by Dan Royer on Thursday, June 23, 2011
The National Prevention, Health Promotion and Public Health Council released the National Prevention and Health Promotion Strategy this week. Members of the Council include Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, Surgeon General Regina Benjamin, as well as Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) and Domestic Policy Council (DPC) Director Melody Barnes.
“This National Prevention Strategy, called for under the Affordable Care Act, will help us transform our health care system away from a focus on sickness and disease to a focus on prevention and wellness,” said Secretary Sebelius. “We know that prevention helps people live long and productive lives and can help combat rising healthcare costs.”
Senator Harkin said of the plan, “I applaud the hard work and collaboration of the Surgeon General and representatives of the 17 Federal departments and agencies that comprise the National Prevention Council. After many years of advocating for wellness and prevention, I am thrilled that public health and health promotion are at the very heart of the historic Affordable Care Act – and also at the heart of the work of so many of our federal agencies. This coordinated approach will have a dramatic impact on the health and wellness of the American people.”
According to a summary of the plan, the council made recommendations to help increase the number of Americans who are healthy at every stage of life. The National Prevention Strategy recognizes that good health comes not just from receiving quality medical care, but also from clean air and water, safe work sites and healthy foods.
“Helping Americans live more healthful lives is a top priority for the Obama Administration,” said Melody Barnes. “The National Prevention Strategy is a road map to help us achieve that goal, and will help public and private partners come together to build healthier communities using evidence-based strategies that we know work.”
The strategy outlines four strategic directions:
- Building Healthy and Safe Community Environments: Prevention of disease starts in our communities and at home; not just in the doctor’s office.
- Expanding Quality Preventive Services in Both Clinical and Community Settings: When people receive preventive care, such as immunizations and cancer screenings, they have better health and lower health care costs.
- Empowering People to Make Healthy Choices: When people have access to actionable and easy-to-understand information and resources, they are empowered to make healthier choices.
- Eliminating Health Disparities: By eliminating disparities in achieving and maintaining health, we can help improve quality of life for all Americans.
by Dan Royer on Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Featuring hospital and health care headlines from the media and the Web.
Iowa News
Iowa state government will keep running July 1, Branstad insists
Gov. Terry Branstad assured Iowa citizens Tuesday that the full spectrum of state services will continue uninterrupted under his broad emergency powers should he and the Legislature fail to have a new state budget plan approved and signed by July 1. (Cedar Rapids Gazette)
County departments prep for a shutdown
Layoffs are part of Johnson County contingency plans in case state legislators don’t approve a budget by June 30 and cause a government shutdown. Members of the Johnson County Board of Supervisors met with department heads during a meeting Tuesday to discuss the effects of and possible plans for a shutdown. (Iowa City Press Citizen)
Clinton woman saved by timely screening
LouAnnda Larson may owe her life to her aching feet. The 55-year-old mother of three grown children had long suffered from foot pain that requires her to use a wheel chair to move any more than short distances. In October 2010, she traveled to the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics to determine the cause and possible treatments for her foot pain. Doctors performed a comprehensive physical exam that included a fecal occult blood test. The test results showed traces of blood in her stool. (Sioux City Journal)
New Crawford County Memorial Hospital to complete move, officially open June 27
The new, state-of-the-art Crawford County Memorial Hospital located at 100 Medical Parkway in Denison will open to the public on Monday, June 27. The moving process to transfer furniture and equipment to the new building will begin on Thursday, June 23. (SW Iowa News)
National News
Senate budget chairman says $2 trillion not enough
The debt-reduction package emerging in talks between the White House and congressional leaders would not “fundamentally change” the alarming rate of growth in the national debt, the chairman of the Senate Budget Committee said Tuesday. Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) said the goal of slicing more than $2 trillion from the federal budget by 2021 falls far short of the savings needed to stabilize borrowing, reenergize the economy and avert the threat of a debt crisis. (The Washington Post)
Hospital vs. medical center: Consumers favor ‘hospital’ title
When it comes to choosing a name—“hospital” or “medical center”–consumers prefer “hospital,” according to survey released today by Rivkin & Associates LLC and Bauman Research & Consulting LLC, both based in Glen Rock, N.J. Consumers tend to associate hospitals with more services, better care, new medicine, and expert physicians, compared to medical centers’ offerings. (Fierce Healthcare)
Health IT Can Energize National Prevention Strategy
The Obama Administration has made several health IT-related recommendations in its National Prevention Strategy that call for expanded use of electronic health records (EHRs), social media tools, and mobile phone applications to help promote health and wellness. (InformationWeek)
National Library of Medicine Launches Medline Plus
The National Library of Medicine, the world’s largest medical library and a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has formally launched MedlinePlus Connect. This free service allows health organizations and health information technology (HIT) providers to link patient portals and electronic health record (EHR) systems to MedlinePlus.gov, a trusted source of authoritative, up-to-date health information for patients, families and health care providers. MedlinePlus brings together information from NIH, other federal agencies, and reputable health information providers. MedlinePlus covers a wide range of health conditions and wellness issues, and includes key resources to inform patients about their health. (Cypress Times)
Medicare Advisory Group Urges Closer Look at Costs for MRIs, CT Scans
A 17-member independent advisory group has urged Congress to get tough on doctors who order too many diagnostic imaging tests for Medicare patients. These tests include MRIs and CT scans, which the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) says are driving up the cost of health care for America’s seniors. (PBS)
AP Exclusive: Medicaid For The Middle Class?
President Barack Obama’s health care law would let several million middle-class people get nearly free insurance meant for the poor, a twist government number crunchers say they discovered only after the complex bill was signed. (NPR)
by Dan Royer on Monday, June 20, 2011
Featuring hospital and health care headlines from the media and the Web.
Iowa News
Senate Democrats say budget agreement near
Senate Democrats say they have agreed to Republican demands to limit state spending to $5.9 billion and approve a two-year budget. The Democrats announced their agreement Monday at a Statehouse news conference. Party leaders say a bill fleshing out the budget will move through a committee later in the day and will be debated in the full Senate on Tuesday. (Iowa City Press Citizen)
Levees holding firm in Siouxland, but rain likely coming
Sunday was another day with 150,000 cubic feet per second Missouri River releases from Gavins Point Dam at Yankton, S.D., another day where the river stayed in the mid-33-feet stage in Sioux City and another where levees withstood it at various spots along the river. (Sioux City Journal)
Fighting Cancer for Dad
Two Washington High School students are making a difference in the lives of children battling a deadly disease. (KCRG)
National News
Many hospitals overuse double CT scans, data show
Hundreds of hospitals are routinely performing a type of chest scan that experts say should be used rarely, subjecting patients to double doses of radiation and driving up health-care costs. The government is taking a closer look at scans because imaging tests are among the fastest growing procedures in health care. (The Washington Post)
Mass burial honors those who gave bodies to science
Hundreds of Maryland residents every year — whether by design or circumstance — had their bodies turned over or given to the state anatomy board for science. They will share a final resting place, cremated and placed under a single grave marker in a field at the Springfield Hospital Center in Sykesville. (The Baltimore Sun)
Goodbye Clipboard, Hello Patient Palm Scanning At NYU
Patients at NYU Langone Medical Center no longer have to fill out the dreaded clipboard with their medical history or insurance data each time they come in for care because the Manhattan academic medical center has switched to palm recognition technology to identify and authenticate its patients. (InformationWeek)
Obama administration to stop new waivers for healthcare overhaul
The Obama administration on Friday said it would stop granting new waivers to the healthcare overhaul in September following sharp opposition from Republicans who cited the waivers in their bid to undermine the law. (The Wall Street Journal)
by Dan Royer on Thursday, June 9, 2011
Featuring hospital and health care headlines from the media and the Web.
Iowa News:
Covenant Cancer Treatment Center wins grant
The Covenant Cancer Treatment Center has been named a winner in the Livestrong Community Impact Project. It was one of many agencies or medical centers to receive funding from the Lance Armstrong cancer foundation. Mercy Medical Center in Cedar Rapids and the YMCA in Des Moines also were awarded funds. (WCF Courier)
House passes ‘omnibus’ budget; lawmakers cranky
There were strong signs Wednesday as House Republicans passed a so-called omnibus budget bill that Iowa’s legislative divide was only getting wider. Those signs included sharp accusations from Republicans that Democrats weren’t negotiating in good faith. (Des Moines Register)
Dennis Hunger new CEO at Washington County Hospital and Clinics
Washington County Hospital and Clinics announces Dennis Hunger as the new chief executive officer at Washington County Hospital and Clinics. (The Kalona News)
National News:
Judges sharply challenge healthcare law
Skeptical questions from three federal judges in Atlanta suggest they may be ready to declare unconstitutional all or part of the healthcare law promoted by the Obama administration and passed last year by Congress. (Los Angeles Times)
Panel endorses delay of stage 2 meaningful use to 2014
A panel developing clinical and process measures for meaningful use endorsed the delay of stage 2 for one year until 2014. As a result, providers will have three years through 2013 in which to verify that they have met stage 1 meaningful use requirements. (Government IT)
Is Social Networking Changing the Face of Medicine?
The reaction to the 2009 U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendations that women in their 40s did not need routine mammograms was swift and furious. Using email, social networking sites and electronic bulletin boards, breast cancer survivors vented their outrage. (Yahoo! News)
CMS extends application deadline for ACO pioneer project
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced on Wednesday it will extend the deadline for accountable care organizations that want to apply to be Pioneer ACO models. CMS officials said they are looking for advanced ACO programs to lead the way for ACO development nationwide. (Healthcare Finance News)
by Dan Royer on Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Featuring hospital and health care headlines from the media and the Web.
Iowa News
All Iowa hospitals sign on to effort to prevent errors
Iowa is the first state in which every hospital has joined a national effort to cut medical errors and reduce the number of patients readmitted for follow-up care, health care leaders said Tuesday. (Des Moines Register)
FMCH Auxiliary announces its scholarship winners
Fort Madison Community Hospital Auxiliary selected three recipients for their 2011 Scholarship awards. This scholarship provides funds to students pursuing a career in any medical field. Scholarship recipients were chosen on grades, character, community and school activities and financial need. (Fort Madison Daily Democrat)
UIHC works to improve patient satisfaction
Walking into a hospital can be a scary experience for any patient, especially at a large institution such as the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. That’s why officials are trying to stop the image of the hospital as a cold, unpleasant place that Theresa Brennan, associate professor of cardiovascular medicine and director of clinical cardiology at UIHC, said has been present since she started working at the hospital 10 years ago.
National News
Blue Shield of California to cut many premiums 2.5% this year
Health insurer Blue Shield of California, under fire for a series of recent rate hikes and the pay of its chief executive, plans to cut this year’s premiums by 2.5% for many of its 3.3 million policyholders as part of a new initiative to hold down costs. (Los Angeles Times)
Study Sees Cuts to Health Plans
A report by McKinsey & Co. has found that 30% of employers are likely to stop offering workers health insurance after the bulk of the Obama administration’s health overhaul takes effect in 2014. (Wall Street Journal)
For veterans in rural areas, health care can be a battle
Frank Munk earned his veteran’s medical benefits more than four decades ago in Quang Tri province, a hard-fought, bloody piece of ground in Vietnam. Yet he doesn’t always choose to use them. The 64-year-old truck mechanic from western Kansas instead spends $2,500 out of his own pocket on a private doctor for such things as hearing tests. It’s either that or drive nearly 300 miles to a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Wichita or Denver.
Sen. Kyl refines Republicans’ demands in debt-ceiling talks
The Senate’s No. 2 Republican on Tuesday spelled out GOP leaders’ conditions in the negotiations over reducing the federal deficit, offering the most specific outline of the party’s demands thus far.
Patient involvement is critical to success of Meaningful Use program
One of the major purposes of the federal program for the Meaningful Use of electronic health records (EHRs) is to produce improved clinical outcomes for patients. Providing patients access to their personal health information and having that information available to their families, caregivers and healthcare providers anywhere at any time is another core requirement of the Meaningful Use program.











