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Stuck between a Rock and an Empty Insulin Vial

While there may be some debate as to who deserves credit for originally developing insulin in the 1920s, there is no doubt that its serendipitous discovery had a life-saving impact. In an attempt to provide affordable treatment to the public, the researchers opted to sell the patent for insulin to the University of Toronto for $1. The researchers later collaborated with a pharmaceutical company to develop insulin due to limited ability of the university to develop it on its own. Once made primarily from animal sources in limited selection, several insulin options are now available, and each product differs slightly in manufacturing and design to better mimic the lacking endogenous insulin in patients with diabetes. Today, insulin is marketed primarily by three manufacturers, and counterintuitive to its length of time on the market as a primary treatment, insulin costs continue to increase. One assessment reported that annual spending per person with type 1 diabetes nearly doubled between 2012 and 2016, and the reported cost of one specific brand of insulin increased by 668% from 2001 to 2015. There are several purported reasons for the high costs of insulin, even resulting in lawsuits and a push for legislative involvement.

The high cost of insulin is a hurdle for many patients and the entire healthcare system, especially considering a reported 1.2 million Americans have type 1 diabetes and a portion of the nearly 30 million Americans with type 2 diabetes are insulin-dependent. So, what happens when a medication necessary for life continues to increase in price? Patients may resort to acquiring insulin from less expensive resources outside of the United States (US). In addition, some patients will continue to use insulin vials beyond their stable use (i.e., beyond 28 days once opened) or share insulin pens. Patients may ration their insulin for their own use or sell the remaining insulin to others, as the temptation for potential income may be too enticing for those with limited financial means. One study reported that the rise in costs has resulted in nearly 25% of patients not taking insulin as directed. Lack of blood glucose control resulting from these measures could be life-threatening.

Taking insulin access to another level, one project aims to develop a protocol for insulin production that would circumvent intellectual property concerns, enabling manufacturers to produce more affordable insulin. Theoretically, an open protocol for manufacturing of insulin could result in community biolab production or somewhat “home-brewed” insulin, but there would still be several costly regulatory hurdles for each product. Even if crowdfunding could support these “biohacked” insulin barriers, would the resulting product be the best treatment for all patients? Would it still result in a high-cost product?

Historically, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has regulated insulins as small molecule drugs; thus, the few generics available are actually branded competitors and considered “follow-on” insulins. The FDA has announced insulins will be transitioned from the small molecule pathway to the biologics pathway effective in March 2020 as part of their Biosimilars Action Plan. According to acting FDA Commissioner, Dr. Ned Sharpless, after this transition, the FDA will be able to license biosimilar and interchangeable insulin products that may be substituted at the pharmacy, potentially leading to increased access and lower costs for patients.

While the idea for “generic” (cheaper) insulin is becoming more of a reality, what will patients do in the meantime for a disease state in which the treatment is not optional? Will interchangeable biosimilar insulin finally be the solution for reversing the constant upward trajectory of insulin prices?




Caring for Yourself after an Organ Transplant

For many patients, receiving an organ transplant may feel like the end of a painful, stressful journey. In fact, the transplant serves as the starting point of a new chapter of life which will require lifelong management. There are many factors that can impact an individual’s health after an organ transplant. Leading a healthy, vibrant life requires commitment from patients, caregivers, and providers.

The main goal of any post-transplant treatment is to prevent organ rejection by the body. To help reduce the risk, there are a variety of treatments available. These drugs, often called immunosuppressants or anti-rejection medications, help the body to shield the newly-transplanted organ from the body’s immune system. In doing so, these drugs help to minimize the risk of transplant rejection.

It is very important that these medications are taken consistently every day as prescribed. It is also crucial to not skip or miss doses. Coordination with the transplant team is a must before making any changes to these medications or how they are taken. Even though some of these medications may be associated with side effects, they can be managed. It is crucial to tell a healthcare provider about any side effects experienced.

Possible side effects from transplant medications include:

  • High blood pressure
  • Weight gain
  • New-onset diabetes
  • High cholesterol
  • Increased risk of bone disease
  • Kidney disease
  • Increased risk of infection

Advances in post-transplant treatments have made it possible for patients to live healthy, vibrant lives. That said, patient management programs may be very valuable to patients whose ability to take their medications as prescribed has a direct impact on the long-term success of their transplant.




Helping Families In Crisis

Care is core to every service we deliver and everything we do at Magellan Health. Through our work, we are listening, learning and using our collective insight to make a difference in the lives of those we serve.

Wyoming’s High Fidelity Wraparound program is just one of many examples where Magellan team members, who have lived through similar experiences, are returning the favor and providing the care and concern they consider themselves fortunate to have also personally received.

High Fidelity Wraparound is a voluntary planning and care coordination process for children and young adults (ages 4-20) with complex behavioral health conditions. High Fidelity Wraparound’s community-based solutions and planning process bring people together from different areas of a family’s life to form a team. The team, led by a Family Care Coordinator, creates steps to help youth stay in their homes, schools and communities.

Through collaboration with the Wyoming Department of Health, Division of Healthcare Financing (Medicaid), Magellan serves as the Care Management Entity for the High Fidelity Wraparound program, setting the rules and providing training for everyone involved in the process.

One of Magellan’s certified Family Care Coordinators, a person responsible for managing a High Fidelity Wraparound team, recalls the story of a recent family she worked with. “In December, the family’s generator went out and without power they had to leave their home. As a result, the family had to move which was highly disruptive and caused a lot of tension within the family as their culture is centered on independence. In addition, it was upsetting to a young member of the family as the unfamiliar environment became very troubling.”

Living away from home negatively impacted progress the youth was making before having to move. Relationships were being affected and everything for this youth became more difficult. The family requested help to get back to their property through Magellan of Wyoming. Their Family Care Coordinator said, “When we found out our flex funds were approved to help get them home, [mom] cried and I did as well. This family finally felt hope, and there could now be a clear plan to help them move back home.”

Tammy Cooley, senior operations director at Magellan Healthcare of Wyoming, said, “We are honored to provide a means for a family to get back to their home, and keep their youth with them. Sometimes, we see families in situations where youth cannot remain at home. When we can fill a need and keep a youth safely at home because it’s the right thing to do, we will do that. The work we do, at the very core, is about the success of youth and families being able to meet their needs in positive ways.”




Helping Your Children Build Inner Strength

The single most important thing you can do to help your children is to show that you love them no matter what. Knowing that you are close by and available gives your children a sense of security. Although your children’s world is expanding, you remain their primary influence.
Always remember that you are a role model.

Your children learn by watching you. So be sure that your actions and behaviors teach them how to:
• Show love and affection.
• Control anger.
• Work with other people rather than against them.
• Stay calm.
• Look forward to tomorrow.
• Express feelings.
• Be brave.
• Laugh.

Safety and security
To build inner strength, children need to feel loved and safe. They need a family that is close, that spends regular time together, and that offers a safe haven as they grow.
• Make sure that your child feels safe. Your child is more likely to feel safe and secure if you are dependable, consistent, respectful, and responsive. These qualities are especially important for parents of preschool children, because these children are gaining a basic sense of trust in themselves and in the important people in their lives.
• Encourage safe exploration. Children need to explore. Children who explore learn new skills and how to solve problems. They learn that actions have consequences, and that causes have effects. Offer a variety of things to play with, read, create, and build. It might be hard, but try not to limit your child because of safety fears. Instead, do what you can to keep the child safe as he or she explores the world.

Social support
• Help your child build social skills. Teach your child by showing your acceptance of others and not gossiping or saying mean things about other people.
 Provide peer contact. Playing with other children even 1 day a week gives children opportunities to learn and practice important social, emotional, and language skills. Children learn to share, cooperate, and negotiate as they interact with their peers. Around age 9, many children successfully form close friendships. Forming these relationships helps children learn sensitivity to the feelings of others.

Confidence and independence
• Encourage independence. Children learn a sense of independence by practicing skills and doing things for themselves, such as getting dressed or brushing their teeth. Children who are not allowed to perform tasks on their own get the message that they are not capable.
• Help your child build self-esteem. Parents have the greatest influence on a child’s belief about himself or herself. Letting children know that they belong, are doing well, and are contributing can help them build healthy self-esteem.
• Reduce stress. Teach your child how to manage stress. Controlling stress increases resilience.
 Stress Management: Helping Your Child With Stress
• Deal with fears. Understand that your child may become extremely interested in scary subjects or images as a way to overcome them. Help your child as much as you can by answering questions and providing reassurance as needed.
• Recognize and develop special talents. To build healthy self-esteem, all children need to feel that they can do at least one thing very well. Pay attention to what your children like to do. Help them develop those skills, or find out where they can learn more.
• Build thinking skills. One way to help your child build thinking and reasoning skills is to get involved in your child’s school. Volunteer if possible, work on having good relationships with teachers and other staff members, and show your interest in what your child is learning.

Caring about other people
Empathy is an important part of building inner strength. It means that a child can recognize and appreciate how others are feeling. It means that a child cares when others feel bad and that the child wants to help them. You can help your child learn empathy by demonstrating it in your own life and talking with your child about it.

• Volunteering. Do volunteer work. If you can, take your child with you.
• Sharing. Teach your child the importance of sharing.
• Helping. Let your child help you with household chores, and show how happy it makes you to have help.

Helping others can help children learn that they have the power to make others feel better.

Self-control and teaching your child what’s right
 Set limits. Setting limits for your children shows them that you love and care about them. Make sure that your rules are reasonable and that your children understand them. And follow through on any consequences you have established for failing to follow rules.
 Use good discipline techniques. Discipline is the teaching of polite and appropriate behavior. Effective parenting techniques encourage your child’s sense of responsibility, nurture self-esteem, and strengthen your parent–child relationship.
• Teach self-control. Children learn by example. Teach appropriate behavior. Avoid physical punishment for behavior that is not appropriate.
©1997–2019, Healthwise, Incorporated
Read the full article here: https://www.healthwise.net/magellanhealth/Content/StdDocument.aspx?DOCHWID=aba5885#aba5




The Importance of Social Connections

What are social connections?

Social connections are the relationships you have with the people around you. They may be close, like family, friends, and coworkers, or more distant, like people you know casually. They can be as close as next door or so far away that you only connect with them by telephone or through the Internet.

Your network of relationships may be big or small. One or two close family members or friends may be all you need to feel supported and valued. Whether your circle is big or small, the important thing is that you are there for each other.

Why are social connections important?

Resilience, the ability to bounce back after stressful situations, is strengthened when you give and receive support. Building positive relationships with people can make a difference in how resilient you are. Try to connect with people who have a positive outlook and can make you laugh and help you. The more positive your relationships are, the better you’ll be able to face life’s challenges.

The support you get from your social connections can add to your feelings of meaning and purpose in life. These, in turn, add to your resilience. Happy, resilient people tend to be more connected to the people around them. Resilient people know that they can depend on the strength of their family and friends when the going gets tough.

Remember that giving support is just as important as getting support. You count on your social connections for support, but they also count on you. Ask others about their families, jobs, and interests, and help them when you can. Don’t always focus on your challenges or talk about yourself. Know when it’s time to listen or just enjoy your friends’ company. Giving support to others builds the social bonds that help make you resilient.

 How can you make more social connections?

There are many ways you can start building positive relationships:

  • Invite a friend who makes you laugh, and go to a funny movie.
  • Send an encouraging email or text message to someone who’s going through a hard time.
  • Look for a faith community that shares your views. It may also have its own organized social groups.
  • Call a food bank or hospital and ask about their volunteer programs.You can also connect with people through social media on the Internet. Many people interact more freely with people they can’t see face-to-face. Online forums about specific interests can be a good choice for people who cannot leave their homes or are shy or self-conscious.

©1997–2019, Healthwise, Incorporated

Read the full article here: https://www.healthwise.net/magellanhealth/Content/StdDocument.aspx?DOCHWID=abl0295

 

 




PTSD MYTHS

Overview

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental health disorder. Many people believe things about mental health disorders that aren’t true. Here are some myths about PTSD.

Myth: PTSD is in your head. It does not exist.

PTSD does exist. It is a recognized mental health problem that has been studied for many years. You may get PTSD if you have lived through a traumatic event that caused you to fear for your life, see horrible things, and feel helpless. Strong emotions caused by the event create changes in the brain that may result in PTSD.

PTSD has not always had the same name. It also has been called combat fatigue or shell shock.

Myth: Only soldiers or people in war zones get PTSD.

Anyone who sees or goes through a traumatic event can develop PTSD. A traumatic event is a horrible and scary experience. During this type of event, you think that your life or others’ lives are in danger. You feel that you have no control over what is happening. These events include violent crimes, sexual assaults, childhood neglect or abuse, and natural disasters such as hurricanes or earthquakes. Your job also could expose you to traumatic events. First responders at a traumatic event, such as firefighters and police, can develop PTSD.

Myth: You should be able to move on after a traumatic event.

The strong emotions you may feel during the traumatic event can create changes in your brain that result in PTSD. You may not be able to “move on” because of this. It’s important to remember that PTSD is a medical condition. People with other health conditions, such as cancer, deal with the condition as best they can. The same is true for PTSD.

Myth: PTSD always happens right after the traumatic event.

PTSD symptoms can develop at any time after a traumatic event. Your symptoms may start soon after the event, or you may not have them until months or years later. They may come and go over many years.

Myth: People with PTSD cannot function.

PTSD can cause severe symptoms, but counseling, medicines, and support all help people adjust. People with PTSD have jobs and relationships. They enjoy life and are active members of their communities.

To view this article on Healthwise, click here

©1997–2019, Healthwise, Incorporated

 




Quick Tips: Getting Active as a Family

When the whole family is involved in physical activities together, children learn that being active is fun and makes you feel good. And busy parents can combine family time with exercise time.

Try these tips for getting everyone in the family up and moving together:

Getting started

  • As a family, make a list of activities you’d like to do together.
  • Make sure the activities are things everyone can do and enjoy.
  • Keep a family physical activity log, or hang a calendar on the wall.
  • Try to plan one or two family activities a week. For ideas, see the suggestions below.
  • Once a month, plan something special that involves being active, like a trip to the zoo, a day hike, or camping.
  • Use a safe backpack, stroller, or bike trailer so that smaller children can be included in family activities.

Walking

When family schedules get really busy, going for a walk may be the easiest thing you can do together.

  • Start with short walks that everyone in the family can do. Add more distance gradually. Younger children can ride a bike or a tricycle. You can pull a wagon in case little ones get tired.
  • Scavenger hunts can keep children from being bored on a walk. Keep in mind a list of “treasures” they can find, such as a red leaf, a blue house, a black dog, or an out-of-state license plate.
  • Use a phone app or get pedometers, and work on increasing the number of steps you take on your family walks. Start with a goal of 10,000 steps a day.
  • Register the whole family in a family fun run/walk in your community. If the event is for charity, have your family walk through your neighborhood to collect pledges.

Outdoor activities

  • Go for a bike ride.
  • Join your children in old-fashioned games like hopscotch, tag, jump rope, and hide-and-seek.
  • Get involved in family-friendly sports like skiing, skating, swimming, and tennis.
  • Play a daily family basketball game in the driveway or at a playground.
  • Take up miniature golf or flying-disc golf.
  • Fly a kite.
  • Pick up trash at a local park.

Indoor and rainy-day activities

  • Have a family dance night. Share dances from each generation, and teach each other to do them. Or learn folk dances.
  • Create a new dance or exercise routine to a favorite song. Have a different child choose the song each week.
  • Go to the mall, and count how many laps you can walk as a family.
  • Have a hula hoop contest.
  • Set up a fun obstacle course in the basement, garage, or spare room.

General rules

  • Limit TV, video games, and computer time.
  • Don’t use food as a reward for meeting activity goals.
  • Make physical activity a priority. Don’t let things get in the way of family activity time.

To view this article on Healthwise, click here

©1997–2019, Healthwise, Incorporated

 




Leveraging Technology to Improve Patient Engagement

Patient management programs are important for both payers and patients. Successful patient management programs can improve health outcomes and quality, increase member enrollment, and improve member satisfaction, all of which support the health plan. The goal of a successful patient program is to improve the quality of medication use and the overall health and wellness of the patient, and this can be achieved through patient engagement and empowerment.

Knowing all of this, the challenge for a patient management program is often getting patients to participate. Traditionally, this has occurred through live and/or automated telephone calls and mailed letters to the patient, and additional faxes to the patients’ providers. These approaches have varied engagement results, and there are growing concerns that there is a ceiling to how many patients can be engaged through these modalities.

Adults are working longer into life than ever before, making them harder to reach and talk to during traditional business hours. In addition, letter campaigns become more and more costly as postage rates continue to rise, and a growing interest in “going green” makes mass mailings appear wasteful.

Newer technologies and the prevalence of mobile devices present new opportunities to engage patients, particularly the millennial generation that are now becoming patients themselves.

Today’s patient likely has a smart phone and may also have a tablet and/or wearable device, all of which provide a means to communicate with his/her provider(s). With that in mind, here are several ways that patient management programs can evolve using technological advances:

Text Messaging – Text messages have become the go-to method of communication for many people. Responses can typically be received in a matter or minutes, and even “busy” patients can text when a phone conversation may be a non-starter. Beyond one-way alerts and reminders to the patient, two-way exchanges and even live chat features are available.

Video Conferencing – For patients who may be not wish to text, online video capabilities allow for face-to-face counseling between clinicians and patients, even if that consultation isn’t in a conventional setting. As opposed to telephone calls, video chats allow for perception of non-verbal cues, assessment of physical symptoms, and even walkthrough tutorials, like injection training.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) – AI can range from predictive modeling and analysis used to predict potential adherence issues, to apps that can monitor, track, and measure adherence through features like facial recognition, digital pills, and more.

Video on Demand – Consumption of video content via mobile devices is as common as ever, and there are services available which can provide patients with additional drug information that can accessed whenever, wherever. These videos can reinforce talking points covered during consultation and provide a compliment to education provided through patient management programs. It also allows for information to be shared in a paperless way.