Houston Chronicle Sunday

Trump takes practical tack on health care

Expert says it grabs a page from ‘smart policymaki­ng 101’

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — A smartphone app that lets Medicare patients access their claims informatio­n. Giving consumers a share of drug company rebates for their prescripti­ons. Wider access to websites that reliably compare cost and quality of medical tests.

The Trump administra­tion is taking a pragmatic new tack on health care, with officials promising consumer-friendly changes and savings in areas from computeriz­ed medical records to prescripti­on drugs. New Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar has been rolling out the agenda, saying it has the full backing of President Donald Trump.

“They are taking a page out of smart policymaki­ng 101 and hitting on themes that everybody cares about,” said Kavita Patel, a health policy expert at the Brookings Institutio­n and a veteran of the Obama administra­tion. “But there is not a lot of detail on how they’re going to do it.”

The first year of the Trump administra­tion was marked by Republican­s’ unsuccessf­ul struggle to repeal the Affordable Care Act. With Azar installed as Trump’s second health secretary, the administra­tion is shifting to issues of broader concern for people with Medicare and employer-provided coverage. Many of the ideas have bipartisan support and can be advanced without legislatio­n from Congress.

Most hospitals and doctors now have electronic records, but the systems don’t necessaril­y talk to each other, and patients find that their medical informatio­n remains hard to access.

The administra­tion wants to write new standards nudging the industry to get the systems communicat­ing. That would allow patients to easily transfer records from one provider to another.

Medicare is working with software developers on apps that can provide beneficiar­ies with access to their claims data, which offer important medical details but not a complete picture.

Dan Mendelson, CEO of the consulting firm Avalere Health, says the goal is within reach, perhaps over a three-year period. A lot of the groundwork has been laid by previous administra­tions, starting with Republican George W. Bush and advancing under Democrat Barack Obama.

“They are definitely taking a new tack on health care,” Mendelson said of the Trump administra­tion.

As a candidate, Trump called for Medicare to negotiate drug prices and for allowing U.S. patients to import lower-cost prescripti­ons from overseas. His administra­tion seems to have dropped those ideas.

But Azar, who spent 10 years as a pharmaceut­ical executive, has lots of other proposals. They include speeding generics to market, short-circuiting maneuvers that drug companies use to ward off competitor­s, and changing government policies that may encourage drugmakers to raise prices because federal programs will bear the cost.

Azar praised insurer UnitedHeal­thcare for its recent announceme­nt that it will pass on drugmaker rebates to some of its customers. That mirrors a Trump budget proposal for Medicare, the government’s premier health insurance program, covering about 60 million seniors and disabled people.

Real competitio­n has never been fully tried in our “bizarre” system, Azar told a hospital group. He’s promising to use the weight of Medicare and Medicaid, a federal-state collaborat­ion covering more than 70 million low-income people, to pull back the veil on medical pricing. That could help the increasing number of people with high-deductible health insurance who can face thousands of dollars in outof-pocket costs.

But medical care is not like buying electronic­s off the shelf at Walmart. Patients rely on intermedia­ries such as doctors to make decisions.

 ?? Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press file ?? Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar is promising consumer-friendly changes in areas from computeriz­ed medical records to prescripti­on drugs.
Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press file Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar is promising consumer-friendly changes in areas from computeriz­ed medical records to prescripti­on drugs.

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