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Brill's Bitter Pill: Accurate Diagnosis, Inadequate Treatment

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Steven Brill, author of the well-known 2013 Special Report, Why Medical Bills Are Killing Us, in Time magazine has just released his new book, America's Bitter Pill: Money, Politics, Backroom Deals, and the Fight to Fix Our Broken Healthcare System. (1) Based upon in-depth reporting of interviews with more than 240 people involved in various ways across our health care industry, he gives us an inside look at how the Affordable Care Act was written, passed, implemented and changed over the last five years.

The result is an honest, damning indictment of our market-based system, with all its profiteering and run away costs. He concludes that the ACA, despite the hype of some of its architects and supporters, will fail to contain costs:

There's nothing in the legislation that brings down the cost of healthcare... The bad news is that the taxpayers are paying for it and they're paying the same exorbitant prices that make the system so unworkable... The drug companies are making more money, the hospitals are making more money, the medical device makers are making more money, and everybody is happy except the taxpayer. (2)

Brill's description of the flaws of our profit-driven system are further amplified by his own personal experience with open-heart surgery for an aortic aneurism. After an eight-day hospitalization, his medical bills came to $197,000. Some time later, even Stephen Hemsley, president and CEO of UnitedHealth Group, his health insurance company, could not explain the medical bills and explanation of benefits.

Brill's meticulous and well-documented reporting of our system problems falls apart when it comes to fixing these problems. There is somehow a striking disconnect between his objectivity in the first part of the book and the proposals he puts forward toward the end. Yes, he is very well-informed, is a graduate of Yale Law School, and has had personal experience as a patient, but that does not make him a health policy expert, as many of his readers now expect. He says in his book, as he was recovering from surgery, he began to frame his "unusual idea" of how to go beyond the Affordable Care Act, which he believes is unsustainable because of costs, and to fix U.S. health care:

At first, pieces of it came in the form of seemingly random thoughts that popped up during the extra time I had to read and watch television. But they soon began to come together. (3)

These are the components of his seven-part proposal for regulating our health care system:
1. Require that any market have at least two big, fully integrated provider-insurance companies (e.g. Kaiser); large markets could have more.3. Cap the operating profits of what would be those now-allowed dominant market players, or oligopolies, at perhaps 8 percent, compared to the current average of about 12 percent.5. Cap the salaries and bonuses of hospital employees (including the CEOs) who do not practice medicine full-time at 60 times the amount paid to the lowest paid full-time physician, typically a first-year resident.7. Establish ombudsman's offices in each oligopoly to streamline the appeals process for patients who believe they have received inadequate care, and for physicians who feel they have been pressured to limit care.9. Any government-sanctioned, oligopoly-designated integrated system should have a physician with practice experience as its top executive.11. Require any sanctioned, oligopoly provider to insure a certain percentage of Medicaid patients at a stipulated discount.13. Require these regulated oligopolies to charge any uninsured patients no more than they charge any competing insurance companies whose insurance they accept, or a price based on their regulated profit margin if they don't accept other insurance. (4)While there may be merit in some of these proposals, Brill's brief prediction of how they would reform our system is unpersuasive and comes across as only wishful thinking, uninformed by evidence. His "plan" would just add another layer to our flawed system, based especially on getting some of its providers bigger yet somehow more accountable. There are many problems with his proposals. For example, what would they do for people in many parts of the country, including rural areas, and why is "bigger is better" a solution to our already consolidating system?

For some reason, Brill ignores mountains of experience and evidence that there are more logical and proven ways to rein in our out-of-control system. For example, he recognizes in his first chapter that the U.S. spends more ($3 trillion in 2014) than the next 10 biggest spenders on health care combined: Japan, Germany, France, China, the United Kingdom, Italy, Canada, Brazil, Spain, and Australia. But then he shows no interest in finding out how these countries can spend so much less on health care than we do while also providing better access and usually better outcomes of care. Recent years have seen a growing information base of how they do it, including T. R. Reid's excellent 2009 book The Healing of America: A Global Quest for Better, Cheaper, and Fairer Health Care, in which he notes, after study of the experience in France, Germany, Japan, the UK, and Canada, that:

The American system does well when it comes to providing medical care, but has a rotten system for financing that care... All the other rich countries have found financing models that cover everybody and they still spend much less than we do. We've ignored those foreign models, partly because of "American exceptionalism" -- the notion that the United States has nothing to learn from the rest of the world. (5)

Brill also ignores long-standing efforts in this country to enact universal coverage through a single-payer system, improved Medicare for all, as embodied in John Conyers' bill in the House, H. R. 676. He cavalierly dismisses this alternative in these words: [My proposed regulations are] certainly more realistic than pining away for a public single-payer system that is never going to happen. (6)

Good as Brill's book is (and I strongly recommend it) in the diagnosis of our health care problems -- the toxicity of our profiteer-dominated system -- his proposed treatment is speculative and uninformed by evidence. At best, if implemented, his proposals would just tinker around the edges of our problems.

We still need to ask more fundamental questions before we can see how to go forward with real health care reform, such as: who is the health care system for? (our current answer is the profiteering, mostly corporate stakeholders, not patients and their families); should health care be just another commodity for sale on an open market?; and is health care a personal right (as it is in most advanced countries), or a privilege based on ability to pay?.

Brill and I agree on one reality -- the ACA is unsustainable because of its inefficiency, increasing bureaucracy, and unaffordable costs to taxpayers as well as patients and families. As all this becomes more clear, he asks, as we all should, what should follow the ACA? My just released book, How Obamacare Is Unsustainable: Why We Need a Single Payer Solution for All Americans, describes and supports the single-payer solution, improved Medicare for all, as a public financing system costing less than the ACA, coupled with a more accountable private delivery system. (7) I hope that readers will read both books and compare their merits based on evidence and experience.

References:
1. Brill, S. America's Bitter Pill: Money, Politics, Backroom Deals, and the Fight to Fix Our Broken Healthcare System. New York. Random House, 2015.3. Brill, S. Health care expert Steven Brill on Obamacare: "Everybody is happy except the taxpayer." Real Clear Politics Video, January 5, 2015.5. Ibid # 1, pp. 418-419.7. Ibid # 1, pp. 438-441.9. Reid, TR. The Healing of America: A Global Quest for Better , Cheaper, and Fairer Health Care. New York. The Penguin Press, 2009, pp. 225-226.11. Brill, S. Ibid # 1, p. 441.13. Geyman, JP. How Obamacare Is Unsustainable: Why We Need a Single Payer Solution for All Americans. Friday Harbor, WA. Copernicus Healthcare, 2015. Reported by Huffington Post 9 hours ago.

Competing plans on Medicaid expansion set to hit the Senate

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Salt Lake City, Utah (ABC 4 Utah) – An alternative to the governor’s Healthy Utah Plan cleared its first test at the Capitol.

Senate Bill 153, Access to Healthcare, also known as the Medically Frail Plan passed the Senate HHS Committee on a 4-2 vote.

It’s Senator Allen Christensen’s solution to address the health insurance coverage gap in Utah.

"Something has to give somewhere. I would like to serve the most critical, the most vulnerable in Utah and have some dollars left to help other groups who are also hurting," said Christensen, (R)Ogden.

SB 153 would cover an estimated 10,000 people and bring about $600 million in federal funds back to Utah.

The committee passed it, noting it deserves a debate in the full senate.

Last week the same committee gave Senate Bill 164, the Healthy Utah Plan its approval.

Healthy Utah, sponsored by Senator Brian Shiozawa would cover an estimated 140,000 people and bring back about $3.2 billion.

"If we are going to get bang for the buck in terms of dollars spent and outcomes, this program that you are proposing is woefully inadequate in comparison to Healthy Utah," said Shiozawa, (R)Salt Lake City.

The American Cancer Society agrees.

They fear what the Medically Frail Plan would mean for survival rates.

“It doesn't offer any sort of cancer screenings, so no mammograms, no colonoscopies, no pap smears, none of that preventative service that people need,” said Brook Carlisle, with the American Cancer Society.

Christensen fears what could come of the dueling plans.

“My concern at the moment is that in the struggle over which one is better that we’re going to end up with nothing,” said Christensen.

It will now be up to the Senate to settle this debate.

The Healthy Utah Plan should hit the Senate Floor any day now.

And the Medically Frail Plan will closely follow.

President Wayne Niederhuaser says he wants to close the coverage gap and is leaning toward Healthy Utah as the best option. Reported by abc4 7 hours ago.

Zane Benefits Releases New eBook: “The Painless Guide to HRPs”

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New Guide Helps Small Businesses Owners Learn How a Health Reimbursement Plan (HRP) Works for Their Small Business

Salt Lake City, UT (PRWEB) February 17, 2015

Zane Benefits, the leader in individual health insurance reimbursement for small businesses, has announced a new ebook, “The Painless Guide to HRPs.”

According to the ebook, a health reimbursement plan is an employer-funded, tax-advantaged benefit designed to reimburse employees for individual health insurance premiums. Small and medium sized businesses are canceling group plans because they have become too expensive and are offering HRPs as an alternative.

The ebook is designed for small business owners, non-profits, CEOs, CFOs, HR managers, accountants, and insurance professionals as an easy-to-understand guide to learn how to set up a Health Reimbursement Plan.

For more information and to download a free copy visit: ZaneBenefits.com

Editors Note: Zane Benefits is available for media questions. Contact Leah Bergersen at 435-659-2921 or leah(dot)bergersen(at)zanebenefits(dot)com

About Zane Benefits:
Zane Benefits is the leader in individual health insurance reimbursement for small businesses. Since 2006, Zane Benefits has been on a mission to bring the benefits of individual health insurance to business owners and their employees.

Zane Benefits' software helps businesses reimburse employees for individual health insurance plans for annual savings of 20 to 60 percent compared with traditional employer-provided health insurance. Today, over 20,000 customers use Zane Benefits' software, services, and support to reimburse individual health insurance plans purchased independent of employment. For more information visit Zanebenefits.com. Reported by PRWeb 7 hours ago.

Correction: Health Overhaul-Penalties story

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In a story Feb. 14 about tax penalties assessed on those without health insurance, The Associated Press reported erroneously that taxpayers must apply for health insurance through the federal exchange and Medicaid before seeking an exemption. Eligible taxpayers may file for the exemption without first applying for health coverage. Reported by MyNorthwest.com 6 hours ago.

White House: Health Law Sign-ups Top 11M

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More than 11 million people signed up for subsidized private health insurance under President Barack Obama's law this year, the White House announced Tuesday evening.But that preliminary estimate - 11.4 million people - comes with a couple of asterisks:-The final number... Reported by Newsmax 4 hours ago.

Some 11.4 million Americans are enrolled in Obamacare: White House

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Some 11.4 million Americans enrolled in private health insurance through Obamacare during the open enrolment period, the White House said in a tweet on Tuesday. Reported by Reuters 5 hours ago.

White House: Health law sign-ups top 11M

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WASHINGTON (AP) — More than 11 million people signed up for subsidized private health insurance under President Barack Obama's law this year, the White House announced Tuesday evening. Reported by TwinCities.com 5 hours ago.

Wonkblog: White House: 11.4 million ‘and counting’ signed up for Obamacare in 2015

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About 11.4 million Americans have signed up for private health insurance coverage through Obamacare exchanges by the official end of the law's second-ever enrollment period, the White House announced in a video Monday night. Reported by Washington Post 4 hours ago.

Covered California cuts a little slack on enrollment deadline

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The total number of enrollees in Covered California’s second sign-up period fell short of the state health insurance exchange’s expectations, but agency officials said Tuesday they hoped a deadline extension for those who started the process of signing up but didn’t finish by the Sunday, Feb. 15, deadline might narrow the gap. Health exchange officials also said they’re also considering allowing uninsured people to sign up for coverage in mid-April, when they will find out what their tax penalties will be if they don’t sign up. In preliminary figures released Tuesday, Covered California officials said they signed up 474,000 new enrollees, but had underestimated the number of people last year who would sign up but fail to complete the process or pay their premiums. [...] Lee said he was confident that the agency would hit its 500,000 goal by extending the enrollment period to Feb. 22 for those who had tried but failed to sign up by Sunday’s deadline. [...] the state’s extension is limited to those who attest to making a “good-faith effort” to sign up and who use an enrollment counselor, insurance broker or Covered California representative to “help them get across the finish line,” Lee said. Lee said he was proud of the total enrollment figures, including the 3 million people who got covered through California’s decision to extend its state Medicaid program, or Medi-Cal, for the poor. Reported by SFGate 5 hours ago.

More Than 11 Million Sign Up for Health Insurance

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More than 11 million people signed up or renewed for health insurance on the health insurance exchanges this year, the White House says. Reported by msnbc.com 4 hours ago.

Some 11.4 million Americans have enrolled in Obamacare: White House

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Some 11.4 million Americans enrolled in private health insurance through Obamacare during the open enrollment period, the White House said in a tweet on Tuesday. Reported by Reuters 4 hours ago.

White House Reports Obamacare Sign-Ups Top 11 Million

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White House Reports Obamacare Sign-Ups Top 11 Million WASHINGTON—More than 11 million people signed up for subsidized private health insurance under President Barack Obama’s law this year, the White House announced Tuesday evening.

But that preliminary estimate — 11.4 million people — comes with a couple of asterisks:… Reported by Epoch Times 4 hours ago.

Obamacare Signups Top 11 Million In Second Year, White House Says

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WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration has beaten its own estimates for Obamacare enrollments, which exceeded 11 million through Sunday's deadline for most U.S. residents to choose a health insurance plan, the White House announced Tuesday.

In a video posted to Facebook, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell informs President Barack Obama of preliminary estimates of this year's signups. The three-month enrollment period all but ended Sunday, but federal and state officials are allowing consumers who began applications prior to the deadline to complete them.

"We just got great news today, which is that during this open enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act, a.k.a. Obamacare, 11.4 million people have either re-enrolled or enrolled for first the first time," Obama says on the video. "It gives you some sense of how hungry people were out there for affordable, accessible health insurance."

Prior to the Nov. 15 kickoff of this year's enrollment campaign, the Department of Health and Human Services set a target of 10.3 million to 11.2 million people enrolled by private policies obtained via the Affordable Care Act's health insurance exchanges by the close of the signup period. Tuesday's announcement shows the exchange marketplaces have bested that goal before the final accounting is made. The department projects a smaller number, 9 million to 9.9 million, will have this coverage at the end of the year.

Sunday was the biggest day for Obamacare enrollment to date during the signup periods for 2014 and 2015, Burwell says on the video. The new enrollment data includes signups from federally run health insurance exchanges on HealthCare.gov in 37 states, as well as from those operated by 13 states and the District of Columbia.

More than 1 million people signed up for a health plan during the last nine days of enrollment, according to a senior administration official. Of the 11.4 million enrollees, 8.6 million came from federally managed exchanges and 2.8 million from state-run marketplaces, the official said.

The White House didn't reveal how many of the 11.4 million enrollees are renewing coverage from last year and how many are new to the marketplaces.

Burwell is considering re-opening enrollment around tax-filing season in April, when as many as 6 million people may learn they owe a fine for not having health coverage under Obamacare's individual mandate. Some congressional Democrats and consumer advocates have pleaded with the Department of Health and Human Services to allow people who owe the individual mandate penalty to instead buy insurance. Burwell will announce her intentions within weeks, Bloomberg News reported last week. Washington state already has extended its enrollment period until April, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

The enrollment tally is bound to come down in the coming months. The figures disclosed Tuesday don't factor in whether consumers have paid their first premium, which is necessary to secure coverage. In 2014, enrollment surpassed 8 million in April after a six-month signup period, but fell below 7 million by October as consumers switched to other forms of health coverage or simply allowed their policies to lapse. Federal authorities also canceled coverage for hundreds of thousands of people who could not verify their citizenship or legal residency status.

Although Sunday technically was the deadline for applying for subsidies and enrolling into health coverage for this year, federal and state health insurance exchange authorities are giving would-be customers extra time to complete applications and select a policy if they began the process before the deadline, or encountered problems accessing the systems. People using a federal exchange have until Feb. 22; the final date varies among the other states.

Last-minute technical problems and long waits for assistance on telephone hotlines prompted the extensions, which are similar to those instituted when the first enrollment period ended last March. In addition, 28 states are allowing people to sign up for health insurance beyond the Feb. 15 deadline, if they aren't also applying for subsidies, according to eHealth, an online insurance broker.

People who experience a change in life circumstances, such as marrying or having a child, can access the health insurance exchanges year-round. The enrollment numbers announced Tuesday don't include people who signed up for Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program this year. There is no deadline to enroll in those programs for low-income households.

*Watch the White House video on Obamacare enrollment:*
Post by The White House. Reported by Huffington Post 4 hours ago.

White House: 11.4 million Americans have enrolled in Obamacare

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Some 11.4 million Americans enrolled in private health insurance through Obamacare during the open enrollment period, the White House said in a tweet on Tuesday. “The Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare, is working. It’s working better than we anticipated, certainly working a lot better t... Reported by Raw Story 3 hours ago.

Behind the curtain, troubles persist in HealthCare.gov

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The "back end" of the Obamacare website still isn't properly wired to the health insurance companies Reported by Politico 1 hour ago.

Affordable Care Act signs up 11.4 million for health insurance

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Post by The White House. The Republicans’ attacks on the Affordable Care Act have not ceased, but “Obamacare” has proven a popular hit with more than 11.4 million people signing up for health insurance or re-upping during the program’s 2015 enrollment period. The figure for those enrolling, higher than the White House predicted, includes those who have paid their first month’s premiums or still have time to do so under the plan selected. President Obama: “It’s certainly working a lot better, I think, than many of the critics talked about early on.”  (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) The enrollment figures are substantially higher than the 8 million who signed up during the [...] Reported by SeattlePI.com 2 hours ago.

Health law sign-ups reported to top 11M

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WASHINGTON -- More than 11 million people signed up for subsidized private health insurance under President Barack Obama's law this year, the White House announced Tuesday evening. Reported by TwinCities.com 57 minutes ago.

GAO Report Misleads Congress on Safety of International Online Pharmacies, Says New PharmacyChecker.com Report

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A new report corrects the public record on personal drug importation and online pharmacies by providing data and analysis that refutes the positions of an earlier GAO report about Internet pharmacies. The new report demonstrates how overreaching federal and private sector enforcement actions curtail online access to safe and affordable medication.

White Plains, NY (PRWEB) February 18, 2015

The leaders of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions each received a comprehensive report countering a GAO report[1] on Internet pharmacies. Written by Gabriel Levitt, vice president of PharmacyChecker.com, the report corrects the public record and informs elected officials and the healthcare community about online pharmacy safety and affordability. Mr. Levitt stated:

“The GAO report wrongly labels safe foreign online pharmacies as rogue online pharmacies. This misrepresentation is leading to misguided policies that hinder online access to safe and affordable medication.”

“According to the CDC, about five million Americans personally import prescription drugs from foreign sources each year due to high domestic drug prices. Safe international online pharmacies are a lifeline of affordable medication for Americans. Ill-considered federal enforcement or private actions will lead more Americans to skip needed medication, which leads to more hospitalizations, sickness and death.”

According to the new report, there are critical errors of auditing standards, omission, fact, or analysis, found in the GAO report about Internet pharmacies, such as those identified below:

1.    The GAO report doesn’t meet Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards (GAGAS) because it relies almost exclusively on sources biased against safe personal drug importation, particularly the U.S. pharmaceutical and pharmacy industries.

The analysis and conclusions found in the GAO report are overly reliant on stakeholders who have significant financial interests in the audit’s outcome, such as pharmaceutical companies and U.S. pharmacies, as well as the associations and groups they fund.

GAGAS standards require that audits exercise “reasonable care and professional skepticism… Professional skepticism is an attitude that includes a questioning mind and a critical assessment of evidence.”[2] Mr. Levitt’s report demonstrates that the GAO s relies on data it was presented by industry sources, and the FDA, without a “questioning mind and a critical assessment of evidence.”

2.    The GAO report omits critical peer-reviewed studies and even its own earlier conclusions about online pharmacies.

Peer-reviewed research clearly demonstrates the authenticity and safety of medications ordered from foreign, credentialed online pharmacies that require valid prescriptions, including hundreds of orders placed with foreign pharmacies verified by PharmacyChecker.com [3]. Furthermore, GAO’s earlier research clearly showed that many Canadian online pharmacies are safe [4].

3.    The GAO report mentions Section 708 of the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act (FDASIA) only once in a footnote to explain that the law expands federal authority to destroy imported prescription orders, but does not explore the unintended consequences of seizing and destroying medications imported for personal use.

In contrast, Senators Charles Grassley (R-IA), Dean Heller (R-NV), Angus King (I-ME), David Vitter (R-LA) expressed serious concerns about the “potential health threat to hundreds of thousands of Americans” from Section 708 [5]. Congressman Keith Ellison wrote the FDA about many of his constituents, underscoring that Section 708 will impede their access to safe and affordable medication [6].

4.    The GAO report wrongly identifies a safe international online pharmacy – CanadaDrugs.com – as a “rogue.”

CanadaDrugs.com was wrongly labeled a “rogue” pharmacy in the GAO report, despite its record of safety. In fact, due to its verifiable licensure, long history of pharmacy safety, and website transparency, CanadaDrugs.com could be used as a good example of how Americans are benefiting from lower cost medications from other countries.

5.    The GAO report doesn’t fully analyze or explain FDA survey data relating to how many Americans are using online pharmacies, potentially encouraging confusion about the problem’s scope.

GAO writes: “According to a recent survey conducted by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)… nearly one in four adult U.S. Internet consumers surveyed reported purchasing prescription drugs online. At the same time, nearly 30 percent said that they lacked confidence about how to safely purchase medicine online. This is a matter of grave concern as rogue Internet pharmacies may sell products that, among other things, have expired; been labeled, stored, or shipped improperly; and may even be counterfeits—unauthorized versions—of other drugs.”

The GAO report omits a crucial finding of FDA’s data: while 23% of American adults may have bought medication online, 83% of them buy medication from U.S. online pharmacies “associated with their health insurance” [7]. These figures and further analysis demonstrate that less than 4% (not “one in four”) Americans are purchasing from unsafe or foreign online pharmacies.

6.    The GAO report doesn’t recognize that Americans can and do benefit from Canadian and other foreign pharmacies accessed online, yet its lead author has, elsewhere, noted the benefits of personal drug importation via online pharmacies.

In an interview on GAO Live, the lead author of the GAO report spoke with a consumer who orders from a Canadian online pharmacy and stated that if the patient has “done some kind of verification that it’s a Canadian pharmacy, and she knows that the drug she has been receiving is the drug that has been prescribed, that’s fine”[8]. This position is not included in the GAO report.

To read and download the whole report for free go to http://www.pharmacychecker.com/online-pharmacies-personal-drug-importation-public-health.pdf.

PharmacyChecker.com (http://www.pharmacychecker.com) is the only independent company that verifies U.S. and international online pharmacies and compares prescription drug prices. It was formed in 2002 when its founder, Tod Cooperman, M.D., saw that increasing numbers of Americans were looking on the Internet to save money on medication but did not have adequate information to protect their health. PharmacyChecker.com is a stakeholder in the online consumer-driven healthcare community, seeking an open Internet environment that promotes innovation and new business models, especially those that serve the public interest.

ENDNOTES

[1] Internet Pharmacies: Federal Agencies and States Face Challenges Combatting Rogue Sites, Particularly Abroad, GAO-13-560 (Washington, D.C. July 2013)..
[2] Government Auditing Standards, GAO-12-331G (Washington, D.C., December 2011).
[3] Bate, Roger, Ginger Zhe Jin, and Aparna Mather, “In Whom We Trust: The Role of Certification Agencies in Online Drug Markets,” The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy. December 2013, Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 111–150, ISSN (Online) 1935-1682, ISSN (Print) 2194-6108, DOI.
[4] Internet Pharmacies: Some Pose Safety Risks for Consumers, GAO-04-820 (Washington, D.C.: June 17, 2004).
[5] U.S. Senator David Vitter, “Vitter Fights to Keep Prescription Drug Prices Affordable Through Reimportation,” July 9, 2014 [press release].
[6] Letter to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by Congressman Keith Ellison dated July 1st, 2014.
[7] FDA Consumer Survey Highlights: “FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) conducted a behavioral assessment survey to understand the knowledge, attitudes and practices associated with purchasing prescription medicine from online pharmacies in May 2012.”
[8] See point no. 6 to link to the relevant clip of an interview with Marcia Crosse, Ask GAO Live: Chat on Internet Pharmacies, August 12th, 2013. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

Using Real-Time Data for Real-Life Healthcare Choices [VIDEO]

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The popularity of knee and hip replacement surgeries is growing quickly in the U.S., The Washington Post noted last month. Total knee replacement is the sole option for effectively treating some chronic knee problems, MedPageToday stated last week, and more people are opting for it because of population growth, the obesity epidemic and expanding health insurance eligibility. Reported by Forbes.com 13 hours ago.

Consumers 'in line' for Obamacare can still enroll by Feb. 22: HHS' Burwell

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. consumers who are already in the process of enrolling in the federal health insurance marketplace will have until Feb. 22 to complete their application, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell said on Wednesday. Reported by Reuters 12 hours ago.
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