Kate
, one of my favorite health policy bloggers, is shutting down the site. She leaves us with two great primers:
one on the insured
,
the other on the uninsured
.
You’ll be missed, Kate!
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on Goodbye, Healthy Policy!
1 Month Friends:
Blogborygmi’s Post-Call Stress Syndrome
is definitely real; our group tried to go get dinner together, once, and it just never happened.
May 4th, 2006
This is definitely good news
; sugar sodas will be removed from schools, but “the beverage industry said its school sales would not be affected because it expected to replace sugary drinks
with other ones.”
Mark my words, folks. Juice is already a problem, and now that soda is out, and people have a notion that juice is healthier, it will take over as a big cause of
unnecessary calories.
And most juices are not 100% juice. Product standards say that a product cannot be called “juice” unless it is 100% juice, so these products will be
called “juice drink,” “nectar,” “beverage,” or “cocktail.” All these drinks are not healthy just because they’re
from fruit. They’re not nutricious, and are loaded with calories–often just as many as soda. And if they don’t contain pulp, they don’t even
contain any fiber benefits. Sure, you get a healthy whopping of vitamins from some juices, but that’s a reason to drink
some
juice, not gallons.
“But if an 8-year-old child took in 45 less calories per day, by the time he reached high school, he would weight 20 pounds less than he would have weighed
otherwise.” Now that’s impressive. I hope I’m wrong about the juice thing.
8 Comments »
(Before or after you read this,
please, please take action
. Especially physicians–Congress listens to you!)
I don’t know how I missed this disaster of a possible policy decision, but luckily
Kate informed me
of the bill. It’s supposed to allow small businesses to band together to buy health insurance together, but in the process also cancels many states’
required coverage items
–that is, areas of health care that the state requires all insurers to cover. (The thinking being that small businesses could purchase cheaper plans if the
plans don’t have these required restrictions.
And this is big; small businesses employ half the work force in the US.
) By a wide margin, these items are
prevention programs
. And what are prevention programs? Screenings that catch disease early so that it doesn’t cost us orders of magnitude more down the line–either in health
care, education, long-term care, etc. Here’s how I view these programs, as a future provider (and likely future pediatrician). I’ll use California
examples. If we cancel…
-
Alcoholism Treatment: We have more drunk drivers, more deaths and more permanent disabilities. We have more fetal alcohol syndrome, which leads to learning
disabilities and more costs for special ed. We have more lost workdays.
- Blood Lead Screening: We have more children with learning disabilities, permanent brain damage and mental retardation.
- Bone Density Screening: We have more women break their hips and require surgery.
-
Colorectal Screening: More men and women get colon cancer, the second most common, deadly cancer in the US. In most cases, if you detect it early, you remove a
polyp and STOP a possible cancer completely.
- Contraceptives: More teen births, more unwanted pregnancies.
-
Diabetic Supplies/Education: Education and supplies are absolutely key to diabetes care. The complications: early heart attacks, amputations, blindness, non-healing
ulcers, infections, more ICU stays.
-
Emergency Services: People with these plans
will pay 4 times as much for ER visits
.
- Hospice Care: People die shitty, painful, scary deaths. Sigh.
- Mammography Screening/Prostate Cancer Screening: Hi breast and prostate cancer, the second most common of cancers in women and men, respectively.
-
Metabolic Disorders (PKU): Near and dear to the Pediatrician’s heart, the newborn screening. This picks up diseases like PKU and hypothyroidism, which if
caught early, can be treated and the patient can have a normal life. If not treated, kids die early, mentally retarded. (The treatment for PKU? Avoid certain foods,
especially those with the artificial sweetener, aspartame–this is why diet drinks say “Phenylketonurics, contains phenylalanine.”)
-
Off-Label Drug Use: This requires companies to pay for drugs that doctors prescribe for non-approved uses. For example, some drugs for seizure disorders also work
for mental illness or chronic pain; doctors are allowed to prescribe it for seizure disorders as well as other diseases it might work for.
-
Well-Child Care: When you take your healthy kid to the doctor to make sure he or she is growing and doing well. In these visits we look for hearing problems,
cataracts, childhood cancers, hip deformities, brain problems, broken bones, child abuse, undescended testes, and other signs of possible abnormalities.
I can’t believe some of the stuff that I just wrote that Congress is considering allowing people not to cover. And I can’t believe we’re willing to
go this route–allowing companies to provide crappy, inadequate insurance to maintain an already broken, patchwork, pathetic health care system.
(Before or after you read this,
please, please take action
. Especially physicians–Congress listens to you!)
12 Comments »
Schizophrenia, as I talked about earlier, is clasically a disease of delusions and hallucinations, often auditory (hearing voices). Some interesting data was brought
up yesterday in class, and it goes something like this (I don’t have the reference, sorry):
When you or I want to say something, there’s an excitatory signal sent to the nerves that control our mouths and tongues so we can say the words properly. But
there’s
also
an inhibitory signal that goes to the temporal lobes, when auditory information is processed. However, if you only
listen to yourself say the words
(from a tape recorder, for example), you don’t get that inhibitory signal in your temporal lobes. Researchers believe this is a way the brain tells the
difference between sounds originating from the inside and the outside.
And, as you might expect (or else I wouldn’t be posting this), schizophrenics seem to lack that inhibitory signal when they themselves speak. The theory then
goes that perhaps schizophrenics can’t tell the difference between thoughts or signals from inside their heads and outside, causing them to hear voices
“from outside” that are saying things.
3 Comments »
And all the other people that don’t get single-payer. Single-payer is
not
the UK system. So please, please please stop
calling out
“single-payer woes” on UK health issues
. As I’ve said before,
NHS Isn’t NHI
.
Phew, I feel better.
3 Comments »
Red:
The Story of the Color Red
. Weird, but lovely.
May 2nd, 2006
is up at Polite Dissent
. Go read!
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on Grand Rounds 232
Fox News and Single-Payer:
Even Fox News couldn’t find opposing EMed docs
: “Doctors interviewed for this article unanimously decried the deterioration of emergency care and see a single-payer universal health plan as the answer. They
point out that government programs could meet important health needs and operate with less overhead than private plans designed to make profits and satisfy
stockholders.”
May 2nd, 2006