Prior Authorization Bill Expected in Congress This Summer

Prior Authorization Bill Expected in Congress This Summer

Two House Republicans and a Democrat working on a draft

https://www.medpagetoday.com/practicemanagement/reimbursement/79314

WASHINGTON — Bipartisan legislation to ease the burden of prior authorization is expected to be introduced in the House this summer, a Republican staffer said.

“We’ve been working with [Reps.] Mike Kelly (R-Pa.) and Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.) on prior authorization,” said Charlotte Pineda, healthcare advisor to Rep. Roger Marshall, MD (R-Kan.), an ob/gyn, during a conference on free-market healthcare here earlier this month.

“It’s important to work across the aisle because you can actually get stuff done,” she continued. “It’s one thing to introduce a bill and another thing entirely to introduce it with members of the committee on which the bill has jurisdiction. So the three members hopefully will be introducing that later this summer.” Kelly and DelBene are remembers of the House Ways & Means Committee, which would likely have jurisdiction over any prior authorization bill.

Naida did not say what the bill might contain, and she was unavailable for comment at press time. However, during the last Congress, Kelly introduced the Prior Authorization Process Improvement Act, which was referred to the Ways & Means committee but got no further. That bill required the Secretary of Health and Human Services to submit a report to Congress within a year “on the feasibility of Medicare Advantage organizations and providers and suppliers of services … using certain technologies to facilitate the administration of prior authorization requirements under Medicare Advantage (MA) plans offered by such organizations.”

The bill called for the secretary to consult with an advisory panel of MA organizations, providers and suppliers of services, beneficiary representatives, and technology vendors in preparing the report. Among other things, the report would include “recommendations on how to improve the administration of such requirements through the use of technology.”

While the three lawmakers work on that bill, other activities related to prior authorization are continuing. In March, the eHealth Initiative, a coalition of provider and healthcare industry organizations, issued a paper on “Considerations for Improving Prior Authorization in Healthcare.” The document included four central points:

  • Transparency of payer policy and evidence-based clinical guidelines available at the point of care may, in many cases, reduce the need for prior authorization and minimize care delays.
  • Reducing the overall volume of services and drugs requiring prior authorization could decrease administrative burdens and costs for all stakeholders.
  • Payers, healthcare professionals, and vendors should use existing, industry-endorsed standards whenever possible and explore incorporating new electronic standards that have the capability to improve the prior authorization process.
  • Payers and healthcare professionals should explore alternative payment models that promote bundled authorization for procedures, medications, and durable medical equipment that are associated with a particular episode of care.

Over at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the agency is participating in two different workgroups for its Document Requirement Lookup Services Initiative, which is aimed at making it easier for Medicare fee-for-service providers to find out what documentation is required in order for Medicare to approve a particular service for coverage.

“One workgroup is a private sector initiative hosted by Health Level Seven International (HL7), the Da Vinci project,” the agency explained on the initiative’s webpage. “The second workgroup, convened by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), is the Payer + Provider (P2) Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource (FHIR) Taskforce.” FHIR (pronounced “fire”) is a common programming interface that is used in many health information technology applications.

Through working with those two efforts, “CMS is helping define the requirements and architect the standards-based solutions,” the agency said. “In parallel, CMS is preparing to support pilots testing the information exchanges for Medicare fee-for-service programs and possibly coordinate pilots with volunteer participants to verify and test the new FHIR-based solutions.”

On the insurer side of the equation, America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), a trade group here for health insurers, is coordinating a demonstration project to automate prior authorization. “We expect to launch the demonstrating project later in 2019 in a manner that is scalable and as integrated as possible with provider workflow,” an AHIP spokeswoman said in an email to MedPage Today. “We will engage an independent organization to evaluate the impact of automation and release a final report in early 2020.”

She noted that only about 15% of healthcare services require prior authorization, which she said was “an important, safe care tool adopted by health plans and government-sponsored health care programs to help ensure patients receive the best results, better outcomes and better efficiencies.”

Specifically, prior authorization “prevents the overuse [of care], misuse [of care], or unnecessary (or potentially harmful) care and offers consistency and value to the patient, when there could be a wide variation provider performance, cost of the drug, and/or utilization within a clinician’s practice,” the spokeswoman said. “[It also] ensures care is consistent with evidence-based practices.”

But there is still work to be done to improve the process, she said, adding that AHIP “supports legislation that is designed to streamline and standardize electronic prior authorization, improve transparency, and encourage best practices that improve care coordination and reduce provider burden.”

Please do not take this final act! National Suicide Prevention Lifeline PLEASE CALL: 1-800-273-8255

https://youtu.be/PTzFiywn0c0

In recent days there have been a series of coordinated attacks against me. I don’t know or understand why but they are making some very serious allegations. Please take a moment to hear me out and if you still have questions, please call me: 423-794-8241 “And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.” 1 Corinthians 13:13

DOJ/DEA/SWAT and their theatrics when they raid a prescriber’s office

A year ago I left a review  I was shocked to find a reply after a year. The patient who replied to my review replied with her very detailed description of the DEA raid IN HER DOCTOR’S OFFICE. Read and learn for if or when it happens to you.

https://www.facebook.com/DEAHQ/

This is the reply to my review:

This is slightly lengthy but it tells of the RAID by the FBI & DEA at my pain clinic. It is my unofficial deposition. Remember this was done when the government was shut down. I’m 61 and the youngest patient I have noticed is approximately 45ish. Some have canes and others have portable oxygen. Far cry the crack head pill mill they thought they would find!

February 23, 2019
To Whom It May Concern,
I am a chronic pain patient and have been one in excess of 15 years and on permanent disability for 8 years. Prior to Dr. Ronald Moon I had to use Family Medical Care. That clinic became my primary care center. I was able to use the clinic for my routine medications such as hypertensive medication, anxiety medication well as my pain medication. I was able to use the clinic for approximately 3 years until their policy changed and they were no longer allowed to practice as a primary care doctor and chronic pain patient were no longer to be seen. I was forced to find a PCP and a Pain Specialist. I was given a list of primary care doctors as well as some pain clinics.
• I have been a patient of Dr. Moon for over 7+ years. My chronic pain is as follows: I have fibromyalgia, M.E., diabetic neuropathy in my feet and intention tremors in both hands. In addition I also have degenerative disc disease in my spine, spinal arthitis and buldging discs. I have had spinal surgery with metal rods and cadaver bone in my spine. The pain in my lower back travels down my right leg. I continue to experience chronic lower back pain. Severe headaches and at least once every 2-3 months I get blinding migraines. I have stiffness in my neck radiating down across both shoulders and extending up my neck to the base of my head. I do have PTSD, anxiety, depression, panic attacks and social anxiety which are being handled by another doctor that specializes in those areas.
• When I first came to Dr. Moon is as barely mobile even using my cane. I was homebound with the exception of my doctor visits. I was apprehensive of seeing another doctor due to the fact unless an medical issue can be visually seen or proven by diagnostic tests it did not exist. Dr. Moon through a system of questions, blood work, urinalysis and my presented systems gave me hope. Did he say he could cure me? NO. He told me that there were medications that could help make my chronic pain tolerable. Throughout the years with Dr. Moon I have had CT scans, MRIs, nerve conduction tests, nerve blocks, and a few other tests. I firmly believe that he is a conservative doctor than tries to locate the cause or root of the pain and DOES NOT hand out pain medication on a whim. In my experience he is careful to prescribe pain medication at the lowest dose that he believes will help the pain become manageable. Next visit if it’s not producing the desired results he reevaluates the situation and adjusts medication aa he sees necessary. Random urine drug screens are not uncommon. There seems to be no pattern in the randomization of the tests. Also if I am seen my another doctor or dentist for any reason and I am prescribed and narcotics I must have that prescribing doctor complete a Medical Disclosure Form. It has been this way since day one. Dr. Moon is a very caring, supportive, compassionate doctor that “talks TO me and not AT me.” There is a huge difference! Just as there is a difference between being dependent on pain medication and being addicted to pain medication. Even today I am unable to walk or stand for any length of time. If I have to go anywhere that requires walking or standing I have no choice but to use my wheelchair.
When he had to discontinue accepting BCBS insurance because of how the they wanted him to run his client and record keeping from what I could figure out.
• That Tuesday (Feb. 5th)morning at 6 a.m. while my husband and I were in the exam room waiting to be seen we both heard a loud commotion in the hall. All of a sudden my room door bursts open and 3-4 heavily armed agents entered the room. The red laser dot from the rifle was placed on my forehead and quickly to my husband’s forehead. They were loudly yelling “Search Warrant” as they burst into the room. This scared me to death! Having PTSD, anxiety and anxiety attacks this was extra stressful for me. I am so grateful my husband was with me to help me remain as calm as possible. Glen saw me begin to panic and he was able to keep me calm and thus avoiding a full blown panic attack.
• To my best guess there were +40 agents from multiple government agencies present. It was extremely intimidating! We each had to give our full name, address, date of birth, social security number and if relevant our work information. The FBI and DEA agents went through the office and each exam room like they were raiding a crack house.
• An FBI agent told me to follow him. We walked into an exam room followed by a DEA agent. I sat on the exam table, DEA agent sat at the small desk while the FBI agent stood in front of the only door to the room. I felt boxed in. I was asked approximately 6-7 typed pages of predetermined questions. I have very poor memory recall due to the fibromyalgia, brain fog and at that point increased anxiety. I answer their questions the best to my ability and informing them both I have had 2 small strokes and my memory wasn’t the best. I also let them know that my husband was out in the lobby and I asked if he could come in the room and help fill in the missing pieces of memory information they needed. I mentioned that on 3 separate occasions and I was told “no” and that I was “ answering the questions just fine.” I no concept of time and my best guess the 3 of us were in the small exam room for about an hour.
• Later I found out that the interview I had just finished was voluntary. At no time was I informed that I didn’t have to go with them and answer all of those questions. It was presented to me as mandatory that I follow them and answer their questions while the FBI agent standing with his back against the door. Yes I felt trapped and intimated. In found out that every patient chart was removed from the office. My private medical history was taken without my consent or prior knowledge. The results of my bone density scan is in my chart. Dr. Moon has not reviewed the results or gone over it with me. My latest blood work and test results are now gone. Yes I do feel my right to privacy have been violated. I do not have any idea as to who is looking at my private records or personal information.
• Having the agents burst into the exam room where we were with their automatic rifles pointed at me has caused my anxiety level to remain high. I have an increased difficulty falling and staying asleep. My prescription medication for sleep does very little to help. The bursting into the exam room so heavily armed and traumatizing me replays over in my head.
This was completely unnecessary. Dr. Moon follows the guidelines and gives me as well as his other patients no choice but to follow the rules. I appreciate the way he looks for the cause of the pain, attempts to remedy the root cause via tests and referrals to other doctors when needed while trying to keep my pain at a tolerable level. I truly believe he has my best interest in mind with every visit. I trust him completely and yes I have referred him to others and I will continue to do so.

Thank you for your time.

When reading this… mental images of  gestapo tactics that I have heard about under Hitler’s dominance of Germany and other parts of Europe that he attempted to conquer.  I would hope that all of the S.W.A.T. theatrics, those police officers had their guns on locked and just using the red laser target lights were just for EFFECT…  “scare the shit out of people in the waiting room effect”  

I am not an attorney, but as was stated in the article all of the theatrics was totally just that – THEATRICS – and the pt did not have to conform with what was going and and being demanded.

I have seen some attorneys who have legally challenged law enforcement when they are “playing games” … all you have to ask is “Am I being detained ?” That is a simple YES/NO question… if they don’t say YES… then you politely tell them that “we are thru here and I am leaving”

If they say YES… ask them what they are charging you with and that you need to talk to your attorney … and don’t say another word or do anything that they request.

 

Andrew Kolodny Rips National Pain Report For Unfair Reporting

Andrew Kolodny Rips National Pain Report For Unfair Reporting

www.nationalpainreport.com/andrew-kolodny-rips-national-pain-report-for-unfair-reporting-8834556.html

Dr. Andrew Kolodny has criticized the National Pain Report for what he calls “its unfair and false reporting” on him.

He said it is “absolutely false” that he is “aggressively pushing the idea of restricting or eliminating opioid usage” as we indicated this week.

“I have never pushed for a policy that would restrict or eliminate opioids,” he said. “I believe opioids play an important in both the treatment of pain and addiction.”

What he is for, he said, is responsible prescribing.

Kolodny also believes we should avoid referring to the crisis as an epidemic of drug abuse.  As he said on the Brandeis University website: “Calling it an abuse problem suggests the cause is bad behavior—people abusing dangerous drugs to get high. While it’s true that some people got addicted from recreational use, many also became addicted taking opioids exactly as prescribed by doctors. Once addicted, people aren’t using heroin or pills because it’s fun. They need to keep using opioids to avoid feeling awful.”

Kolodny, who in addition to his work at Brandeis University is also executive director of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, started working on the issue about 15 years ago for New York City’s health department.

Kolodny has been in the news recently urging the Trump Administration to move faster to address the issue of overprescribing and addiction.

“There really isn’t anything this (federal) commission is going to figure out that we don’t know already,” Dr. Andrew Kolodny, told the New York Times. “What we need is an enormous federal investment in expanding access to addiction treatment, and for the different federal agencies that have a piece of this problem to be working in a coordinated fashion.”

“Policymakers wanted to stop so-called ‘drug abusers’ but were ignoring the problem of overprescribing. It was all focused on preventing kids from getting into grandma’s medicine chest, but no one was looking at why every grandma now had opioids in her medicine chest.”

Kolodny indicated he would think about writing a column talking about opioids and chronic pain for the National Pain Report but said, “Had you approached me before you did this false reporting, I might have been more inclined to do it.”

 

See the source image

The day has come when I AGREE with Andrew Kolodny  Kolodny also believes we should avoid referring to the crisis as an epidemic of drug abuse. 

On JUST ONE THING… substance abuse/addiction is not a EPIDEMIC… because the word EPIDEMIC suggests that something is CONTAGIOUS and substance abuse/addiction is a mental health problem, not a moral issue and both our current and previous Surgeon General and new head of the CDC agrees with that statement.

Doesn’t anyone really wonder that only 5% of so called “addicts” that go to a sobriety clinic  stay “clean” ?  Maybe that is because they were never really addicted but was prescribed opiates and was not properly weaned off and had become dependent and experienced withdrawal symptoms and when they are properly weaned off… SURPRISE … no longer addicted.

I read this article several times and not ONCE did Kolodny mentioned that substance abuse/addiction is a MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE.

I had a Logic professor in college whose favorite quote was , “.. never say never and never say always… because someone will always prove you wrong… because there is no absolutes in life “

So this statement is patently UNTRUE  It was all focused on preventing kids from getting into grandma’s medicine chest, but no one was looking at why every grandma now had opioids in her medicine chest.”

I hope that Ed Coghlan will not let him make any posts… this statement shows he is interested in the liberal distribution of controlled substances:  “I have never pushed for a policy that would restrict or eliminate opioids,” he said. “I believe opioids play an important in both the treatment of pain and addiction.”

Since the medications that are used in a chemical rehab are both controlled substances  a C-II Methadone and a C-III Suboxone.  So apparently Kolodny and the members of his Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing are very supportive of the prescribing of controlled substances/opiates… but mostly limited to those who are dealing with substance abuse/addiction.  Apparently a pt being dependent on one of those meds is perfectly fine, but .. those suffering from chronic pain should only get “responsible doses”  Whatever in the hell that is ?

Asked to pass this along – 04/17/2019

Please join our state pain advocacy groups and work together at the state and federal level to facilitate real change. We have members going to Town Hall meetings right now before they return to Congress to pass health care legislation soon. Members are meeting with policy makers and media in each state and creating real change. We have advocates, patients and medical personnel meet in with policy makers – home bound patients can call in to take part and we have a team of medical personnel to call in and share their side and what’s happening to their patients. They have to see people with 5, 10 or 20 different conditions, as many think we bumped our elbows and hopped on medication.

 

Tamera Stewart, the new C-50 Director has killed bad bills and gotten good ones passed in Oklahoma. We are losing our window, please work with others in your state before it’s too late


Alabama-


http://bit.ly/AlabamaC50


Alaska-


http://bit.ly/AlabamaC50


Arizona-


http://bit.ly/ArizonaC50


Arkansas-


http://bit.ly/ArkansasC50


Calif-


http://bit.ly/CaliforniaC50


Colorado-


http://bit.ly/ColoradoC50


Connecticut-


http://bit.ly/ConneticutC50


Delaware-


http://bit.ly/DelawareC50


Florida-


http://bit.ly/FloridaC50


Georgia-


http://bit.ly/GeorgiaC50


Hawaii-


http://bit.ly/HawaiiC50


Idaho-


http://bit.ly/IdahoC50


Illinois-


http://bit.ly/IllinoisC50


Indiana-


http://bit.ly/IndianaC50


IOWA-


http://bit.ly/IowaC50


KANSAS-


http://bit.ly/KansasC50


KENTUCKY-


http://bit.ly/KentuckyC50


LOUISIANA-


http://bit.ly/LousianaC50


MAINE-


http://bit.ly/MaineC50


MARYLAND-


http://bit.ly/MarylandC50


MASSACHUSETTS-


http://bit.ly/MassachusettsC50


MICHIGAN-


http://bit.ly/MichiganC50


MINNESOTA-


http://bit.ly/MinnesotaC50


MISSISSIPPI-


http://bit.ly/MississippiC50


MISSOURI-


http://bit.ly/MissouriC50


MONTANA –


http://bit.ly/MontanaC50


NEBRASKA-


http://bit.ly/NebraskaC50


NEVADA-


http://bit.ly/NevadaC50


NEW HAMPSHIRE-


http://bit.ly/NewHampshireC50


NEW JERSEY-


http://bit.ly/NewJerseyC50


NEW MEXICO-


http://bit.ly/NewMexicoC50


NEW YORK-


http://bit.ly/NewYorkC50


NORTH CAROLINA-


http://bit.ly/NorthCarolinaC50


NORTH DAKOTA-


http://bit.ly/NorthDakotaC50


OHIO-


http://bit.ly/OhioC50


OKLAHOMA-


http://bit.ly/OklahomaC50


OREGON-


http://bit.ly/OregonC50


PENNSYLVANIA-


http://bit.ly/PennsylvaniaC50


RHODE ISLAND-


http://bit.ly/RhodeIslandC50


SOUTH CAROLINA-


http://bit.ly/SouthCarolinaC50


SOUTH DAKOTA-


http://bit.ly/SouthDakotaC50


TENNESSEE-


http://bit.ly/TennesseeC50


TEXAS-


http://bit.ly/TexasC50


UTAH-


http://bit.ly/UtahC50


VERMONT-


http://bit.ly/VermontC50


VIRGINIA-


http://bit.ly/VirginiaC50


WASHINGTON-


http://bit.ly/WashingtonC50


WEST VIRGINIA-


http://bit.ly/WestVirginiaC50


WISCONSIN-


http://bit.ly/WisconsinC50


WYOMING-


http://bit.ly/WyomingC50

 

As seen on the web… law firm interested

Chronic Illness Advocacy & Awareness

Hi everyone! We have an important question:

Have you been unable to get your medication (or as much medication as your doctor prescribed) due to your pharmacy/insurance declining or giving you the runaround? Please post here and we will PM you. We’re talking to reps for a big law firm who may be interested in working with us to bust up the types of mergers that impact us (between CVS and Caremark, or Cigna and Express Scripts, for instance).

Three Veterans in Five Days Die by Suicide at VA Facilities – RIP

Three Veterans in Five Days Die by Suicide at VA Facilities

https://www.military.com/daily-news/2019/04/13/three-veterans-five-days-die-suicide-va-facilities.html

WASHINGTON — Three suicides occurred during a five-day period on Department of Veterans Affairs properties, prompting reaction this week from Capitol Hill.

Two veterans died by suicide in Georgia, one April 5 at a parking garage at the Carl Vinson VA Medical Center in Dublin and the other April 6 outside the main entrance to the Atlanta VA Medical Center in Decatur, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.

On Tuesday, a veteran shot himself in the waiting room at a VA clinic in Austin, Texas, according to KWCX-TV.

“Those deaths did not go by me without noticing them, nor has it gone by me that we have a job to do,” Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., said Wednesday during a Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing.

Though it wasn’t the intended subject of the hearing, multiple senators asked VA officials on Wednesday about the recent suicides.

Richard Stone, executive in charge of the Veterans Health Administration, said there have been more than 260 suicide attempts on VA property, 240 of which were interrupted and prevented. He didn’t specify a time period for the attempts.

According to a Washington Post report, 19 suicides occurred on VA property between October 2017 and November 2018.

“Every one of these is a gut-wrenching experience for our 24,000 mental health providers and all of us that work for VA,” Stone said.

In response to reports of the three suicides, Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., chairman of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, said he would schedule a hearing on the issue later this month.

“Every new instance of veteran suicide showcases a barrier to access, but with three incidents on VA property in just five days, and six this year alone, it’s critical we do more to stop this epidemic,” Takano said in a statement. “I have called for a full committee hearing… to hear from VA about the recent tragedies and spark a larger discussion about what actions we can take together as a nation.”

According to the latest VA data, 20 veterans die by suicide every day. Of those deaths, 14 are not receiving VA health care.

Suicide among veterans continues to be higher than the rest of the population, and younger veterans are particularly at risk. VA data released in September showed the rate of suicide among veterans ages 18 to 34 had significantly increased.

The VA hasn’t identified the veterans who died by suicide in Georgia, nor described the circumstances of the deaths. In Austin, a still-unidentified veteran shot himself in front of hundreds of people in the waiting room, KWTX reported. Weapons are prohibited in VA clinics, but the Austin facility didn’t have metal detectors.

Stone told senators Wednesday that veteran suicide was a societal problem that needed a nationwide approach. He noted an executive order that President Donald Trump signed in March creating a Cabinet-level task force that he promised would “mobilize every level of American society” to address veteran suicide. VA Secretary Robert Wilkie was selected to lead it.

“I wish it was as simple as me saying I could do more patrols in a parking lot that would stop this epidemic,” Stone said. “Where we as a community and society have failed that veteran is a very complex answer.”

This article is written by Nikki Wentling from Stars and Stripes and was legally licensed via the Tribune Content Agency through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@newscred.com.

It’s time to reform accessibility to prescription drugs

It’s time to reform accessibility to prescription drugs

https://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/healthcare/350091-its-time-to-reform-accessibility-to-prescription-drugs

Too many Americans can’t readily access or afford their prescription drugs. Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) play a central role in creating this dynamic.

PBMs are hired to administer prescription drug benefits, but these middlemen face little accountability. Increasingly, PBMs extract considerable profit from drug manufacturer rebates, administrative fees on pharmacies and spread pricing (the profit they take from the difference between what they bill the plan sponsor for a medication and what they reimburse the pharmacy).

Since the three largest PBMs emerged in the late 1980s, prescription drug benefit costs have risen 1,010 percent — despite PBM claims that they reduce costs. In addition, too many patients have to wade through the bureaucratic mess of prior authorizations, step therapies or mandatory mail order just to access their prescriptions.

If PBMs were an automobile, you might say they have engine troubles. Their model isn’t running properly. We all have a hunch what is wrong, but we have to look under the hood to verify. PBMs operate like that car, but they’ve put a padlock on the hood.

They won’t allow plans to know what they’re paying pharmacies on the other end, so the plan sponsor often has little idea of the profit the PBM is keeping for itself. Those problems can’t be fixed until the padlock is removed. The veil of secrecy puts health plan sponsors, patients, drug manufacturers, policymakers, and pharmacies at a disadvantage.

Legislation can certainly help. The U.S. Congress should pass legislation that increases transparency and patient access — bill’s like the Improving Transparency and Accuracy in Medicare Part D Drug Spending Act; the Prescription Drug Price Transparency Act; and the Ensuring Seniors Access to Local Pharmacies Act.

But moving legislation through our gridlocked Congress takes time.

We don’t have to wait. We can make improvements while we press lawmakers to act. Alternatives to the traditional PBM business model do exist. If companies and organizations want to upend the status quo in their benefit plan design process, they should take the wheel instead of riding shotgun.

That’s what Caterpillar, the world’s leader in manufacturing construction and mining equipment, did. In “Caterpillar Breaks New Ground Managing the Prescription Drug Supply Chain,” a 2010 American Journal of Pharmacy Benefits article, Caterpillar’s compensation and benefits manager Todd Bisping explained how the company sought to reverse an increase of 14 percent in its annual prescription drug spending from 1996 to 2004.

Caterpillar created direct-to-pharmacy agreements that cut PBMs out of the equation. The arrangements emphasized volume for margin when it came to the prescriptions they dispensed, were subjected to competition as opposed to exclusivity agreements, worked under a new pricing model, and were audited to ensure the methodology was properly applied. By 2009, Caterpillar’s total drug costs were down 6.8 percent, and yearly member costs were 13.8 percent lower.

Independent community pharmacies, which are often located in underserved areas, can enhance these efforts by ensuring adequate patient access to prescription drugs and pharmacist counseling services.

Finding more innovative and cost-effective ways to deliver prescription drug benefits is a growing phenomenon. More than 40 major corporations, from American Express to Verizon, have formed the Health Transformation Alliance. HTA is dedicated to reducing the more than 30 percent of waste that bloats health care spending.

When it comes to prescription drugs, their relationships with PBMs have been reimagined to include “full financial disclosure, financial disclosure auditing rights, and participation in the development of formularies.” It is an ongoing process where the best practices will be applied.

The time has come for PBM reforms like these, not only for Fortune 500 companies, but also — and especially — for Medicare and Medicaid. Common-sense reforms could actually save our federal government billions of dollars.

Henry Kaiser once said, “Problems are only opportunities in work clothes.” All of us — policymakers, insurers, pharmacists, and even PBMs — must roll up our sleeves and create better, more cost-effective prescription drug benefit plans for Americans.

B. Douglas Hoey is a licensed pharmacists and CEO of the National Community Pharmacists Association CEO.

Opioids II: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

this was just posted on www.youtube.com on 04/14/2019 – so in less than 48 hrs – this has a 50:1 ratio of THUMBS UP to THUMBS DOWN and has nearly 7000 comments  Does that suggests that the actual feelings of the general public about pain management or that John Oliver has a rather young audience that probably has not had much experience with chronic pain and get most of their “news” via social media.

Notice in the transcript of one of the Sackler family they asked if anyone became “dependent or addicted”… as if they are the SAME ?

The only thing that I can sort of agree with Oliver is that the company that put out Insys Fentanyl oral spray… was the “poster child” of very bad marketing of that product.  Fentanyl being dosed via a oral spray has only one valid medical use – end of life cancer because a oral spray will  have a very short onset and a very short duration of action.  This medication – in this route of administration – would put a chronic pain pt on a “pain roller coaster” and likewise this med in this application should NEVER BE USED as the primary pain management med for ANYONE.

It is too bad that John Oliver and his staff are not as smart as they are smart asses.

Torture and Cruel Treatment in Health Settings

Torture and Cruel Treatment in Health Settings

https://www.hrw.org/news/2010/01/20/torture-and-cruel-treatment-health-settings

Human Rights Watch has reported on a wide range of abuses against patients and individuals under medical supervision – in medical facilities, juvenile detention centers, orphanages, drug treatment centers, and social rehabilitation centers. Often in these settings, health providers may be forced to withhold care or engage in treatment that intentionally or negligently inflicts severe pain or suffering for no legitimate medical purpose.

Medical care that causes severe suffering for no justifiable reason can be considered cruel and inhuman, and in some cases, where there is state involvement and specific intent, it can be considered torture.

Prohibitions in international human rights law forbidding torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment (CIDT) or punishment apply to conditions of confinement, including in medical and other institutions. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the first international treaty to address torture and CIDT explicitly, provides, in article 7, that: “No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. In particular, no one shall be subjected without his free consent to medical or scientific experimentation.”

The UN Human Rights Committee emphasizes that article 7 “protects, in particular … patients in teaching and medical institutions.” The UN Manual on Reporting also notes: “Article 7 protects not only detainees from ill-treatment by public authorities or by persons acting outside or without any official authority but also in general any person. This point is of particular relevance in situations concerning … patients in … medical institutions, whether public or private.”

The United Nations Human Rights Committee has stated that prohibitions against torture and CIDT apply “not only to acts that cause physical pain but also to acts that cause mental suffering to the victim.”[1] Article 16 of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (Convention against Torture), and interpretations by the European Court of Human Rights and the United Nations special rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment suggest that, at a minimum, CIDT covers “treatment as deliberately caus[ing] severe suffering, mental or physical, which in the particular situation is unjustifiable.”[2] The special rapporteur, Manfred Nowak, suggests that CIDT is distinguished from torture in that it may occur out of intentional and negligent actions.”[3]

Human Rights Watch research into torture and CIDT in health settings includes  health care providers’ involvement in forcible anal and vaginal exams, female genital mutilation, and failure to provide life-saving abortion, palliative care and treatment for drug dependency.

The Human Rights Watch 2010 World Report essay, “Abusing Patients: Health Providers’ Complicity in Torture and Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment” summarizes recent research by Human Rights Watch on the abuse of patients in health settings.

Other Human Rights Watch research related to this theme, in various institutional settings:

Prisons/Pre-Trial Detention

Barred from Treatment: Punishment of Drug Users in New York State Prisons,” March 2009: Details lack of drug dependence treatment, Medication-Assisted Therapy, and harm reduction services in New York state prisons.

Torture and Impunity in Jordan’s Prisons: Reforms Fail to Tackle Widespread Abuse,” October 2008: Documents torture in Jordan’s prisons and notes lack of adequate health care, especially psychiatric care.

Locked Up Alone: Detention Conditions and Mental Health at Guantanamo,” June 2008: Describes deteriorating mental health of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as a result of conditions of confinement.

In a Time of Torture,” February 2004: Documents the human rights abuses suffered in Egypt  by men suspected of engaging in homosexual activity, which is unlawful under Egyptian moral codes. The systematic abuse imposed on suspected individuals  by police officials includes forcible “anal exams,” conducted by forensic physicians. These exams, which involve anal molestation and penetration, are used to establish whether an individual has violated the moral code against “debauchery.” But examining physicians admitted to HRW that the tests are not conclusive despite official reliance on results for conviction.

[See also: News Release, “Egypt: Court Upholds HIV Sentences, Reinforces Intolerance,” May 2008; News Release, “Egypt: New Indictments in HIV Crackdown,” March 2008; News Release, “Egypt: Spreading Crackdown on HIV Endangers Public Health,” February 2008; News Release, “Egypt: Stop Criminalizing HIV,” February 2008: Series of pieces detailing abuses suffered by men arrested and tried on the basis of suspected HIV positive status, including HIV testing without consent by Ministry of Health doctors and forced forensic anal examinations designed to “prove” that they had engaged in homosexual conduct].

Undue Punishment: Abuses Against Prisoners in Georgia,” September 2006: Details conditions of detention in Georgian prisons and substandard or absent medical care, including lack of medicines and other treatment and wholly inadequate mental health care.

Guinea – “The Perverse Side of Things”: Torture, Inadequate Conditions, and Excessive Use of Force by Guinean Security Forces,” August 2006: Describes prison conditions in Guinea, including severe overcrowding, and policy of releasing individuals who are near death so that they do not die in custody.

Ill-Equipped: U.S. Prisons and Offenders with Mental Illness,” October 2003: Documents the disproportionate number of mentally ill individuals in prisons. Three times as many  mentally ill people are in prisons as in mental health hospitals; and prisoners have rates of mental illness  two-to-four times greater than the rates for the general public. Seriously ill prisoners often receive little or no meaningful treatment because prison mental health services are woefully deficient, crippled by understaffing, insufficient facilities, and limited programs. The role of psychiatric personnel is limited, and includes stabilizing those who suffer psychotic episodes so that they can be returned to the conditions that provoked the attack.

[See also: Letter to Representative Julie Hamos, “Human Rights Watch Supports HB 2633,” April 2009; Article, Jamie Fellner, “Prevalence and Policy,” Correctional Mental Health Report, January 2007; News Release, “U.S.: Number of Mentally Ill in Prisons Quadrupled,” September 2006; News Release, “Prisons No Place for Mentally Ill,” February 2004].

Long Term Solitary Confinement for Political Prisoners,” July 2004: Describes Tunisia’s prolonged isolation of selected inmates, most of them leaders of the banned Nahdha Party, which seems driven less by legitimate penological motives than by a political will to punish and demoralize these individuals and to crush the Islamist trend they represent.

Nowhere to Hide: Retaliation against Women in MI State Prisons,” September 1998: Describes  retaliation by attackers against  women inmates who have been raped by guards in Michigan prisons.

Cold Storage: Super Maximum Security Confinement in Indiana,” October 1997: The first comprehensive assessment under international human rights law of super-maximum security facilities in the United States, which house prisoners who will someday be released back into society.

Immigration Detention

Report, “On the Margins: Rights Violations against Migrants and Asylum Seekers at the New Eastern Border of the European Union,” November 2005: Describes detention conditions  for migrants in Ukraine, including lack of access to medical services.

Chronic Indifference,” December 2007: Documents HIV/AIDS care for detained immigrants; death of HIV-positive detainee in federal custody immigration facility; and failures in the system that lead to insufficient medical care, discrimination and harassment.

 “Detained and Dismissed,” March 2009: Documents health care conditions in  US immigration and Customs Enforcement Service facilities, where as of 2007,  more than 320,000 people were in its custody. Individuals are detained for administrative infraction but suffer health care conditions worse than prison settings. Documents  many instances of facilities ignoring sick call requests, not delivering necessary medication, losing medical records, failing to provide translation services, impeding access to specialist care, and  denying access to needed treatment. Documents instances in which women were denied gynecological care, mammograms and adequate care during pregnancy.

Health Care Institutions/Hospitals

Please, do not make us suffer any more…,” March 2009: Examines the chronic  worldwide problem of under-treatment for pain. Despite the universal consensus that palliative care should be  part of the national response to AIDS and cancer treatment, 80 percent of the world’s people do not receive adequate pain treatment. Government passivity is a key reason for under-treatment  in both the developed and developing world.

A High Price to Pay: The Detention of Poor Patients in Hospitals,” September 2006: Examines the effects of user fees and the practice of routinely detaining poor patients who are unable to pay their hospital bills in Burundi, one of the poorest countries in the world.  Documents inadequate, often inhumane, living conditions for  detained patients, who often go hungry, sleep on the floor and are refused appropriate medical treatment. The abuses  discourage similarly situated people from seeking health care and exacerbate health problems of recovering patients.

Hated to Death: Homophobia, Violence, and Jamaica’s HIV/AIDS Epidemic,” November 2004: Notes discrimination faced by men who have sex with men in Jamaica by health workers, who refuse to treat the men, make abusive comments and disclose their sexual orientation, putting them at risk of homophobic violence.

Over Their Dead Bodies,” October 2007:  Documents  deaths that result from a blanket ban on abortion in Nicaragua, one of three remaining countries that ban abortion for women in all circumstances and a country in which a doctor who performs abortions may face criminal charges. The deaths include those that result from the “chilling effect” of the law, described by women reluctant  to seek medical care for obstetric emergencies, including heavy bleeding, for fear of being suspected of inducing abortion.

No Bright Future,” July 2006: Details the practical impossibilities for HIV-positive individuals in Zimbabwe  in accessing necessary antiretroviral therapy (ART), whose cost can be prohibitive. The government grants waivers for health user fees  but the  system is rife with flaws. Hospitals turn away patients who have been granted exemptions, for example,  requiring payment  up front instead. Such provider abuse denies life-saving care  and disrupts ART, which can result in the patient’s developing drug resistence.

Decision Denied,” June 2006: Documents the difficulties  Argentinian women have gaining access to abortion.

Mexico: The Second Assault,” March 2006: Documents difficulties girls and women face in Mexico if they seek abortions  as a result of rape. Mexico’s laws permit legal abortion after rape. But for many rape survivors, actual access to safe abortion procedures is made virtually impossible by a maze of administrative hurdles as well as official negligence and obstruction. At the core of this issue is a generalized failure of the Mexican justice system to provide a solution for rampant domestic and sexual violence, including incest and marital rape.

Rhetoric and Risk,” March 2006: Describes discrimination by health  care providers  against people living with and at high risk of HIV/AIDS in Ukraine. People living with HIV/AIDS and injection drug users have been turned away from hospitals, summarily discharged when their HIV status became known, or provided poor quality care that was both dehumanizing and debilitating to their already fragile health status.

Positively Abandoned,” July 2005: Documents discrimination for HIV-positive mothers and their children in healthcare settings (as well as in other sectors).

Psychiatric Institutions

News Release, “Speaking Up for Vietnam,” June 2008: Notes the legally sanctioned practice in Vietnam of committing political dissidents to “social protection centers” and psychiatric facilities involuntarily without trial.

News Release, “Turkmenistan: New Leader Should End Rights Abuses,” December 2006: Urges Turkmenistan to end practice of forcible detention of political prisoners in psychiatric hospitals

News Release, “Uzbek Activist in Eighth Day of Detention,” November 2005: Describes arrest of Elena Urlaeva, a member of the Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan,  in the waiting room of the office of the human rights Ombudsman in Tashkent while trying to deliver a complaint.

News Release, “Uzbekistan: Dissident Forced into Psychiatric Detention,” September 2005: Describes  politically motivated detention of individuals in psychiatric facilities and forced psychiatric treatment as punishment.

[See also: News Release, “Uzbekistan: Dissident in Psychiatric Detention,” April 2001].

News Release, “Russia: EU Policy Should Address Human Rights,” March 2004: Notes need for reform of psychiatric institutions given serious problems with procedures for committal for involuntary treatment.

Dangerous Minds: Political Psychiatry in China Today and Its Origins in the Mao Era,” August 2002: Details the practice of politically motivated psychiatric diagnosis and institutionalization in China. Inside a secret network of state run psychiatric facilities, accused political dissidents are detained indefinitely, alongside those who are truly mentally ill. Political dissidents receive “treatment” for disobedience in the form of electroshocks, public humiliation, force feeding, and forcible injections of anti-psychotic drugs.

[See also: News Release, “China: No Medical Reason to Hold Dissident,” March 2006; News Release, “China: Political Prisoner Exposes Brutality in Police-Run Mental Hospital,” October 2005; News Release, “China: WPA Action on Psychiatric Abuse Falls Short,” August 2002; News Release, “China: End Political Abuse of Psychiatry,” August 2002].

Drug Treatment Facilities

“‘Skin on the Cable’:The Illegal Arrest, Arbitrary Detention and Torture of People Who Use Drugs in Cambodia,” January 2010: Documents the treatment of   people who use drugs  by law enforcement officials and staff  at government drug detention centers  claiming to provide drug “treatment” and “rehabilitation.”  These centers  hold  people rounded up by police or arrested at  the request of family members, who sometimes pay for their care,   without  judicial oversight.  In 2008 over 2,300 people were detained in such centers, including many children under 15 and people with mental illnesses.

Where Darkness Knows No Limits,” January 2010: Documents how China’s June 2008 Anti-Drug Law compounds the health risks of suspected illicit drug users by allowing government officials and security forces to incarcerate them for up to seven years without trial or judicial oversight.  The law fails to  define clearly mechanisms for legal appeals or to report abusive conduct and does not ensure evidence-based drug dependency treatment.

An Unbreakable Cycle: Drug Dependency Treatment, Mandatory Confinement, and HIV/AIDS in China’s Guangxi Province,” December 2008: Details the range of human rights abuses suffered by identified drug users in China. Detained in drug rehabilitation centers for indefinite periods of time, drug users are forced into unpaid labor, exposed to environments with  an unnecessary and heightened risk of disease infection, inadequate medical services and rampant abuse  by prison guards.   Describes human rights violations resulting from a  national drug policy that shirks universally recommended methods for rehabilitation in favor of a punitive system.

Rehabilitation Required: Russia’s Human Rights Obligation to Provide Evidence-based Drug Dependence Treatment,” November 2007: Finds that treatment offered at state drug treatment clinics in Russia is so poor as to constitute a violation of the right to health and further notes breaches of confidentiality.

Deadly Denial,” November 2007:Documents the repeated failures of the Thai government in extending the success of its universal ART program to HIV- infected drug users. Although the law has extended  provision of  ART to drug users, discriminatory practice continues without state censure. Health care  providers interviewed admitted  they did not know of a change in the law, were uncertain about potential interactions between ART and methadone or other illicit drugs, or feared that extension of ART to drug users would be “asteful” given the group’s “unreliability.”

Not Enough Graves: The War on Drugs, HIV/AIDS, and Violations of Human Rights,” July 2004: Details inadequacy of drug treatment and HIV prevention programs in prisons in Thailand, coerced substandard drug treatment, discrimination in hospitals, and drug users’ exclusion from government-sponsored HIV/AIDS treatment programs.

Locked Doors,” September 2003: Documents the urgent needs of persons living with HIV in China  for healthcare, legal aid and community support.  Instead, widespread discrimination by state and private actors and the lack of redress are forcing many people with HIV/AIDS to live like fugitives. 

Social Rehabilitation Facilities

Libya: A Threat to Society? Arbitrary Detention of Women and Girls for ‘Social Rehabilitation‘” February 2006: Details the inhuman and degrading treatment of women  suspected of transgressing moral codes – often involving extramarital sex and rape –  in state run “rehabilitation centers.” Women and girls identified as “vulnerable to engaging in moral misconduct” can be detained indefinitely at these  centers. A majority of women interviewed reported undergoing invasive “virginity exams,” by health care personnel when they entered  the facility. Results from such exams not only inform the prosecutorial process but also affect the family’s decision on whether to abandon the woman to the facility’s care.

Orphanages/Juvenile Detention Centers

Real Dungeons: Juvenile Detention in the State of Rio de Janeiro,” December 2004: Describes abuse and inhumane conditions in Rio de Janeiro’s state juvenile detention centers, including poor hygiene and healthcare (lack of water and frequent scabies outbreaks).

Abandoned to the State: Cruelty and Neglect in Russian Orphanages,” December 1998: Details the egregious abuse and inhumane conditions that abandoned and orphan Russian children experience in state-run orphanages. . Inhumane conditions include prolonged use of restraints and light deprivation, inadequate medical attention, isolation, and abuse by supervising medical staff.

Custody and Control,” September 2006: Examines two large, prison-like facilities in which girls in New York state are confined, and concludes that, far too often, girls experience abusive physical restraints and other forms of abuse and neglect and are denied the mental health, educational and other rehabilitative services they need.

Death by Default: A Policy of Fatal Neglect in China’s State Orphanages,” January 1996: Documents the pattern of cruelty, abuse, and malign neglect which has dominated child welfare work in China since the early 1950s, and that constitutes one of the country’s gravest human rights problems.

Romania’s Orphans: A Legacy of Repression,” December 1990: Shortly after Nicolae Ceaucescu was overthrown on December 22, 1989, the world was exposed for the first time to the shocking images of Romania’s orphans, expecially its handicapped children and babies with AIDS. These children, numbering over 100,000, lived for the most part in Dickensian institutions – bleak, understaffed orphanages built by the Ceaucescu government to deal with the consequences of its policy of coercively raising the birth rate. The orphans are the grisly legacy of an oppressive regime in a country that lacks both democratic traditions and independent associations of professionals.