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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Study Shows MLR Has Lowered Premiums For Consumers.
The Los Angeles Times (6/6, Terhune) reports that a new study, released Thursday by the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that “U.S. consumers who purchase their own health insurance saved $2.1 billion last year due to tougher rules in the federal healthcare law.” According to the report, “individual premiums would have been $1.9 billion higher in 2012 without the requirements in the federal Affordable Care Act. In addition, the nonprofit group said individual policyholders nationwide should receive $241 million in rebates this summer.”
Related Links:
— “Health law led to $2.1 billion in savings for consumers, report says, “Chad Terhune, Los Angeles Times, June 06, 2013.
Electronic Health Records Compounding Patients’ Privacy Fears.
Bloomberg News (6/5, Robertson) reports that while “hospitals in the U.S. pledge to keep a patient’s health background confidential,” states including Washington and New York “are putting privacy at risk by selling records that can be used to link a person’s identity to medical conditions using public information.” The article explains, “the potential for a patient’s hospital record to be made public by anyone buying data compiled by states adds to ways privacy is vulnerable in an age of digitized health record keeping and increasingly sophisticated hacking.” Still, “the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights, which investigates HIPAA violations, has not received complaints about companies identifying patients, said Rachel Seeger, a spokeswoman for the agency.”
Related Links:
— “States’ Hospital Data for Sale Puts Privacy in Jeopardy, “Jordan Robertson, Bloomberg News, June 04, 2013.
Family Struggles To Help Violence-Prone Son With Mental Illness.
In a lengthy segment on the CBS Evening News (6/4, story 7, 4:10, Pelley), CBS News correspondent Seth Doane followed one family’s struggle to help their “mentally ill child…prone to violence.” The Lammers family discussed how they tried everything to help their son Blake, who by the age of 18 had already been twice placed in a mental hospital for four-day stays. While doing the laundry, Blake’s mother found a receipt for an AR-15 assault weapon he had purchased legally. Because had never been committed by a court to a psychiatric hospital, his background check had revealed no record of his mental health history. When Blake revealed he had plans to use the assault weapon at a local movie theater, his mother turned him in. Blake, now 21, is in jail, currently facing three felony counts. While worried that he is not receiving the treatment he needs in jail, the Lammers family is thankful they were able to intervene before Blake could carry out his plan.
APA Representatives Conduct Press Conference Following White House Mental Health Summit.
Psychiatric News (6/5) reports that on June 3, “President Obama and Vice President Biden held a White House conference on mental health.” In attendance was American Psychiatric Association president Jeffrey Lieberman, MD, APA president-elect Paul Summergrad, MD, Jeffrey Borenstein, MD, editor-in-chief of Psychiatric News, former member of Congress Patrick Kennedy. “After the conference, these participants, as well as APA Medical Director James H. Scully Jr., MD, hosted a press conference to discuss some of the pressing issues in mental health care.” At the press conference, APA representatives discussed the Federal mental health parity law “which still does not have a final rule to ensure that insurance companies follow the law.” The representatives also discussed the fact that many people in the US mistakenly believe that people with mental illnesses are violent. Finally, the representatives discussed the issue of combating stigma.
Related Links:
— “APA Representatives Hold Press Conference in Wake of White House Meeting,Psychiatric News, June 04, 2013.
Anxiety The Most Common Mental Health Issue Facing Long-Term Cancer Survivors.
MedPage Today (6/5, Gever) reports, “Anxiety, not depression, is the most common mental health issue facing long-term cancer survivors and their spouses,” according to “a large meta-analysis” published online in the Lancet Oncology.
HealthDay (6/5) reports that researchers “analyzed data from 27 publications that reported on a total of 43 comparison studies and found that levels of depression were similar among adults without cancer and adult cancer survivors two or more years after diagnosis, 10.2 percent and 11.6 percent, respectively.” But, the investigators found that “cancer survivors were 27 percent more likely to report anxiety two or more years after their diagnosis and 50 percent more likely to experience anxiety 10 or more years after diagnosis, the findings indicated.” Additionally, the investigators “found that cancer survivors’ partners were even more likely than survivors to experience anxiety over the long term (40 percent versus 28 percent).”
Related Links:
— “After the Cancer the Worry Remains, ” John Gever, MedPage Today, June 04, 2013.
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