Posted on 12/11/2013 10:45:04 AM PST by ShadowAce
Just recently, the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center was announced as one of an elite group of six cancer research and treatment centers throughout the world who will participate in an ongoing collaborative effort to fast-track the advancement of cancer treatment development as part of a new GlaxoSmithKline initiative. It is just one in a series of many examples of how MD Anderson is the preeminent cancer research and treatment center in the United States, if not the world.
According to a new report in the Financial Times, new healthcare plans are being nudged by the statutes of the Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as Obamacare, so that they will exclude in-network coverage for patients to visit top cancer hospitals for advanced therapy including MD Anderson when the plans go into full effect next year.
Under the new healthcare plans, a cancer center like MD Anderson will not be included as part of the choices within patients covered networks. Instead, visiting MD Anderson for cancer treatment would be out-of-network, meaning that very little of the cost would be covered by insurance; most would come out of pocket.
According to the FT report, the shift by insurers to exclude coverage to top treatment centers has everything to do with the new statutes handed down by Obamacare, which seeks to balance costs through what critics see as rationing of care and limiting choices for patients:
One of the biggest goals of Obamacare was to make subsidized healthcare plans that are being sold on the new exchanges as affordable as possible, while also mandating that certain benefits, like maternity care, were covered and that people with pre-existing medical conditions could not be denied access.
Amid these new regulatory restrictions, says Tim Jost, a health policy expert, insurance companies have had to come up with new ways to cut the cost of their products. In this new era, limiting the availability of certain facilities that are seen as too expensive in part because they may attract the sickest patients or offer the most cutting edge medical care is seen as the best way to control costs.
The Obama administration has moved aggressively to characterize this lack of coverage as the fault of insurance companies, and that Obamacare in an of itself has not dictated that top research and treatment centers explicitly be excluded from plans that conform to the laws new rules, with an HHS spokesperson noting that, Decisions about which private health insurance plans cover which doctors is a decision currently made by insurers and providers and will continue that way.
Yet, industry experts explain that, because new Obamacare statues have constrained healthcare insurers ability to maintain profitability, the only recourse is to narrow healthcare networks to include only the most cost-effective providers. Because of this, top cancer centers like MD Anderson, whose healthcare prices billed to insurers and ultimately patients are higher due to its faculty of world-renowned researchers and medical practitioners, are too expensive to include in networks.
Supporters of Obamacare have sought to portray these research institutions price points less as a result of their excellence, and more because of institutional inefficiencies. However, Thomas Priselac, president and chief executive officer of Cedars-Sinai Health System in California, explained to the FT, There is confusion between price and efficiency, adding, The major teaching and research hospitals are more expensive not because they are inefficient but because of what they do.
While Obamacare is already facing the prospect of the so-called death spiral in striking a balance in solvency with the risk of the healthy, young invincible generation rejecting the coverage, thus hyper-inflating healthcare costs for the rest of Americans, the risk of reducing revenues to research and treatment centers such as MD Anderson is that Americans could lose access to critically important specialized treatments, as well as experimental research that in necessary in continuing to advance new treatments and possibly cures for deadly diseases such as cancer.
Dr. Ronald DePinho, CEO of MD Anderson, offered what can now be seen as a prophetic set of comments on this issue back in May, when he said in a candid memo to the institution: We cant run the institution at an operating loss, especially at a time when the health care field faces external challenges from implementation of the Affordable Care Act, the budget sequester and continuing federal deficits. If we dont make changes now, we potentially will find ourselves in a crisis that will force us to take drastic measures that could hurt our ability to meet our mission.
If this was Dr. DePinhos position in May, certainly it has sharpened in the months since the rollout of Obamacare.
[UPDATE 12/9/2013 1:15pm CST: An MD Anderson spokesperson issued the following statement to the press in response to the Financial Times article:
All patients deserve access to top tier cancer care. MD Anderson and the nation's other top cancer centers play a key role in the fight against cancer, and particularly aggressive forms of the disease or rare cancers where expertise is limited to only a small number of facilities worldwide.
In addition, our country's leading cancer centers help bring down the cost of care for all patients by conducting research that leads to new and better treatments, better cancer fighting strategies and increased efficiencies that lead to cost savings. This knowledge is shared among all cancer care providers to benefit patients in the US and beyond our borders.
While every cancer patient may not need to come to MD Anderson, we believe both insurance providers and our health care system must work together to ensure patients have that option so that all of us have the best chance of beating cancer. ]
MD Anderson Among Top Hospitals Excluded From Obamacare Coverage [UPDATED]
Thank you
Death panel at work.
Very sickening
Sloan-Kettering in New York is another.
If you get good treatment, you may well survive for a long time. That costs money and enables you to cause trouble for the regime. This is not permitted, so you must die quickly and die broke.
That’s the Democrat healthcare plan. Period.
Jeff, FYI.
He always claimed he wanted to fundamentally change America. THis i part of it—remove America’s superior medical care from the world, and everyone is managed much easier.
Kathleen Sebelius told Sarah Murnahan’s mother when she begged for her little girl to be put on the adult lung transplant list “Some people live and some people die” that is the mind of a typical liberal..the more people that die the better for their cause
>> Sloan-Kettering in New York is another.
No doubt many within the walls of SK supported the a-hole.
Sloan-Kettering is a phenomenal hospital.
Don’t buy the insurance and instead use the huge cost the “insurance plans” would have cost to go to the hospitals of ones choice...the hospitals may very lower their costs for those who pay cash directly!
“There ain’t no time to wonder why, whoopee, we are all gonna die”. (Country Joe and the Fish at Woodstock singing about Viet Nam). This is what’s coming.
Had stage 4 this time 2 years ago. So far so good. Don’t hate
Insurance co.s or think Dr.s make too much money.
Why Americans are letting this destruction of our medical system go through is beyond me, totally.
Not according to Dr Mengele's spawn, Ezekiel Emanuel. Cancer patients are expected the get the he77 out of the way; to hurry up and die already.
The answer is found next to the answer to; why do many people b*tch & moan about paying 50 to 100 dollars a month on meds that are keeping them alive or allowing them a better life but have no problem shelling out $200 per month for that iphone...
the largest non profit system that I work for just “lost” on the obamacare and is “excluded”.....of course the for profit hospital with a strike looming and who allows abortion will be right in there...
I feel for you. I’m kinda watching to see how MDA will be affected by this.
Liberal Holocaust made to look legal instead of using camps, ya think?
Probably. Forget the camps—kill ‘em where they are.
What’s up wit dat?
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