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Doctors say Medicare cuts force painful decision about elderly patients

How about a checkup from geriatric specialist Michael Trahos? Expect to see him every six months: The Alexandria-based doctor has been limiting most of his Medicare patients to twice yearly rather than the quarterly checkups he considers ideal for the elderly. Still, at least he’ll see you. Top-ranked primary care doctor Linda Yau is one of three physicians with the District’s Foxhall Internists group who recently announced they will no longer be accepting Medicare patients.

“It’s not easy. But you realize you either do this or you don’t stay in business,” she said.

Doctors across the country describe similar decisions, complaining that they’ve been forced to shift away from Medicare toward higher-paying, privately insured or self-paying patients in response to years of penny-pinching by Congress.

And that’s not even taking into account a long-postponed rate-setting method that is on track to slash Medicare’s payment rates to doctors by 23 percent Dec. 1. Known as the Sustainable Growth Rate and adopted by Congress in 1997, it was intended to keep Medicare spending on doctors in line with the economy’s overall growth rate. But after the SGR formula led to a 4.8 percent cut in doctors’ pay rates in 2002, Congress has chosen to put off the ever steeper cuts called for by the formula ever since.

This month, the Senate passed its fourth stopgap fix this year – a one-month postponement that expires Jan. 1. The House is likely to follow suit when it reconvenes next week, and physicians have already been running print ads, passing out fliers to patients and flooding Capitol Hill with phone calls to convince Congress to suspend the 25 percent rate cut that the SGR method will require next year.

Such temporary reprieves have increased the potential pain down the road, compounding not only the eventual cut but the cost of doing away with it for good, now estimated in the tens of billions.

The lobbying blitz by doctors also comes amid concern in Washington that Medicare spending is spiraling up so fast the nation can’t afford to boost it further by significantly raising doctors’ pay. And government analysts and independent experts suggest that although doctors could not absorb a 25 percent fee cut, the claim that they have been inadequately compensated by Medicare until now is wildly exaggerated.

Among the top points of contention is the complaint by doctors that Medicare’s payment rate has not kept pace with the growing cost of running a medical practice. As measured by the government’s Medicare Economic Index, those expenses rose 18 percent from 2000 to 2008. During the same period, Medicare’s physician fees rose 5 percent.

“Physicians are having to make really gut-wrenching decisions about whether they can afford to see as many Medicare patients,” said Cecil Wilson, president of the American Medical Association.

But statistics also suggest many doctors have more than made up for the erosion in the value of their Medicare fees by dramatically increasing the volume of services they provide – performing not just a greater number of tests and procedures, but also more complex versions that allow them to charge Medicare more money.

From 2000 to 2008, the volume of services per Medicare patient rose 42 percent. Some of this was because of the increasing availability of sophisticated treatments that undoubtedly save lives. Some was because of doctors practicing “defensive medicine” – ordering every conceivable test to shield themselves from malpractice lawsuits down the line.

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Former surgeon general Koop warns of complacency about AIDS

About 56,000 Americans become infected each year, about 15,000 die, and about one-fifth of those with the virus don’t know they have it, he told a gathering at the National Press Club. HIV – the virus that causes AIDS – continues to be transmitted readily in the gay community, and efforts to prevent infections or diagnose them early have not made much progress.

“Simply put, HIV is no longer on the public’s radar screen, and the result is deadly serious,” Koop said.

Although ignorance about AIDS remains widespread, the “irrational fear” that accompanied its emergence in the early 1980s has now been replaced by “a growing sense of complacency that is as dangerous,” he added.

Koop, who is 95 and lives in New Hampshire, is in Washington to attend the National Summit on HIV Diagnosis, Prevention and Access to Care. He will give an address on Friday about his experiences in the early days of the AIDS epidemic and will receive an award.

At the news conference, Koop spoke from a wheelchair, his head bent forward close to his text. He told the gathering that he is “very, very deaf” and in the past few months had become legally blind.

“I suspect this is probably the last time I’ll be speaking in the National Press Club,” he said.

Appointed by President Ronald Reagan in 1981 – the year AIDS was first described – Koop was an unexpected vehicle for AIDS education and advice on safe-sex practices.

He was a pediatric surgeon, not a public health physician. He was a Christian who wrote theological tracts. Unlike recent holders of the office, he always wore his surgeon general’s dress uniform, which with his mustacheless beard made him look like an admiral from the Civil War.

Koop became famous for frank, practical and nonjudgmental talk about AIDS. In 1986, he issued a report to the American people about the disease, with 20 million copies distributed to local governments, schools and physicians. In 1988, an eight-page version was mailed to 107 million households, which he recalled being told was the largest mass mailing in U.S. history.

In the early years of the epidemic, “the country was rife with rumors and misinformation” that HIV could be contracted through casual contact at schools, at restaurants and in bathrooms, he said. There was also “a pervasive bias against the people most affected by HIV/AIDS, which severely hampered our ability to respond,” he added.

In his public pronouncements, he said, he focused on two messages: that the risk of infection increases with the number of sexual partners and that the best protection besides abstinence is the use of condoms. The expansion of the epidemic slowed as that message sank in.

“What was the lesson here?” Koop asked. “If you tell people the truth, in a very factual way, they will act. When it comes to bad news or controversial issues, Americans want to hear it straight.”

While HIV infection remains concentrated in the gay community – 53 percent of new cases are in gay and bisexual men – almost half of the people who are infected are black, which is far different from the white, middle-class first face of the epidemic.

Gay men in the 1980s altered their behavior, but a generation later, “a whole new cohort moved from adolescence into adulthood totally untaught,” Koop said. Prevention efforts should be aimed at gays, bisexuals and intravenous drug users, as in the early years, and also at African Americans and at Hispanics, a population with rising rates of infection.

Koop appeared with three AIDS scientists and public health physicians, who previewed what they will say at the HIV summit, being held at National Harbor in Maryland. He was asked to give the final message at the news conference.

“I occasionally get birthday cards that say, ‘Never, never, never, never give up,’ ” he said. “That’s my message.”

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Sex survey shows growing diversity, but cliches about men and women still apply

Happily, other people’s sexual relations are still entirely fair game. And all of a sudden, there’s a whole lot more to discuss: Last month, researchers from Indiana University’s Center for Sexual Health Promotion published what they said was the most comprehensive national study on sex in nearly 20 years. Their findings appear in a special issue of the peer-reviewed Journal of Sexual Medicine and include commentary from several prominent sexual-health experts. “This data provides a contemporary snapshot . . . of the sexual landscape,” says research scientist and lecturer Debby Herbenick, lead author of the study, which surveyed 5,865 teens and adults from ages 14 to 94.

It is certainly interesting reading. “Because nobody really talks about sex, people are very curious about what their neighbors are doing,” says Herbenick.

“Learning more about other people’s sex lives provides some type of context about our own lives: whether people are having the same type of sex, with the same frequency and, of course, whether they’re enjoying it or not. We want to provide some answers, and help start a conversation between parents and teenagers, friends, partners and a range of people.”

So let’s talk, then: According to the study, vaginal intercourse remains the most common sex act, although respondents reported more than 40 unique combinations of behaviors during their most recent sexual experience.

“What this shows is that our sexual space has become incredibly diversified,” says Michael Reece, director of the Center for Sexual Health Promotion and a co-author of the study, who notes that Americans are having more oral sex than ever before and that a significant number of straight men and women are experimenting with anal sex: More than 40 percent of men and women 25 and older in the survey said they had tried it. “They’re not doing it frequently, but they are trying it, and that’s something we just didn’t see 20 years ago,” he explains.

The research also shows that Mom and Dad – and even Grandma and Grandpa – are probably still, well, doing it. Many adults continue to have active, varied sex lives well into their later years, often with longtime partners but even – gasp! – with dates or “friends with benefits,” just like college kids.

In the 50-plus age category, 21 percent of women and 16 percent of men had sex most recently with a casual partner, while 6 percent and 12 percent respectively had sex with a friend.

“Conventional wisdom says that young people are out there having lots of sex and being promiscuous, while older adults have their act together and aren’t having sex in later stages, but these data show frequent sex behaviors across the life span, for people well into the later ages,” says Reece. He speculates that the advent of drugs such as Viagra, increased exposure to Internet pornography and media influences such as, yes, “Sex and the City,” have affected sexual attitudes and behavior since the last study of this kind.

Still, just because they’re older doesn’t mean that adults are any wiser.

Indeed, this research, which was funded by the maker of Trojan condoms, shows that people older than 40 have the lowest rates of condom use. Specifically, among singles older than 50 who reported more than one sexual partner in the last year or who had sex outside a relationship, just under than one-third of men and women used such protection during sex with a new acquaintance. In addition, nearly 40 percent of older people had never been tested for HIV.

“These are older generations who were probably married at the time [that the AIDS crisis unfolded] and who didn’t acknowledge that any of the widespread safer-sex messages were for them, and who now find themselves single at 40, 45 or later, and they are having sex with good old Mrs. Jones, the librarian from down the street, who couldn’t possibly have herpes, but then find themselves infected,” says Robin Sawyer, an associate professor and instructor in human sexuality at the University of Maryland.

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All About Seated Massage Therapy : Hunching during Seated Massage Therapy

Learn the solution to hunching with expert advice on seated massage therapy in this free massage video. Expert: Greg Ellsworth Contact: www.gmemassage.com Bio: Greg Ellsworth Is a graduate from Utah College Of Massage Therapy. He currently works for GME massage, in charge of a network of over 30 massage therapists. Filmmaker: joseph wilkins

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Medicare beneficiaries can decide in November about prescription drug coverage

Don’t be. In part because of the health-care overhaul law, there are some changes in the Part D program that may affect your out-of-pocket costs and coverage for 2011. By investing time during the enrollment period – Nov. 15 to Dec. 31 – to evaluate your options on the Medicare Web site (www.medicare.gov), you can make sure you’re signed up for the plan that’s best for you.

Analyses by health-policy experts indicate that Part D premiums are going up an average of 10 percent, to .72 monthly. But plans may depart significantly from that average, depending on such factors as deductibles, coinsurance and whether they cover prescription drugs while a beneficiary is in the so-called doughnut hole.

There will be some new plan options as well, including Humana’s Walmart-Preferred Rx Plan, which carries a .80 premium in every region of the country. That bargain price may well attract many seniors, but premiums are only part of the equation. By Nov. 15 each plan’s formulary – the list of covered drugs – and cost details will be available. It’s important to plug your drug information into the Medicare plan finder and compare costs.

“Even in a low-premium plan, someone could have relatively high spending depending on the drugs they take,” says Tricia Neuman, director of the Medicare Policy Project for the Kaiser Family Foundation. (KHN is a program of the foundation.)

It’s also important to investigate other plan features that might limit your coverage, says Joe Baker, president of the Medicare Rights Center, a consumer advocacy organization. In particular, beneficiaries should keep an eye out for limits on how much of a drug can be prescribed over a certain period and restrictions that require providers to explain why a particular drug is medically necessary. “It might be better to pick the plan without the restrictions, even if costs a bit more, because you’re going to have an easier time,” he says.

As a result of regulations aimed at getting rid of plans that were duplicative or had low enrollment, there will be nearly one-third fewer drug plans offered in the coming year, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis. Seniors will still have an average of 33 plans to choose from, however.

If your plan is being eliminated in 2011, you’ll be automatically assigned to another plan in your area. Don’t assume that this replacement is the most cost-effective choice for you, say experts. Run the numbers for plans in your area to make sure you’re getting the best deal.

For Medicare beneficiaries with high drug costs, 2011 will bring some relief, as the federal health overhaul law continues to close the doughnut hole – the gap in coverage that occurs when a senior reaches ,840 in total drug spending by himself and his health plan, and continues until the total exceeds ,448. Under the overhaul law, seniors will get a 50 percent discount on brand-name drugs while in the doughnut hole, and a 7 percent discount on the cost of generics.

These discounts will be important to Claudette and Richard Therriault. Until last summer, the couple was insured through Claudette Therriault’s job at a senior housing facility near the couple’s home in Sabattus, Maine. But when she turned 66 last May, Therriault says her company cut back her hours and she could no longer afford to keep her husband on her plan.

Richard Therriault, 67, takes a number of brand-name drugs, including NovoLog for diabetes, OxyContin for chronic pain and Nexium for gastric problems. He enrolled in Medicare in May, and in June was already in the doughnut hole. After three months paying 100 percent of his bills, he reached the maximum and the plan started paying 95 percent of his costs. But by then he’d spent ,550 out-of-pocket (his share of the ,448).

“It was devastating,” says Claudette Therriault, adding that the couple almost lost their house. Now they’re chipping away at a ,500 loan from a local charity that got them through that stretch.

Next year, they’ll both be on Medicare. After another cutback in her hours, Claudette is leaving her job in December. She takes the anti-inflammatory drug Celebrex for her knees and Singulair for asthma; she estimates she’ll probably enter the doughnut hole in November. The 50 percent discount will make a big difference for both of them. “You have no idea what a relief that will be,” she says. “We’ll probably pay ,000 less than last year.”

This column is produced through a collaboration between The Post and Kaiser Health News. KHN, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health-care-policy organization that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente. E-mail: questions@kaiserhealthnews.org.

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All About Seated Massage Therapy : Seated Massage Therapy Defined

Learn about seated massage therapy with expert advice in this free massage video. Expert: Greg Ellsworth Contact: www.gmemassage.com Bio: Greg Ellsworth Is a graduate from Utah College Of Massage Therapy. He currently works for GME massage, in charge of a network of over 30 massage therapists. Filmmaker: joseph wilkins
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Campus illnesses intensify worries about high-alcohol energy drinks

Several states have enacted or are considering limits or bans on the drinks, and at least two universities have banned them from campus while the Food and Drug Administratio reviews their safety.

The drinks are popular with college students who want to get drunk quickly and cheaply. The maker of one beverage linked to the Washington state party this month said that it markets its products responsibly to people of legal drinking age.

At that party, police officers found a chaotic scene, with students from Central Washington University passed out and so intoxicated that investigators thought they had overdosed on drugs.

Nine students who drank Four Loko, a caffeinated malt liquor, were hospitalized with blood-alcohol levels ranging from 0.12 percent to 0.35 percent, and a female student nearly died, CWU President James L. Gaudino said. A blood-alcohol concentration of 0.30 percent is considered potentially lethal.

All the hospitalized students were inexperienced drinkers – freshmen ranging in age from 17 to 19. Toxicology results showed no drugs in their bloodstreams, although a small amount of marijuana was reported at the party, university police Chief Steve Rittereiser said.

Some students admitted drinking vodka, rum and beer with Four Loko.

Phusion Projects Inc. of Chicago, which makes Four Loko, said in a statement that people have consumed caffeine and alcohol together safely for years. It added that it shares college administrators’ goal of making campuses safe and healthy environments.

“The unacceptable incident at Central Washington University, which appears to have involved hard liquor, such as vodka and rum, beer, our products, and possibly illicit substances, is precisely why we go to great lengths to ensure our products are not sold to underage consumers and are not abused,” the statement said.

The FDA sent a warning letter to Phusion Products in November, asking it for information that shows adding caffeine to alcoholic beverages is safe. The case remains open, the agency said in a statement Monday.

Four Loko comes in several varieties, including fruit punch and blue raspberry. A 23.5-ounce can sells for about .50 and has an alcohol content of 12 percent, comparable to four beers, according to the company’s Web site.

Health advocates say the caffeine in the drink can also suspend the effects of alcohol consumption, allowing a person to consume more than usual.

“It gets you really drunk really fast, and it gives you a lot of energy so you’re not going to be laying down and sleeping,” said 18-year-old CWU freshman Hyatt Van Cotthem of Everett, Wash., who said he’s tried the beverage but doesn’t drink it because he thinks the taste is “nasty.”

He didn’t attend the party, but he questioned whether the drink alone could have been to blame.

“There’s no way that Four Loko caused all these people to just pass out,” he said.

The sickened students have recovered and are back in class. No criminal charges have been filed, but Rittereiser said that officers are still investigating where the alcohol came from.

Gaudino banned alcoholic energy drinks from CWU’s campus Monday. Last month, so did Ramapo College in New Jersey after several students’ hospitalizations were attributed to Four Loko.

“It’s not that we’d seen a lot of consumption, but we’d seen enough that it worried us, because it was in situations of extreme intoxication,” Ramapo President Peter Mercer said Monday.

“Having seen no redeeming social use for it, and seeing the damage and danger it could pose, I ordered a ban,” he added.

Mercer said he eagerly awaits the results of the FDA review and supports a measure to ban the drinks in New Jersey.

Utah and Montana have restricted the sale of the caffeinated malt liquors to state liquor stores. A bill to ban the drinks in Washington state failed in the legislature earlier this year, but Gov. Chris Gregoire (D) said she would support another effort.

Steven Schmidt, a spokesman for the National Alcohol Beverage Control Association, said many states feel they need to act quickly on the issue because the drinks are increasing in popularity.

“There’s really a sense that people consuming these drinks don’t understand how much alcohol they are drinking,” he said. “These products pack a punch, and they are relatively inexpensive.”

- Associated Press

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All About Seated Massage Therapy : Demonstration of Seated Massage Therapy

See a demonstration of seated massage therapy with expert advice in this free massage video. Expert: Greg Ellsworth Contact: www.gmemassage.com Bio: Greg Ellsworth Is a graduate from Utah College Of Massage Therapy. He currently works for GME massage, in charge of a network of over 30 massage therapists. Filmmaker: joseph wilkins

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