$6.9 Billion Spent Yearly On 12 Unnecessary Tests And Treatments

New York, NY, United States (KaiserHealth) – For many adults, a routine visit to a primary care physician might involve blood tests, a urinalysis, an electrocardiogram, maybe a bone density scan. Too often, however, these tests are inappropriate and they cost a bundle, according to a recent study, not only for the health care system but also for individuals, who are increasingly footing more of the bill for their care.

The study, led by physicians from the Mount Sinai Medical Center and the Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, was published online in October in the Archives of Internal Medicine. The researchers examined the cost of common primary care practices that were identified as being overused earlier this year in a study by another group of physicians, known as the Good Stewardship Working Group. .

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The working group, for example, had noted that blood and other diagnostic tests were often ordered even for patients who had no related symptoms or risk factors and said they should be discontinued in those cases. Also included on its list were imaging studies such as CT scans or MRIs for low back pain and Pap tests to screen for cervical cancer in teenagers.

Among the frequently inappropriate pediatric practices were writing prescriptions for antibiotics for children with sore throats who didn’t have a strep infection; recommending cough medicines for children with upper respiratory infections and ordering imaging tests for the heads of kids who took a spill but didn’t exhibit red-flag symptoms such as dizziness or loss of consciousness.

The newest study, using data from federal medical surveys, estimated that 12 of those unnecessary treatments and screenings accounted for $6.8 billion in medical costs in 2009. The activity most frequently performed without need was a complete blood cell count at a routine physical exam. In 56 percent of routine physicals, doctors inappropriately ordered such tests, accounting for $32.7 million in unnecessary costs. In terms of dollars, the biggest-ticket item by far was physicians ordering brand-name statins before trying patients on a generic drug first: That accounted for a whopping $5.8 billion of the $6.8 billion total.

Minal Kale, an internist at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and lead author of the study, says $6.8 billion was a conservative estimate of the cost of the inappropriate care. She notes, for example, that the study didn’t evaluate the cost of additional testing or procedures that result from an abnormal blood test reading result or imaging scan, even though in the absence of symptoms or risk factors the follow-up may be unnecessary and even cause harm. “The financial and other emotional results of that can be significant,” she says.

The original list of primary care activities upon which Kale and her colleagues based their financial analysis was developed by the Good Stewardship Working Group under a grant from the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation and published first online in May. Working group members were composed of internists, family physicians and pediatricians who are part of the National Physicians Alliance, a group of 22,000 doctors that advocates universal, affordable health care.

The working group focused on common activities that no physician would argue against, says Stephen Smith, a family physician and professor emeritus at Brown University’s Alpert Medical School, who co-authored that group’s paper. That’s why you don’t see more controversial practices like the PSA blood test for prostate cancer, which was recently removed from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force’s list of recommended screenings for most men. “What we were trying to do was change [physicians'] mindset, not cause firestorms of controversy,” says Smith.

So why would physicians continue to order tests and prescribe pricey drugs when there’s clear evidence that they’re not necessary in many cases and may even cause harm by exposing people to unneeded care?

One of the main reasons is the way doctors are trained, Smith says. “I think all of us practicing in the U.S. were raised in an educational environment where we got dinged if we didn’t order certain tests,” he says.

Defensive medicine also plays a role. “Nobody ever gets sued for ordering unnecessary tests,” says Doug Campos-Outcalt, a family physician in Phoenix and a past president of the Arizona Academy of Family Physicians.

And patient expectations drive some of the spending as well, say physicians, who note that sometimes simple directives, such as drinking less alcohol or getting more exercise, aren’t what patients want to hear. “If a doctor says, ‘Let’s talk about weight control,’ patients aren’t usually too happy,” says Campos-Outcalt. “They feel like there should be some testing.”

Doctors alone can’t turn the tide. Improving patient education and communication with doctors is key to helping change practice patterns, says Smith.

Still, one expert is encouraged that doctors came up with this list of wasteful spending, rather than leaving it to government bean counters. “It’s only the doctors that can get into the clinical detail and find out what sorts of things are not producing a benefit and might cause harm,” says H. Gilbert Welch, a professor of medicine at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, whose work has questioned whether much of the preventive screening people receive is helpful.

The dollar amounts identified in the current study may be a good start, but they don’t even begin to address the country’s spending issues, he says. In 2009, health spending grew to $2.5 trillion and accounted for 17.6 percent of the gross domestic product.

Kale suggests that specialist care be the next target that physicians take aim at to identify inappropriate, overused activities. Specialist income, after all, is primarily generated through procedures, while primary care is often conversation-based. “We have more to gain by examining [specialist care] more closely,” she says.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Readers Face Multiple Dilemmas About Insurance Coverage, Costs

Washington, DC, United States (KaiserHealth) – This week, we address readers’ questions about health insurance coverage and costs.

My son was denied coverage on the basis that he had been drinking before going to the ER with a broken shoulder. Is drinking a legitimate reason for denial of coverage? John Johnson, Tucson, Ariz.

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As of 2008, 36 states allowed insurers to exclude coverage for injuries related to alcohol and/or drug consumption, according to research from George Washington University’s Department of Health Policy at the School of Public Health and Health Services.

The practice dates to’47 when, as a way to discourage drinking, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners adopted a model statute that excluded coverage of alcohol-related health claims. More than 40 states and the District subsequently passed such laws.

But as the benefits of drug and alcohol treatment programs became apparent, these laws were recognized as counterproductive, since they discouraged emergency department and other medical personnel from screening people for and counseling them about drug and alcohol abuse. In 2001, the NAIC reversed course and recommended that such laws be scrapped.

My husband had a stroke in December, and the insurance reps refused to discuss his account with me because they didn’t have his signature on a form, and he couldn’t tell them over the phone it was okay to talk to me. And it is MY insurance! They said they had to follow HIPAA [the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, which protects patients' medical privacy]. Is this true? Name withheld, Lawrenceville, Ga.

It’s a common misperception by health-care providers and insurers that HIPAA prohibits them from discussing patients’ medical information with family members, says Deven McGraw, director of the health privacy project at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a civil liberties group that promotes health privacy. “It’s not true; it has never been true,” she says. Unless the patient objects, such information can be shared with family members.

Advance planning documents can help avoid confusion and heartache, say experts. A living will spells out what if any measures you wish to have taken to prolong your life — being put on a breathing machine or on dialysis, for example. A health care proxy names the person you choose to make medical decisions for you in the event that you can’t do so yourself.

In addition, most states have surrogacy laws that assign decision-making responsibility to family members based on their relationship to the patient. Typically, if someone is incapacitated, state law would assign decision-making to the patient’s spouse, says Jay Horton, clinical program manager at the Lilian and Benjamin Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. If there is no spouse, the laws spell out who would be assigned to make decisions instead, based on their relationship to the patient.

Our doctor recommended that my husband get a preventive colonoscopy since it had been five years since his last one. The doctor found two benign polyps and removed them. Our [health] plan was to cover 100 percent for a preventive colonoscopy. Because the doctor removed the polyps during the procedure, it is now not covered. We have to pay the deductible, and the balance owed. I can assure you that many, many people will not have this procedure done (as I will not) when they are made aware of the additional costs involved. Pam Nevin, Rutherfordton, N.C.

Under the new federal health law, Medicare beneficiaries and members of new private health plans starting this year can generally receive free colonoscopies to screen for colon cancer if they meet age and other criteria.

Unfortunately, like you, others have been hit with sometimes substantial charges if a growth or mass called a polyp is discovered during a routine screening colonoscopy they thought would be free. Once a preventive procedure turns into a diagnostic procedure or other type of treatment, providers can charge you for it under the new law. According to the interim final rules: “A plan or issuer may impose cost-sharing requirements for a treatment that is not a recommended preventive service, even if the treatment

results from a recommended preventive service.”

Some experts have expressed concern that colonoscopy charges raise questions about what other newly free preventive services might incur similar hidden costs. Fortunately, it doesn’t appear that it will be a widespread problem, says Stephen Finan, senior director of policy for the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network. The reason: Colonoscopies appear to be the only procedure covered under the new guidelines for free preventive care where both prevention and diagnosis happen during

the same procedure. Usually they’re separate, as when something suspicious turns up on a woman’s mammogram. In that case, a separate procedure such as a biopsy would be scheduled to diagnose the problem, says Finan. “Colonoscopy is a very unique scenario,” he says.

Got a question for Michelle Andrews to answer in a future column? khnquestions@kff.org

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Remains may be those of Rochester student

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Rochester, NY, United States (AHN) – Authorities are expected to confirm on Monday whether remains found in New York are those of a missing Rochester Institute of Technology student.

New York State Police were due to hold a press conference just before noon about the discovery of human remains Sunday night in the town of Cohocton in Steuben County. The body may be that of George Delany, a 21-year-old student who has been missing for more than a month.

The Leader reported that two hikers found the body in a wooded area. The Monroe County Medical Examiner’s Office is performing an autopsy.

According to state police, Delany was last seen on the evening of March 12 walking away from his car in Wayland, another town in Steuben County. His car was found near the area the next day.

Delany was a junior political science major from Maryland. He lived off-campus with fellow students, who have held rallies and canvassing events since he disappeared.

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3 in 10 Americans admit to consuming alcohol at least once a week

Ayinde O. Chase – AHN News Editor

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – According to a recent study, three in 10 Americans aged 21 and older consume alcohol at least once a week.

The study also found that 5 percent drink daily whereas 10 percent drink numerous times a week.

Beer, domestic wine and vodka appear to be the alcoholic beverages of choice

Other findings include one in five Americans 21 or older (20 percent) say they drink alcohol at least once a month and 15 percent drink it several times a year.

Another 22 percent report they never touch liquid libations.

Males were also found to be more frequent drinkers than women. Almost two in five men (38 percent) say they drink at least once a week compared to 21 percent of women.

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CA community colleges to cut enrollment after failed budget talks

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Sacramento, CA, United States (AHN) – California’s community colleges could turn away more than 400,000 students next year because Republican lawmakers refused to let voters decide in a June ballot whether to temporarily extend taxes.

Gov. Jerry Brown has proposed a budget cutting spending by $12 billion, including $400 million for the state’s 112 community colleges.

The plan also called for tax extensions, which under the state constitution requires the approval of two Republicans from the Assembly and two from the Senate before a special election.

The governor, a Democrat who served two terms as governor three decades ago, had been in negotiations with the GOP about the tax extensions since announcing his budget two months ago. Talks broke down on Wednesday, after what Brown said was “an ever changing list of collateral demands” from Republicans.

Without a June ballot to approve the revenue-generating extensions, Community Colleges Chancellor Jack Scott quickly warned that an “all-cuts budget” would “devastate our ability to train th[e] workforce.”

A budget that does not continue 2009 taxes expiring this year will double the cuts for community colleges to $800 million. This reduction would force some districts to offer fewer classes in the summer and fall and deny access to 400,000 students, the same number enrolled in the state university system.

The state has already increased fees at community colleges for the fall from $26 to $36 per unit. Fees could rise to $66 if an all-cuts budget is approved, preventing even more students to attend a community college.

Brown continued to seek support from Republicans while calling them out for demands that he said would undermine the budget, such as giving a $1 billion tax break to out-of-state corporations so the companies would bring jobs to California.

In a letter to state Senate Republican Leader Bob Dutton on Wednesday, he said, “Democrats have swallowed hard and done their part—they have approved painful cuts… I was very surprised (and frankly, disappointed) that you came today with a very long list of demands (53 separate proposals), many of which are new and have no relationship whatsoever to the budget.”

The demands included moving the U.S. presidential primary to March and extending taxes for only a year and a half instead of five years.

California, the world’s eighth-largest economy and the nation’s most populous state, is facing a $26.6 billion deficit. Last month, Brown slashed the number of state-owned vehicles and cell phones by 50 percent and ordered a hiring freeze to help end the budget crisis.

Republicans say the governor’s budget plan actually has only $7 billion of cuts, a small sum compared to the $60 billion from tax extensions, and far from a balanced proposal.

“Gov. Brown and the Dems can’t have it both ways,” GOP state chair Tom Del Beccaro said in a statement. “They asked for ideas — and then complained there were too many. They wanted specific budget solutions — and then complained there were too many details.”

“The list that Republican leadership gave the governor… included a number of proposals to which Brown has publicly agreed — but obviously angered the public unions that control our state government,” Beccaro added. “Not coincidentally, Brown, unlike Democrat Andrew Cuomo of New York, is refusing to reduce the state bureaucracy — demonstrating that he values bureaucracy more than essential services.”

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New York Reports First HIV Spread From Live Organ Donor

A New York man has contracted the AIDS virus in the nation’s first case of transmission from a living organ donor since a screening test was implemented to prevent such infection….

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Tri-Valley University case gathers momentum with ministerial visit

Tejinder Singh – AHN News Correspondent

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – The United States reiterated its focus on “visa fraud” in the ongoing investigation into Tri-Valley University while the subject was highlighted during high-level visits from Indian officials to the U.S.

The latest efforts of Sushmita Thomas, Indian Consul General in San Francisco, on Wednesday resulted in the US Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) de-tagging three more Indian students out of total 18, bringing the number to five.

Noting that ICE has returned the passport of these three students along with two others from whom radio tags were removed last week, Thomas elaborated that the students were taken to ICE by two immigration attorneys.

Both of the attorneys, Kalpana Peddibhotla and Manpreet Gahra, are from the South Asian Bar Association, which is cooperating with the Consulate to provide free legal aid for the Tri Valley students.

There has been a flurry of diplomatic activities over the last weeks, as more than 1,500 students of Indian origin await results of the ongoing investigation by the Department of Homeland Security into the murky waters of Tri-Valley University.

Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao met with U.S. Undersecretary for political affairs William Burn and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton this week.

Commenting on the meetings, Heide Bronke Fulton, director of the State Department’s Office of Press Relations, told All Headline News, “During these discussions the issue of Tri-Valley University was raised. This is the issue that the United States government takes very seriously. Our Department of Homeland Security is leading the investigation into the situation and has established a website to assist all students who are affected by the issue of fraud that has risen.”

Asked to sum up her advise to the affected students, Indian Foreign Secretary Rao told AHN, “To stay in touch with the embassy and the consulates —– to reach out to the embassy and the consulates and not to be afraid to reach out to embassy and consulates —- we are there to help you to try to seek a solution to your problems and to their parents back home similar message —- that we would do our best to help them and to take up their case with the US authorities —- we are there to help Indian citizens —- that is the primary responsibility and primary work of any diplomatic establishment abroad.”

Addressing journalists on Wednesday, PJ Crowley, the State Department spokesman, said, “We will work as cooperatively as we can with the Indian government as we move ahead here, but it’s hard to know exactly what is possible because the matter is still under investigation.”

Commenting on the phone conversation between Indian External Affairs Minister SM Krishna and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton over the weekend, Crowley said, “India has made the point, and we understand it fully, that students caught up in this, the risk is that they’ll lose a year of schooling and go through great inconvenience as this matter is being investigated. We do understand that and we have pledged our cooperation.”

During the State Department briefing Crowley said, “But we do recognize that there’s – are strong indications of visa fraud, and we don’t know who is involved, we don’t know how they got involved, but this has to be investigated fully, and we will do that.”

Over the weekend visiting Indian minister Krishna told journalists in New York, “We would like to assure that we have taken attempt with the authorities in the United States at the highest level and we have been assured that the students in the Tri-Valley – so called university will be dealt in all fairness – just not legalistically but taking into on the basis of humanitarian situations.”

“Our consul general in San Francisco has already provided legal assistance to some of these affected students,” added Krishna.

Indian Consul General Thomas told AHN, “We have been speaking to ICE repeatedly regularly – in fact we have been speaking to their principal chief investigator in this case and we have finally got them to agree that they would be dealing with this in a very humanitarian manner – not just a legalistical manner – and that in the cases where they are convinced that the students were not guilty – they would be willing to help them -either leave for India and then come back without prejudice or allow them to transfer to other universities and if their transfers get accepted or allow them a reinstatement of their visas if the universities from where they originally transferred accept them back.”

Calling the process “a long haul,” Thomas said, “I feel definitely it would be much longer than that–six to seven months or eight months but definitely there is a lot of hope and a lot of student whom we can possibly help to reinstate themselves and to get back to their studies.”

Over the weekend, a group of 25 students along with Mohan Nannapaneni, secretary of the Telgu Association of North American (TANA), met with Krishna to apprise him of the situation.

After the meeting, Nannapaneni told AHN, “We had a very lengthy meeting. The foreign affairs minister and the external affairs secretary listened to our concerns very carefully and a lot of students came and they gave a very clear description of their problems that they are going through.”

“Until we met the minister they didn’t even have an idea what exactly was going on here and the ministry and the government – they did not understand the urgency of this issue – now at least we have a feeling that they know the urgency of the issue and they are going to work quickly on it,” hoped Nannapaneni.

Praising TANA for supporting the students in distress, the Indian Consul General urged other community organizations to come forward with their resources to help these students.

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First lady Michelle Obama doesn’t allow daughters on Facebook

Ayinde O. Chase – AHN News Editor

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – Although millions of American children and teens are on the popular social networking site Facebook and use it to communicate across the digital expanse. There are two children with the last name of Obama whose mother won’t allow them on the site.

While speaking on NBC’s “Today” show first lady Michelle Obama said security issues limit some of the things her daughters can’t do.

However, even if they were two normal kids living in Chicago, she wouldn’t allow them on the site.

Michelle, who is “not a big fan of young kids having Facebook,” says Facebook is “not something they need.” She did say that when they get older it may be a something that gets revisited.

While on the morning program Obama also revealed her husband doesn’t dye his hair and attributed images that reveal a darker hair color could just be the lighting the picture was taken in.

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Principal at NYC prep school fired over affair with 18-year-old ex-student

Ayinde O. Chase – AHN News Editor

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – The principal at a private New York City prep school has been fired after school officials learned he was having an affair with an 18-year-old ex-student.

Christopher Durnford, 39, served as principal of York Prep until he was dismissed over the winter break, according to a New York Post article.

The school was founded by his father-in-law Ronald Stewart. Stewart’s daughter Jayme is married to Durnford, so it’s no surprise that when the affair was discovered his job was placed on the chopping block.

Stewart notified parents of the change in the institution’s administration last week in a welcome back letter to students and parents. Durnford has since been replaced by the middle school dean.

According to reports, nothing sexual happened while the girl was enrolled, however fellow students noticed an intimacy between the two of them. The student was on the volleyball team, and Durnford served as coach.

Students said that the two appeared to be close and she was often seen going into his office.

The student reportedly involved with Durnford graduated last June.

Tuition at the 40-year-old sixth-through-12th grade academy costs parents an average of $35,000 a year.

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NY union to appeal release of teacher rankings

Teachers in New York plan to appeal a court decision allowing the state education department to release their names and rankings, citing privacy and flawed data.

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