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“Challenges facing US health care”

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Assuring effective health care to a population is a challenge for every society. As care options become more complex – and expensive – the challenges increase.

In the US both the organization and the financing of health care are perennial issues in public discussions, political campaigns and among social policy researchers. Basically there are two distinct but intimately related concerns – providing access to care and paying for that care. There is widespread agreement that when folks are sick or injured they should receive appropriate care. Disagreements emerge, however, in deciding how to pay for that care.

I believe it is instructive to look at the experience of other wealthy developed countries that have similar challenges. Doing so is actually quite sobering.

Using data from the Commonwealth Fund, a respected independent research organization, we can compare US experience with that of Sweden, Australia, France and Canada. These countries differ significantly in aspects of culture and geography. They do, however, all guarantee health care to 100% of their population. They spend approximately $5000 per capita (range $5447 to $4965). In the US the expenditure is $10,586 per capita and approximately 10% of the US population have no form of health care coverage. Life expectancy in each these countries exceeds that of the US – 82 yrs. (range 82.0 to 82.6) compared to a US average of 78 yrs. Recently the US life expectancy has actually gone down.

An area of particular concern in the US is maternal mortality – death related to child birth. In a modern society birthing mothers should not be dying. Nonetheless, maternal mortality in the US is higher than in any of these countries and it has gotten worse. US rates currently are 3X higher than Canada, 4X higher than the UK and 10X higher than Australia.

In some areas US performance is quite good. Outcomes In the treatment acute myocardial infarction (heart attack), stroke and some types of cancer in the US are significantly better than in comparable countries.

A troubling feature of care in the US is that all too often there is inadequate coordination between different parts of the care system. This leads to inefficiency and often poorer results. To further complicate the situation, patients, fearing high costs, often put off seeking care. Delayed care increases the risk of both poor outcomes and increased expenditures over the long run.

A contributor to high costs that has gotten relatively little attention is the complexity of US administrative and billing procedures. Providers (physicians, hospitals, therapists, etc.) have to document – and often justify – every service provided. Commonwealth Fund estimates are that administrative outlays account for as much as 1/3 of all health care expenditures. No other comparable country comes close to that rate.

There are differences between countries in patient populations, utilization of technology, etc. Researchers, however, have concluded that the single biggest difference between the US and others is that prices charged in the US are substantially higher.

How did all these problems develop? I believe that a major factor is that we have, with a few exceptions, consistently treated health care as a commodity to be bought and sold in the same manner as other consumer goods. The underlying belief has been that traditional market forces will insure efficiency, effectiveness and cost control. It has not worked.

A clear example of this failure is right here in South Dakota. In eastern South Dakota we have intense competition between two major health systems. Given that, traditional market analysis would predict that our costs would be competitive. The reality is quite the opposite. In November 2022, Forbes magazine listed South Dakota as having the most expensive health care in the nation.

Yes, there is intense competition but it is not focused on price. Competition is primarily on range of services, etc. In fact, some folks fear low cost care will be inferior even though lower cost can be a sign of just the opposite – prompt diagnosis, appropriate intervention and avoidance of complications.

The US population – our families, friends and neighbors – deserve effective and efficient health care delivered at an affordable cost. We clearly are not there. We need careful analysis coupled with serious policy discussions free of the polemics which tend to dominate today’s discussions. We have a long way to go. But, it is important that we start.

This article was previously published in SD Searchlight.
Tom Dean, MD is a retired family physician who practiced for over 40 years in Wessington Springs, SD and a past member of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC). Dr. Dean is a recent inductee into the SD Hall of Fame. Follow The Prairie Doc® at www.prairiedoc.org and on Facebook featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc®, a medical Q&A show providing health information based on science, built on trust, streaming live on Facebook most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.

KU News: Exhibition ‘Black Writing’ opens Aug. 19 at Spencer Museum of Art

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Exhibition explores connection between contemporary art and History of Black Writing
LAWRENCE — A new show opening Aug. 19 at the Spencer Museum of Art explores the power, politics and complexities of language in contemporary Black culture. The exhibition “Black Writing,” featuring works by artists including Paul Stephen Benjamin and Dread Scott, ties in with the 40th anniversary of the KU-based History of Black Writing. The free public exhibition will be on display through Jan. 7, 2024.

Dole Institute of Politics, Bipartisan Policy Center announce partnership
LAWRENCE – In honor of the 100th birthday of the late Bob Dole, the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas and Washington, D.C.-based organization Bipartisan Policy Center announce plans to create an ongoing programmatic partnership that fosters bipartisan engagement and civility in future generations of leaders. “We are excited to work with our friends at BPC in Washington to bring the nation’s top policy experts and legislative leaders to the Dole Institute to engage with undergraduate students here at KU and, eventually, across the state,” said Audrey Coleman, Dole Institute director.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Jon Niccum, KU News Service, 785-864-7633, [email protected]
Exhibition explores connection between contemporary art and History of Black Writing
LAWRENCE — At the start of the pandemic, Atlanta-based artist Paul Stephen Benjamin initiated a daily project called “Black is Beautiful.” It involved sitting down and typing these titular words over and over. But if, for instance, someone walked into the room or the radio was on, stream-of-consciousness thoughts bled into the text.
“Under his instruction, we turned it into a graphic covering two massive black walls in the gallery with black text on top that reads ‘Black is Beautiful,’” said Joey Orr, the Mellon Curator for Research at the Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas.
“But embedded are different references to Black Kansas history: Wilt Chamberlain, Charlie Parker, Oliver Brown, Nicodemus, The Wiz …”
The prominent pieces serve as anchors of “Black Writing,” which opens Aug. 19 at the Spencer Museum. The show functions as both a contemporary art exhibition celebrating Black culture and an exploration of KU’s History of Black Writing (HBW) research project.
“I definitely wanted to avoid an exhibit that was all text-based visual artworks. There are certainly some examples of that. But the exhibition really tries to include a broader spectrum of things like song lyrics, family lore, AI generation, cultural coding and methods of erasure,” said Orr, who co-curated the exhibition with Ayesha Hardison, KU associate professor of English and of women, gender & sexuality studies.

When assembling the exhibition, the pair not only had to find the unifying relationships between written and visual art forms but also strove to activate reading, writing and observing in a way that nurtures what they term “multiple encounters.”
“For something as rich and complex as ‘Black Writing,’ it’s been very challenging to fit our vision and all our ambitions into one exhibition. But it was important for us to put HBW’s efforts to preserve and celebrate Black writing in conversation with the museum and artwork,” said Hardison, who serves as the HBW director.
Artists who will showcase new and recent works also include Bethany Collins, Jamal Cyrus, Stephanie Dinkins, Fahamu Pecou, Carrie Schneider and Dread Scott. The New York–based artist Scott provides new artwork titled after a song popularized by Nina Simone.
“‘I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free’ was just made about a month and a half ago,” Orr said. “It’s a gorgeous piece with a winged figure and gold foil in the background. As you walk in, it hangs above the door like an icon.”
Several special events will take place during the exhibition’s five-month run. From 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 23, artist Benjamin will be on site in the gallery, where he’ll sit in front of his typewriter and perform the “Black is Beautiful” meditation, followed by an opening reception. From Nov. 29 to 30, there will be a marathon reading of the KU Common Book in the museum gallery. This year’s book is Octavia Butler’s “Parable of the Sower,” which corresponds with a painting the Spencer commissioned by Atlanta-based artist Fahamu Pecou.
“As the KU Common Work of Art, it’s directly in conversation with the KU Common Book,” Orr said.
The reading will coincide with a visit by Pecou, who will give a talk about his painting Nov. 30.
KU’s History of Black Writing is an interactive research center with the mission of exposing students, instructors and audiences to reading, studying and teaching literature by Black authors. This year marks its 40th anniversary.
“HBW is always asking how we can bring our work to a broader audience,” Hardison said.
One approach, she said, involves trying to incorporate the digital aspects of HBW into the “Black Writing” exhibition. This has manifested in an opportunity to explore an interface used for searching HBW’s digitized works; the interface is a partnership with the Chicago Text Lab at the University of Chicago.
“In embracing the digital aspects of HBW, we wanted to not only represent the center’s archival media but also to make laptops available in the exhibition for visitors to use and browse some of the database,” Hardison said. “In thinking about the broad history of Black writing, the exhibit nods toward HBW’s use of digital tools and the potential evolution of writing.”
“Black Writing” is free and open to the public. It will be on view through Jan. 7, 2024.
“When people come to the Spencer Museum, they will recognize first of all how HBW is a really important research center at the university that’s doing incredible work that we should all be really proud of,” Orr said. “But also they’ll understand that the artists are important researchers themselves who are contributing to our knowledge of so many subjects.”
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Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.


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Contact: Maria Fisher, Dole Institute of Politics, 785-864-4900, [email protected]
Dole Institute of Politics, Bipartisan Policy Center announce partnership

LAWRENCE – In honor of the 100th birthday of the late Bob Dole, U.S. senator from Kansas from 1969 to 1996 and Republican senate leader from 1985 to 1996, the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas and Washington, D.C.-based organization Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) announce plans to create an ongoing programmatic partnership that fosters bipartisan engagement and civility in future generations of leaders.

“We are excited to work with our friends at BPC in Washington to bring the nation’s top policy experts and legislative leaders to the Dole Institute to engage with undergraduate students here at KU and, eventually, across the state,” said Audrey Coleman, Dole Institute director. “Our organizations both recognize that bipartisan compromise is the foundation of policymaking in a democracy, and we’re proud to promote that value together in new generations.”
John Richter, BPC’s Governing and Civics Project director, said, “It is entirely fitting that BPC joins with this highly regarded institute established by one of our founders. Senator Dole devoted his entire life to service. While he vigorously embraced the ‘R’ after his name, above all he considered himself an ‘American’ — and understood that driving our diverse nation forward requires collaboration and compromise. BPC launched our Campus Partnerships Program this year to help the next generation of leaders appreciate and operationalize this principle, and there is no better place to do that than the Dole Institute.”
The Dole Institute and BPC have partnered in the past, most recently in April 2023 when the Dole Institute hosted former U.S. senators Trent Lott and Tom Daschle to discuss their careers and practical bipartisanship during a public interview program.
The Dole Institute was dedicated July 22, 2003, at the University of Kansas on Dole’s 80th birthday. Home to the personal archives of both former lawmakers Bob and Elizabeth Dole, with a museum facility on par with the U.S. presidential libraries, the Dole Institute has been a vibrant political forum promoting civil discourse, civic engagement and idea exchange across the political spectrum for 20 years.
The Bipartisan Policy Center is a mission-focused organization helping policymakers work across party lines to craft bipartisan solutions. By connecting Republicans and Democrats, delivering data and context, negotiating public policy, and creating space for bipartisan collaboration, BPC helps turn legislators’ best ideas into durable laws that improve lives. Since 2007, the Bipartisan Policy Center has helped shepherd countless bills across the finish line.

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KU News Service
1450 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
[email protected]
http://www.news.ku.edu

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

Roots of discord (5)

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john marshal

 

Last of five articles on the history of trouble in the Kansas Republican party

At the last general election, party affiliation among registered voters in Kansas was split:
Republicans, 858,429;
Unaffiliated, 565, 871;
Democrats, 503,746;
Libertarians, 23,053.
To understand politics in Kansas is to grapple with two states in one ‒ rural and urban ‒ and the persuasions that rise in each of them.
There are 200,000 more Democrats and independents than Republicans, and yet Republicans are elected to the state legislature in massive majorities. That dominance comes from a strong conservative persuasion in the state’s rural counties and farm cities.
It’s different for the state’s five metropolitan counties, which elect nearly two-thirds of the 125 members of the House of Representatives and 40-member state Senate. In the 2022 election for the House, Johnson, Shawnee, Douglas, Wyandotte and Sedgwick elected an even split ‒ 38 Republicans and 38 Democrats.
The other 100 counties ‒ rural cities and farm country ‒ provided Republicans a veto-proof majority, electing 47 Republicans and two Democrats, marking their overall House predominance, 85-40.
The pattern holds for the Senate and its four-year terms. In 2020, Democrats came only from metropolitan counties. The Republicans’ 29-11 majority includes ten rural Republicans who tilt the senate’s power balance.
Although Republican power comes from the rural vote, the party is ruled by urban leaders from Johnson and Sedgwick Counties and heavily prompted by out-state cause lobbies. Well-heeled advocacy groups and policy institutes draft their heavyweight legislation, the sponsors not listed because they prefer to operate behind the scenes.
The legislators’ mission is less about hearing constituents than selling them hot issues that generate attention and money. Local concerns are sidetracked; constituents are told that the crusades of distant legions are a better fit for them than their own ideas.
Conniptions over voter fraud and dirty books roll over such local concerns as declining school enrollment, vacant towns, hospitals on life support and rising property taxes.
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Across the state’s vast rural stretch, its sense of isolation and distance, man and nature remain hard at work in the production of food and fiber. Elections report this as Republican country. In truth it is Landon and Eisenhower country, its root conservatism modified and reinforced by Frank Carlson, Bob Dole and Nancy Kassebaum.
The spotlight may reflect a callous party image but the life force here defies stereotype. Beneath the veneer’s sharp edge are durable citizens who put community interests on a plane with their own interests; quality of life is more important than standard of living. Fierce independence remains cherished. An old Republican philosophy insists that responsibility in private life and community life is as great as the responsibility of government to shape the life of communities.
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And yet elected Republicans ignore local interests while bowing to a more provocative national agenda.
Example: For the past 20 years Republican legislatures have denied more than $1.5 billion in relief ordered for property taxpayers and demanded by state law. This revenue-sharing statute, dating to 1937, requires that 3.63 percent of state sales tax revenues be consigned to a Tax Relief Fund and returned yearly to local governments.
The idea was to stabilize and reduce property levies, a reward for locals collecting state taxes. Routinely ignored, this withheld city-county tax relief has been estimated recently at more than $100 million annually.
The legislature since 2003 has suspended the transfer each year, sluicing it into more favored political causes. Meanwhile, local taxes increase.
Republican leaders defend the theft by accusing local governments of incompetence. Last month Senate President Ty Masterson, an Andover (Wichita) Republican, dismissed the transfer, saying it “never worked as intended.”
Masterson believes cities and counties would waste their share. Most local governments, he told the Kansas City Star, “failed to use the money to reduce property taxes, but rather used it to spend more money.”
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Local issues are sidetracked for national crusades ‒ vaccines, gay athletes, abortion,” woke”, renegade teachers, multiple conspiracies and immigrant invasions, among others.
Across Kansas, genuine topics wait: Health care, hospital closings, population loss, college tuition, nursing shortages, water depletion, taxes, Medicaid expansion, affordable housing, child care, and more.
In times past, legislators were entrusted to define and address concerns of their constituents.
So long as hot-button issues ‒ abortion, book bans, woke, guns ‒ remain heated for the national show, the money rolls in for the advocacy groups. Common purpose is no longer cost-effective. Attempts at moderation (problem solving) threaten the ghost grievances and campaign spigots of cause lobbies and their politicians.

 

KU News: Study identifies best ways of helping teachers adopt supports for students with autism

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Contact: Mike Krings, KU News Service, 785-864-8860, [email protected], @MikeKrings
Study identifies best ways of helping teachers adopt supports for students with autism
LAWRENCE — Most teachers will work with students with autism in their careers, often not in a separate special education setting. Evidence-based practices exist to help those educators assist students with accessing content and developing skills. A new study from the University of Kansas and University of Washington sheds light on the best ways to train teachers so they understand the practices and can implement them in their classrooms.
Research has shown more than a dozen practices to be effective at helping students with autism in general education settings. However, little is known how best to implement them in schools. Maria Hugh, assistant professor of special education at KU, led a study that surveyed and interviewed more than 85 teachers on the most effective methods of professional development and training to ensure the practices are used properly, effectively and with support for the educators.
Survey respondents indicated active learning, collective participation, content focus, cohesion and sustained duration were the most effective methods of delivering training. Professional development can be delivered in multiple ways, though, and webinars and conferences were shown to be the least likely to help educators use the practices to aid their students with autism.
“We wanted to learn directly from educators about what works for them,” Hugh said. “These were general education, special education and paraeducators telling us about what practices they use with learners with autism in general education settings and what helps them or what hinders them.”
Previous research has shown that including students with disabilities in general education settings has positive educational outcomes for all learners, yet it is not always evident how best to include practices to aid students with disabilities in such settings.
“We’ve learned a lot in the last 10 years about what practices work well with kids with autism. But they’re not always studied with representative populations,” Hugh said. “And there are at least 20, which is a lot for teachers to keep up with.”
Therefore, understanding the most effective ways of delivering training on the practices can help ensure teachers understand the practices and how to use them, as well as ensuring school budget allotments for professional development are used effectively.
The study, published in the journal Teacher Education and Special Education, was written with Michael Pullman, Mahima Joshi, Daina Tagavi and project primary investigator Jill Locke of the University of Washington; Kaitlyn Ahlers of the Geisel School of Medicine and Alyssa Hernandez of the University of Pennsylvania.
The opportunity to work with colleagues to understand practices and having support locally showed to be the most important factors in adoption of evidence-based practices. Active learning showed to be another effective approach. Teachers who had the opportunity to practice the methods and apply them in work situations predicted successful implementation.
Support also proved critical. When teachers had ongoing opportunities to learn more about a practice, and it was coherent with school or district policy, new practices were more successfully implemented. Coaching and support was also key, as teachers who had coaches or mentors who could help them understand and answer questions about new evidence-based practices consistently rated highly as well. Some respondents indicated coaching availability was key, as they only had access to coaching after they had encountered serious challenges with a new practice. On-site experts and support in the classroom also rated highly.
Coaching, pre-service training and workshops offered by the district or school proved critical in successfully implementing new practices for learners with autism. Study results also showed that only receiving training on a method once was not as effective. When maximizing use of school’s limited resources, these approaches with ongoing support and active training within the school can be effective, as opposed to sending one or two teachers to an educational conference to learn about new practices, Hugh said.
“It’s great to help kids reach their full potential,” Hugh said. “This is one way we can do that. Research has shown one of the best ways to get someone to use a new practice is to show them that it works. We need to help educators have usable evidence-based practices in schools and help support their use of those to improve children’s outcomes.”
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KU News Service
1450 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
[email protected]
http://www.news.ku.edu

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs