Posted by: AtlasMD

December 27, 2013

There’s Red Tape, And Then There’s “Cinnamon” Tape…

Just in time for the New Year, a new kind of red tape strolled into town. This story of government interference originates in Denmark, where the quantity of cinnamon has been regulated, to prevent instances of liver cancer. Bakers can now only use 50 milligrams per kilogram of dough, if it’s a traditional or seasonal pastry, or 15 milligrams per kilogram if used in regular pastry. They are concerned about cassia’s high levels of coumarin, a natural substance that can cause liver damage, if you eat too much.

If this isn’t government playing mommy, we don’t know what is. How about we let people regulate their own diets?

READ MORE ABOUT “CINNAMON” TAPE IN DENMARK

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 26, 2013

This Hurts. New ACA Fees Coming 2014.

“Here comes the ObamaCare tax bill,” writes Fox News. Unfortunately, most insurers aren’t being forthcoming about the Obamacare taxes that are to be added on to premiums. Nope. Instead these “hidden fees” will be discretely passed on to customers.

One insurance company, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama, wasn’t hush hush about it, though. They laid out the taxes on customer bills, using a separate line item for “Affordable Care Act Fees and Taxes.” Fox News lists out all the new taxes here. Ouch. You know, when we consider our push for more direct care nationwide, it’s hard not to notice that every new patient we enroll, who opts for lower monthly insurance payments using a wrap-around plan, is actually taking money away from the Federal government. Considering all this additional revenue they plan on bringing in from these healthcare taxes, isn’t this just another power ploy? And not to harp, but where’s the actual care in any of this dialogue?

Nowhere. Which is one of the biggest problems we have with it. It doesn’t address where healthcare is failing. Instead, it becomes a bureaucratic argument over dollars and line items, not patients and doctors having healthy, meaningful interactions.

READ ABOUT NEW OBAMACARE TAXES COMING 2014

The Moral Hazard Of American Healthcare

John F. Hunt, MD writes on Kevin MD, “If you learn nothing else today, I would ask you to learn that moral hazard is the cause of medical price hyperinflation.” His is a controversial post, meant to elicit click-through with the title, “The cheapest form of health care is to let sick people die.”

Obviously, Dr. Hunt doesn’t want anyone to die. However, his argument is that so long as it’s the government’s obligation to take care of people, prices will skyrocket. This is due in part to the inherent moral hazard. He explains, “Moral hazard is when the person who bears the economic burden of a decision is not the decision maker.” In healthcare, the moral hazard is a third party payer (insurance/government) bearing the economic consequences of a patient’s decision.

Dr. Hunt makes an excellent point. When there’s moral hazard, the patient cares less about drug and procedure cost, and what doctors charge. As a result, he says, prices rise when the “buyer” doesn’t care about these costs. He compares this to teens given no-reins access to their parents’ credit card. “[Then] if everyone in America let their teenage daughters go shopping for clothes… the prices would skyrocket.”

He explains the catch-22 in play here. So long as the government/insurance are responsible for payment, the actual prices of services will be hyper-inflated. The only way to break this cycle is to make the patient the person who bears full financial responsibility. The problem is that we as a populace need to make that leap of faith. Direct care patients are doing this. Direct care docs are doing this. The question is when will everyone be doing this? Only then will we see prices return to realistic levels. Seriously, the out-of-pocket cost of an ambulance trip alone would break most Americans’ banks.

READ DR. HUNT’S BLOG POST ON KEVIN MD

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 23, 2013

Is The ACA Deadline Update A Publicity Stunt?

NPR reports that the administration has granted a one-day extension on Obamacare sign-ups. According to NPR, “The deadline that had been midnight on Dec. 23 has been pushed to Christmas Eve at midnight.” So why the update? Apparently the government realized that there were issues with time zones, and that more time should be allotted to compensate.

fry

It’s a good thing the federal government isn’t an actual person. We’d be concerned that their head is attached to their shoulders.

READ MORE ABOUT OBAMACARE DEADLINE UPDATE HERE

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 23, 2013

Smartphone Cholesterol Checks Could Be A Smart Tool For Direct Care Docs

Cardiovascular Business reported on a new accessory that uses a smartphone camera to measure cholesterol levels. The smartphone system is in development and uses analytical software (this would be downloaded as an app) and a smartCARD accessory that fits over a mobile phone camera. From here, a user would place a drop of blood on a commercially available test strip (similar to glucose monitoring), which fits into a smartCARD reader. The camera phone accessory measures the color change on the strip which the app then processes to display a cholesterol value on the phone’s screen.

According to Cardiovascular Business, the Cornell team found that it takes 60 seconds for the blood sample to change colors, with a 1.8 percent accuracy rate. They tested it on various smartphone platforms and found that their system had a maximum error rate of 5.8 percent, around the same rate as at-home testing kits.

So far there is one drawback: the system in question can’t discern good and bad cholesterols; only a total reading is given. However, tools like these should be introduced into the direct care practice when they hit the market. How cool is it to empower your own patients to be able to do their own cholesterol tests? If you’ve ever tried to lose weight or manage your blood sugars as a diabetic, first off, you know it’s challenging. It takes will and discipline. But tools like these are great because they enable people to track their own progress. People need that connection or lifestyle changes can wind up feeling austere. Although, we don’t have a problem if our patients want to come in every few weeks to get an A1C or cholesterol reading. We’re more than happy to oblige.

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 20, 2013

So Long, Superbug. New Medical Action Video Simplifies Ninja Polymers And MRSA.

Great animation in this informative video! Although we’re not sure is needed to be so — how do we put it — fun. Isn’t it already cool that we developed a defense against a deadly bug that kills 19,000 people a year? Also, we’re curious how these polymers “degrade” and “slip away”? That’s solid creative writing (ninjas, slip away, ha). But they left a lot of the science out of this part. Oh well. Ayn Rand marveled at innovation in Atlas Shrugged, speeding trains and such. For all the market intervention bestowed upon us, it’s good to know biomedicine hasn’t slowed down.

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 20, 2013

Wichita Eagle Spreads Direct Care Cheer

Thanks to reporter Kelsey Ryan who shared a touching Atlas MD story in her recent report on our model of care. She focused on one of our patients, Michael Scheidt, who’s been enrolled in our practice since around the time we opened up. His wife was extremely sick and practically bedridden when he signed them both up for Atlas MD care. Dr. Josh was able to drive to their home and check up on her, which helped them tremendously. Even after the passing of his wife, Scheidt told the Wichita paper that he keeps coming in to see us because it’s “just so darn cost effective.” This was a real tearjerker. Thanks for your kind words, Michael.

Read more

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 19, 2013

And The Red Tape Thickens… HHS Now Demands Free Coverage For Those Affected By ACA

Do you have even an inkling of support for free market policies? A modicum of belief in free enterprise? Here’s a stop-whatever-you’re-doing article from Forbes writer Avik Roy. He reports on disheartening news in light of recent ACA failures.

From Forbes.com > Government Takeover: White House Forces Obamacare Insurers To Cover Unpaid Patients At A Loss

Roy opens with a rally cry, saying, “Of all of the last-minute delays, website bungles, and Presidential whims that have marred the roll-out of Obamacare’s subsidized insurance exchanges, what happened on Thursday, December 12 will stand as one of the most lawless acts yet committed by this administration.” The White House—who’s already canceled Americans’ old health plans, and has botched the system for enrolling people in new ones—is well aware that millions of Americans are going to enter the new year without health coverage. Yet instead of actually fixing anything, they have a new solution. They are going to to try to retroactively force insurers to hand out free health care—even at a potential loss—to those people uninsured through the White House-induced fiasco. Roy asks, “If Obamacare wasn’t a government takeover of the health insurance industry, then what is it now?”

Read more

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 18, 2013

Healthcare’s Horizon Looks Costly, Bureaucratic

It looks like the sky is falling, according to the 2014 Watch List released by the Physicians Foundation. Sure, we paraphrased a bit here but there’s not much that docs are optimistic about except the repealing of the Medicare sustainable growth-rate formula.

“While the promise of a better future for healthcare remains, the current path is leading us toward a more monopolistic, bureaucratic and costly healthcare system,” Lou Goodman, Physicians Foundation president and Texas Medical Association executive vice president and CEO, said in a news release. “It is critical for policymakers to more regularly seek the counsel of physicians as they begin to implement health reform, since they are the true voice in determining the future of patient care.”

Read more

Posted by: AtlasMD

December 16, 2013

The Doctor Will See You All Now

We thought Time was kidding when they wrote about something called “shared medical appointments, or group visits.” But no, evidently this group therapy approach to medical care is gaining popularity. Could it be a more satisfying way to see your doctor? It’s too early to tell, but either way, we’re excited here at Atlas MD. Security issues aside, we’re behind any movement that puts the patients in the driver seat. As is the case here when we Tweet with clients, the patients have to provide authorization and be comfortable talking about themselves in front of other people.

You might be thinking, this is ludicrous. But when it comes to diabetics, it makes perfect sense. Taking care of that condition is a full-time job, and as much as family, friends, and even docs, can empathize, there’s no replacement for people who’ve gone through the same ordeal you have.

Read more