NEW: The Biden administration will offer bonuses to doctors who "create and implement an anti-racism plan" under new rules from the Department of Health and Human Services, which also reward doctors for "trauma-informed care."

freebeacon.com/biden-administ…
Effective Jan. 1, Medicare doctors can boost their reimbursement rates by conducting "a clinic-wide review" of their practice's "commitment to anti-racism." govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR…
The plan should cover "value statements" and "clinical practice guidelines," according to HHS, and define race as "a political and social construct, not a physiological one"—a dichotomy many doctors say will discourage genetic testing and worsen racial health disparities.
The "rationale" for the bonus, the new rules read, is that "it is important to acknowledge systemic racism as a root cause for differences in health outcomes between socially-defined racial groups."
Such premises have found a receptive ear in the Oval Office. Hours after his inauguration, President Joe Biden signed an executive order launching a "whole-of-government equity agenda." The new bonus scheme, HHS stresses, is "consistent with" this order.
It follows a series of steps by the Biden administration to integrate "anti-racism" into government policy: in November, for example, the Department of Homeland Security listed "diversity, equity, and inclusion" as one of its top two priorities, ahead of "cybersecurity."
HHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The new rules update Medicare's Merit-Based Incentive Payment System, a scoring rubric that determines eligible doctors' reimbursement rates.
Congress set up that system in 2015 to reward clinicians for high-quality, cost-effective medical care—and to penalize them for providing unnecessary, costly services.
Doctors had been billing Medicare for services "regardless of how necessary they were," said the Manhattan Institute's Chris Pope, who worked on the legislation as a Hill fellow. Sold as a way of controlling costs, the payment reform passed with broad bipartisan support.
"Republicans who voted for [the scoring system] weren't voting for this," @CPopeHC explained. "The idea that this would be used as a tool of racial policy never came up."
But the scoring system did reward "improvement activities" that advance "health equity," creating a mechanism for HHS to inject ideology into medical compensation.
The new rules add "anti-racism" plans to the list of such activities, which are broken up into "medium" and "high-weighted" categories. "Anti-racism" plans will fall into the second weighting, giving doctors extra incentive to implement them.
Medicare is one of the most expensive programs in the US and has been growing more so over time. In 2020 alone, it cost nearly a trillion dollars. Efforts to lower the price tag, such as the 2015 payment reform, have produced administrative headaches and bureaucratic bloat.
MedPAC, the independent federal agency that advises Congress on Medicare policy, has called for the merit-based payment system to be repealed, arguing that its complicated rules have little relation to medical outcomes and saddle doctors with unnecessary paperwork.
"No one went into medicine to check all these boxes," Rita Redberg, a cardiologist on the commission, said at a public meeting in 2017.

modernhealthcare.com/article/201710…
The new improvement activities could exacerbate this regulatory burden, especially on small clinics. According to HHS, one public comment on the rules stated that "anti-racism" plans "would be easier for larger, more established practices than smaller or solo practices to adopt."
The agency said it "disagree[d]" that the bonus would have a disparate impact because a "small or new practice could tailor the activity to their context."
Clinics can also boost their reimbursements by implementing "a Trauma-Informed Care Approach to Clinical Practice," which seeks to "avoid re-traumatizing or triggering past trauma."
That includes "multi-generational trauma, whereby experiences that traumatized earlier generations, such as the genocide of Native American tribes, are passed down" to subsequent generations.
In 2018, the New York Times science section called the evidence for multi-generational trauma "circumstantial at best," saying it "falls well short of demonstrating that past human cruelties affect our physiology today." nytimes.com/2018/12/10/hea…
Medicare has always straddled the line between medical and social policy, Pope noted. By conditioning payments on compliance with civil rights law, the program played a key role in desegregating Southern hospitals in the 1960s.
In that sense, Pope said, the new payment scheme is "in tradition of how Medicare has operated since the outset."

But, he added, "the world in 1965 is very different from the world of 2021."

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More from @aaronsibarium

16 Dec
This would be much less of a worry if more people were vaccinated, which is why I do not find it scandalous to pass (some degree of) moral judgment on the willfully unvaxxed.
That the public health authorities have thoroughly discredited themselves provides a partial excuse for irresponsible behavior. It does not justify it.
I do not expect or want conservatives to embrace a formal policy of medical triage based on vaccination status, or even to support mandates.

I do want them to say, calmly but clearly, that the vast majority of unvaccinated Americans are doing something irrational and immoral.
Read 4 tweets
14 Dec
NEW: Boston University is requiring all students and faculty to affirm that they should "intervene" if a woman is complimented on her husband or encouraged to have children, guidance transmitted during a mandatory Title IX training this semester. 🧵

freebeacon.com/campus/boston-…
The training included multiple-choice questions that had to be answered correctly in order to complete it. Some questions were empirical—"How often do you think people make false allegations?"—while others asked about the appropriate course of conduct in a given scenario.
Faculty who did not complete the training would "not be eligible for merit-based salary increases," the school said in an email, with further penalties possible for "continued non-compliance." Students who did not complete it would "be blocked from registering next semester."
Read 25 tweets
12 Dec
I am sympathetic in principle to (certain) Covid restrictions, and to (certain) critiques of ossified Reaganism. But Covid poses a real problem for conservatives trying to define themselves in opposition to the Reaganite Right.
Even if you like lockdowns, the FDA, NIH, and CDC have spent the last two years vindicating, over and over again, every imaginable warning about government incompetence and bureaucratic malevolence. It’s hard to look at Covid and think: “see, the government CAN do things.”
There are counterexamples, of course. Warp Speed was triumph (though private corporations did most of the leg work), and the US did some of the most aggressive economic stimulus in the world. But these exceptions seem to prove the Reaganite rule.
Read 8 tweets
4 Dec
To hear the media tell it, the emergence of the Omicron variant in South Africa is the direct result of "vaccine hoarding" by Western countries. As @DrewHolden360 and I explain in the Free Beacon, this narrative is mostly false.

freebeacon.com/coronavirus/th…
@DrewHolden360 Five of the eight countries from which the Biden administration has suspended travel have pumped the brakes on new vaccine shipments because the countries have more doses than health officials can administer. That's a tragedy, but it's not due to vaccine hoarding.
Vaccine hesitancy is widespread across Africa. A recent survey that spans five West African countries found that 6 in 10 people were vaccine hesitant—compared with 13 percent or less in France, the United Kingdom, and other parts of Europe and 27 percent in the United States.
Read 14 tweets
3 Dec
NEW: The dean of Yale Law School authorized the email condemning second-year law student Trent Colbert for his use of the term "trap house." The revelation suggests she has been downplaying or deliberately obfuscating her involvement in the scandal.

freebeacon.com/campus/report-…
The revelation comes amid a contentious review of Gerken's deanship. Gerken vowed in October not to "act on the basis of partial facts" and tasked Yale Law School deputy dean Ian Ayres with assembling a report on the incident.
In a follow-up email that appeared to summarize the report, Gerken said that the administration's message condemning Colbert was inappropriate and implied it had been sent without her permission.
Read 12 tweets
29 Nov
SCOOP: The two accrediting bodies for all US medical schools now say that meritocracy is "malignant" and that race has "no genetic or scientific basis"—positions many doctors worry will lower standards of care and endanger lives.

freebeacon.com/campus/doctors…
The Liaison Committee on Medical Education, which accredits all medical schools in North America, is cosponsored by the American Medical Association (AMA) and the American Association for Medical Colleges (AAMC).
Those are the same groups that on Oct. 30 released a controversial guide to "advancing health equity" through "language, narrative, and concepts."

Yes, the same guide everyone was mocking on twitter the other week.

ama-assn.org/system/files/a…
Read 27 tweets

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