Showing posts with label Jetelina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jetelina. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2025

RFK, Jr.: The Secretary of Health and Human Services is Dangerous to Your Health!

It can sometimes seem like the public health and medical communities are “ganging up” on Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., with ongoing criticism and attacks on his beliefs and, more important, his policies. The rebuttal is that this man, whose thinking is wildly unscientific and fringe, is the incredibly powerful Secretary of Health and Human Services, in charge of the second biggest department in the US government (after Defense) in budget and staff, and responsible for the diverse, varied, and highly important components of that department. These include Medicare, the health insurance system for the aged and disabled and Medicaid, the federal/state partnership that provides insurance for many low-income Americans (mostly children and their mothers in number, mostly long-term care in dollars). It also includes the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which studies and intervenes in both infectious and chronic disease, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that oversees the safety and effectiveness of our – food and drugs, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) that funds and supports most medical research, and other major agencies, including the Indian Health Service (IHS) that provides health care on Native American reservations, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) that funds community health centers and many other major service delivery and educational program, and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) that supports addiction and mental health services. It’s a big, responsible, job.

And, so, there are a lot of things that can be screwed up. And a lot things are being screwed up. By him. In part, this may be because of his general incompetence and lack of actual knowledge about health care (knowing little about their portfolio is a common thread among those Trump has selected to lead federal departments). Kennedy is not a health professional, although he is a health “profess-er” – he professes a lot of opinions.  A lot of the screw up is the result of the DOGE-created cuts of 10,000 people from the HHS workforce in all of these agencies. Some of it is the administration’s political antipathy to programs (like Medicaid) that help people in need instead of the wealthiest in society who don’t need help at all. And no small part of it is because the beliefs that he has about health that come from fringe proponents of every bizarre remedy from ivermectin (good for worms, not for COVID) to hydrogen peroxide to Vitamin A to prevent measles, and opponents of many of the health interventions that we know really work to save lives. Let’s look at some of these.

Measles is a bad disease. It causes a great deal of morbidity. I come from a generation of children who almost all had measles – and varicella (Chicken Pox) and rubella (German measles), and mumps. Most of us survived, without even being hospitalized. But some did not. About 20% (1 in 5) people/children with measles are hospitalized, which means they are very sick. From 1-3 per 1000 die. That is a lot. Not as many as currently die from, say, being shot at school, but a lot. The thing is, though, that measles is preventable by vaccine. Per the CDC:

A vaccine became available in 1963. In the decade before, nearly all children got measles by the time they were 15 years old. It is estimated 3 to 4 million people in the United States were infected each year. Among reported measles cases each year, an estimated:

·       400 to 500 people died

·       48,000 were hospitalized

·       1,000 suffered encephalitis (swelling of the brain)

 

After the vaccine, measles went from being an endemic disease to one that was essentially eliminated. Until many people stopped vaccinating their children, based on unfounded fears of side effects, especially autism, being promoted by unscientific “experts” – like Kennedy. He has commissioned a new study on the link, to be done by discredited physician Andrew Wakefield, and thus is ignoring hundreds of studies with over 3 million children that show no link! Kennedy has also promoted using Vitamin A to prevent or mitigate measles. While in countries where there is widespread Vitamin A deficiency, this is a good strategy, there is no significant prevalence of Vitamin A in the US. And taking more to “be safe” is a bad idea since Vitamin A, a fat-soluble vitamin, accumulates and causes toxicity. So now, in addition to over 700 cases and at least 3 deaths (which suggests the number of cases is an underestimate) from measles, we have children being hospitalized for Vitamin A toxicity! And measles is only one serious condition; I have written about infections in children with Hemophilus influenza B and even worse polio (Raw milk, vaccines, and RFK, Jr: Some dates worth remembering, November 15, 2024) and was reminded of its effects on a recent episode of “Call the Midwife” which featured a man in an iron lung. Let’s not bring polio back!

Kennedy has also angered many Native American tribes, simultaneously calling for greater attention to their health status (good) and cutting the programs that benefit them, as covered by the Arizona Star (RFK Jr. says chronic disease in tribes a focus as program to do that gutted). He has also made the possibly not serious but nonetheless insulting proposal to move laid-off health workers from CDC and other HHS agencies to reservations (NY Times Kennedy’s Plan to Send Health Officials to ‘Indian Country’ Angers Native Leaders).

While on many of these issues, such as opposition to vaccines, Kennedy is simply wrong (and dangerous, see the recent NY Times article The many ways Kennedy is already undermining vaccines), on others it is less clearcut, which is why his opinions get traction. For example, he advocates strongly for the importance of diet and exercise to health. Those are generally are good. Most people should get more exercise and eat more healthful foods (and fewer unhealthful ones). But that is not a panacea. A healthful diet will not prevent measles – or COVID or smallpox or Hemophilus influenza B infections or cancer – although having good general underlying health will likely make one relatively able to weather such conditions better. Kennedy employs many logical fallacies in his pronouncements, including setting up “straw men” to knock down, using misdirection to keep you from looking at what he is saying, data-dumping to overload you, appeal to (false) authority (like Wakefield), and others. Some of these are discussed in the NY Times piece, From ‘Data Dumping’ to ‘Webbing’: How Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Sells Misleading Ideas and by Dr. Jessica Knurick.Your Local Epidemiologist”, Katelyn Jetelina, discusses the Progress on Make America Healthy Again (MAHA), his signature plan. It has made a lot of progress, although it has been in reverse, making America less healthy. For more on his strategy, check out Paul Offit, MD, of the American Council and Science and Health, who describes the RFK Jr. Playbook. And, of course, he has traded on his family name and the reputations of his father and uncle John, who would (like most of his surviving family) be outraged by his positions.

Kennedy’s ideas and actions are both unscientific and damaging to the public’s health, leading the American Public Health Association (APHA) to call on him to resign or be fired in a statement enumerating many of his most damaging actions and dangerous pronouncements. All the “charges” it lists are accurate, and serious, and he should be gone. He is a real danger to our health. But the things he has championed, his hypocrisy and sleight of hand, and the false relativism he promotes that is dangerous, would unfortunately not be likely to be better with any HHS Secretary nominated by the current President. Most of Trump’s Cabinet and other senior-level picks have been unqualified, uninterested, and incompetent at best, and evil at worst. It has been said that their only “qualification” needs to be obsequious loyalty to Donald Trump, but a serious commitment to ruining the lives of as many American people as possible also seems to be important.

And, of course, that is the intention.

Thursday, January 25, 2024

ER backups and poor-quality but expensive insurance: The American Way!

The January 22 edition of the Arizona Star (Tucson) reprinted a piece from the Arizona Republic (Phoenix) titled “'I've never seen it this busy': Here's why Arizona emergency departments are jammed”. The article is paywalled, but you don’t really need to read it since that headline basically is the story: all over the state, including its two biggest cities, waits for non-emergencies (and sometimes emergencies) in ERs is many hours to, sometimes, days! The article discusses some reasons, including the increase this winter in respiratory diseases like flu, RSV, and, yes COVID (despite everyone pretending it has gone away; see NY TimesCalifornia and Oregon Ease Covid Isolation Rules, Breaking With C.D.C.”). In fact, there has been a lot of respiratory disease this winter, and as reported by “Your Local Epidemiologist”, Katelyn Jetelina, and while it seems to be declining, there could well be more peaks.

The colder weather makes the most vulnerable, those without housing, even more vulnerable. Also contributing to the ER backup in Arizona is the increase in the number of “winter visitors” (also known as “snowbirds”) who are coming back “after” the pandemic, who are often older and do not have a regular source of care here. And, yes, also that too many of us who live here year round do not have a regular source of care because, as in most places, there are not enough primary care clinicians (see “Primary Care, Private Equity, and Profit: How to ensure poor quality care for the American people”, Sept 28, 2023 and “We need more primary care to serve our people: Why do the medical schools lie?”, Dec 12, 2023). So people go to the emergency room, or to an urgent care center where they are told to go to the emergency room “if it gets worse” or, when it is serious enough, right away.

But there is something else going on here. That is the breakdown of the American health care system, particularly the insurance system and the ways people are covered (or not) for health care costs. It is breaking down at all levels: there are not enough doctors, especially in primary care (see the blog posts cited above), insurance companies and employers are covering less and less of the cost of health care and requiring those who have insurance to pay more and more, and private equity (see the referenced blog above) has taken over many practices and is squeezing them for maximum profit without regard to what it does to the quality of the “product”, which is our health care. Private equity in the healthcare sector follows the same playbook it follows everywhere: squeeze profit out, diminish services, and if it bankrupts the company too bad; they already have theirs. And when it is insurance companies that take over the practices (such as United Health Care owning Optum) the result is about the same. No one is minding the people-serving part of the store.

Yes, there are plenty of uninsured people, including the homeless, and those who are “too rich” (hah!) to get Medicaid, which in most states requires an income far below (often way less than half) the poverty level (which is about $31,000 for a family of 4), and anyway is also, in most states, pretty much limited to women with small children and virtually never covers single adults. But there are also the under-insured, those with terrible insurance coverage because it is all they can afford, as employers cut back on their contributions and insurance companies raise their rates and the financial burden on the insured including through copays, deductibles, and denied care (kind of like both raising the price and shrinking the size of a candy bar, except with much more serious outcomes). In addition, the expenditures by employers on health insurance (even when it is inadequate) is money that is not spent on wages, thereby increasing income inequality, as documented recently by Hager, Emanuel, and Mozaffarian in JAMA Open Network. And, since health insurance premiums are tax deductible for employers (although not for employees!) they prefer it to paying higher wages. What is the result of having insurance that doesn’t pay for what you hoped and expected it would when you or a family member is seriously ill? You go into debt. So the proportion of medical debt held by insured people as opposed to “self-pay” (uninsured, virtually all poor) people, has risen from 11.1% to 57.6% in 4 short years, from 2018 to 2022. Quintupled. The system, to the extent that it can be called a system at all, is broken.

But why? How? While there are still undoubtedly those, including politicians, pundits, and health administrators (all of them WELL-insured, you can be sure!) who blame it on some kind of “overuse” by patients (the medical word for “people”), there are actually 2 real causes:

  1. Abuse, corruption, and illegal behavior by insurance companies in pursuit of ever-more profit, and
  2. The failure of government entities to prevent them from doing so, or to prosecute them when they do.

Really? Really. Not only are insurance companies inadequately regulated, and able to effectively abstain from paying for care by repeatedly denying it and creating other obstacles, they frequently simply break the law, as documented in a study by ProPublica and reported by the Nonprofit Quarterly:

‘The findings point not just to bad behavior on the part of health insurance companies but also to a failure of the state regulatory apparatuses that oversee health insurance coverage to enforce laws already on the books: … If explicit laws on the books, spelling out mandatory coverage requirements, aren’t enough to prevent insurers from denying coverage, how are ordinary people to push back?

The answer, ProPublica’s Cheryl Clark found, is that those fighting for their own coverage are forced to navigate a “mind-boggling labyrinth” of bureaucracies set up by insurers and often barely regulated.”

It’s pretty bad, and it’s getting worse. Poor and uninsured people suffer the most, but employed and insured people are right behind them. Their medical debt increases in part because they think they have insurance and actually seek care, rather than avoiding it, as uninsured people often do. Which is, of course, terrible – how can there possibly be any justification at all for a “system” that encourages people to not seek care when they are sick, that provides too few primary care doctors or other clinicians to care for them, that makes them wait hours or days in ERs to be seen, and then saddles them with unpayable – but of course credit-destroying -- medical debt when they do get care?

Who are the worse criminals? The insurance companies and private equity firms who directly cause these problems by pursuing only maximum profit? Or the politicians who allow it to happen, who at best tinker around the edges, trying to limit (only occasionally with any success) the worst abuses? Should we run our fire departments like that? Police? The answer is in part tight regulation, prosecution of abuses and illegal activities including putting senior executives in prison, and really, finally, creating a universal coverage system in which each person has good coverage, can get good care, and be treated as a human being.

Like the executives, politicians and pundits expect for themselves.

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