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CCHC HEALTH eNEWS



Providing news and commentary on health care policy, health insurance issues, and medical confidentiality.


Contents:


CCHC REPORT: MN HOUSE PASSES HEALTH POWERS ACT

On March 22, the Republican-controlled Minnesota House of Representatives passed their version of the Minnesota Emergency Health Powers Act (HF 3031). Authored by Rep. Richard Mulder, M.D. (R-Ivanhoe), and co-authored by Rep. Tom Huntley (D-Duluth), the controversial bill was quickly passed with little debate: 120 - 11.

Only two amendments were allowed to be offered. One to improve the definition of bioterrorism and another to provide citizens with the right to refuse medical testing, vaccination, treatment, examination, and specimen collection. The amendment also allows health officials to place such non-compliant citizens into quarantine.

An amendment to remove the most controversial portion of the bill was offered and then withdrawn. The bill provides health officials with ongoing, year-long authority to place citizens into quarantine with or without a court order. The Commissioner of Health need only apply for a court order within 72 hours of imposing quarantine on an individual suspected of harboring a communicable disease.

After the detained individuals gets a copy of the order, they may request in writing a court hearing to contest their confinement. Within 72 hours of receiving their request, a judge must hear the case, excluding holidays and weekends. In other words, a person could be detained for over a week without a judge hearing their side of the case.

The Senate version of the bill, which provides state control of all medical supplies, facilities, real estate and private property during a public health emergency is scheduled to be heard this week. As a result of CCHC testimony, both bills require the Health Department to study professional immunity, health care rationing and constitutional issues. But the law would take effect before the study was completed.

    Citizens' Council on Health Care, April 2, 2002


MESSAGE FROM CCHC's PRESIDENT:

This email publication is free, but it is not free to produce. Please consider providing CCHC with a tax- deductible contribution. Online credit card contributions are taken at: http://www.cchconline.org/donate.php3


ACTION ITEM: COMMENT ON PROPOSED CHANGES TO PRIVACY RULE

DEADLINE: Friday, April 26, 2002
COMMENT: http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/ Specifically: http://erm.hhs.gov:9567/nprm/comments.cfm

To address the concerns of the health care industry, medical research community and government agencies, the Bush Administration proposes to change the so-called federal medical privacy rule, for the most part not to the benefit of patients.

At the end of each section below, see the "TELL THEM" statements for suggested comments:

PATIENT CONSENT: The Bush Administration has proposed to eliminate the requirement that health care providers and insurers get patient consent before sharing patient data for the purposes of payment, treatment and "health care operations."(Sec 164.506) They propose that patients only receive notice of privacy practices. CCHC has detailed the broad definitions of "treatment" and "health care operations" at: http://www.cchc-mn.org/definitions.php3 TELL THEM: keeping the patient consent requirement respects the rights of patients. They should not delete it.

PERMISSIVE AUTHORITY TO DISCLOSE: The proposed changes will not restrict the rule's permissive authority which gives doctors, hospitals and health plans the right to disclose patient data without consent for "national health care priorities" such as law enforcement, public health, government databases, research, organ transplant centers, and public safety. (Section 164.512) CONSIDER adding a comment about this when you comment on Patient Consent (Sec. 164.506) and Consent for Research (Sec. 164.512)

DE-IDENTIFICATION OF DATA: The Administration is specifically seeking public comment on their intent to weaken the strict requirements for de-identification of patient data (the removal or encryption of data that could possibly identify an individual). For research, public health, and "health care operations," the Administration proposes to allow the admission, discharge and service dates, date of death, age, and five-digit zip code of patients to remain visible. In addition, regulators want public comment on inclusion of city, precinct, neighborhood or county in disclosed medical record information(Sec. 164.514). TELL THEM: to keep the original requirement that 18 data elements be deidentified.

Keep in mind: Merging one partially de-identified database with one completely identifiable database (driver's license for instance) can make the data identifiable. The Administration knows this but want to appease corporate and public health researchers. Regulators suggest making researchers sign on the dotted line that they won't abuse the data, sell the data, or contact the patients once they identify the data. TELL THEM: not to disclose your identifiable personal data without your consent, even for research and even with written data use agreements.

CONSENT FOR RESEARCH: They also propose to delete the rule's requirement that an Institutional Review Board's (IRB) waiver of the patient's right to give/refuse consent for use of their data for research be conditioned on whether the disclosure will adversely affect the privacy rights and the welfare of the individual. Officials think the requirement to consider privacy rights conflicts with the requirement to consider minimal privacy risk before waiving the patient's right to refuse. So they are choosing minimal privacy risk over consideration of patient privacy rights. (Sec. 164.512) TELL THEM: Patients deserve to have their privacy rights considered. In addition, it should be patients who determine the risks to their privacy, therefore IRB's should not be able to waive the patient's right to refuse or to give consent for use of their data for research.

And finally, regarding research, regulators propose that no expiration date need be included on any research-based access to patient data, for any study, but particularly regarding the creation of research databases or repositories. (Sec. 164.512) Access to the database data once created would require a separate authorization, consent or waiver, but no expiration date for accessing the date need be included on the waiver, consent or authorization. TELL THEM: that consents and authorizations must have end dates. If the research requires more time, an extension should be sought. And no patient data should be placed on a database without explicit written patient consent.

PARENT ACCESS/MARKETING/EMPLOYERS: Regulators also propose to require specific patient consent before health care providers can send advertisements to patients or use their information in marketing campaign. (Sec. 164.508) In addition, the Administration proposes to give State legislatures the right to determine parent access to medical records.(Sec. 164.502) and clarifies that employment records held by a covered entity (clinic, practitioner, health plan, hospital) in its role as employer are not considered protected health information (Sec. 164.501) TELL THEM: that you appreciate requiring consent before marketing, and state (local) control over medical record access decisions.

READ Proposed Changes: http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/propmods.pdf (Explanation, rationale and proposed modifications make up the first 36 pages. The actual changes are on the last 5 pages, but you will need the original rule to make much sense of them)

COMMENT ADDRESSES:
EMAIL comments at the Office for Civil Rights web site.

SEND written comments, postmarked no later than April 26, 2002, to:
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Office for Civil Rights
Attn: Privacy 2
Hubert H. Humphrey Building
Room 425A
200 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, D.C. 20201

COMMENT REQUIREMENTS

  1. Include full name, address, and telephone number of the sender, or a knowledgeable point of contact.
  2. Address only those sections of the rule for which comments are requested.
  3. If duplicate comments are provided on various sections of the rule, please note that in the comment.
  4. Comments sent by fax will be destroyed and not considered.
  5. Use 8 1/2 x 11 inch paper to make non-email comments.
    Citizens' Council on Health Care, April 2, 2002


UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE CAMPAIGN LAUNCHED

********* OPENING NIGHT **************

Opening Night formally launches the new Congressional campaign for Universal Health Care.

An Evening With Rep. John Conyers ...featuring the Junior Mance Trio
Friday April 5, 2002
St. Peter's Lutheran Church
East 54th St.

RSVP 718-694-8290 x44

Reception 6pm Program 7pm

Complementary Admission * Donations Accepted

Rep. John Conyers, Jr. has long been a fighter for health care justice and civil rights for all Americans. A year ago he established a non-partisan Congressional Universal Health Care Task Force. The Task Force developed The Health Care Access Resolution (HCAR 99). Along with America's Health Together(www.healthtogether.org) and the Universal Health Care Action Network(www.uhcan.org)

Source: email received by CCHC, 4/1/02


NATIONAL HEALTH CARE - COMMUNITY BY COMMUNITY

On Wednesday, March 20, HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson addressed the National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) during their 27th annual conference. The organization honored the Secretary with their 2002 Distinguished Community Health Champion Award in recognition of his commitment to the work of America's health centers, his respect for the critical role they play in providing access to care, and his advocacy for increasing the capacity of these centers.

"We made great strides in extending access to health care to Americans during the first year of the Bush administration," says Thompson. "We increased funding for community health centers by $165 million, in order to build on the expertise and compassion that provide care to so many Americans nationwide. However, there is much more to be done."

The proposed HHS budget for Fiscal Year 2003 requests an increase of $114.4 million to create 1,200 new community health centers by 2006. The President's proposal would support 170 new and expanded health centers and provide services to a million additional patients.

The Secretary will also speak about the importance of emergency preparedness in light of the increasing threat of bioterrorist attacks on the U.S. "In 2003 we're calling for $4.3 billion," says Thompson, "an increase of 45 percent over the current fiscal year - to support a variety of critical activities to prevent, identify and respond to incidents of bioterrorism. Community health centers will be critical in helping us to prepare and potentially deal with such incidents."

NACHC is a national trade association serving and representing the interests of America's community health centers. Their programs in primary and preventive care serve 11 million people at 3000 health center delivery sites.

Source: HHS WEEKLY REPORT, March 17-23 2002

    Citizens' Council on Health Care, April 2, 2002


GROWING NUMBERS OF DOCTORS REFUSING TO TREAT NEW MEDICARE PATIENTS

For years, doctors have grumbled about Medicare's complex regulations and reimbursements. But now many are simply refusing to take new patients who are on Medicare -- and the trend is spreading.

  • Medicare cut payments to doctors by 5.4 percent this year -- and doctors say payments no longer cover the costs of caring for the elderly.

  • The government estimates that under current law, the fees paid for each medical service will be reduced in each of the next three years -- for a total decrease of 17 percent from 2002 to 2005.

  • The American Academy of Family Physicians says that 17 percent of family doctors are refusing new Medicare patients.

  • Doctors explain that the cuts come at the same time their expenses are climbing -- and that elderly patients require a lot of time and attention.

Spending for doctors' services accounted for nearly $41 billion of last year's total $238 billion Medicare budget.

Health policy experts predict the cuts will make it more difficult for elderly patients to find doctors -- even as the population ages. Medicare covers 40 million people and the number of beneficiaries is expected to double by 2030.

Other health care providers like hospitals, nursing homes and health maintenance organizations are also demanding more money.

Although Medicare can barely support all the benefits promised under current law, some Capitol Hill politicians are seriously considering adding new benefits -- such as coverage of prescription drug costs for the elderly.

Source: Robert Pear, "Many Doctors Shun Patients With Medicare," New York Times, March 17, 2002.

For text: http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/17/health/policy/17HEAL.html

Source: Taken directly from Daily Policy Digest, National Center for Policy Analysis, http://www.ncpa.org, 3/18/02


"FOR THE GOOD OF THE HEALTH OF THE NATION"

When President Bush announced the nominees for Surgeon General and Director of the National Institutes of Health, he said, "The research is overwhelming that simple improvements in diet and exercise would result in dramatic improvements in America's health. Studies show that overweight Americans who are at risk of developing type II diabetes or coronary heart disease can delay and possibly prevent these diseases with just moderate exercise and a healthy diet. Walking 30 minutes a day will dramatically improve your life. Playing a game with your children in your backyard will help. Walking in a park can make a difference to your health.

"These relatively small actions can dramatically reduce costs and strain on our health care system. Fitness and a healthy lifestyle are a priority for me. I really like to run. It makes me feel better. The doc and I are going to encourage all our country to either run or walk or swim or bicycle for the good of their families, for the good of their own health, and for the good of the health of the nation."

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is following the Bush lead. Secretary Thompson issued a challenge to HHS employees to eat right and exercise. Secretary Thompson asked all employees to weigh themselves the day after Easter, and encouraged anyone who is overweight to lose 10 pounds, and said that he himself plans to lose 15 pounds.

Source: " President Bush emphasizes prevention" and "HHS weight loss challenge," HHS WEEKLY REPORT, March 31 - April 6 2002

    Citizens' Council on Health Care, April 2, 2002


EXPANDING MEDICAID TO THE MIDDLE CLASS

The Children's Health Insurance Program for children and their parents provided health coverage to 4.6 million children at some point during fiscal year 2001. This was a 38 percent increase from the 3.3 million enrolled at some point during 2000, according to an HHS press release. In addition, more than 230,000 adults were enrolled in fiscal year 2001.

Created in 1997 with bipartisan support in Congress, SCHIP is in essence, a state and federal Medicaid expansion program. According to the press release, HHS made it simpler for states to coordinate SCHIP and Medicaid plans in August 2001. Under the new Title XXI of the Social Security Act, states were allowed to set up a separate child health program, expand their existing Medicaid programs, or a combination of both.

Coverage is now available for children whose family income is 200 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL) or higher in 38 states and the District of Columbia. The FPL is $17,650 for a family of four, therefore a family of four with an income of $35,300 qualifies.

To expand SCHIP, President Bush's fiscal year 2003 budget would make available to states an estimated $3.2 billion in unused SCHIP funds that otherwise would return to the federal treasury.

CMS' report on SCHIP enrollment is available at http://www.hcfa.gov/init/children.htm.

"SCHIP COVERS 4.6 MILLION CHILDREN IN 2001," HHS Press Release, February 6, 2002. http://www.hhs.gov/news

    Citizens' Council on Health Care, April 2, 2002


PATIENT SAFETY THROUGH FEDERAL SURVEILLANCE

President Bush is proposing $10 million in new funding to support patient safety initiatives and to reduce medical errors. The funding would bring the total HHS budget for improving patient safety to $84 million in fiscal year 2003, according to an HHS press release.

"Quality health care is a priority for Americans and for this administration," Secretary Thompson said.

Under the initiative, HHS' Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) will receive $60 million, an increase of $5 million, for patient safety expertise and adoption of proven but underused technologies. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will also receive $5 million in new funding for patient safety, bringing their total funding for this issue to $22 million. The FDA will assess and follow-up on reports of adverse events with an emphasis on medication errors.

The President's proposed fiscal year 2003 budget will also again request $2 million for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for developing a Web-based system for providers to report data on infections that patients acquire in hospitals.

The HHS Patient Safety Task Force has been working to determine data that should be collected to improve patient safety. The group is working to coordinate federal patient safety data collection, monitoring, analysis and feedback efforts in an effort to enhance the usability of data collected on patient safety and medical errors while reducing the reporting burdens for health care providers.

Source: "HHS TO PROPOSE NEW FUNDING AND FOCUS ON PATIENT SAFETY," HHS Press Release, February 1, 2002, http://www.hhs.gov/news.

    Citizens' Council on Health Care, April 2, 2002


NOTE: These news items have been taken directly from email received by CCHC or from Internet newspaper publications. Titles in ALL CAPS are CCHC creations except for those heading articles from the National Center for Policy Analysis, the Health Law Pulse, PrivacySecurityNetwork, and LIST.HEALTHPLAN. Credit to the sending organization or news service is listed at the end of each article.


Citizens' Council on Health Care
1954 University Avenue West, Suite 8, St. Paul, MN 55104
Phone: 651.646.8935 / Fax: 651.646.0100, e-mail