Posts Tagged ‘United States Secretary of Health and Human Services’

March 11, 2010

President Obama and the Insurers: Let’s Decide

As President Obama stumps the country trying to regain leadership on health reform—and get the health reform bill passes—he is now taking aim at the health insurers. Citing big rate increases for buyers of individual insurance policies in some states — 40 percent, 60 percent, even 100 percent — Mr. Obama is trying to focus attention on provisions in the legislation that he says will protect consumers from the worst excesses of insurers.

 Is this too little too late?  Where was the President’s voice early on? The process the President set in motion months ago has clearly emboldened the insurers and pharmaceutical companies.  One could argue that they know now that nothing substantive will change and they have carte blanche to do whatever they want.

HHS Secretary Sebelius is also confusing the insurance issue.  Today she told insurers,  “It’s not too late to work on this issue together, for insurance companies to come to the table and work with us.’’ Last week, the Secretary was attacking rate hikes by insurers in California. 

It’s hard for the American public to get the Administration’s message straight. The President and the Secretary have not focused on the day-to-day actions of the insurers that people can relate to and understand.  The insurers have gone hog wild on restrictions on drugs and services and pre-certifications for drugs and services.  People experience that every day.  People are frustrated and fighting that every day—and time and energy with the insurers (I should say with a recorded message machine that the insurers hide behind).  That’s the insurance industry the American people know.  Who will monitor that? Where is that in health reform? Will supporting health reform get the insurers out of medical decision making?  That is what the people want and that is what the President is not addressing.

November 19, 2009

Mammogram Payment Leads to Empty Seat at CMS

The brouhaha about breast cancer screening is raising major concerns about who should get mammograms.  It is also heightening anxiety about whether mammograms will be paid for by Medicare and private  insurers.  Which leads me to the  Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the government agency charged with responsibilities for health care  payments.  CMS, the agency with control over Medicare and Medicai,  is still leaderless even though more than a year has passed since President Obama took office. 

Secretary Sebelius, as secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), presides over this agency and knows something about payments to insurers, having been an insurance commissioner back in Kansas.  With that background, she should know how critical CMS is to the functioning of the health care system. It is troubling that Secretary Sebelius has not taken action to fill what is the perhaps the most significant and essential slot in HHS.  At this critical juncture, there is no leadership in place to assess the structure and resources of CMS that will have the massive task of implementing any health reform legislation. 

Of great importance to academic health centers,  the Administration has not taken action on some of the most pressing issues for Medicare beneficiaries, which fall under the purview of CMS, specifically  participation of Medicare beneficiaries in clinical trials.  The current clinical trials policy hampers such participation.  In fact, the clinical trial policy threatens the nation’s ability to conduct clinical research and compete globally?  Secretary Sebelius and Mr. Sunstein, our new regulatory czar in the White House, have been made aware of the future dangers but have taken no action.   Why is CMS not an issue?  

Waiting for health reform is no answer.  The problems with CMS organization, resources, and policies will only be heightened.  Action must be taken now.  Nominating and appointing someone to head this agency is critical.

August 3, 2009

On the Road With Health Reform: Where’s the Next Exit?

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius are using their August vacations to try to sell health reform.  Unfortunately, no one really knows what they are selling.  President Obama was elected in part because millions of Americans wanted health reform.  They wanted change and a NEW health care system.   What the Congress now has to offer—and Pelosi and Sebelius are trying to sell– is a warmed over version of the dysfunctional system we already have.  It’s reasonable to expect that buyers might be leery. 

Americans are attracted to all that is  shiny, new, high tech, and different.  But what are they getting with health reform? The proposed public plan is warmed over Medicaid, not Medicare—and no one is buying that.  The insurers still get a big piece of the action—and no one is buying that.  The timeline is too long for people out of work now—or fearing a layoff–and no one is buying that. People are wondering why the President is asking them to buy a clunker. 

 Mr. President, it’s time to  take the next exit—turn around– and tell the Congress you want something better to sell on the road.