Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Health Care Solution


As a family member with several cell base diseases I was delighted to read The Capital Times’ recent guest column, “FTC fighting deals to keep generic drugs off shelves.” Federal Trade Commissioner, Jon Leibowitz wrote, “Getting health care costs under control is a daunting and multifaceted challenge.”

He then went on to report how pharmaceutical companies collude with their competitors to keep lower generic alternatives to prescription drugs off the market and how the commission plans to ban such “pay-for-delay” settlements.

Leibowitz is challenging all citizens and health care consumers who are waiting for a single payer universal health care plan to arrive must meanwhile continue to take steps to
bring about more accessible and affordable health care to all our citizens. In this spirit I want to propose another simple approach that would save health care consumers billions of dollars annually.

Stop federal and state funding of biotech research and development companies without providing public health care benefit safeguards to ensure that stem cell derived cures and medications will be accessible and affordable to all Wisconsin citizens.

To date we have been promised only indirect trickle-down economic effects, including more jobs and a higher tax base from our support. While this is a worthy and much needed economic benefit, it alone is far too narrow and short sighted. If Wisconsin is to effectively manage its ever escalating and exorbitant health care costs we must act now.

A genuine public health care benefit for public funding of stem cell research can range from a percentage of biotech profits beyond a certain threshold to simply ensuring that drug costs and other stem therapies in Wisconsin will be managed and made at reasonable costs to all our citizens. Other public interests policy concerns have to do with whether medication discounts are to be given to low and medium income patients and other underserved groups?

Will Wisconsin taxpayers have any say to help ensure that such stem cell funding targets  prioritized disease groups such as Alzheimer’s, diabetes and sickle cell anemia versus pursuing products that have only short-term commercial and cosmetic benefits?

Millions of our state tax dollars have already been spent and more have been added to this year’s biennium budget without any such consumer safeguards.  State innovation grants, tax credits and a host of other public financial incentives are being invested and now are in the state administrative pipeline.

Asking grantees to do the right thing after giving away the farm is like asking the fox to cough up the chickens after giving him the key to the hen house. If these stem cell policy concerns are not already on your civic or health care organization’s radar screen and advocacy agenda such neglect could be catastrophic for Wisconsin health care consumers.

The fundamental policy questions that you and your organization should be asking is should your organization support legislation for federal and state funding of stem cell research with public health care payback safeguards?

Respectfully yours,

William R. Benedict,
Madison.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Countering the effects of early childhood trauma


The Capital Times - Guest Column - October 20, 2012

Conservative columnist David Brooks, in his most recent 9/7/12 editorial in the New York Times discusses how early childhood traumas and risk factors sew the seeds of later physical and behavioral problems in adults. His solution was for much greater coordination and cooperation of all those who serve our youngest children.

To continue this early neglect of our youngest citizens that ultimately results each year in billions of dollars being spent in treating our most chronically ill adults is perhaps the number one reason for our country’s ever growing health care crisis.  

Fortunately for American taxpayer, Obama’s administration, his Department of Health and Human Services, and its Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration have already recognized this health and economic reality and have a sound and comprehensive solution to this ballooning health care crisis.

Called Project Launch, simply stated, the health and future prosperity of our country requires a greater investment in the physical and emotional health of our youngest children. The project presently consists of 35 communities who are pioneering new ways to promote and sustain young child wellness. The project’s target is children from birth through 8. The goal is for all children to reach their physical, social, emotional, behavioral, and cognitive milestones.

Project Launch has five prevention and promotional strategies. These strategies should be upper most in the mind of every taxpayer who goes to the polls in November. If you are a citizen and taxpayer and concerned about the ever spiraling costs of health care and your increasing health insurance costs, support the present Administration. Your vote will mean that your supporting the continuation of  the following actions to end our health care crisis:

  1. Health screening and assessments for every child birth through 8.
  2. Integrate behavioral health care into primary health care settings.
  3. Mental health consultation in all early child care and education settings.
  4. Increasing focus on social and emotional well being.
  5. Expand use of culturally-relevant evidenced-based prevention and wellness practices.

See you at the polls!

Benedict is a mental health reform advocate and blogs at danecountyalmanac.blogspot.com

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Administration concerned with patient outcomes

Wisconsin State Journal - Opinion/Your Views

As a member of the Wisconsin Council on Mental Health and as one who has spent nearly a lifetime trying to introduce patient treatment outcomes technology into mental health organizations, I was distressed to see the editors of the Sunday Journal fail to describe President Obama’s already significant efforts in this regard.  But instead, they stated that his administration and the existing affordable health care act have only “dabbled” with this concept. This simply is not true. In fact Obama is and has been a strong advocate and spokesman for moving our health care forward from presently measuring and funding service volume to measuring and paying for patient treatment effectiveness outcomes.

Our readers and voters will be better informed by Googling SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration), Strategic Initiative #7: Outcomes and Quality, Department of Health and Human Services.

Hopefully when the moderator of the upcoming debate this week between the President and Gov. Romney asks which candidate has done the most to change the focus of health care for the better, readers of the Journal will have already completed their homework.

Benedict blogs at danecountyalmanac.com