollars for the injured workers.”

Thinking Creatively To Fill Gaps In The Health Care Work Force

Thinking Creatively To Fill Gaps In The Health Care Work Force

_MG_1317

Like many states, Texas faces shortages of doctors and other health workers. A conference at the Texas Medical Center explored the research behind several possible solutions, such as “grand-aides” and dental therapists.