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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Mar 9 2016

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Medicare's Art Of Compromise; Consumerism And Health Care

A selection of opinions from around the country.

If the Presidential race is any guide, many Americans do not like 鈥減oliticians.鈥 Weak-kneed and compromised by campaign contributions, 鈥減oliticians鈥 imperil our virtuous Republic. Or so we are told by ideologues on the Right and Left and by a distressing number of citizens whose interest in politics is but a quadrennial event. 鈥淐ompromised.鈥 A troubling word. Yet our system of government, with its divided powers, cannot function without 鈥渃ompromise鈥 among competing interests and philosophies. Can we 鈥渃ompromise鈥 without being 鈥渃ompromised鈥? Yes, and the resulting hybrid may even be superior to ideologically pure alternatives. (Glenn Hackbarth, 3/8)

American politicians and policymakers often tout consumer-based approaches, such as price transparency, comparison shopping, retail clinics, and high-deductible health plans featuring health savings accounts as answers to the nation's pressing healthcare cost and access problems. But recent evidence suggests that these types of market-based solutions have severe limits. (Harris Meyer, 3/8)

Defining and measuring quality in health care isn鈥檛 easy. New yardsticks from the Core Quality Measurement Collaborative are a step in the right direction ... They include things like whether a doctor has done a specific test or recommended a specific treatment. But they ignore things that matter to most of us. (Mitch Rothschild, 3/8)

Put simply, Sanders has promised to democratize access to our national resources. This includes our hospitals and medical facilities, our universities, our political system, and our economy. For Sanders, this is what true democracy entails 鈥 allowing all to participate and benefit regardless of location in the socio-economic hierarchy. (Tom Gill, 3/9)

Mr. Trump released a 10-paragraph health plan last week, perhaps in response to the criticism that he has no policy details ... one detail that leapt out for comment is his endorsement of foreign pharmaceutical importation鈥攁n idea even liberals left for dead a decade ago. (3/8)

The more doctors learn about the Zika virus, the more dangerous it appears. Is it too much to hope that this research will prod the U.S. Congress to take action? Of course, congressional action on any issue has been hard to come by lately. In the case of Zika, however, it鈥檚 worth examining what science says about its potential for harm. (3/8)

Coping with a public-health issue such as drug addiction is complicated, and when success is achieved in one area, new problems can arise elsewhere as a result. This is the case with efforts in recent years to shut down 鈥減ill mills,鈥 in which some unscrupulous doctors made a practice of prescribing opioid painkillers to virtually anyone. When government and law enforcement successfully cracked down on such operations and increased monitoring of painkiller prescriptions, many of those who were addicted to pain pills turned to illegal drugs such as heroin instead. (3/9)

Granting access to drugs, vaccines, biologics, and devices that have not yet been approved by governmental regulatory authorities is a growing challenge for physicians, public officials, patient advocacy groups, institutional review boards (IRBs), and patients.1 Although the issue of rapid access to investigational agents is not new, tracing back to the early days of the human immunodeficiency virus pandemic, the pace of requests has increased. This is attributable to many factors, including greater awareness of compassionate use on the part of patients and their physicians; more information available through the Internet and websites describing clinical trials; an increase in promising interventions, including genetic markers, immunotherapies, and recombinant vaccines; threats from potential epidemics such as Ebola, cholera, and influenza; and an increased willingness to try novel agents by patients who are chronically ill or dying. (Arthur R. Caplan and Amrit Ray, 3/8)

The new standards are among the most important efforts to improve children鈥檚 health in the past two decades. Since 1980, obesity has more than doubled in children and quadrupled in adolescents. Nearly a third of children and adolescents are either obese or overweight. In some states, the combined rate is close to 40 percent; among African American and Latino children, these rates are particularly high. And millions more children consume more sugar and empty calories than is healthy. (Steven Czinn, 3/8)

Last Friday was a bad day for clean air. First, the board of the South Coast Air Quality Management District voted to fire its longtime executive officer. Then, it reconfirmed its support for a plan to let oil refiners, power plants and other major polluters keep spewing emissions. (3/8)

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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