LSU Hospitals

Media Sweep

Friday, June 05, 2009

 

Jindal: New clinic La.’s future

The Advocate | 06.05.09

 

New health clinic opens in north BR

The Advocate | 06.05.09

 

Mid-City hospital site may be sold

The Times-Picayune | 06.05.09

 

Jindal favors merit raises for state workers

The Advocate | 06.05.09

 

Bill: Dentist board gets deadline to enact rules for school dentistry

The Advocate | 06.05.09

 

Jindal: Protecting higher ed, health care important

The Town Talk | 06.04.09

 

Battle to halt higher ed cuts intensifies

Ruston Daily Leader | 06.04.09

 

Despite availability, thousands of children go without health insurance

WWLTV | 06.04.09

 

Mobile dentists bill heads to Louisiana Senate

New Orleans CityBusiness | 06.04.09

 

Keeping Them Honest

The New York Times | 06.05.09

 

Avian Flu Fears Said to Help U.S. Prepare for Swine Flu

The New York Times | 06.04.09

 

Republicans Complain About Plan for Health Insurance

The New York Times | 06.04.09

 

Should Health Insurance Be Mandatory?

The New York Times | 06.04.09

 

 

Jindal: New clinic La.’s future

The Advocate | 06.05.09

By MARSHA SHULER

 Advocate Capitol News Bureau

 

:LSU_3477.jpg

 

New clinic opened.  Baton Rouge State Sen. Sharon Broome (in red at center) and Herbert Brown cut the ribbon opening LSU’s new $18 million North Baton Rouge clinic.

 

An $18 million state-of-the-art LSU-operated medical clinic officially opened Thursday in north Baton Rouge.

 

In the next few weeks, primary care, women’s health and cancer services will move from the campus of LSU’s Earl K. Long Medical Center north on Airline Highway to the new clinic.

 

In Thursday’s ceremonies marking its opening, state Sen. Sharon Broome, D-Baton Rouge, was already promoting “a vision” for future expansion of the facility, which is in her legislative district.

 

“We need an urgent-care center attached right over there,” Broome told Gov. Bobby Jindal, one of the speakers. “I wanted to say it in front of all these witnesses.”

 

Jindal called the clinic the  way of Louisiana’s health-care future. It will emphasize preventive and primary care. He praised LSU officials for their leadership role in establishing “medical homes,” which provides patients with medical care in their communities.

 

Jindal said Louisiana is one of leading states in the nation for use of emergency rooms for nonemergency medical problems. He said facilities like the north Baton Rouge clinic would provide early diagnosis and care that would reduce expensive emergency room visits and hospital stays.

 

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North Baton Rouge Clinic

 

“This is exactly our vision for reform,” said state Department of Health and Hospitals Secretary Alan Levine. “We are going to give you the tools and infrastructure where it can be done properly.”

 

The 44,000-square-feet, two-story building has 30 exam rooms, a community meeting room, a diagnostic laboratory, a pharmacy and radiology services.

 

Broome said it took a lot of different people to make the clinic reality from the Florida businessman, who donated the land, to Gov. Kathleen Blanco’s administration, which committed the funds and many others in-between. Blanco’s commissioner of administration, Jerry Luke LeBlanc, attended.

 

Earl K. Long Medical Center Administrator Kathy Viator said physicians started seeking obstetrics and gynecology patients at the clinic on Monday. Cancer services will be moved from the EKL campus next, then internal medicine services after July 1, Viator said.

 

Patient care will continue to be at the same high level just in different and better surroundings for patients, physicians, nurses and others, Viator said.

 

“You have a modern state-of-the-art facility that will effectively serve patients’ needs. Our building down the street is antiquated,” said Viator.

 

                                                                                                                                 Richard Alan Hannon/The Advocate

 

LSU medical students Suhas Patel, left, Myles Bevan and Mary Plaisance listen to speakers Thursday who helped open a state-of-the-art medical clinic where they will train. Sitting at back is LSU System Vice President Fred Cerise, who oversees medical education and hospitals.

 

Herbert Brown, who donated the clinic land to LSU, and his family participated in the ceremony officially opening the facility.

 

Brown gave the old Kmart property at 5439 Airline Highway — a short distance from EKL — in memory of his son H. Graham Brown who died tragically at age 15. A plaque will be placed on the building in his memory.

 

“We are still trying to do what Scripture said: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive’,” said Brown.

 

Dr. Michael Butler, chief of the LSU Health Care Service Division of which EKL is a part, shared a litmus test he uses in judging health-care facilities.

 

“Can you say you would want this for your momma? If you can’t say that, you need to do better. LSU-Earl K. Long has finally come up with something that’s good enough for you momma,” Butler said to applause from the crowd.

 

http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/47004687.html

 

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New health clinic opens in north BR

The Advocate | 06.05.09

 

Watch Video:  http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/46978862.html?showAll=y&c=y

 

A new health clinic is open in north Baton Rouge so people don't have to go to Earl K. Long Hospital for non-emergency cases. News 2's Christine Lewis visited the new LSU North Baton Rouge Clinic on Airline Highway and found it is cutting down the wait time.

 

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Mid-City hospital site may be sold

The Times-Picayune | 06.05.09

By Kate Moran

Business writer

 

The local nursing home operator St. Margaret's is exploring the possible purchase of Lindy Boggs Medical Center, the devastated Mid-City hospital that was slated as recently as last year to be torn down to make way for a retail center.

 

St. Margaret's signed a purchase agreement for the hospital this week and plans to spend the next three to six months inspecting the building and weighing whether to move forward with the deal, according to Jason Hemel, the vice president of business development.

 

Hemel said the nonprofit, which is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church and serves the elderly poor, would like to build a state-of-the-art nursing home in part of Lindy Boggs and seek a hospital operator to run the remainder as a health-care facility open to the public.

 

"St. Margaret's is not in the business of running hospitals. We would look to bring in an operator, if that aspect is even feasible," Hemel said. "We are very much in the infancy of our due-diligence process."

 

Lindy Boggs was among the suite of five hospitals that Tenet Healthcare, a publicly traded hospital operator based in Dallas, ran in the New Orleans area before Hurricane Katrina. Tenet sold three hospitals after the storm to Ochsner Health System, which declined to purchase Lindy Boggs because of its heavy damage.

 

Tenet sold the vacant hospital in 2007 to Victory Real Estate Investments, a Georgia company that accumulated an enormous sweep of land in Mid-City for a big-box retail development, an effort that met with considerable resistance from neighborhood groups.

As the economy contracted and retail chains began rationing the launch of new stores, Victory put its retail plans on ice and enlisted local real estate broker Don Randon to find a buyer for the property it owned in Mid-City. Randon referred calls about the purchase agreement for Lindy Boggs to St. Margaret's.

 

Hemel declined to disclose the agreed-upon price for Lindy Boggs, which Victory acquired for $11.5 million. Tenet agreed as part of the sale to pay $2.1 million to tear down the hospital, which would have effectively reduced the price Victory paid had the company moved forward with the demolition. The hospital still stands.

 

St. Margaret's currently runs a nursing home in Bywater, but Hemel called it a temporary facility that was designed to help bring the elderly poor home after the storm. The Federal Emergency Management Agency helped renovate the Bywater location, and it will provide additional money for the permanent nursing home, Hemel said.

 

The nonprofit also hopes to secure new market tax credits to help with the renovation of the portion of Lindy Boggs that would be open to the public as a health-care facility. New market credits are a federal incentive designed to spur investment in distressed and low-income areas.

 

Hemel said Lindy Boggs would require a major renovation before St. Margaret's could move in. He said a new, modern nursing home at the former hospital would serve about 116 seniors, about the same as the temporary facility on St. Claude Avenue.

 

The purchase agreement St. Margaret's signed this week includes the main hospital as well as the medical building, but not some parking and other land associated with the former hospital.

 

Hemel said St. Margaret's would hold meetings in the coming weeks with Mid-City neighborhood groups. Jennifer Weishaupt and Virginia Blanque, both Mid-City neighborhood leaders, could not be reached for comment Thursday evening to comment on the proposal.

"We want community involvement," Hemel said.

 

Residents previously have expressed frustration with the slow return of health care to Mid-City, and they supported the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs as it explored whether to build its new hospital on the site of the former Lindy Boggs hospital. The VA eventually selected a site closer to downtown, where it would share a hospital campus with Louisiana State University.

 

As it mulls whether to buy the former Lindy Boggs site, St. Margaret's is managing the redevelopment of a medical center in Algiers that used to be owned by Little Sisters of the Poor. Hemel said the nonprofit is renovating St. Luke's, a facility next to Holy Cross College, on behalf of several partners.

 

The 130,000-square-foot building on the West Bank eventually will hold a nursing home, a geriatric psychiatric hospital, a rehabilitation center, a cardiology office run by Tulane and a retail pharmacy, among other health-care uses, according to Hemel.

 

http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/frontpage/index.ssf?/base/news-13/124417984974800.xml&coll=1

 

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Jindal favors merit raises for state workers

The Advocate | 06.05.09

By MARSHA SHULER

Advocate Capitol News Bureau

 

Gov. Bobby Jindal said Thursday he favors the granting of a 4 percent pay raise to state workers in the coming budget year.

 

But Jindal said changes need to be made so in the future the so-called “merit” raises are better tied to employee performance on the job.

 

“They should be truly merit based,” Jindal said.

 

Jindal noted today’s system grants the same raise to state workers whether their job performance rating is merely acceptable or exceptional.

 

The state Civil Service Commission on Wednesday postponed action on a proposal that would have withheld the 4 percent raise from some 60,000 rank-and-file state employees.

 

The commission’s staff had recommended the plan as a way to help reduce employee layoffs because of a $1.3 billion downturn in state revenue available for spending in the fiscal year that begins July 1.

 

But commission member Burl Cain recommended the panel wait to see if other options materialized.

 

The House version of the budget included language barring agencies from giving the employee pay raises. The Senate reversed that decision late Wednesday night as senators put their imprint on the proposed $28 billion state budget document.

 

There is no extra money in the budget for the pay increases. Agencies — as they have traditionally done — would be required to cut in other areas to fund them.

 

The 4 percent pay raise is nearly automatic and is awarded annually to most state workers on the anniversary date of their employment. Only those with less stellar job ratings don’t get the “merit” increase.

 

According to Civil Service — state government’s employment agency — some 96 percent of state classified employees get merit pay annually.

 

Civil Service Deputy Director Jean Jones said the agency’s compensation division has been working on “a comprehensive revision to our pay system, including — but not limited to — merit increases. … We’ll probably have a proposal sometime later this year.”

 

A couple of state representatives have been pushing for Civil Service layoff and pay policy changes during the legislative session.

 

State Rep. John Schroder, R-Covington, wants Civil Service to develop a system where employees would get anywhere from 0-to-4 percent merit pay increases depending on their job performance.

 

Meanwhile, House Concurrent Resolution 6 by state Rep. Mike Danahay, D-Sulphur, requests that Civil Service revise the system to give bosses “greater flexibility in compensating employees based on job duties and evaluations of performance.”

 

The same resolution urges Civil Service to move away from seniority as the sole factor in determining who goes and who stays when employee layoffs are required. The resolution seeks inclusion of other factors such as knowledge, performance and ability in the decision-making process.

 

The Civil Service Commission on Wednesday approved policy changes that would keep seniority as a factor but also consider performance and other factors. The policy would end automatic “bumping rights” which allow more senior employees to displace less senior workers when their jobs are eliminated in layoffs.

 

Jindal said he agrees with the commission decision, saying other factors, “not just length of service,” need to be considered.

 

State employees who opposed the policy change told the commission that performance ratings were not a good barometer because they are subjective.

 

Some said it could easily interject politics into a system where workers are supposed to be protected from the ebb and flow of governor’s administrations.

 

http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/47004737.html

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Bill: Dentist board gets deadline to enact rules for school dentistry

The Advocate | 06.05.09

By JORDAN BLUM

Advocate Capitol News Bureau

 

A debate that lasted several days in the Legislature about allowing dental care in schools was resolved Thursday with changes to a measure that would force the Louisiana State Board of Dentistry to enact rules for dentistry in schools or mobile dental units.

 

The amended House Bill 687 was approved on a 64-30 House vote to require the state dentistry board to adopt new health and safety guidelines by Jan. 1.

 

The amended legislation also requires any dentist providing such school care to have at least $1 million in medical malpractice liability insurance. Opponents said the insurance measure would price out many dentists from practicing.

 

HB687 centers on the new trend in Louisiana of dentists going to schools in primarily low-income and rural areas and performing dental work on children who are covered by Medicaid, the government insurance program.

 

Bill sponsor and state Rep. Kevin Pearson, R-Slidell, contended removing “partial” dentistry care in school libraries and gyms is needed to encourage parental involvement and to get students the quality care they really need.

 

Several in opposition have argued that dentistry in schools is the only way many students from low-income families will get any dental care at all.

 

House Speaker Jim Tucker, R-Terrytown, offered the compromise amendment that finally solved the debate.

 

“If we’ve learned anything, rulemaking should be kept at the dental board level,” Tucker said.

 

State Rep. Fred Mills, D-St. Martinville, who initially opposed the bill, worked on the compromise with Tucker. Mills said the compromise is good because neither side of the debate is thoroughly pleased with it.

 

“It just tells the Board of Dentistry to get your act together and set guidelines,” Mills said. “If they don’t get it done, then let’s get a new board.”

 

State Rep. Chris Roy, D-Alexandria, expressed concern about the insurance requirement.

 

“The amendment is a clever way to make it impossible to practice mobile dentistry,” Roy said.

 

Only about 1,000 dentists in the state have agreed to treat Medicaid patients. However, more than 430,000 young people on Medicaid are not seeing dentists outside of schools.

 

The Louisiana Dental Association and its 1,800 or so members have lobbied for the legislation, but Mills said much of the association’s members are split on the issue. The LDA contends students need to visit dentist’s offices in order to get proper care.

 

State Rep. John Bel Edwards, D-Amite, complained the compromise was reached between Pearson, Tucker, Mills and no other legislators as promised. Edwards said the amendment was too restrictive and threatened to punish the Board of Dentistry too harshly.

 

“This amendment doesn’t do what we were told it was going to do,” Edwards said.

 

Edwards offered a counter-amendment for the Board of Dentistry to enact guidelines. But Edwards’ amendment had fewer restrictions, unlike Tucker’s tighter “road map,” and did not threaten to remove dentistry board members.

 

Edwards withdrew his amendment after Tucker’s proposal was approved on a 65-31 House vote.

 

The legislation next moves to the Senate for consideration.

 

Voting YES on House Bill 687 (64): Mr. Speaker and Reps Abramson, Arnold, Badon A., Badon B., Barras, Billiot, Burford, Burns, H., Burns, T., Champagne, Chaney, Connick, Cortez, Cromer, Danahay, Dove, Downs, Ellington, Fannin, Foil,  Gallot, Geymann, Guillory, Guinn, Hardy, Hazel, Henry, Hill, Hoffmann,  Howard, Hutter, Johnson, Jones, R., Katz, Kleckley, LaBruzzo, Lambert, LeBas, Leger, Ligi, Little, Lopinto, McVea, Mills, Monica, Nowlin, Pearson,  Perry, Pope, Pugh, Richardson, Schroder, Simon, Smiley, Smith G., Smith J.,  Talbot, Templet, Waddell, White,  Williams, Willmott and Wooton.

 

Voting NO on the measure (31): Reps. Armes, Brossett, Burrell, Carmody, Carter, Chandler, Dixon, Doerge, Edwards, Ernst, Franklin, Gisclair, Greene, Henderson, Honey, Jackson G., Jones, S., Landry, Montoucet, Morris,  Norton, Peterson, Ponti, Richard, Richmond, Ritchie, Robideaux, Roy,  St. Germain, Stiaes and Thibaut.

 

Not Voting (9): Anders, Aubert, Baldone, Barrow, Harrison, Hines, Jackson M.,

 

LaFonta and Smith, P.

 

http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/47004337.html

 

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Jindal: Protecting higher ed, health care important

The Town Talk | 06.04.09

By Gov. Bobby Jindal

 

We have all seen the effects of the national economic downturn, even as our state continues to out-perform the nation. Indeed, many families and small businesses across the country and here in Louisiana are tightening their belts and finding ways to cut costs. The state budget we are currently crafting for next year is no different.

 

While we all want to eliminate waste in government, no one in Louisiana and certainly none of our elected leaders want to cut critical services. We must be clear on that point. The challenge we are currently facing is how to balance our state budget. When faced with a deficit, and required to balance the budget, we are met with only two true choices: we can raise taxes on our people or we can trim the size of government. We must choose one or the other. Unlike the federal government, we can’t simply print more money and pass the bill on to the next generation, or borrow money from China.

 

Given only these two real choices, we know that trimming government and keeping taxes low encourage growth and success in Louisiana. On the other hand, increasing taxes on our people or our businesses, or taking away planned tax relief, would be the wrong choice for fostering growth and job creation during this national economic downturn. There is something we can do right now, however, and that is to reform our budget process so that in tough economic times we can trim government in all areas and better protect critical services, especially in higher education and health care.

 

Currently, funding for higher education and health care are too often singled out for cuts in tight budget years, while there are nearly 400 dedicated funds with more than $3.7 billion in funding that are protected and not often examined for efficiency in spending. Under our antiquated budget rules, these funds are off limits and not scrutinized.

 

We are trying to change that through legislation in this session to make significant constitutional and statutory changes to protect our spending priorities by forcing every government dollar and agency to compete for funding. These reforms include being able to examine dedicated funds frequently to ensure they match up with our state priorities and to redirect their funding into more critical service areas when they do not. We are also supporting significant reforms to curtail civil service red tape, fund both preK-12 and higher education based on their performance, and to streamline government.

 

Prioritizing state spending and making reductions where we need to is not an easy process, but it is necessary to balance our budget in a time of deficit. Most importantly, by keeping our taxes low and trimming government so we live within our means, we will further strengthen Louisiana as a competitor with the best places in the world for attracting business investment, job creation, and greater economic growth. When you hear someone mourn the fact that we have to trim government in lean times, remember two things – first, we can make this process better by changing our budget rules, and second, the alternative is to raise taxes.

 

http://www.thetowntalk.com/article/20090604/OPINION/90604015

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Battle to halt higher ed cuts intensifies

Ruston Daily Leader | 06.04.09

T. Scott Boatright, Reporter

 

This is one prizefight Louisiana Tech and Grambling State University officials will have their eyes on.

 

Louisiana Senate’s budget-writing committee gave their support for a more than $28 billion spending plan Wednesday that would reverse proposed cuts to public colleges and health care by tapping into the “rainy day” fund and delaying a scheduled income tax break.

 

The move sets up a battle with Gov. Bobby Jindal’s administration and the House, both of which have already stated opposition to some of the financing plans used in the patchwork proposal by the Senate Finance Committee for the new fiscal year that begins July 1.

 

Jindal has said he would veto the bill in its current form, and a majority of House members have signed news releases promising to vote it down.

 

Tech and GSU have been at work for months to craft budget plans that would address cuts that will hit the two universities.

 

Jindal’s original budget planned for $220 million in cuts to higher education, $400 million in cuts to health care programs and millions of dollars in cuts to arts programs, state parks and social services. That plan would have sliced a combined $13.2 million from the budgets of Tech and GSU — $8.3 million for Tech and $4.9 million for Grambling.

 

The House reworked some of those plans, reversing $100 million of the $220 million in cuts Jindal proposed for public colleges, though part of that was linked to a tuition increase legislators agreed to levy on students. Higher education leaders say the remaining cuts still would force layoffs, boost class sizes and damage services to students.

 

Budget analysts said the Senate’s new bill, authored by Sen. Lydia Jackson, D-Shreveport, would shrink higher education cuts to less than $100 million and health care cuts to about $170 million next year as lawmakers struggle to cope with a $1.3 billion projected drop in state general fund revenue. Other agencies also still wouldface cuts, and state government jobs would shrink by 1,400.

 

Jackson’s bill would delay implementation of a 2007 law that allows taxpayers to deduct 100 percent of their excess itemized deductions — including mortgage interest, charitable donation and health care costs — compared to the current 65 percent. The change is scheduled to take effect for 2009 tax forms, but Jackson’s bill would delay that change until taxpayers fill out their 2012 forms.

 

About a quarter of Louisiana’s taxpayers, mostly those with high incomes, itemize their deductions, according to the state Department of Revenue.

 

The full Senate plans to debate the budget proposal Friday. If approved there, it would head back to the House, where it was expected to run into a flurry of complaints.

 

A majority of House members have signed onto statements opposing the delay of a tax break for individual taxpayers who itemize their state returns until 2012, but the Senate agreed Wednesday to the tax cut delay and the Finance Committee budgeted the anticipated $118 million for college programs.

 

Senate opponents included Sen. Buddy Shaw, who called supporters of the bill hypocrites because they’re backing off a tax break promised to voters in 2007.

 

The committee also advanced legislation that would use money from the state’s rainy day fund and then budgeted $86 million from it for health care, agriculture, tourism marketing and other items.

 

Attempts to use the rainy day fund in the House have stalled in committee.

 

http://rustonleader.com/news.php?id=5347

 

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Despite availability, thousands of children go without health insurance

WWLTV | 06.04.09

Meg Farris / Eyewitness News

 

NEW ORLEANS – There are 50,000 children across the state who are eligible for state health insurance called LaCHIP but have never signed up.

Video: Watch the Story

 

There is also help for people who have recently lost their jobs and can't afford health insurance.

 

For the next three days dozens of state workers are hitting malls, groceries, drug stores and other public places on a blitz to sign up thousands of infants, children and teens who are eligible but have never signed up for state health care insurance.

 

It's not only Medicaid. There are more than 30 different types of health insurance programs for seniors, children and the disabled. Working adults who can't make ends meet can even buy into an inexpensive health insurance policy.

 

"It's regular it's private health insurance that's run, state group benefits, same insurance that the state employees have. They pay $50," said Venessa Simmons, the Regional LaCHIP Coordinator.

 

Some are embarrassed to sign up because they have never needed assistance.

 

"You're dealing with working families people that may have worked all their lives. The economy now is bad so a lot of people are being laid off from work," added Simmons.

 

"We've got to do something about our health rankings.  We've got to do something about our children who are not insured and are unhealthy and I am just tired of being at the bottom," said Rudy Macklin, executive director of the Governor's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. “I mean, I'm tired of Louisiana being on cruise control.”

 

Louisiana ranks at the bottom when it comes to health. Children have type 2 diabetes, heart disease and high blood pressure.

 

"These are adult type of illnesses. Why are 11-year-olds and 10-year-olds having these types of problems? And we found out that those kids have never been to the doctor since they were born," adds Macklin.

 

LaCHIP insurance allows this mother to give her sons regular doctor's visits.

 

"We keep up with our doctor's appointments now," said Shadana Sorrell, who has her two sons on LaCHIP. They are 9- and 11-years-old.

 

And before you had the insurance, you couldn't keep up with the appointments?

 

"I couldn't afford it at all," said Sorrell, "Even with two jobs." 

 

The blitz is already helping.

 

"I took the brochure because my neighbor have a daughter that needs medical care, and she don't have none at all," said Linda Crosby, a resident who passed by the sign up table.

 

http://www.wwltv.com/local/stories/wwl060409cbchildren.4b6f2cae.html

 

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Mobile dentists bill heads to Louisiana Senate

New Orleans CityBusiness | 06.04.09

by The Associated Press

 

BATON ROUGE — A battle over who tends to the teeth of Louisiana's poor children shifts to the state Senate, after the House approved a reworked proposal today that would require tighter regulations on mobile dental clinics at public schools.

 

The House previously rejected a bill that would have banned the clinics outright, but today lawmakers revamped the bill to instead direct the Louisiana State Board of Dentistry to come up with new regulations for them. That compromise gained enough votes for passage, 64-30, and went on to the Senate.

 

The mobile clinics bill by Rep. Kevin Pearson, R-Slidell, has become one of the more contentious issues of the legislative session.

 

The facilities have provided care to thousands of poor Louisiana children on school campuses, proliferating in recent years as the state increased reimbursement rates for dental work through the Medicaid program for the poor.

 

Critics of the clinics, including House Speaker Jim Tucker and the Louisiana Dental Association, said it is unsanitary and unsafe to drill on children's teeth in school gyms, libraries and cafeterias. They question whether the clinics can properly handle infections and emergencies and whether they know enough about the children's medical history and drug allergies before treating them.

 

Others argue the mobile clinics bring care to poor children who otherwise would never see a dentist, and they note that no complaints or problems with the clinics have been reported to the dentistry board. They call the bill a bid by some dentists to get more money for themselves now that the state is paying more money for the care.

 

The changes approved today by the House didn't soften all the opposition to Pearson's bill.

 

Several opponents of the reworked bill said while it doesn't outright ban the clinics, it would give regulation instructions to the dentistry board that are too strict and would force some clinics to close.

 

"The better practice would be to get the Legislature out of this business and to let the dental board do its job, but then we come back with an amendment that tells them exactly how to do their job," said Rep. John Bel Edwards, D-Amite.

 

As approved by the House, the bill would require the dentistry board to adopt regulations for the clinics for record-keeping, practice standards, parental consent forms, parental consultation, equipment standards, inspection plans and guidelines for disposing of infectious waste. The rules would have to be in place by January 2010 or the members of the board would be removed.

 

Also, a dentist at the mobile clinic would have to get a permit to run the clinic and would have to have at least $1 million in medical malpractice liability insurance. Opponents said that insurance requirement is 10 times the amount of insurance many dentists have and would be a disincentive to participation.

 

Tucker, R-Terrytown, disagreed, saying the proposal would ensure safety, take liability concerns off the schools and still provide dental care.

 

"This allows competition. This allows dentists to go into the schools," he said.

 

http://www.neworleanscitybusiness.com/uptotheminute.cfm?recid=25104

 

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Keeping Them Honest

The New York Times | 06.05.09

By PAUL KRUGMAN

 

“I appreciate your efforts, and look forward to working with you so that the Congress can complete health care reform by October.” So declared President Obama in a letter this week to Senators Max Baucus and Edward Kennedy. The big health care push is officially on.

 

But the devil is in the details. Health reform will fail unless we get serious cost control — and we won’t get that kind of control unless we fundamentally change the way the insurance industry, in particular, behaves. So let me offer Congress two pieces of advice:

 

1) Don’t trust the insurance industry.

 

2) Don’t trust the insurance industry.

 

The Democratic strategy for health reform is based on a political judgment: the belief that the public will be more willing to accept reform, less easily Harry-and-Louised, if those who already have health coverage from private insurers are allowed to keep it.

 

But how can we have fundamental reform of what Mr. Obama calls a “broken system” if the current players stay in place? The answer is supposed to lie in a combination of regulation and competition.

 

It’s a sign of the way the political winds are blowing that insurers aren’t opposing new regulations. Indeed, the president of America’s Health Insurance Plans, the industry lobby known as AHIP, has explicitly accepted the need for “much more aggressive regulation of insurance.”

 

What’s still not settled, however, is whether regulation will be supplemented by competition, in the form of a public plan that Americans can buy into as an alternative to private insurance.

 

Now nobody is proposing that Americans be forced to get their insurance from the government. The “public option,” if it materializes, will be just that — an option Americans can choose. And the reason for providing this option was clearly laid out in Mr. Obama’s letter: It will give Americans “a better range of choices, make the health care market more competitive, and keep the insurance companies honest.”

 

Those last five words are crucial because history shows that the insurance companies will do nothing to reform themselves unless forced to do so.

 

Consider the seemingly trivial matter of making it easier for doctors to deal with multiple insurance companies.

 

Back in 1993, the political strategist (and former Times columnist) William Kristol, in a now-famous memo, urged Republican members of Congress to oppose any significant health care reform. But even he acknowledged that some things needed fixing, calling for, among other things, “a simplified, uniform insurance form.”

 

Fast forward to the present. A few days ago, major players in the health industry laid out what they intend to do to slow the growth in health care costs. Topping the list of AHIP’s proposals was “administrative simplification.” Providers, the lobby conceded, face “administrative challenges” because of the fact that each insurer has its own distinct telephone numbers, fax numbers, codes, claim forms and administrative procedures. “Standardizing administrative transactions,” AHIP asserted, “will be a watershed event.”

 

Think about it. The insurance industry’s idea of a cutting-edge, cost-saving reform is to do what William Kristol — William Kristol! — thought it should have done 15 years ago.

 

How could the industry spend 15 years failing to make even the most obvious reforms? The answer is simple: Americans seeking health coverage had nowhere else to go. And the purpose of the public option is to make sure that the industry doesn’t waste another 15 years — by giving Americans an alternative if private insurers fall down on the job.

 

Be warned, however. The insurance industry will do everything it can to avoid being held accountable.

 

At first the insurance lobby’s foot soldiers in Congress tried to shout down the public option with the old slogans: private enterprise good, government bad.

 

At this point, however, they’re trying to kill the public option in more subtle ways. The most recent ruse is the proposal for a “trigger” — the public option will only become available if private insurers fail to meet certain performance criteria. The idea, of course, is to choose those criteria to ensure that the trigger is never pulled.

 

And here’s the thing. Without an effective public option, the Obama health care reform will be simply a national version of the health care reform in Massachusetts: a system that is a lot better than nothing but has done little to address the fundamental problem of a fragmented system, and as a result has done little to control rising health care costs.

 

Right now the health insurers are promising to deliver major cost savings. But history shows that such promises can’t be trusted. As President Obama said in his letter, we need a serious, real public option to keep the insurance companies honest.

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/opinion/05krugman.html

 

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Avian Flu Fears Said to Help U.S. Prepare for Swine Flu

The New York Times | 06.04.09

By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.

 

Six years of worrying about bird flu did much to prepare the United States for the current swine flu outbreak, federal officials and an independent monitoring group said Thursday, but they cautioned that there were still gaps in planning.

 

After the H5N1 avian flu emerged widely in Asia in 2003, killing about 60 percent of those infected by it, many countries took steps to head off the crisis that would emerge if that virus were to acquire the ability to jump easily from human to human. It has not, but a number of the measures were helpful. These are some of them:

 

The federal government stockpiled 50 million courses of Tamiflu.

 

New vaccine factories were opened.

 

Pandemic plans were written, and emergency drills were held.

 

“Everyone was concerned about the avian flu, and biology played a trick on us,” said Jeffrey Levi, executive director of the monitoring group, the Trust for America’s Health, a nonprofit organization that has tracked the country’s preparations for flu pandemics for several years.

 

The first case of the H1N1 virus in the United States — a San Diego resident who is believed to have fallen ill on March 28 — was uncovered only because of pandemic planning, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, director of immunization and respiratory disease for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

A Navy medical laboratory in San Diego was trying out a new rapid flu test and realized it had found something different from any previous virus. The sample then had to be sent to the C.D.C. for sequencing, which produced its results the same week as the Canadian national laboratory sequenced some flu samples taken in Mexico.

 

The H5N1 virus “was really a wake-up call for the world that serious threats are out there,” Dr. Schuchat said.

 

But a report from Dr. Levi’s organization pointed out weaknesses. These are some of them:

 

Closing schools to slow the spread of the epidemic caused confusion and frustrated parents and their employers.

 

Conversely, many adults went to work sick, endangering their co-workers. According to the report by the Trust for America’s Health, 48 percent of Americans have no paid sick days.

 

Some hospitals were overwhelmed, even by mild cases, because the “worried well,” especially those people with no insurance or family doctor, filled emergency rooms.

 

Underfinanced state laboratories fell chronically behind on testing.

 

The World Health Organization’s pandemic alert levels caused confusion.

 

It also became clearer Thursday that little vaccine would be available by the fall, even if nothing went awry in production.

 

The goal of pandemic plans is to make 600 million doses in six months, enough for two doses for each American; that could cost $8 billion. Manufacturers now have seed virus. But clinical trials of their first runs will last into the summer, and federal regulators must wait until those are finished, Dr. Schuchat said.

 

Domestic production capacity is still “completely inadequate,” according to a 2008 Congressional Budget Office report, and it seems unlikely that foreign governments will let vaccine factories on their soil export doses before their own needs are met.

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/health/policy/05flu.html?_r=1&ref=health

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Republicans Complain About Plan for Health Insurance

The New York Times | 06.04.09

By ROBERT PEAR and JOHN HARWOOD

 

WASHINGTON — Republican frustration with Democratic plans to remake the health care system boiled over Thursday, as Republicans complained about the size, shape and cost of the emerging proposal. But Democratic leaders said they still intended to push a bill through the Senate this summer.

 

Despite the Republicans’ concerns, the chairman of the Finance Committee, Senator Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana, and its senior Republican, Senator Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, expressed confidence that they could come together on a bill producing near-universal coverage.

 

“I share the confidence that we’re going to get it done because the people of this country expect us to get it done,” Mr. Grassley said in a New York Times/CNBC interview.

 

Indeed, the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada, said senators should expect “a very long, hard work period in July,” with roll-call votes from Monday through Friday every week.

 

“We cannot complete this most important legislation by working just Tuesday through Thursday,” Mr. Reid said, referring to the Senate’s customary schedule.

 

But after weeks of amiable optimism, Republicans who emerged from a two-hour meeting of the Senate Finance Committee on Thursday volunteered sharp-edged political comments.

 

Senator Pat Roberts, Republican of Kansas, said Republicans were being pressed by Democrats to support tax increases to pay for a bill they had not seen, with an unknown price tag.

 

“I’d like to see a bill,” Mr. Roberts said. “All I’ve seen is slide shows. After every show, I send the information to our health care providers. Then, after cardiac arrest, they come back and say, ‘Whoa, wait a minute, how is this going to affect doctors, hospitals, home health care, clinical laboratories, pharmacists, ambulance drivers?’ ”

 

The Democratic bill is likely to include a requirement for people to carry health insurance, subsidies for those who cannot afford it, and a requirement for employers to contribute to the cost.

 

Senator Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah, said he feared that Democrats, with a solid majority in the Senate and strong support from President Obama, would ignore Republican concerns about a big expansion in the role of government.

 

Mr. Hatch predicted that such an approach would meet the same fate as President Bill Clinton’s plan for universal coverage.

 

“If the Democrats go ahead with a purely partisan bill,” Mr. Hatch said, “you saw what happened on Hillarycare, and this will be just as bad.”

 

Mr. Grassley said many Republicans agreed that Americans should be required to have “insurance of some kind or another.” But he said he and other Republican senators did not believe the government should require employers to provide or pay for coverage of their employees.

 

Creation of a new government insurance plan remains the most contentious issue in the debate.

 

“A bill that passes the Senate will have some version of a public option,” Mr. Baucus predicted on Thursday. “If there is a public plan, we have to make sure it does not set prices, there really is competition and the government’s thumb is very, very light.”

 

Mr. Grassley said, “If there is a solution here, it’s got to be one that does not have the government setting prices or unfair competition.” But he also said: “Our caucus is very, very much against a public option. It’s kind of a litmus test.”

 

In a letter to senators on Wednesday, Mr. Obama came down strongly in favor of “a public health insurance option operating alongside private plans.” Mr. Grassley said Mr. Obama’s letter “was not helpful.”

 

Mr. Baucus and Mr. Grassley agreed that Congress was likely, in the end, to limit the decades-old tax break for employer-provided health insurance. Revenues raised from this change could help finance coverage of the uninsured, proponents say.

 

But much more money would be needed.

 

“When you look at what the Democrats want to do, the costs are astronomical,” Mr. Hatch said.

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/us/politics/05health.html?ref=health

 

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Should Health Insurance Be Mandatory?

The New York Times | 06.04.09

By The Editors

 

                                                       Photo: Mandel Ngan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

 

President Barack Obama said this week that he is now open to Congressional proposals that would make every American responsible for getting health care insurance. In a letter to Senators Edward Kennedy and Max Baucus, he wrote that employers would have to share in the cost and that there would have to be a hardship waiver for those who could not afford insurance.

 

During the campaign last year, he opposed such a broad individual mandate, which Hillary Rodham Clinton supported. At that time, he argued for a more incremental approach, requiring that children be covered first.

 

Is a broad mandate that Americans have medical insurance a workable way to begin health care reform? Would taking a bolder step be more efficient or more disruptive?

 

Defining the ‘Hardship Waiver’

Stuart M. Butler

 

Stuart M. Butler, an adjunct professor in public policy at Georgetown University, is the vice president for domestic policy at the Heritage Foundation.

 

President Obama has opened the door this week to a serious conversation about “individual responsibility” in health care. As he reminded Hillary Clinton during the primaries, and now reminds Congress, any mandate is unjust if it is unaffordable. So his “hardship waiver,” which would exempt Americans who cannot afford it, is welcome. Still, we need to know what counts as “hardship.”

 

Why not first try automatically enrolling families in workplace plans or default private plans selected by each state?

 

But there remain basic questions about a mandate, in addition to the concern about paternalist compulsion. A mandate to buy what? In automobile insurance it’s typically to protect other people against the damage the driver might do to them. The parallel in health is a mandate for me to buy insurance to cover emergency and catastrophic costs that you (taxpayers and insured people) would be stuck with if I can’t pay my hospital bill.

 

Also, should families be mandated to buy whatever Congress decides, after being pressured from health lobbyists to add everything they can think of into a mandatory “basic” plan? I don’t think so! So let’s discuss what I should be responsible for and who decides that question before embracing any mandate.

 

And finally, President Obama should propose using a mandate as the last resort, not the first. It turns out that you can get most people to sign up for something by using “automatic enrollment,” where the default is that you are signed up unless you actively decline. Part B of Medicare is voluntary, and yet thanks to automatic enrollment about 96 percent of eligible seniors are enrolled.

 

President Obama has proposed that workers be automatically enrolled in individual retirement accounts to boost retirement savings. So rather than fight over mandates, why don’t we try automatically enrolling families in plans at their workplace or default private plans selected by each state. Let’s first try individual responsibility as the default option before sending the cops around to enforce a mandate.

 

Regressive and Unaffordable

Marcia Angell

 

Marcia Angell is a senior lecturer in social medicine at Harvard Medical School and former editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine.

 

There would be no need for an individual mandate in a single-payer system, since everyone would be covered automatically and it would be paid for through their income and payroll taxes. So asking me, a supporter of a single-payer health system, about mandates is a little like asking someone whether he’s stopped beating his wife.

 

Only a single-payer system would stop the private insurance industry from holding us hostage.

 

But even within our current system, I’m troubled by the notion of an individual mandate. I live in Massachusetts, where we have one. It requires people to buy private insurance at whatever price the companies choose to charge. As might be expected, this is a windfall for the insurance industry. Premiums are rising much faster than income, benefit packages are getting skimpier, and deductibles and co-payments are going up.

 

Many people can’t afford the premiums for the best plans, and so have to choose bare-bones, low-premium plans with high deductibles and co-payments. They are then left with insurance that they might not be able to afford to use, but have to purchase anyway.

 

A mandate is also extremely regressive. In Massachusetts, mandated insurance and co-payments can amount to nearly a third of income. Income taxes apportion the costs of public services more fairly, and I see no reason not to adopt that approach in paying for health care. To be sure, President Obama has said he would exempt people from the mandate who couldn’t afford to purchase their own health insurance. But aren’t these precisely the people most in need of it? Massachusetts has exempted 62,000 people from the mandate for that reason.

 

I would hope the President and Congress would come up with something less regressive and truly universal, and stop holding the rest of us hostage to the private insurance industry.

 

We Need a Market, Not Mandates

Grace Turner

 

Grace-Marie Turner is president of the Galen Institute, a nonprofit research organization focused on free-market ideas in the health sector.

 

President Obama said during the 2008 campaign, “I believe that the problem is not that people don’t want health care. It is that they can’t afford it.” His reasoning was correct in opposing a mandate that individuals must purchase health insurance. In his letter to Congress this week, he moved toward support for a mandate but again conditioned it on health care being more affordable.

 

The government-dominated proposals that Obama is endorsing have a poor track record of producing the savings he needs for this plan to work.

 

But the kind of centralized, government-dominated proposals he endorses elsewhere in his letter have a poor track record of producing the savings he needs for this plan to work. And there is no evidence that Congress will significantly cut the growth of spending in Medicare or Medicaid nor will more spending on information technologies, disease management and prevention produce the needed savings.

 

As Massachusetts has learned, it is essential to get control of costs first. The state imposed a health insurance mandate on individuals and employers, and cost increases are now the biggest concern. Plans offered through the Massachusetts health insurance exchange have few, if any, of the tools that the private sector is using to engage consumers as partners in managing health costs. The state kept in place the expensive mandates and insurance regulations that had made private coverage so expensive in the first place. Washington appears to be headed down the same path.

 

The best evidence we have for programs that work is through the incentive-based models that have produced genuine savings for consumers and employers. Deloitte’s Center for Health Solutions found that the cost of consumer-directed health plans increased by only 2.6 percent in 2006 among the 152 major companies it surveyed. This is about a third the rate of increase for traditional plans.

 

Flexibility, competition and a properly functioning market — which we do not have now — are far preferable to mandates, price controls and more government regulation to reform our health sector.

 

Universal Coverage Is the Linchpin

Charles Moulton

 

Dr. Charles P. Mouton, professor and chairman of the Department of Community and Family Medicine at the Howard University College of Medicine and chief attending physician for the Howard University Hospital Free Clinic. He was recently co-investigator for a study to examine the health of more than 80,000 U.S. women to determine how diet, hormone therapy, calcium and vitamin D might prevent heart disease, cancer, bone fractures and other ailments.

 

In his letter to Congress, President Obama indicated he might be supportive of a requirement that every American have health insurance, with employers sharing some of the cost. Coverage for every American is essential to any health care reform package. No longer can the public afford a system that shifts the burden of care for the uninsured onto those who have health insurance or onto the fragile health care infrastructure.

 

Every American needs to have a physician who provides them a “medical home.”

 

As those who have lost their jobs through layoffs, plant closings and corporate failures lose their health coverage, attempts to recover from the economic downturn will likely be stopped in its tracks without health reform. The Obama administration understands this. Universal coverage is the necessary linchpin to stabilizing the health care system.

 

Some opponents think that merely encouraging health insurance companies to expand their enrollment will be enough to correct the problem of the uninsured. They seem to be prescribing a new whip for a dead horse. As health insurers continue to shift costs, add more pre-existing conditions that would not covered and deny coverage, the number of uninsured Americans will increase.

 

Perhaps equally important to providing the fundamental change to the system, universal coverage will provide the opportunity for every American to have a physician who provides them a “medical home.” No longer will millions of families seek routine medical care through hospital emergency rooms. Instead, they will have a family physician focused on coordinating care for their illnesses and assuring that they receive care that promotes health and wellness. Only through coverage for everyone will we begin to raise the health of Americans from 37th among industrialize countries to the top where it belongs.

 

http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/04/should-health-insurance-be-mandatory/?scp=1&sq=%20%20Should%20Health%20Insurance%20Be%20Mandatory?&st=cse

 

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