Tuesday, January 26, 2010

It’s Not Us Versus Them; We Are All in This Together

By Dr. Evelyn Higgins

Washington is under the false impression that all it will take is a new tax, a new czar or a new bailout to fix health care in America - that the problem is US versus THEM. All eyes will be on Washington on Wednesday for the State of the Union to see and hear the new 'answer' to our health care ills. The problem is that the real solutions are not even on the drawing board. The problem is that we don’t have our problem defined. The problem is that we don’t have a health care crisis at all, but rather a problem in how we think about health care. The problem is that the administration wants a government-run bureaucracy that will dictate and define prevention and treatment. We are all in this together and we need to have positive solutions - positive for everyone, not a few. Positive solutions for what 'We the People' want to see. [more...]

Massachusetts Voters Decided to Make a Stand, But Is It Enough to Save American Healthcare?

By Dr. Elaina George

It has become clear that health care reform in its present state has nothing to do with delivering quality healthcare to the American people. The idea of universal coverage, with protection against insurance company wrongs (e.g., denying patients for pre-existing conditions and limiting the insurance company’s ability to deny coverage when you really need it) has been the sheep’s clothing cloaking a bill designed to destroy our healthcare system. In short, the proposed healthcare reform will doom us to a future that has the potential to make us sicker by limiting our access to screening exams such as mammograms, and limiting our access to physicians while making us pay more for the privilege. The vote in Massachusetts was a stand against those in the government who are bent on telling us that they know what is best for us. I have been astounded by the complete contempt in which those in power hold the American people. A majority of the people in this country think the healthcare reform effort is going in the wrong direction. Although the vote in Massachusetts made it clear that there was major opposition to the current bill, I have doubts that the voices of the majority will be heard and this debacle will be stopped. [more...]

Monday, January 11, 2010

Are Total Body Scanners Safe? The Jury Is Still Out

By Dr. Elaina George

A few weeks ago we were told that CT scans and mammograms can increase the risk of cancer. Since the rush to deploy the new total body scanners in our airports has been a topic of hot debate. There has been a burning question that has not been answered that needs to be. If CT scans and mammograms are no longer considered safe, what makes the total body scanners safe to use? The technology used in the full body scanners is either backscatter X-ray or millimeter waves both use a form of radiation call terahertz photons (T-rays). T-rays are a form of infrared energy that lies between radio waves at the low-end and microwaves at its higher end. It may be non-ionizing unlike X-rays; however, the energy is able to penetrate tissue, clothing, paper, plastic, wood and ceramics among other things. The TSA Web site represents the full body scanner as a safe method of screening. However, not only are we giving up our privacy, we are also playing Russian roulette with our safety. [more...]

Monday, January 4, 2010

Healthcare Reform: Bending the Cost Curve on the Backs of Patients

By Dr. Elaina George

After reading Bob Herbert’s column on how the Senate’s version of the healthcare reform bill is nothing but a tax hike that will adversely affect the middle class, it struck me how really awful this bill is for patients. Divide and conquer is a time honored technique used to advance an agenda especially when it is unpopular, and the Senate played into our worse instincts. It sounded great to tax the “fat cats” who have the best health insurance policies to pay for extending coverage to those without health insurance. The way it has been framed, it seems that the wealthy have somehow been gaming the system and denying precious pieces of the health care pie to those who cannot afford insurance. [more...]

Big Pharma Wins Again

By Dr. Evelyn Higgins

The stakes are high. In an industry that understands money prevails and common sense is a lost virtue, big pharma willingly spent $50 billion last year on advertising and over $20 billion on lobbying to make sure their interests remained untouched by the new administration. Today, it appears the industry continues to be brilliant and they played their cards just right, bought off the right people, and once again money prevails. Last October, the now President Barack Obama was campaigning hard to make his new home 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. As he spoke to America, his tale sounded like this: “then we’ll tell the drug companies thanks, but no thanks for overpriced drugs” and “we’ll allow low cost drugs from places like Canada” referring to keeping everyone honest for a better country with a better health care system. We bought it - hook, line and sinker. Wow, was that the smoothest fairytale ever heard about health care and the making of fiscal responsibility for a better America. [more...]

Monday, December 21, 2009

Government is Cause of High Costs of Health Care

By Dr. Elaina George

The reality about the health care bill is that the government's insertion into healthcare has led to the high costs that we are living with today. It began when the Medicare reimbursements to physicians were disconnected from the costs of delivering quality healthcare. For over 10 years the reimbursements for physicians has dropped every year while the cost of supplies, malpractice premiums and overhead expenses have continued to rise. This is the underlying engine for the cost shifting to both insured and self pay patients that we have seen over the years. It has become an untenable situation leading physicians to seek paid positions in hospitals, form large single and multi-specialty groups, opt out of the system and move towards a concierge model or leave the practice of medicine completely. Overall, this has led to a fracture in the doctor patient relationship, and a rise in the number and clinical expansion of providers such as physician assistants and nurse practitioners in an effort to fill the gap left by the physician's need to see an ever increasing patient load per day to keep the doors open. [more...]

Dr Elaina George is a Board certified Otolaryngologist. She graduated from Princeton University with a degree in Biology. She received her Masters degree in Medical Microbiology from Long Island University, and received her medical degree from Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. Dr George completed her residency at Manhattan, Eye Ear & Throat Hospital.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Practicing Gratitude Daily

By Dr. Evelyn Higgins

November is a reflective time of year, one packed with beauty, splendour, wonder and tradition - a perfect time to ponder gratitude. Whether you are seasoned in the art of gratitude or a novice spending time developing this skill, you will reap huge benefits. The emotional and physiological benefits are numerous. Being thankful and holding that feeling for just 15-20 seconds can actually reduce the stress hormones in your body, relax the coronary arteries and increase the blood supply to your heart. Another bonus, which we are all concerned about today as we face the H1N1 swine flu is that being grateful can actually increase your immune system. Doesn't this sound like a skill that you should spend some time investing in? By contrast, the use of anti-depressant medication has nearly doubled over the last 10-year period from 1996-2005. Currently, 10 percent of the population over the age of 6 is taking some kind of psychotropic drug. Is being "medicated" the new normal? [more…]