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FDA Drafts Transparency Rules

The Food and Drug Administration's Transparency Task Force has issued 21 draft proposals concerning public disclosure of FDA operations without compromising patents or companies' trade secrets. Part of the FDA's transparency initiative launched last summer, the proposals are aimed at helping consumers, stakeholders, and others understand how the agency makes decisions and enforces them. The FDA said that one of the draft proposals would support research into rare diseases by freeing the agency to discuss that a company has abandoned its application for an orphan drug. Once made public, this information could enable another drug manufacturer to pick up where the first one left off. The FDA will accept comments on the public disclosure policies until July 20.

Medical Home Service Expands

The American Academy of Family Physicians subsidiary TransforMED, which helps primary care physicians turn their practices into patient-centered medical homes, has launched a new product aimed at practices with four or fewer physicians. The Small Practice Package bundles the usual components of the product but streamlines the process of converting to medical home practice, the company said. The materials and individualized guidance can come strictly online for a cost of $1,250 per practice per quarter or include on-site assessments at $2,500 per practice per quarter. The TransforMED announcement said that the package will enable small practices to implement the patient-centered medical home model in 2 years.

Survey: Telehealth Improves Care

Eight of ten health care and information technology professionals believe telehealth technology will improve quality of care, especially for the aging population, according to a survey conducted for the technology company Intel, which develops telehealth devices. It surveyed top medical and IT executives at hospitals, clinics, home health organizations, disease management companies, and private payers. Challenges to the adoption of telehealth technology reside mainly in financial issues, such as reimbursement for services provided. More than two-thirds said that health care providers probably will implement telehealth technology if financial issues are resolved.

House Probes Home Gene Testing

Three key House lawmakers have launched an investigation into personal genetic testing kits being marketed directly to the public. The investigation, spearheaded by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) and supported by Rep. Joe Barton (R-Tex.), Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), and Rep. Michael C. Burgess (R-Tex.), has targeted the companies 23andMe, Navigenics, and Pathway Genomics. The companies already offer their tests to consumers by phone or online, and Pathway is seeking to sell testing kits in retail locations, despite concerns from the scientific community about the accuracy of test results. In letters to the companies, the lawmakers said they want information on how the companies analyze test results and identify potential genetic risks, as well as how they collect, store, and process individual genetic samples collected from consumers.

Growth in Health Accounts

About 10 million Americans are now covered by high-deductible health insurance plans, which make them eligible to open health savings accounts. That's a 25% increase over total enrollment in early 2009, according to a report from the health insurance industry group America's Health Insurance Plans. The fastest-growing market for high-deductible health plans last year was among large groups, where such plans increased by 33%, the report said. The increase of high-deductible plans was 22% among small groups of insured people and 17% among those individually insured. States with the highest percentages of enrollment in high-deductible policies were Vermont, Minnesota, Colorado, Arkansas, Indiana, and Ohio.

Seniors Did Blow the Whistle

A program that uses volunteers to train senior citizens to identify fraud in the Medicare program recovered $76,176 in 2009 and saved Medicare, Medicaid, and individuals $214,060, but Administration on Aging grants to conduct the program totaled $9.3 million, according to a report from the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General. The 55 Senior Medicare Patrol Projects had a total of 4,444 active volunteers, who conducted more than 78,000 educational sessions and media and community outreach activities, the report said. As a result of these training sessions and events, the projects received more than 63,000 inquiries from seniors, of which nearly 1,000 were referred for further action, the report said. Since the Senior Medicare Patrol Projects program began in 1997, it has recovered nearly $4.6 million in Medicare funds, the report said, but the program may not be getting full credit for savings attributable to the volunteers' work because it can't account for savings from seniors scrutinizing their bills for fraud and abuse.

 

 

—Jane Anderson

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FDA Drafts Transparency Rules

The Food and Drug Administration's Transparency Task Force has issued 21 draft proposals concerning public disclosure of FDA operations without compromising patents or companies' trade secrets. Part of the FDA's transparency initiative launched last summer, the proposals are aimed at helping consumers, stakeholders, and others understand how the agency makes decisions and enforces them. The FDA said that one of the draft proposals would support research into rare diseases by freeing the agency to discuss that a company has abandoned its application for an orphan drug. Once made public, this information could enable another drug manufacturer to pick up where the first one left off. The FDA will accept comments on the public disclosure policies until July 20.

Medical Home Service Expands

The American Academy of Family Physicians subsidiary TransforMED, which helps primary care physicians turn their practices into patient-centered medical homes, has launched a new product aimed at practices with four or fewer physicians. The Small Practice Package bundles the usual components of the product but streamlines the process of converting to medical home practice, the company said. The materials and individualized guidance can come strictly online for a cost of $1,250 per practice per quarter or include on-site assessments at $2,500 per practice per quarter. The TransforMED announcement said that the package will enable small practices to implement the patient-centered medical home model in 2 years.

Survey: Telehealth Improves Care

Eight of ten health care and information technology professionals believe telehealth technology will improve quality of care, especially for the aging population, according to a survey conducted for the technology company Intel, which develops telehealth devices. It surveyed top medical and IT executives at hospitals, clinics, home health organizations, disease management companies, and private payers. Challenges to the adoption of telehealth technology reside mainly in financial issues, such as reimbursement for services provided. More than two-thirds said that health care providers probably will implement telehealth technology if financial issues are resolved.

House Probes Home Gene Testing

Three key House lawmakers have launched an investigation into personal genetic testing kits being marketed directly to the public. The investigation, spearheaded by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) and supported by Rep. Joe Barton (R-Tex.), Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), and Rep. Michael C. Burgess (R-Tex.), has targeted the companies 23andMe, Navigenics, and Pathway Genomics. The companies already offer their tests to consumers by phone or online, and Pathway is seeking to sell testing kits in retail locations, despite concerns from the scientific community about the accuracy of test results. In letters to the companies, the lawmakers said they want information on how the companies analyze test results and identify potential genetic risks, as well as how they collect, store, and process individual genetic samples collected from consumers.

Growth in Health Accounts

About 10 million Americans are now covered by high-deductible health insurance plans, which make them eligible to open health savings accounts. That's a 25% increase over total enrollment in early 2009, according to a report from the health insurance industry group America's Health Insurance Plans. The fastest-growing market for high-deductible health plans last year was among large groups, where such plans increased by 33%, the report said. The increase of high-deductible plans was 22% among small groups of insured people and 17% among those individually insured. States with the highest percentages of enrollment in high-deductible policies were Vermont, Minnesota, Colorado, Arkansas, Indiana, and Ohio.

Seniors Did Blow the Whistle

A program that uses volunteers to train senior citizens to identify fraud in the Medicare program recovered $76,176 in 2009 and saved Medicare, Medicaid, and individuals $214,060, but Administration on Aging grants to conduct the program totaled $9.3 million, according to a report from the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General. The 55 Senior Medicare Patrol Projects had a total of 4,444 active volunteers, who conducted more than 78,000 educational sessions and media and community outreach activities, the report said. As a result of these training sessions and events, the projects received more than 63,000 inquiries from seniors, of which nearly 1,000 were referred for further action, the report said. Since the Senior Medicare Patrol Projects program began in 1997, it has recovered nearly $4.6 million in Medicare funds, the report said, but the program may not be getting full credit for savings attributable to the volunteers' work because it can't account for savings from seniors scrutinizing their bills for fraud and abuse.

 

 

—Jane Anderson

FDA Drafts Transparency Rules

The Food and Drug Administration's Transparency Task Force has issued 21 draft proposals concerning public disclosure of FDA operations without compromising patents or companies' trade secrets. Part of the FDA's transparency initiative launched last summer, the proposals are aimed at helping consumers, stakeholders, and others understand how the agency makes decisions and enforces them. The FDA said that one of the draft proposals would support research into rare diseases by freeing the agency to discuss that a company has abandoned its application for an orphan drug. Once made public, this information could enable another drug manufacturer to pick up where the first one left off. The FDA will accept comments on the public disclosure policies until July 20.

Medical Home Service Expands

The American Academy of Family Physicians subsidiary TransforMED, which helps primary care physicians turn their practices into patient-centered medical homes, has launched a new product aimed at practices with four or fewer physicians. The Small Practice Package bundles the usual components of the product but streamlines the process of converting to medical home practice, the company said. The materials and individualized guidance can come strictly online for a cost of $1,250 per practice per quarter or include on-site assessments at $2,500 per practice per quarter. The TransforMED announcement said that the package will enable small practices to implement the patient-centered medical home model in 2 years.

Survey: Telehealth Improves Care

Eight of ten health care and information technology professionals believe telehealth technology will improve quality of care, especially for the aging population, according to a survey conducted for the technology company Intel, which develops telehealth devices. It surveyed top medical and IT executives at hospitals, clinics, home health organizations, disease management companies, and private payers. Challenges to the adoption of telehealth technology reside mainly in financial issues, such as reimbursement for services provided. More than two-thirds said that health care providers probably will implement telehealth technology if financial issues are resolved.

House Probes Home Gene Testing

Three key House lawmakers have launched an investigation into personal genetic testing kits being marketed directly to the public. The investigation, spearheaded by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) and supported by Rep. Joe Barton (R-Tex.), Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), and Rep. Michael C. Burgess (R-Tex.), has targeted the companies 23andMe, Navigenics, and Pathway Genomics. The companies already offer their tests to consumers by phone or online, and Pathway is seeking to sell testing kits in retail locations, despite concerns from the scientific community about the accuracy of test results. In letters to the companies, the lawmakers said they want information on how the companies analyze test results and identify potential genetic risks, as well as how they collect, store, and process individual genetic samples collected from consumers.

Growth in Health Accounts

About 10 million Americans are now covered by high-deductible health insurance plans, which make them eligible to open health savings accounts. That's a 25% increase over total enrollment in early 2009, according to a report from the health insurance industry group America's Health Insurance Plans. The fastest-growing market for high-deductible health plans last year was among large groups, where such plans increased by 33%, the report said. The increase of high-deductible plans was 22% among small groups of insured people and 17% among those individually insured. States with the highest percentages of enrollment in high-deductible policies were Vermont, Minnesota, Colorado, Arkansas, Indiana, and Ohio.

Seniors Did Blow the Whistle

A program that uses volunteers to train senior citizens to identify fraud in the Medicare program recovered $76,176 in 2009 and saved Medicare, Medicaid, and individuals $214,060, but Administration on Aging grants to conduct the program totaled $9.3 million, according to a report from the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General. The 55 Senior Medicare Patrol Projects had a total of 4,444 active volunteers, who conducted more than 78,000 educational sessions and media and community outreach activities, the report said. As a result of these training sessions and events, the projects received more than 63,000 inquiries from seniors, of which nearly 1,000 were referred for further action, the report said. Since the Senior Medicare Patrol Projects program began in 1997, it has recovered nearly $4.6 million in Medicare funds, the report said, but the program may not be getting full credit for savings attributable to the volunteers' work because it can't account for savings from seniors scrutinizing their bills for fraud and abuse.

 

 

—Jane Anderson

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Policy & Practice : Want more health reform news? Subscribe to our podcast – search 'Policy & Practice' in the iTunes store
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