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Thursday, May 26 2016

Full Issue

Viewpoints: A 'Value Framework' For Medical Care Is A Bad Idea; What Is The Gov't Doing About Zika?

A selection of opinions on health care from around the country.

Do you want to know what the future of health care could look like? You should pay attention to a little-known yet hugely important event taking place in St. Louis on Thursday. But don鈥檛 expect a rosy vision 鈥 what you鈥檒l actually see is terrifying. The event in question will be hosted by the Institute for Clinical and Economic Research, a national nonprofit funded with millions of dollars from the health insurance industry and like-minded interests. The group 鈥 known as ICER 鈥 is unveiling its new method of determining the cost of medical treatment for patients. It鈥檚 called a 鈥渧alue framework,鈥 and it could potentially harm the health and well-being of the millions of Americans with cancer and other life-threatening diseases. (Jonathan Wilcox, 5/26)

The Zika virus exploded out of Brazilian slums at 21st-century speeds, and raced north into Central America and the Caribbean in a matter of months. A full-blown outbreak in the United States looks imminent. This statistically small virus is part of a global insurgency that adapts rapidly to developments of human progress. It exploits cultural dynamics: rapid over-urbanization, a changing climate and increased levels of travel and economic activity among countries. (Grey Frandsen, 5/26)

Chronic dysfunction on Capitol Hill is often cause for amusement, but not when lives and public health are at stake. That's what's happening now, with the menace of the spread of the Zika virus to the United States becoming ever more concrete. The House and Senate haven't been utterly idle on the Zika front. Their actions have been merely inadequate and cynical. Both chambers have proposed funding plans to combat Zika -- the Senate at $1.1 billion, the House at $622 million. But neither matches the $1.9 billion President Obama requested in February, and the House proposal would raid other disease programs to cover the bill. (Michael Hiltzik, 5/25)

Boys with lethal Duchenne muscular dystrophy have waited years for the Food and Drug Administration to approve a safe and innovative treatment, and they鈥檒l have to hold out longer. On Wednesday the FDA delayed a decision on eteplirsen by Sarepta Therapeutics, but the agency can still choose the correct scientific and legal outcome. Sarepta said FDA had notified the company that a decision would not be issued on Thursday as scheduled. The agency offered no clues beyond promising to finish 鈥渋nternal discussions鈥 and the broader review 鈥渋n as timely a manner as possible.鈥 An FDA advisory panel voted against approval in April, though agency bosses can accept or disregard the input. (5/25)

Everyone loves a happy ending, and in this season of political meltdown and partisan deadlock, the impulse is more acute than usual. So the question lingers from the Supreme Court鈥檚 non-resolution last week of the latest controversy brought about by the Obama administration鈥檚 effort to make birth control available to women in the work force: Was it a sign of a new appetite for compromise or of institutional dysfunction? Along with the many headline writers who stressed 鈥渃ompromise,鈥 I鈥檇 like to believe the former. But I fear the latter. (Linda Greenhouse, 5/26)

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has said before that he doesn鈥檛 get much sleep. And at a campaign event Wednesday in Anaheim, California, less than two weeks before the California presidential primary, Trump bragged again: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 sleep much. I don鈥檛 sleep much.鈥 ... That last claim is actually terrifying. (Sarah DiGiulio, 5/25)

The Theranos saga hit another low last week when the company informed regulators that it was voiding two years of tests from its Edison blood testing devices and sending of tens-of-thousands of revised tests results to doctors. This means that thousands of patients received incorrect results and were likely given the wrong treatments. Surely the doctors and the patient victims were not responsible for this misplaced trust. (Vivek Wadhwa and Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, 5/24)

[Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert] McDonald has been VA chief two years, and apparently has been co-opted utterly by the bureaucracy. His resignation should be the first one the next president accepts. (Editorial Board, 5/25)

Bob McDonald inherited a stink bomb when he was appointed Veterans Affairs secretary in July 2014. The agency was bloated with a backlog of nearly 350,000 unprocessed disability claims filed by veterans who put their life on the line for their country. Wait times ranged from months to years. Worst of all, it had come to light that VA employees were covering up average wait times to make the VA appear more efficient than it was. (Gary Peterson, 5/25)

Not only can it take months for the Brownback administration to process and approve Medicaid applications, but even applying for Medicaid can be an ordeal. No wonder there has been a drop in the number of Medicaid beneficiaries in Kansas. The state鈥檚 expensive new online application system and reorganized processing clearinghouse were supposed to make enrolling in Medicaid faster and easier. The opposite happened. (Phillip Brownlee, 5/26)

[T]he U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could 鈥渙pt out鈥 of the Medicaid expansion, and Republican leaders in North Carolina 鈥 ideologically opposed to the ACA and more specifically to all things associated with President Obama 鈥 did just that. So now perhaps 500,000 North Carolinians who could qualify for the federal/state health insurance program for the poor and disabled don鈥檛 have the coverage thanks to that 鈥淢edicaid gap.鈥 It was an astonishingly partisan and cruel step from the General Assembly. (5/25)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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