Editor's Note -
If you are looking for good news about the state of the American Health Care System, you need not read any further than the first clipping.
If you can tolerate the truth - read this posting to the end.
- SPC
A chance to send a message on universal health care
In addition to the eight state ballot questions this November, residents of the town of Penobscot will have their own referendum to consider: “Shall the citizens of Penobscot call on the Maine Legislature to create a publicly funded health-care plan that provides every Maine resident with comprehensive medical care?”
I am a resident of Penobscot and board member with Maine AllCare, a statewide nonprofit that advocates for universal health care here in Maine and across the country. I asked the town’s Select Board to put the referendum on November’s ballot, and the board agreed. If the Penobscot referendum succeeds, Maine AllCare intends to launch similar initiatives in other towns across the state, with the goal of demonstrating to state legislators that there is widespread support for a publicly funded system of universal health care in Maine.
Despite the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid expansion, over 75,000 Mainers are still uninsured. And hundreds of thousands more are underinsured — that is, they have insurance but still can’t afford health care because their plans come with significant co-pays and deductibles as high as $10,000 per year. Consequently, far too many Mainers go without care, and far too many are saddled with medical debt — the number one cause of bankruptcy in the United States.
With publicly funded health care we would no longer have people forgoing care they need because they can’t afford it. We would treat health care as a public good less driven by profit. We already handle other common needs this way, such as education, roads and highways and fire protection — services that everyone requires, supports, and should have a right to. (Unlike these other public goods, however, in the system that Maine AllCare proposes, health care would be publicly funded but still privately provided.)
There are a number of paths to universal health care that are financially sound and distribute benefits fairly to all. Most of these paths would eliminate the current system of employment-based private health insurance (which is where more than half of all insured people currently get their coverage). This system places huge financial and administrative burdens on employers. It puts small businesses that can’t afford to offer health insurance as a benefit at a disadvantage in recruiting good workers. In addition, the need to maintain insurance coverage makes many employees reluctant to change jobs or start their own businesses.
Employment-based private health insurance is also the source of massive waste in health care, and eliminating this waste would provide more than enough money to provide good coverage for all those who currently lack it, both uninsured and underinsured. First and foremost, this waste comes from the high administrative costs of private health insurance. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, the cost for administering Medicare is about 2 percent of operating expenses; estimates of the comparable figure for private insurance range from 12 to 18 percent. Other sources of waste include corporate profit-making and uncontrolled prices.
In 2018, Maine AllCare contracted with the Maine Center for Economic Policy to analyze the economic impact of publicly funded universal health care in Maine. That study concluded that a public plan it envisioned could decrease yearly health care spending in Maine by $1.5 billion. Under this plan, universal health care would be supported by taxes and premiums. There would be no co-pays or deductibles, and what people paid in taxes and premiums would be pegged to income. Everyone would pay their fair share, and 80 percent of families and individuals would see an increase in household income because of savings in insurance and out-of-pocket health costs. (A summary of the study is available on our website, maineallcare.org)
No health care system is perfect, but almost every other developed country has managed to implement a plan for universal care, and on average they’ve done so at less than half of what the U.S. spends per person on health care. We are the richest nation in the world; our country could have universal care as well — if we had the political will to make it happen. Unfortunately, comprehensive reform of health care is unlikely any time soon at the federal level. But change is possible at the state level. Maine AllCare wants our state legislators to make that happen here. That’s why we hope the people of Penobscot will vote yes on this referendum, and why we ask all Maine residents to work with us for high-quality, affordable health care for all.
David Jolly is a member of the Maine AllCare board. He taught public health policy at North Carolina Central University for more than a dozen years.
‘Get the right cases to the supreme court’: inside Charles Koch’s network
Billionaire’s web of rightwing groups works to bring cases to court that could undermine core functionings of the US government
by Ed Pilkington and Nick Surgey - The Guardian - October 26, 2023
The Koch network, a web of rightwing groups cultivated by billionaire businessman Charles Koch and his late brother David Koch, is spearheading the attack on federal agencies and government regulations that dominates the US supreme court agenda this term.
The network has been working behind the scenes to bring cases before the court that, if successful, could undermine many of the core functionings of the US government. At least two of the biggest cases to be considered by the justices this term have been spurred by groups bankrolled and coordinated within the Koch universe.
Footage of an internal panel discussion between senior operatives from Koch entities held in the summer of 2022 reveals that the network has been quietly planning the current assault on the “administrative state”. The groups are seeking to exploit the supreme court’s new six-to-three rightwing majority secured by Donald Trump to dismantle vital executive powers.
Regulatory controls in their sights include environmental standards to combat pollution and the climate crisis, consumer protections against predatory lenders, and safeguards for workers’ rights. At stake is what the Strict Scrutiny podcast has called “the future of government as we know it”.
The footage, which is made public here for the first time, was obtained by the investigative watchdog Documented and shared with the Guardian. During the 37-minute panel discussion, legal strategists with several Koch-related groups expressed excitement that the new hard-right supreme court supermajority has created the potential for a concerted attack on the functions of federal agencies.
Jorge Lima, an economic policy strategist at the Koch network’s central coordinating group, Stand Together, said that the new composition of the court amounted to a huge “landscape opportunity, particularly on the administrative state. We’re doubling down on this strategy.”
Lima added: “Every dog has its day, and it’s a big day for the administrative state.”
Casey Mattox, a legal strategist at the main Koch advocacy group, Americans for Prosperity, argued that the supreme court was now “primed for a real change in the law” on federal regulations which he said amounted to a “paradigm shift”. Mattox said: “That’s why we are partnering with organizations that can get the right cases to the supreme court.”
The effort appears to have born fruit. Two of the most significant cases before the court in the 2023-24 term, brought with the backing of Koch-linked organizations, attempt to rein back the government’s power to impose regulations on corporations.
The prominence of the cases underlines how the libertarian empire created by the Kochs is still a force to be reckoned with within US politics. Since David Koch’s death in 2019, and the Koch network’s decision to come out in opposition to Trump ahead of next year’s presidential election, the network has receded from public attention.
But the scope of Charles Koch’s reach remains formidable, as was demonstrated earlier this month when the 87-year-old told Forbes that he had given $4.3bn of his Koch Industries stock to Believe in People, a newly-created group named after his book of the same title. He has transferred a further $975m to another new entity, CCKc4, which carries the initials of his son Chase Koch.
The massive combined $5.3bn in donations, one of the largest acts of giving to non-profits in US history, will ensure that the Koch influence will continue to push the US to the right for years to come. Undermining government regulations is central to those ambitions.
Lisa Graves, the executive director of the progressive watchdog True North Research who is a long-time Koch watcher, said that Charles Koch has shown a “fundamental hostility to government regulation” since his early political writings in the 1960s. “This is the through-line of his career. His business operations have a substantial self-interest in assailing regulations that impede his profits.”
Koch Industries is a conglomerate of energy and chemicals companies that stand to benefit if controls on pollution, workers’ rights and other aspects of public governance are rolled back. The firm is the second largest privately-owned company in the US.
Among the big administrative state cases that the justices will be considering this term is Loper Bright Enterprises v Raimondo, which seeks to overturn a 40-year precedent set by the supreme court itself. Known as Chevron, the ruling allows federal agencies the flexibility to reasonably interpret laws without interference from the courts as they regulate critical parts of public life, such as the environment and public safety.
Experts have warned that if Chevron is struck down, it could be a recipe for legal and administrative chaos. “We are talking about rules that protect us in so many ways – truckers who are too tired to drive on the highway, unsafe workplaces, and pollution of our water and the air we breathe,” Graves said.
The case was nominally brought by a New Jersey herring fishing company that objected to being charged by a federal agency that monitors its catch to prevent over-fishing. Behind the challenge is a conservative group called Cause of Action, which is intricately tied to the Koch network.
The chair of Cause of Action’s board, Brian Menckes, is general counsel of the Charles Koch Foundation. Cause of Action’s executive director, James Valvo, who is acting as one of the fishing company’s lawyers in the case, is the former head of policy of Americans for Prosperity.
A second lawyer representing the company, Eric Bolinder, holds dual roles as a counsel for Cause of Action and Americans for Prosperity.
In 2021 Cause of Action’s entire income of $375,000 came from Stand Together, the Koch network’s coordinating group, Bloomberg reported. The groups are also physically close: Cause of Action and Americans for Prosperity not only share the same address in Arlington, Virginia, they occupy the same office – suite 700.
Bolinder was one of the panel speakers at the 2022 Koch discussion on the administrative state. He framed the plan to use the supreme court to launch a legal attack on regulatory government as a states’ rights issue.
“As the federal government grabs more and more power, particularly to the regulatory state, the states become less and less important,” he said.
The Guardian contacted Stand Together and Cause of Action for comment. Cause of Action did not immediately reply.
Gretchen Reiter, Stand Together spokesman, said that the Loper Bright case was seeking “to restore one of the core tenets of our democracy: that Congress, not the administrative agency, makes the laws. Cause of Action Institute – which filed the lawsuit in 2020 – is representing family-run fishing companies that the federal government is forcing to pay a tax that Congress never authorized, and that violates our constitution’s separation of powers.”
Last week, the supreme court accepted a second case also challenging the Chevron precedent, which has now been consolidated with the fishermen’s petition. Relentless v Department of Commerce was also filed by a group with intimate connections to the Koch network, the New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA).
The organization, which claims to “protect constitutional freedoms from violations by the administrative state”, was founded in 2017 with seed money from the Charles Koch Foundation. Over five years, it has received more than $5m from the Koch network.
NCLA’s president, Mark Chenoweth, previously served as in-house counsel for Koch Industries.
NCLA submitted an amicus brief last week supporting another major challenge to regulatory agencies that will be heard by the supreme court this term. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) v Jarkesy threatens to gut the enforcement power of the SEC by curtailing its ability to fast-track cases of securities fraud through its own in-house administrative law judges.
A ruling against the SEC could drastically reduce the ability of numerous government agencies to enforce environmental and other standards.
The footage of the Koch panel discussion obtained by Documented reveals that the NCLA has been secretly lobbying for the Jarkesy case to reach the supreme court. Mattox said that “NCLA brought a lot of value to that case”.
He went on: “You won’t see them actually directly litigating on that case, but they’ve done a lot of work behind the scenes, and that speaks to the way that our community adds value here, because when we partner with people we look for results, not necessarily for headlines and attention-grabbing.”
There is a further twist to the issue of Koch influence on the supreme court’s docket this term. Last month, ProPublica revealed as part of its expose of ethical breaches by some justices, that the right-leaning Clarence Thomas had attended at least two Koch donor events where funds were raised to forward the Koch network’s mission – which includes bringing cases before the court.
The attack on the administrative state is central to the work of Americans for Prosperity, which boasts of its years-long campaign to challenge what it calls the “out-of-control regulatory environment imposed by Washington”. It organizes bus tours around the country, directly relating “red tape” on energy infrastructure projects to the high cost of fuel at the pump.
This has taken place while oil and gas giants such as Exxon, BP and Shell have posted record profits, and the world has increasingly felt the impact of climate change. Americans for Prosperity calls itself “the nation’s premier grassroots organization”, but according to an independent audit report from 2021, 94% of the $112m in cash it received that year came from just two donors.
This article was produced in partnership with Documented, an investigative watchdog and journalism project. Nick Surgey is Documented’s executive director
Nurse’s furious takedown of American healthcare system goes viral: ‘Treating people like literal garbage’
‘It is virtually impossible to be a ethical healthcare worker in this extremely unethical healthcare system,’ Lex Hinkley said
Kelly Rissman - The Independent - September 11, 2023
A nurse has gone viral on TikTok for her tirade against the “unethical” American healthcare system.
In a video posted on TikTok, 27-year-old San Diego-based nurse Lex Hinkley, laid out some of her qualms with the healthcare system.
“It is virtually impossible to be an ethical healthcare worker in this extremely unethical healthcare system,” she began. “The amount of times I’ve had to discharge patients back to situations where I knew they weren’t going to be able to take care of themselves, but I had no other options, is truly too hard to even give a number to.
“If my career as a healthcare worker has done anything to my worldview or life, it has simply radicalised me further than anyone could believe.”
Ms Hinkley, who has said she has been a nurse for four years and worked in seven states, said ”there is no way shape or form that we improve our society as a whole without completely dismantling for-profit healthcare.”
To demonstrate how for-profit healthcare companies value making money more than patients’ wellbeing, she shared a heartbreaking tale. She pointed to a recent example in Louisville, Kentucky where hospitals have been scrutinised for leaving “leaving patients outside on f***ing sidewalks” rather than being placed inside the shelters.
The nurse was referring to a local hospital employee’s complaint made to a local news outlet, WAVE. The employee reported seeing security dumping an elderly woman just outside of the hospital, throwing her out of her wheelchair onto the sidewalk. This prompted the outlet to investigate further.
A reporter began filming what was going on outside of the hospital, and eventually saw another patient being dumped from the hospital grounds—on a cold December day— allegedly because she was homeless and asked to leave despite being there for diabetes and COPD treatment.
“In order to understand what could potentially lead to a situation like this, we need to know two things,” Ms Hinkley said. One, the nurse detailed, is the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), a federal law that states “that anyone who has an emergency must be treated or stabilized, regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay,” according to the American College of Emergency Physicians.
“Patient dumping,” as the upsetting practice is called, has long been an issue. The AMA Journal of Ethics even wrote about it in 2009, underscoring “EMTALA’s inability to curb denial of treatment,” due to the law’s ambiguity and lack of enforcement. It’s unclear if these are the same problems that lead to patient dumping in 2023.
The second thing, Ms Hinkley explained, is “when you defund social programs”—like senior care, psychiatric care, or homeless shelters — people end “up in the ER.”
“When you defund the safety nets that our society needs to prevent people from beginning a crisis, a downward spiral, they end up in the ER and simply put, ER workers and hospital workers are already at their f***ing wit’s end,” she continued.
“We cannot act as a catch all for every single issue in society, and yet, we are here we are doing it. And at the very f***ing same time, treating people like literal f***ing garbage should never f***ing happen.”
The 27-year-old added that while medical professionals have no options, she placed blame on the executives. “The only way to fix situations as unethical and disgusting as this from happening is to fund solutions. We need to fund proper safety nets for our society,” she said.
“In this country, if you lose your job, you lose your health insurance, you potentially lose all of your income, which means you’re not going to be able to pay rent,” Ms Hinkley added.
“Well, then what happens if you get sick? Do you see what I’m saying? We don’t have safety nets for our poor in this country,” the nurse added. “We have a greased chute, and at the very bottom of that greased chute of poverty is a trip to your local emergency room because everything ends up in the ER and then we have nowhere to place people.”
She said ER employees have “to answer for all of these executives…who have privately funded their own bank accounts instead of publicly funding our communities.”
Ms Hinkley added that the solutions are there but come with a cost. “And we as a society have said that we’re A-okay with 400 people having 70 per cent of the nation’s wealth while our community members get treated like this,” she said.
Social media users praised the nurse’s rant.
One wrote, “This is why so many of us healthcare workers are leaving the field. We just can’t take it anymore.”
Another commented, “Can’t agree more. I’m so morally distressed and burnt out. I left the ER [because] of the emotional turmoil it caused in me.”
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/nurse-healthcare-system-rant-viral-b2409241.html
Editor's Note -
To see the Tik-Tok version posting referred to in the preceding story follow this link:
Having a harder time accessing health care? You’re not alone – and it’s making us sicker
by Joe Lawlor - Portland Press Herald - October 23, 2023
Jessica Rogers has tried for two years to find a mental health counselor who can take her on as a new patient. But she continues to struggle on her own with the grief that followed her adult son’s death in 2020.
“It’s been pretty much impossible,” said Rogers, of Augusta. “I ended up giving up. Every place I called had a long wait list or weren’t accepting patients.”
Sara Kinrade, of Naples, can’t schedule a dentist appointment for her 5-year-old son, even though she knows he has a cavity. It’s maddening to know he’s in pain and that there’s not much she can do.
“I have called every dentist within 50 miles, and I can’t get him in,” Kinrade said. “I’m just so frustrated I can scream. It makes me feel like I’m a bad parent.”
Alex Petrovich, of Woodstock, said that despite many efforts, he can’t get in to see a mental health therapist, and he knows it’s holding him back.
“It’s like I can see the finish line, and I know what needs to happen, but I’m stuck,” the 27-year-old said. “I can’t take that first step forward to get better.”
Maine is experiencing a crisis in access to health care services. While a record number of Mainers now have health insurance, many are finding it difficult or impossible to get help from a broad range of providers – primary care doctors, medical specialists, mental health counselors, dentists. It can take months – even more than a year – to get an appointment with a health professional, frustrated patients told the Portland Press Herald.
While the severity of the problem may vary, other states also are struggling with access. The U.S. will need 4.2 million additional health care workers to meet the demand over the next five years, according to Kaiser Permanente, a national managed-care organization.
The reasons for constricted access to health care are myriad, but experts say the pandemic worsened access in two significant ways. People delayed care during the early years of the pandemic, and as restrictions were relaxed, patients flooded the health care system seeking services for untreated or chronic health problems. Meanwhile, the health care workforce shrank during the pandemic, leaving fewer health care professionals to see an increasing number of sicker patients.
Maine’s population also has grown – by slightly under 2% since 2021 – outpacing the rest of New England. Maine’s population had only grown 2.6% from 2010 to 2020. The population increase is driven by people moving to Maine since the pandemic, including an influx of people from other states and the immigrant population.
Delayed care leads to sicker patients with more complex conditions, research shows.
More people will need hospitalization to treat mental health crises, for example, when they may not have reached a breaking point had they been seeing counselors. And what could have been an easily managed chronic illness can grow serious if left untreated – hypertension, for instance, developing into a significant heart condition.
Petrovich’s wife, Roxy Kai-Petrovich, said she’s been trying to get a primary care doctor for more than a year, ever since her doctor moved away. Her physician had been a convenient 15-minute drive away, a rarity in rural Maine. She has chronic conditions, including attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and migraines, and she’s had a difficult time managing them without a doctor.
“Every place I call, there’s such a long wait list with no end in sight, or they say they’re completely full and don’t even have a waitlist,” Kai-Petrovich said.
Kristin Jackson, of Brunswick, said it took about 10 months to get an appointment with a dermatologist so she could properly diagnose and treat a skin rash. And trying to schedule a preventive colonoscopy screening is also a monthslong process that she is still in the middle of trying to navigate.
“It’s just really frustrating. America is an advanced country with a supposedly advanced health care system. It can make you feel really helpless,” Jackson said.
Medical professionals say they understand the frustration and sympathize.
“Every new patient we see tells us, ‘I’m so glad we’re here. I waited so long to get here.’ It really breaks my heart,” said Dr. Brigitte Salembier, a primary care doctor with MaineHealth in Westbrook.
Dr. Andy Mueller, CEO of MaineHealth, the largest health care provider in Maine and the parent organization of Maine Medical Center in Portland, said everyone is feeling the strain, from health professionals to patients.
“There’s not enough availability compared to demand,” Mueller said. “We have patients seeking care, and we know they are having difficulty finding it. We are still dealing with a lot of deferred care from the pandemic.”
Glenda Dwyer, vice president of clinical operations and chief access officer for Northern Light Health, said bottlenecks delaying care cause a host of problems in the health care system, so solving the access problem is paramount.
“If we don’t get people in through the gate, they just get sicker and sicker,” Dwyer said.
WORKFORCE SHRINKS
While the uninsured rate in Maine declined from 8% in 2019 to 5.7% in 2021 – the most recent data available – having insurance coverage does not guarantee being able to get a doctor’s appointment.
Experts say the global pandemic continues to reverberate through the health care industry, exacerbating what already had been a persistent access problem, especially in rural areas of Maine.
The ability to see a health care provider historically has varied in Maine depending on whether patients were in rural, suburban or urban parts of the state, and whether they were covered by MaineCare, Medicare or private insurance. But patients around the state are now struggling to find care.
Statewide labor statistics tell part of the story. Maine’s health care practitioner workforce is significantly leaner than before the pandemic.
As with workers in many other sectors, health care professionals retired early or left the workforce for other careers faster than they could be replaced. The stress and strain of caring for patients during the peak of the pandemic added to the exodus. And now a shortage of staff across the health system may be causing more to leave. Between 40% and 70% of health care workers say they feel burned out, according to national data.
Workforce numbers vary widely in the many sectors of health care, but the number of health care practitioners – which includes doctors, nurses and numerous other medical positions – has declined overall.
In 2019, the year before the pandemic began, Maine’s health care practitioner workforce totaled 42,390, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, a peak after several years of mostly slow and steady growth. By last year, the number had declined to 41,110.
Because the state’s population grew during the period – a trend also fueled by the pandemic – the decline was more significant on a per capita basis, with 67.32 practitioners per 1,000 population in 2022, the lowest level in more than a decade.
The decline was evident in key areas, such as primary care, where demand for services is especially strong. The number of family medicine doctors in Maine decreased from 710 in 2019 to 580 in 2022. Nurse practitioners declined in number from 1,380 in 2019 to 1,300 in 2022, while the pool of physician assistants fell from 840 in 2019 to 770 in 2022.
The number of registered nurses increased slightly, from 14,490 in 2019 to 14,610 in 2022, in part a result of aggressive efforts to build the nurse workforce. But there is still a shortage of nurses compared to the need, especially in hospitals, health officials have said. Workforce gaps are often filled by expensive traveling nurses, straining hospital budgets.
DEMAND CLIMBS
At the same time the state’s workforce declined, demand for services climbed.
People put off seeking care for health issues during the early years of the pandemic. Then demand exploded. And patients now tend to have more complex problems because they went a long time without screenings or treatment, health professionals say.
Patients who are now coming in for primary care or specialized services have greater needs in large part because their untreated chronic conditions have become more severe. Fifteen-minute consultations take twice as long. Each patient takes longer to care for.
The situation is especially critical in mental health.
“We are having a mental health crisis in this country,” said Jayne Van Bramer, president and CEO of Sweetser, a Maine mental health provider. “We have high levels of suicide, anxiety and depression, especially in our youth. But we have a waiting list at Sweetser of over 2,000 people.”
Van Bramer said Maine’s reimbursement levels under MaineCare are too low and the state needs to step in and fix the system. MaineCare is the state’s name for Medicaid, a state-administered program funded with state and federal dollars.
“We pay our therapists much less than in any state I’ve worked, including Oklahoma,” said Van Bramer, who also worked in New York.
Without care, patients who otherwise might be stable end up in crisis in hospital emergency departments.
“When a person goes to the ER, that’s far more expensive for the system than paying mental health therapists,” Van Bramer said. “We are being penny wise and pound foolish.”
Dr. John Campbell, senior physician executive at Northern Light Acadia Hospital in Bangor, said it’s not just the increased ER crisis care. Some in need of help self-medicate with alcohol and drugs.
“We’re not anywhere near as effective as we could be,” he said.
DENTAL CARE
Dental care is also facing staff shortages and overwhelming demand, said Kalie Hess, associate director of the Partnership for Children’s Oral Health, and both those with private insurance and MaineCare are affected.
“Access is definitely a problem. There are fewer providers to serve more people,” Hess said. “We definitely still need more dentists and more hygienists.”
Dental disease is the most prevalent chronic disease in childhood, and preventive care is key, she said: “It’s really horrible the number of kids in Maine who are not getting any preventive care.”
In 2019, Maine had 590 dentists, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That total dipped to 521 in 2021 before rebounding to 560.
But in 2022, Maine created a new adult MaineCare dental benefit covering about 200,000 Mainers, many of whom had gone decades without care.
That’s created a crushing demand, only made worse because not all dentists accept MaineCare, in part because reimbursement rates are lower.
Kinrade, whose 5-year-old son has a cavity that needs care, said their MaineCare insurance doesn’t help.
“Some of these waiting lists go into 2025,” she said. “He’s not going to even have the same teeth by then.”
LACK OF ACCESS HARD TO MEASURE
Workforce statistics gathered by the health care industry and state and federal governments tell only part of the story.
The number of primary care physicians in Maine per capita is one of the highest in the country, for instance, even with the dip since the pandemic.
But the numbers don’t reflect how the need has changed since the pandemic, with patients requiring more care and time. Maine also has the highest median age in the nation – 45 – and older patients typically have more health problems and take longer to treat. And doctor totals don’t take into account other health care workers – physician assistants, nurse practitioners, front-office staff – who are essential to making a practice run smoothly.
Meanwhile, there is no comprehensive data to track wait times for medical appointments around the state and therefore no way to measure the unmet demand or to compare Maine’s access crisis to other states.
MaineHealth is in the middle of updating the way it tracks how long it takes to get in to see a doctor, said spokesman John Porter.
Dwyer, of Northern Light Health, said their health system does not have a statistic that shows, over time, the changes in wait times for patients, but access has definitely been a problem.
In Northern Light’s service area, which includes Bangor, Portland, and many parts of northern and Down East Maine, Dwyer said, there are 37 vacancies for advanced practitioners in primary care – doctors, nurse practitioners and physician assistants. That number has sometimes been as high as 50.
Before the pandemic, vacancies would typically be in the 15-20 range, she said.
Some data points to the demand for mental health care. A comprehensive report by the nonprofit Mental Health America found that when looking just at “access to care” including therapists per capita, Maine ranks 11th among the states. But when looking at a number of factors, such as unmet mental health needs and prevalence of substance use disorder, Maine’s ranking plummets to 31st.
SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS
Maine’s health care systems are trying to increase efficiency by various means: changing how patients are scheduled, expanding telehealth, assigning patients to teams of providers instead of just one doctor, increasing the number of graduates in health care and providing incentives for them to stay in Maine. The University of New England, MaineHealth, Northern Light and others have expanded student enrollment in various health care fields in Maine recently, including nursing, primary care, dentistry and other health care fields.
Telehealth, which boomed as a pandemic necessity, is now being used for some of the simpler health needs, such as medication management, that used to require in-person appointments.
More MaineHealth practices are using a team-based approach. Salembier works on a care team with Caitlin Costigan, a nurse practitioner. They manage 1,800 patients and give them care based on needs. Some patients may just need to see a nurse or have a telehealth consultation, they said.
Costigan said in specialty care practitioners can consult “econsultants,” apps linking physicians in specialty areas, such as dermatology. Primary care doctors used to often have to call specialists with questions and wait for responses, which could take time if the specialists and primary care doctors were booked up with appointments. But the apps’ doctors focus solely on responding to queries from other doctors.
Mueller, the MaineHealth CEO, said there are some common sense ways to improve efficiency, such as streamlining responses to patients’ online messages to their doctors. A doctor doesn’t need to respond to all of them, and MaineHealth now funnels some questions to others, including nurses and front-office staff.
Hess, of the Partnership for Children’s Oral Health, said they are looking for ways to provide baseline care when dentists aren’t available, such as in-school clinics where hygienists can provide cleanings and fluoride coatings.
Northern Light, Dwyer said, is trying to reduce patient no-shows by 10% with increased communication with patients to ensure they show up to appointments.
In all health care sectors, suggestions of ways to help fix the access problems include increasing MaineCare and Medicaid reimbursement rates, loan forgiveness for college graduates in health fields and increasing the number of college graduates in health fields including mental health, primary care and dentistry.
Northern Light Acadia Hospital in Bangor is starting a postgraduate residency program to help boost the number of psychiatrists in Maine, said Dr. John Campbell, senior physician executive. The number of psychiatrists practicing in Maine fell from 220 in 2015 to 110 in 2020. And with the average age of Maine psychiatrists at 55, many will soon be retiring.
With four residents per class, the Northern Light program will have 16 residents in four years, Campbell said, helping alleviate shortages. He said it’s hard to know how many psychiatrists will remain in Maine after completing their residencies, but typically it’s about half.
Van Bramer said Sweetser has also expanded non-clinical mental health care, such as peer support and call lines that allow people to discuss their challenges anonymously. Sweetser also has a system in place to call and check in on the people on its waitlist – and it refers some to outside services.
Lindy Graham, CEO and founder of Wellspace, a Portland- and Yarmouth-based outpatient mental health clinic, said Wellspace is always working at improving patients’ access by “shortening the time between when they reach out to us and get an appointment.”
The new Wellspace@Work program, she said, provides mental health services to workers at companies, which gives people faster access.
“When people are in a place of distress and it takes enormous hoops for them to jump through to get to a clinician, that’s really traumatic,” Graham said. “At a time when someone needs help, it should be a seamless process.”
Jessica Rogers, whose 23-year-old son Hunter died of a fentanyl overdose in October 2020, said the fight to find a mental health counselor has been exhausting and painful.
“It’s a lot of effort just to be told no,” she said. “I called Augusta, Portland, Bath, Brunswick. Every place I called, they said, ‘Try back in a few months.’ No one was even taking names for a waiting list.
“It’s frustrating, and it’s hard to understand.”
Shortage of pharmacists leaving Maine customers in peril
Walkouts at some pharmacies in other states are fueling concerns in Maine, where store closures are already a problem.
by Emily Bader - The Maine Monitor - October 22, 2023
With pharmacists around the country walking off the job or threatening to do so, Maine pharmacies have experienced sudden closures, infrequent hours and frustration from customers who say they’re unreliable.
Over the past several weeks, employees at Walgreens and CVS, the nation’s two largest pharmacy chains, staged walkouts or did not show up for work to protest what organizers told The Washington Post are conditions that threaten the safety of employees and patients.
The walkouts show pharmacists feel “safety is so compromised that it’s actually better to not open the pharmacy,” than to open it, said Emily Dornblaser, a founding faculty member of the University of New England School of Pharmacy and director of interprofessional education.
“They just can’t meet the needs of the people that need them. And in doing so, they’re potentially putting other people at risk.”
There have been no reports of walkouts at Maine pharmacies as of Friday, but national organizers told CNBC that Walgreens walkouts are scheduled for Oct. 30 to Nov. 1. It is unclear whether any Maine pharmacists will participate.
Meanwhile, at least eight Walgreens have closed since 2020.
There is a shortage of pharmacists in Maine and nationwide, Dornblaser said. It started in the mid-2000s, when a shortage prompted a number of pharmacy school openings. But then the 2008 recession hit, and pharmacists who may have otherwise retired continued to work, she said.
Starting about six years ago, Maine finally met the demand for pharmacists – and then some. Jobs became more competitive, wages dropped, and so did applications to pharmacy schools.
In the fall of 2018, UNE School of Pharmacy reported 273 students enrolled in its Doctor of Pharmacy program, according to data from the university. By the fall of 2022, enrollment had dropped to 116 students, a nearly 60% decrease over five years.
Maine’s only other pharmacy school, at Husson University in Bangor, admits 65 students per year, according to its website.
“Right in the middle of that, then, is a pandemic,” Dorblaser said.
Complicating the equation is that pharmacists are doing a lot more than filling prescriptions.
“We’ve definitely seen a lot more added to our plate: testing, delivery of vaccines. We’re right now in the introduction phase of the 23-24 COVID vaccine, along with our flu vaccine, along with the (respiratory syncytial virus) vaccine,” said Steve Maki, president of the Maine Pharmacy Association.
“So, I mean, there’s a lot of additional services and things that three years ago weren’t even on our radar of, ‘Oh my gosh, this is now something we have to adjust for and we have to plan for.’”
Maki, who has been a pharmacist since 1996 and opened Spruce Mountain Pharmacy in Jay in 2009, said the pharmacy landscape “seems like it changes right before our eyes.”
“Three years ago, pharmacists weren’t even considered as providers in the state,” he said, referencing a bill passed during the 130th Legislature that amended wording to the Maine Pharmacy Act to add that a pharmacist is a “provider of healthcare services,” but did not effectively change what pharmacists do.
The additional responsibilities led to “substantial burnout,” Dornblaser said.
Compounding that, wages for pharmacy technicians, who provide critical support by counting and filling pills, stocking shelves, giving immunizations and assisting customers, have remained low for years, Dornblaser said.
The average hourly wage for a pharmacy technician in May 2022 was $18.12, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Dornblaser said during the pandemic-induced workforce shortage in other industries, she often heard of techs lured from pharmacies for better-paying jobs.
“You had people who had really a large amount of responsibility in the job in terms of keeping people safe, who weren’t compensated nearly as much as somebody working at … a McDonald’s,” she said.
Not only are pharmacists overworked and pharmacies understaffed, but there are fewer brick-and-mortar locations for people to get prescriptions filled.
Since 2020, Walgreens has closed locations in Auburn, Bangor, Fort Fairfield, Guilford, Millinocket, Newport, Pittsfield and Portland, according to pharmacy board licensing records that were confirmed by a Walgreens spokesperson.
Walgreens, CVS and Rite-Aid, which had already closed hundreds of stores nationwide before the pandemic, have since announced hundreds more closures.
Walgreens announced in June it would close 150 stores and in 2021, CVS said it would close 900 stores by next year.
Rite-Aid, which closed its Maine locations by early 2018, announced earlier this month it filed for bankruptcy and will close hundreds of stores.
In rural areas, inconsistent hours, staff shortages and closures mean residents can’t depend on their local pharmacy to get their medications – if they even have a pharmacy near them.
Peter McCormick spends his summers on Campobello Island, just over the bridge from Lubec, in Canada. When he’s there, he transfers his prescriptions from a Walgreens pharmacy near his primary residence in Vermont to the one closest to his summer home, 40 miles away in Machias.
One Friday last summer, he received a notification two prescriptions were ready for pickup and made the 50-minute drive to Machias. When he got there, he said, the pharmacy was closed. A clerk told him, “We don’t have enough pharmacists,” and he could try the Calais Walgreens an hour away.
“A woman standing nearby said to me, ‘Don’t bother going to Calais because the Walgreens there is closed, too,’ ” McCormick said.
“Thankfully I had enough medication to get me to Monday, but the episode caused me an unnecessary three-hour round trip and would have been a much bigger problem if I hadn’t ordered my refills somewhat early. Overall, very disappointing,” he said.
Last month, Walgreens signed a consent agreement with the Maine Board of Pharmacy that said the chain’s Machias and Calais locations closed without notification and did not meet the state requirement that pharmacies are open for at least 40 hours per week on multiple occasions. It agreed to pay a $10,500 fine.
Walgreens paid at least $68,000 in penalties last year after failing to meet staffing requirements.
“There are times when we must adjust or reduce pharmacy operating hours, or temporarily close a store, as we work to balance staffing and resources in the market to best meet customer demand. When this occurs, we make every effort to minimize disruption for patients and customers by selecting days with the lowest prescription demand to ensure that there is a nearby pharmacy to meet immediate prescription needs,” Walgreens spokesperson Kris Lathan said in an email.
“We also provide patients as much advance notice as possible through signage, automated phone calls, updates to our online scheduler, and adjustments in refills,” she said, but did not respond to specific questions from The Maine Monitor about the penalties, store closures or walkouts.
Lance Keen of Cooper said those stores are a “mess,” with “sporadic closures and can’t be relied on.”
He, too, experienced an incident where he ran out of a prescription and was unable to get it refilled in a timely manner, causing him “physical distress.”
With his usual pharmacy being 20 miles away, Keen said he has to be more attentive to when he needs to send in refill requests. He has also started to get his prescriptions delivered through Express Scripts, a prescription benefit manager that offers home delivery.
Mail order services offer convenience and consistency, especially for people in rural areas, like McCormick or Keen in Washington County, but Dornblaser worries an overreliance on them is a missed opportunity to develop “that community relationship.”
“Often it’s the pharmacist that you sort of casually mention something to and they can sort of say, ‘You know, that sounds like this,’ or, ‘You should go get that checked out,’ ” she said.
They can catch potential drug interactions, administer vaccines or serve as an easily accessible healthcare professional to answer questions.
The possibility of more closures worries her.
“We are a very rural state and, you know, having access to a healthcare provider can be such a lifeline for people,” Dornblaser said. “And the loss of a pharmacist or a pharmacy in a community has a pretty big impact overall.”
https://www.pressherald.com/2023/10/22/shortage-of-pharmacists-leaving-customers-in-peril/
Stabbed. Kicked. Spit On.
Violence in American Hospitals
Is Out of Control.
Crushing chest pain, an itch that festers into torment, an inconsolable baby, no place to sleep at 3 a.m., an ankle twisted on a jog, a fentanyl overdose, a car crash, the need to tell someone, “I feel sad and lonely.” The only place that tends to this kaleidoscope of needs is the emergency room, its doors perpetually open to all.
It’s what I love — fiercely, unwaveringly — about emergency medicine. It’s why I and other doctors pursued it as a specialty: to provide a safety net. For many, we may be the first health care workers they meet at their most dismal hour. But it’s also what makes our workplace so dangerous, more than ever, and jeopardizes the emergency care that everyone receives.
Last year one of my patients was on the phone, lamenting about how long he had been in the emergency room. He had already waited several hours to get a CT scan. Medications he was supposed to be given were repeatedly delayed. I heard his voice rise and fall, with each swell more expansive than the one before. When I turned to look at him, he yelled a racial epithet before hurling a desktop computer into the area where doctors and nurses sit. A seasoned nurse ducked. As I pushed an intern and medical student out of the way, he charged at us with a steel tray. Thankfully, no one was injured.
In a 2022 American College of Emergency Physicians survey of E.R. doctors, 55 percent said they had been physically assaulted, almost all by patients, with a third of those resulting in injuries. Eighty-five percent had been seriously threatened by patients. The risks can be even higher for E.R. nurses, with over 70 percent reporting they had sustained physical assaults at work. I don’t know anyone who works in the E.R. who hasn’t suffered some form of violence there. The health workers at the University of Vermont Health Network in the video above share examples of this.
“People, appropriately so, feel that the safety net should always be there, no matter what, and should serve its purpose of not letting people fall through the cracks,” Dr. Aisha Terry, the president of the American College of Emergency Physicians, told me. But it’s this tenet at the heart of emergency medicine that also allows it to be exploited. “Whether intentionally or unintentionally, those factors have resulted in us becoming more vulnerable to violence.”
In the E.R., there’s a certain level of resignation that violence is just part of the job, like getting bloodstains on our shoes. We have come to endure racist, sexist and homophobic slurs, choosing silence over confrontation, to fulfill our duty to care for human life. After all, we pledge to hold our patients’ well-being above all else.
In some sense, violence in the E.R. is stark evidence of society’s broader neglect: a medical system in which mental health beds are scarce, primary care remains elusive and prescription costs soar; a shelter network that’s buckling; a country where parents may not make enough to feed their children. All of this can lead to intolerable overcrowding and interminable waiting in the E.R., which can rupture into frustration, anger and incivility.
Even before the Covid pandemic, the trajectory was troubling. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the rate of injuries from workplace violence against health care workers grew by nearly two-thirds from 2011 to 2018. The pandemic worsened the situation, cracking society wide open and exposing its systemic failures. During the pandemic, more than 40 percent of American adults reported high psychological distress, which may contribute to outbursts. It has also sown profound mistrust between patients and medical professionals.
The repercussions of this are being felt. Only 15 percent of surveyed hospital nurses said they would continue in the same job in one year; a third of nurses said they had considered exiting the profession because of the pandemic. The burnout rate among E.R. doctors climbed to 65 percent, the highest rate among all specialties. When employees leave, those who remain face terribly short-staffed workplaces. Or employees meet a revolving door of new colleagues, making it impossible to understand one another’s strengths or compensate for one another’s shortcomings — to become a team. This can worsen outcomes for patients.
Organizations and lawmakers are starting to address violence against health care workers. The Joint Commission, a group that accredits hospitals, added workplace violence regulations last year. This year Virginia became the first state to pass a law requiring that all emergency departments keep a security officer on site around the clock. Federal legislation is also in progress: If passed, the Workplace Violence Prevention for Health Care and Social Service Workers Act would mandate health employers to adopt plans to prevent workplace violence. Another bill, the Safety From Violence for Healthcare Employees Act, modeled on protections in the airline industry, would create federal criminal penalties for people who assault health care workers.
Health care, though, is not the same as air transportation. Because of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, in place since 1986, every person who goes to an E.R. for treatment must be medically examined and assessed. Hospitals don’t create no-fly lists, akin to airlines, nor should they. A patient can be aggressive and also be seriously ill. Patients struggling with mental illness, addiction or delirium may have violent episodes but also need compassionate care.
Federal and state laws are necessary as backstops, permitting warning signs to be posted, so that everyone knows a boundary exists that will be enforced. But hospital administrators also need to prioritize their staff members’ safety. Hospital systems have added electronic flags to the charts of patients who threatened or assaulted staff members in the past. Currently, these flags are put in by providers to warn one another and don’t go beyond individual charts. This is a starting point, but more must be done.
Simple confidential reporting systems that encourage employees to formally record these incidents in detail for further review, as they would with any medication error, should be instituted. Hospital administrators need to then perform thorough dissections of the events to diagnose what went wrong, applying the same rigor as they would to clinical mistakes, and intervene with specific remedies — whether it’s bolstering security in certain areas or equipping staff members with personal panic buttons. Some health care workers have already taken matters into their own hands by undergoing self-defense training, even looking into wearing body armor.
What has stayed with me most is not the near miss of a thrown computer or a slur a patient used but a medical student saying to me after he witnessed a violent episode, “I learned today that I don’t want to go into emergency medicine.” The field is seeing a steep decline in applicants. Who will tend to waiting patients? What will happen when society’s safety net withers away?
Standing up to end violence against health care workers does not mean taking care away from anyone. Instead, it promises to make care better for everyone.
Roland Kielman is a communications specialist with the University of Vermont Health Network, where he focuses on storytelling and corporate communications. Ryan Mercer is a communications specialist with the University of Vermont Health Network where he focuses on multimedia storytelling. Helen Ouyang (@drhelenouyang) is a physician, an associate professor at Columbia University and a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/24/opinion/emergency-room-hospitals-violence.html
Opinion | Open Enrollment Reminds Us How Easy It Is to Lose Health Insurance in America
A few days before New Year’s Eve, an unfamiliar health insurance card for me arrived in the mail. I assumed there must have been an error and called the human resources department of the medical center where I’m employed as a doctor.
“No,” the representative replied, “it’s not a mistake. You didn’t enroll this year, so you automatically got put on the basic plan.”
“That’s … that’s impossible,” I stammered. “I’ve always signed up my family for the same health plan.”
“I’m sorry, Dr. Ofri,” the representative said, rechecking her records, “but you didn’t enroll this year.”
Could that be? Could I have somehow forgotten? Or missed the notification? “But don’t worry,” she said. “We’ve put you on the basic plan.”
“OK,” I said, starting to relax and thinking out loud. “I guess my kids will get to meet some new doctors.”
But the representative did not match my tone. “I’m sorry, but the basic plan is just for the employee,” she said, “not your family.”
That’s when a coil of disbelief clamped my heart to a standstill. My spouse and children would be left without health insurance? The panicked questions quickly percolated: What about their ongoing medical treatments? What about their medications? What if someone got hit by a car, or got cancer? There’s hardly a more devastating feeling for a parent than to realize that you haven’t adequately provided for your family.
Swirling in panic, I hardly heard anything else the representative said. There was something about referring my case to a supervisor, but it was a holiday week, so many employees were on vacation. All I could think about was that in a few days it would be the new year, and my family would be uncovered. I felt tears creep into the corners of my eyes as I realized that I had jeopardized my family’s health. All, it seemed, from missing the email notifications.
The smaller question of my oversight turned out to be easily answered. My work inbox is teeming with dross; legitimate emails disappear in the sea of junk mail. We’ve been encouraged to clean up our inboxes using various tools, and one of the spam filters I enabled had apparently inadvertently swept up all the emails from H.R.
“But didn’t you know that October is open-enrollment month?” the representative had chastened me; I work in health care, after all. Well, yes, but there’s life and work and children and my patients. I must have assumed I’d already done it.
The larger question was why this could occur so easily. Why is the American health insurance system set up in a manner that a slip of the mind or a bureaucratic hiccup can render people uninsured?
As I thought about it some more, I was struck by a question that I’d never thought about before: Why do Americans have to “remember” to get health insurance every year? We don’t ask citizens to remember to enroll with the fire department every year, or to remember to sign up for electricity service or water. Yet with health insurance, we’ve set up an unwieldy mechanism where millions of people have to opt in every year or do without. (While some companies automatically re-enroll employees with their prior year’s selections, this is by no means universal.)
During the Covid-19 pandemic, the federal government forbade states from removing anyone from Medicaid. This so-called continuous enrollment resulted in coverage for an additional 23 million Americans and brought the nation’s uninsured rate down to a historic low of 8 percent. Once the public health emergency ended this year, however, states were free to resume culling the rolls, and more than nine million people have been disenrolled to date. This has tragic human consequences, as medical treatments and preventive care are abruptly amputated.
The stated reason for this bureaucratic merry-go-round is that eligibility must be ascertained every year so as not to allot services to someone who doesn’t qualify. But the process of determining eligibility is highly flawed. Only some of disenrolled Medicaid patients, for example, are truly ineligible; according to KFF, a health policy research organization, the majority of people (more than 90 percent in some states) were disenrolled for “procedural reasons,” such as missed deadlines, paperwork issues or outdated contact information. Many of these people are actually eligible for insurance, but lose coverage because of the byzantine logistics. And even beyond the pandemic related “unwinding,” some people on Medicaid face multiple disenrollments and re-enrollments if their income fluctuates, such as with seasonal work or gig jobs.
The net effect is that we require an enormous chunk of the U.S. population to continually re-enroll for health insurance. The inefficiency of this is staggering; we require tens of millions of people to prove eligibility over and over again to catch the few who might no longer be eligible. Beyond pure inefficiency, it’s also inhumane, leading to worse medical outcomes, plus higher costs.
A simpler solution would be to flip the script. After an initial eligibility assessment, people would stay with the same insurance plan unless they opt out, request a change or are ineligible for genuine — not procedural — reasons. For employer-based health insurance, this would be relatively simple, as most ineligibility stems from no longer working at the company, something that employers surely know. For everyone else, health insurance would auto-renew each year the same way it already does for the plans on the Affordable Care Act exchanges. This would be far simpler than having every person redo the paperwork every single year.
For Medicaid, the income eligibility requirement adds a layer of complexity, but there are nevertheless ways to reduce the hoop jumping. For starters, every recipient should be granted a full year of continuous coverage after enrolling to eliminate the wasteful short-term upheavals. But the simpler and more humane option would be to keep the continuous coverage we adopted during the pandemic, and only disenroll people if I.R.S. and other data sources demonstrate sustained higher income or insurance from another job. Random audits — as we do for taxes — can help ensure compliance.
Will there be errors? Of course. Some people will stay insured when they are no longer eligible. But our current system offers a crueler and more expensive type of error: mistakenly kicking off eligible people.
My own experience of jeopardizing my family’s insurance because of an errant spam filter drove home the harrowing point. Our health insurance system is capricious, and it takes little to upend people’s lives. For me, it took endless phone calls to fix the problem and a miserable week in which I was convinced that I’d failed my family. For millions of Americans, the system is simply unnavigable.
Of course, none of this would be necessary if the only requirement for getting insurance was — as it is in most countries — being born. Instead, Americans are forced to live within an illogical patchwork of plans and regulations that so easily allows people to fall through the cracks.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/25/opinion/open-enrollment-health-insurance.html
Faced with abortion bans, doctors beg hospitals for help with key decisions
by Caroline Kitchener and Dan Diamond - Washington Post - October 28, 2023
Vague state laws, and a lack of guidance on how to interpret them, have led to some patients being denied care until they are critically ill
“You know the laws, Amelia,” Huntsberger recalled the administrator saying. “You know what to do.”
If she made the wrong decision, the doctor knew she could face up to five years in prison.
While the more than two dozen abortion bans enacted since the fall of Roe v. Wade all include some kind of exception for the mother’s life, the laws use ambiguous language, with many permitting abortions in a “medical emergency” without offering a concrete definition of that term. Prompted by numerous prominent cases in which women became critically ill after being turned away from hospitals, the issue has spawned debate in state legislatures, several high-profile lawsuits and a standoff with Biden administration officials who say the procedure should be covered by emergency care laws.
But behind that public controversy is a little-known struggle between doctors making life-or-death decisions at great personal risk and hospital administrators navigating untested legal terrain, political pressure from antiabortion lawmakers, and fears of lost funding, a Washington Post investigation found. In staff meetings, phone calls and tense, months-long email exchanges, many doctors have repeatedly sought guidance on how to interpret the medical exceptions in their states’ abortion bans, only to be given directives from hospital officials that are as vague as the laws themselves.
“I just worry that without more guidance, our patients are in danger and providers are in a dangerous place as well,” Lindsey Finch, then an OB/GYN resident at Jackson Health System in Miami, wrote in a July 2022 email obtained by The Post. “It just does not feel safe and I am concerned.”
Confiding in a colleague, another OB/GYN practicing at Jackson Health, Ian Bishop, said he had tried unsuccessfully to get his hospital to “plan for the upcoming changes” in Florida’s abortion law, according to another email reviewed by The Post, expressing concern that the hospital “does not want to create a policy or guidelines, thus leaving those who perform abortions vulnerable and not the institution.”
A spokesperson for Jackson Health System, Lidia Amoretti, said the hospital “complies with Florida law and follows a policy that ensures pregnancy terminations are performed in compliance with state and federal regulations.” Finch and Bishop did not respond to requests for comment.
This report on an overlooked aftershock of the fall of Roe is based on interviews with 26 doctors, lawyers and hospital administrators in antiabortion states, as well as documents gathered from public records requests to 50 of the largest public hospitals in states with abortion bans.
The Post review found that many hospitals have failed to provide specific guidance or policies to help doctors navigate high-stakes decisions over how to interpret new abortion bans — leading to situations where patients are denied care until they are on the brink of permanent injury or death.
Of the 37 hospitals that responded to The Post’s requests, documents provided by 28 institutions revealed they offered guidance that was virtually identical to the language of the abortion ban, or no guidance at all. While many doctors were told to reach out to lawyers or hospital leaders to solicit advice on a case-by-case basis, some said they were unable to reach those people when confronted with emergency situations after hours — provided with only office phone numbers or, in one instance, an email address.
Just nine of the hospitals that responded to The Post produced records showing that they had provided doctors with guidance on how to interpret their state laws’ medical exceptions — often with carefully crafted answers that advised physicians to take a cautious approach.
At the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Medical Center, for example, officials opted for a narrow interpretation of the medical exception in Arkansas’ abortion law, which allows doctors to perform an abortion to “save the life of a pregnant woman in a medical emergency.” The hospital issued June 2022 guidance that forbids abortions in certain cases, according to records, even though some hospitals in states with similar bans permit the procedure in identical situations. Stephen Mette, who was chief executive officer for the Arkansas hospital before stepping down in September 2022, said the staff made that decision because they feared retribution from the state’s antiabortion legislators.
“You won’t find a document saying [it], but the leaders at UAMS were perennially afraid of funding cuts,” said Mette, adding that legislators routinely threatened to withdraw funding from the hospital. “I have no doubt it was subliminally or actually was overtly influencing the conservatism in the guidelines.”
UAMS officials disputed Mette’s account. The attorney who crafted the guidance said she was “not influenced by any political pressure,” Leslie Taylor, a spokesperson for the hospital, wrote in an email.
While abortion laws specifically target the individuals involved in performing an abortion, the potential legal risk for hospitals is unclear. More than a dozen hospitals and their state and national associations declined to answer questions from The Post about their abortion policies, with officials privately citing fears of slashed funding or other retaliation from lawmakers.
“Everyone just wants to be off the radar right now — and not invite the ire of the state attorney general,” said Ellie Schilling, a lawyer in Louisiana who supports abortion rights and has consulted with hospitals on how to interpret new abortion laws.
In a handful of cases, the Post review found, some hospitals have crafted clear and robust guidance — or even formalized policies — that permit their physicians to treat considerably more conditions than others. Such efforts, doctors say, have likely saved patients’ lives.
But even those hospitals are often reluctant to put their policies in writing or discuss them widely, according to several people who helped craft those policies. Hospital leaders quietly circulate lists of situations in which they feel their doctors can legally perform abortions, often including life-threatening pregnancy complications many doctors would not feel comfortable treating without an institutional green light.
Adding to the pressure on hospitals, according to lawyers and experts, is that they are caught between the contradictory demands of state abortion bans and the Biden administration’s use of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, or EMTALA — the federal rule requiring hospitals to treat emergency medical conditions, or risk being blacklisted from Medicaid, Medicare and other federal programs that provide hospitals much of their funding.
Biden officials have repeatedly insisted that the nearly four-decade-old law takes precedence over state abortion bans. But several federal judges — all Trump appointees — have rebuffed those arguments, and said the White House is attempting to justify abortions by twisting rules that were meant to help low-income patients access emergency health care.
In northern Idaho, Huntsberger said she watched other hospitals in her state develop detailed policies on the issue, forming working groups and offering 24/7 legal support to doctors. She became increasingly frustrated by the lack of guidance offered by her own hospital, she said, and administrators who did not seem to fully understand the law.
“It was profoundly disturbing that I was supposed to be taking advice from someone who didn’t seem to have read every single line,” said Huntsberger, stressing that she does not speak for the hospital.
Officials from the Sandpoint, Idaho-based hospital where she worked, Bonner General Health, said the hospital empowers medical professionals “to make evidence-based decisions regarding care and treatment of their patients.”
“Unfortunately, one of the drivers of medical decision-making regarding women’s health in Idaho is the fear of litigation and that’s not something Bonner General Health can control,” Sandy Brower, the hospital’s director of quality and risk management, wrote in an email.
By March 2023, Huntsberger — one of only a handful of OB/GYNs in northern Idaho — had decided she could not continue working under the abortion ban.
She now practices in Oregon.
GOP seeks to avoid a ‘gaping exception’
Many hospitals have resisted providing abortions for decades, with some allowing the procedure only to save the life of the mother or for fatal fetal anomalies. At religiously affiliated hospitals, those policies stemmed from a long-standing moral opposition to abortion; elsewhere, doctors said hospitals restricted abortions to placate lawmakers responsible for their funding.
But those policies were far easier to navigate than the abortion bans, doctors said, because they could typically refer patients to abortion clinics in the area. Doctors deciding whether to perform an abortion in a hospital setting were also far less fearful, they added — worried only about censure from their employer, rather than jail time.
Medical exceptions have long been a point of tension within the antiabortion movement, with some conservatives concerned that doctors may interpret the exceptions too broadly, offering abortions for conditions antiabortion advocates view as not sufficiently life-threatening, said Mary Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California at Davis who specializes in abortion.
When former Florida state senator Kelli Stargel (R) began drafting Florida’s 15-week abortion ban with her Republican colleagues in the fall of 2021, she said they talked at length about whether to allow an exception for the mother’s health, in addition to the exception for the mother’s life.
“We had a big discussion,” recalled Stargel, who is no longer in the legislature. “Is health strong enough? Is mental health considered health? Is inconvenience considered health?”
Then came a series of cases, widely covered in the news media, in which women with life-threatening complications were turned away from hospitals because of new abortion bans.
While antiabortion lawmakers like Stargel were initially hesitant to offer a broad medical exception, some now say their laws allow doctors to treat a wider range of medical conditions than has been generally understood.
On the Florida Senate floor this spring, nearly a year after the state’s 15-week abortion ban took effect, Sen. Erin Grall (R) assured her colleagues that doctors could legally treat patients who experienced pre-viable PPROM, a relatively common life-threatening condition where a woman’s water breaks before the fetus can survive on its own. Grall said the problem was not the laws themselves but the doctors who are playing “games and politics” by willfully misinterpreting them — a claim doctors say is inaccurate and deeply insulting.
Several states, including Texas and Tennessee, have recently passed new laws to clarify their medical exceptions, designed to allow doctors to treat ectopic pregnancies, a life-threatening condition where a fetus grows outside of the uterus, among other conditions. Texas’s law, which took effect Sept. 1, also permits doctors to treat patients with pre-viable PPROM.
But even the new laws are hard to trust, several doctors and hospital lawyers said. The Texas law, for example, is worded in a way that technically leaves doctors liable but provides a path for them to prove their innocence in court. Instead of including an explicit exception for ectopic pregnancies and pre-viable PPROM, the law instead outlines situations where doctors could make an “affirmative defense” that shows they performed the procedure for a true medical emergency.
“That law is not as great as a lot of people think it is,” said Marc Hearron, senior counsel at the Center for Reproductive Rights. “They still need to go to court to defend themselves. It just adds to the confusion.”
Hospitals fear liability in untested legal landscape
Speaking at a regional conference for OB/GYNs in August 2022, Rachel Rapkin was determined to convince over 50 of her fellow doctors that their hospitals had power. Rapkin told the group gathered at the Orlando Ritz-Carlton what she’d learned in the two months since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade — and how doctors at her hospital, Tampa General, had quietly forged a path forward.
Then, Rapkin said, she asked her colleagues to put down their phones: The next slide, she said, should not be photographed.
“This is what we are doing,” Rapkin recalled saying. She gestured to a list of more than a dozen life-threatening pregnancy complications and severe fetal abnormalities for which doctors often offer an abortion — but that many in the audience assumed they could no longer treat as they once did, given Florida’s new abortion law.
“You should be doing these things — at a minimum,” said Rapkin.
Rapkin’s colleagues at Tampa General had already tried reaching out to other hospitals in the region, including Jackson Health System in Miami, where physicians had previously exchanged emails expressing concern about a lack of hospital guidance. As one Tampa doctor wrote in a June 2022 email to several Florida OB/GYNs, including one in Miami, “it may be helpful if [our institutions] were aligned in policy and which conditions we considered lethal.”
But records show that Jackson Health took a very different approach, drafting a policy that simply mirrors the language of Florida’s abortion ban and without offering further guidance for doctors on how to interpret the law’s medical exception.
Today, Tampa General continues to be known as the only major hospital in the region that will offer abortions for many pregnancy complications, according to several doctors licensed in Florida. Rapkin recently moved to New Zealand in part because of Florida’s abortion laws, and, she said, her fear that a future Congress might pass a national ban.
Amanda Bevis, a spokesperson for Tampa General, said the guidelines and list of conditions Rapkin discussed are considered “educational tools,” not a formal hospital policy.
“Public records prove that the procedure is extremely rare at this hospital (less than 0.2% of pregnant patients over the last year), and when it does occur, it is medically necessary and well within the confines of the law,” she wrote in an email.
At one hospital in Texas, the lawyer charged with helping to craft their institution’s policy said each new abortion ban triggered a new round of weekly meetings to hash out how doctors should interpret the laws’ medical exceptions. The lawyer and their colleagues carefully studied the language in the laws, they said, even reviewing discussions held in committee to try to parse the legislative intent. Ultimately, they settled on a narrow interpretation that “sticks to the most restrictive language in the statute,” the lawyer said.
“We do not take those risks, we just don’t. We’re a tax-supported organization,” said the lawyer, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal deliberations. “I think it’s so new and untested that lawyers don’t know how to interpret it.”
Some doctors worry that a written list of approved conditions could backfire — even one like the list at Tampa General, which Rapkin said is explicitly not comprehensive and focuses on the most common pregnancy complications that arise.
After some debate, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists decided not to create its own list of conditions its leaders consider to be medical emergencies, said Christopher Zahn, the group’s interim chief executive.
“The problem when you get into creating a list is that there are so many aspects that need to be individualized,” said Zahn. “Creating a list like that creates more risk and more danger.”
But many doctors interviewed for this story stressed that some limited degree of specificity would be useful, even if hospitals just issue guidelines that permit ending a pregnancy for one or two of the most common complications, like pre-viable PPROM.
As Rapkin was creating guidance for Tampa General, she spoke with her county prosecutor, Andrew Warren, to make sure she and her colleagues would not be charged, she recalled.
“I knew we’d be doing more abortions at Tampa General than at any other hospital,” said Rapkin. “So I wanted to make sure everything I’m doing was in accordance with state law.”
Warren assured Rapkin that she had nothing to worry about, so long as doctors exercised reasonable medical judgment, Rapkin and Warren said. (Bevis, the Tampa General spokesperson, said the hospital did not collaborate with Warren to create a policy.)
Several months later, Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) suspended Warren from the elected post he’d held for six years, citing his public statements about abortion and appointing a conservative to the position.
Rapkin decided not to meet with Warren’s successor, Susan Lopez, who did not respond to a request for comment.
“I was really scared,” Rapkin said. “I really didn’t want to be on her radar.”
Caught between state and federal law
Seeking protection against state bans, some doctors have urged their hospitals to invoke EMTALA, the 1986 federal law that Biden officials insist requires hospitals to provide abortions when physicians say so.
Idaho has emerged as a flash point: The federal government sued the state last year, arguing that its strict abortion ban did not provide enough leeway for physicians to perform abortions in emergency situations. Idaho officials are currently barred from prosecuting physicians as the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals considers the case, and local doctors said they are closely tracking the implications.
“EMTALA has been tremendously helpful for us in clarifying our legal obligations,” said an OB/GYN at an Idaho hospital, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal hospital deliberations.
The OB/GYN recounted a medical episode earlier this year in which a woman came into the emergency room after her water broke long before the fetus was viable, asking to be induced immediately. The woman was at high risk for infection or hemorrhage, and there was virtually no chance that her baby would make it to term — but, the OB/GYN said, the guidance shared by hospital leaders did not allow the doctors to end the pregnancy until the patient developed an infection the next morning.
“It bothered us all night long,” said the OB/GYN. “We were dragging our feet, waiting for something to happen.”
The case prompted the doctor to continue to press hospital lawyers to permit abortions in similar situations, eventually warning them that their guidance on the abortion ban was “placing our hospital at risk for EMTALA violations,” according to emails provided to The Post. Hospital lawyers later agreed to change their guidance, said the OB/GYN, who then emailed the revised guidelines to colleagues in their department in May. “If the patient desires immediate delivery, our EMTALA obligation is to offer it to her,” the doctor wrote in the guidance shared with other doctors.
The Biden administration earlier this year announced investigations into two hospitals in Missouri and Kansas for failing to provide treatment to a pregnant patient who presented with PPROM at 18 weeks of pregnancy. Federal officials also are privately reviewing dozens of reports of potential EMTALA violations, said four people with knowledge of those cases. Federal officials declined to comment on the number of cases under investigation, but confirmed that they are reviewing multiple reports related to abortion bans.
But it is unclear whether Biden officials’ interpretation of EMTALA will stand, as conservative states and antiabortion groups argue the White House has twisted the law from its original purpose of ensuring hospitals treat patients who need emergency care but can’t pay for it.
“We’re not going to allow left-wing bureaucrats in Washington to transform our hospitals and emergency rooms into walk-in abortion clinics, and the decision last night proves what we knew all along: The law is on our side,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) said last year, after his state won an injunction over the Biden administration’s guidance. The case is now pending at the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
If a Republican wins the 2024 presidential election, a new administration could also argue that the federal emergency-care law does not apply to abortion; a playbook being circulated by the conservative Heritage Foundation calls for the next president to immediately reverse the “distorted pro-abortion ‘interpretations’” of the law.
Some supporters of abortion rights said that the White House hasn’t gone far enough, calling for the Biden administration to sue more states with bans and take other steps to clarify the legal landscape. Schilling, the Louisiana lawyer who’s worked with hospitals facing abortion bans, said that the Biden administration’s decision to highlight the federal emergency-care law “doesn’t actually help hospitals or doctors” determine how to proceed when faced with many abortion complications.
“It just puts them on notice that you may either be violating state law and get thrown in jail or you may be violating federal law and … could get sued,” Schilling said.
Huntsberger, the OB/GYN who left Idaho for Oregon, said she had been so attuned to EMTALA as a potential counterweight that she helped organize a series of local webinars to emphasize the federal law.
“We realized people were so focused on state laws, and they were neglecting EMTALA,” said Huntsberger.
Many hospitals seemed receptive, said Huntsberger — and some facilities eventually updated their policies. But not every institution made the same choice.
“At my own hospital,” Huntsberger added, “nothing changed.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/10/28/abortion-bans-medical-exceptions/
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