Monday Health Blog Roundup
• In the past week, there have been numerous reports that call attention to the disparities among those living with HIV/AIDS in the U.S. The Kaiser Health Disparities Report has linked to a CBS Evening News story on the disproportionate number of African Americans that have HIV or AIDS. According to the story, blacks account for 49% of new HIV diagnoses, 69% of AIDS cases among ages 13 to 19 and 56% of AIDS cases among ages 20-24. Despite these high percentages, blacks only make up 13% of the population:
"No matter how you look at it through the lens of gender or sexual orientation or age or socioeconomic class or level of education or region of the country where you live, black folks bear the brunt of the AIDS epidemic in this country," Phill Wilson, founder of the Black AIDS Institute, said. Wilson added that early HIV/AIDS advocates did not send the right HIV prevention and education messages to the black community. "The mischaracterization of the epidemic in the early days ... made black folks think we didn't have to pay attention to the disease," Wilson said.
• Rates of HIV/AIDS are not only disproportionate in African American communities – The Washington Post is reporting that Hispanics represent 22% of new HIV/AIDS diagnoses, despite only making up 14% of the population. While the Post notes that HIV rates are highest among blacks, it also claims it is harder to target enough resources towards Latinos, particularly those who are immigrants, who have been diagnosed with HIV:
Blacks still have the highest HIV rates in the country, but language difficulties, cultural barriers and, in many cases, issues of legal status make the threat in the Hispanic community unique. For those who arrived illegally, in particular, fear of arrest and deportation presents a daunting obstacle to seeking diagnosis and treatment.
• On a more positive note, the Senate passed a bill that calls for a reauthorization of federal funding for a program that supports community health centers, the Deseret News reported last Tuesday. The bill, sponsored by Senator Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), allows for continued support for health centers that provide affordable and quality care for many Americans, particularly those with low income:
Hatch said that since 2001, increased funding has enabled community health centers to treat 4 million new patients in more than 750 communities across the nation. His bill reauthorizes funding for the program for five more years.
• State governments were also discussing implementing health care measures this past week – in Massachusetts, the Council on Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities, chaired by State Senator Dianne Wilkerson and State Representative Byron Rushing, met on July 21 to discuss the recommendations of the Special Legislative Commission on Health Disparities. According to A Healthy Blog, the Council discussed various successes and failures in the state's health care reform:
The presenters all pointed to the success of health care access expansion in Massachusetts as an important step in disparities elimination efforts, but also noted the need to continue working to address quality, cultural competence, and social context problems.
• According to The Health Care Blog, The Century Foundation has announced that it is creating a working group to establish a blueprint for Medicare reform. Maggie Mehar, author of HealthBeat Blog, will direct the group and plans to review issues such as:
Revising Medicare’s physician fee schedule to pay more for primary care, palliative care, and co-ordination and management of chronic diseases.
Rethinking Medicare’s fee-for-service system to reward doctors for quality, not volume.
Creating an independent Comparative Effectiveness Institute that reviews head-to-head testing of drugs, devices, and procedures to ensure that they are effective.
Identifying and rewarding hospitals that provide better outcomes and higher patient satisfaction at a lower cost while helping other hospitals meet benchmarks.
The Medicare reform we most need is HR 676. Improving it so that it is better funded and more efficiently run. And the way it becomes more efficient is to take it out of the hands of private insurers. It is such a twist on the Koolaid Reagan got us to drink that government can't do anything as efficiently as the private sector---WRONG! (The real answer is that government in the hands of the Republicans won't do anything efficient or in the Public Interest.)
Medicare's administrative costs are less than 5%. Canada's National Health Plan adminstrative costs are less than 5%. Private insurance company administrative costs are as much as 31%. Who are the bloated ones? Aetna and Blue Cross and Cigna and Humana and Health Net and...
HR 676. That is the reform we all need to push our representatives toward.
Privately delivered: you chose your own doctor and hospital. Publicly funded: we all put into a kind of government trust fund. Health care providers get paid out of that trust fund. You go get the care you need when you need it. No pre-existing conditions. No deductibles. No co-pays. Your doctor and hospital will be paid for the care they give you. No hasseling with insurance companies over paper work and fighting them for payment.
You get the care you need. That does not happen right now for everybody. Health care providers get paid for every patient treated. That does not happen right now. Hospitals get paid for every patient treated. That does not happen right now.
Let's join the rest of the civilized world and have a universal health care system that includes all in America! Single Payer, Guaranteed Health Care for All: HR676 (John Conyers bill cosponsored by 91 members of Congress at this time. Call your Congressperson and tell them to become a sponsor).
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