Category Archives: Children

Addiction: Twenty-first Century Style

Technology is wonderful, ever moving forward. Now that cigarettes and other tobacco products have been thoroughly discredited as nothing more than a dirty 20th Century addiction, the purveyors of nicotine addiction have developed the e-cigarette for the 21st.

None of that harmful tar. None of that distasteful, annoying smoke. Just pure pleasure, as innocent as sucking a straw.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is not convinced and is expected to issue regulations shortly.

E-cigarettes are a battery-powered device, about the size of a cigarette, that heats a nicotine-laced liquid into a vapor to be inhaled.

First, the FDA will not be able to regulate e-cigarettes as medical devices. That was decided by the DC Court of Appeals in Sottera, Inc v. FDA at the end of 2010. That means that restrictions will be similar to tobacco products rather than to nicotine patches.

Second, there will be considerable debate about the relative safety of e-cigarettes. While it is true that the tar and smoke is missing, it is unclear what the effects of the vapor components are both or the “vaper” and those around him.

A 2012 study at the University of Perugia (Italy) concluded:

The e-cigarette seems to give some advantages when used instead of the conventional cigarette, but studies are still scanty: it could help smokers to cope with some of the rituals associated with smoking gestures and to reduce or eliminate tobacco consumption avoiding passive smoking. However, the e-cigarette causes exposure to different chemicals compared with conventional cigarettes and thus there is a need for risk evaluation for both e-cigarettes and passive steam exposure in smokers and non smokers.

In August, 2013 respected researcher Igor Burstyn of the Drexel University School of Public Health issued a study financed by The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association (CASAA), an advocacy organization of the e-cigarette industry. Burstyn’s work and presentation is rigorous, but it is a technical study, not the peer-reviewed journal article considered the gold standard among researchers. While finding that the contaminants are generally safe, Burstyn:

  1. does not evaluate the risk of nicotine exposure to the person “vaping.”
  2. notes the difference in standards between exposure to a willing user and more stringent standards for an unwilling bystander.

Burstyn report

This approach to secondhand vapors provides a legal and philosophical foundation for applying existing tobacco regulation to the newer nicotine delivery systems.

Third, the e-cigarette industry is following the lead of the tobacco industry in its advertising. Note the remarkable parallels in Cigarette Flashbacks, a presentation by three Democratic members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

Fourth, there is widespread concern about the marketing and increased consumption of e-cigarettes by teenagers. Ninety percent of adult smokers had begun smoking in their teen years. The issue is well summarized by Health.Howstuffworks.com Flavoring the vapor with chocolate, caramel, strawberry, and bubble gum suggests a conscious attempt to lure youth into early addiction for later profits. Similar concerns have been expressed about the flavorings in hookah smoking as well. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently issued a report on the percentages of teenagers using flavored tobacco products, nearly half of the consumption is flavored.

In the Jewish tradition, consumption of dairy and meat products together is forbidden. Technically, it would be permitted to have soy cheese on a hamburger, but the rabbis have forbidden that as well, because the appearance of violation by believers might encourage others to violate the prohibition.

It is clear that the appearance of smoking cigarettes should be treated no differently than the consumption of cigarettes. The difference between suggesting “Reach for a Lucky instead of a sweet,” and “E-cigarettes have no tar or smoke,” is minimal.

The FDA should treat e-cigarettes as tobacco products, and the several states should follow the examples of Utah, North Dakota, New Jersey, Arkansas, and the District of Columbia in banning indoor use in public places. Additionally, sales to minors should be banned as well as Internet sales since age-verification is not possible on line. In short, we need to bring these products under the same regulations as their tobacco cousins–NOW.

The US health care debate

Writing about the political dance in Washington, DC is not a pleasant task. I intend to skirt around the edges of it. It is marginally about health care and largely about the relative power of the two major US political parties.US_capitol

Nonetheless, since it has brought the Obama health care plan back to the top of the national political agenda, it is worth recalling some basics.

First, the principle of insurance is that a catastrophic risk is spread across as many people as possible making advanced contributions so that funds are pooled and available to any individual suffering that risk. For example, individuals buying life insurance at a young age receive a favorable premium rate and are likely to contribute for a long time, much longer than the time it would take to accumulate the death benefit, but for those individuals not so fortunate, the monies are there in a pooled risk fund to be distributed to the family of someone who dies prematurely. The risk of an expensive illness with accompanying medical costs is similar.

Second, millions of Americans have not had health insurance. Some of those are young, feel invulnerable and do not want health insurance. Others have pre-existing health impairments and have been refused health insurance. Still others do not receive insurance through their employers and cannot afford it on their own.

Third, there are negative consequences to our society for these uninsured:

  1. Those without insurance still must be treated when they get ill or have a motor vehicle accident.
  2. The young, less likely to be net expenses to a pooled risk fund, need to be part of the contributors under the principle of insurance
  3. Those denied insurance because of pre-existing conditions need to be saved from bankruptcy, and the hospitals need to be protected from having to serve them at no cost.
  4. Those who do not have insurance through their employers, who could not afford individual insurance policies, require a means to participate.

Fourth, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), commonly known as “Obamacare,” is an honest attempt to address those concerns, as well as reining in the ever-rising costs of medical care.

Fifth, the term “socialized medicine” is easily bandied by politicians, but there are two distinct areas of government involvement in health delivery that can more accurately be called “socialized medicine,” and “socialized insurance.” The US has both. Socialized medicine occurs when the government provides access to healthcare either directly through government clinics or through social insurance used in government health facilities. In that case, the health care providers are government employees. Foreign examples are the National Health Service of the United Kingdom. NHS-logoIn the US the system of hospitals under the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Socialized insurance is when the government supplies health insurance but the healthcare practitioners are not government employees. Medicare is socialized insurance, as are the national health systems of Canada, France, Italy, and Germany. There are advocates for socialized insurance in the United States, under the banners “Medicare for All” and “Single-Payer.” There is no recognizable group that favors socialized medicine in the US–NONE.

Sixth, Obamacare is neither socialized medicine nor socialized insurance, because all of the providers are private, and all of the insurers are private. An early proposal to include a “public option” form of insurance was dropped. It is not surprising that Obamacare is completely privatized–it is a proposal in concept by that most conservative think tank, the Heritage Foundation. (More recently, it has taken a further turn to the Right by engaging former SC Senator Jim DeMint as President; however, it has always been quite conservative.) Its proposal was adopted, supported, and implemented by the Republican governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney. The theory was that the accelerating costs of healthcare could be addressed by a market system, and the government assumed the role of creating the market or even playing field for the insurance companies to compete for business.

Seventh, the individual mandate, which draws a lot of the political fire, was part of the original Heritage plan by Stuart Butler in a 1989 paper, and of the Romney plan. It is essential to the effectiveness of the system in two major ways:

  1. It makes the younger, healthier citizens participants, with the benefit of their consuming less than they contribute but not being a burden when struck by accidents or rare illness.
  2. More importantly, it makes possible the elimination of pre-existing conditions. If pre-existing conditions could not prevent obtaining insurance, no one would buy insurance until contracting an illness, and would then be assured of acceptance. Because the insurance would have to cover the illness, with no reserve built up, with no spreading of risk across the entire population per the insurance principle, the insurance would be nearly unaffordable with the premiums set at the level of the average illness since it would have to cover the risk. Pregnancy benefits are often rated that way in insurance policies since the benefits being paid are nearly assured.

Eighth, there is the issue of affordability. Enterprises with over 50 employees are required to provide insurance. Most already do, but these employers are a very small segment of the workforce, perhaps 10 percent. The rest of us are self-employed or employed by smaller enterprises. If they already provide health insurance that is fine, but under the individual mandate, if they do not, then anyone working there including the executives will have to fulfill the mandate by finding insurance on the exchanges, and by shopping for the level of coverage at a premium they can afford. Both affordability and insuring the young are addressed in part by requiring adults to be eligible until age 26 for insurance under their parents’ plan.

For those at the bottom of the pay scale, those who do not qualify for Medicaid, which can have very stringent asset limitations (in California, for example, having funds over $2,000 disqualifies one from Medi-Cal), those often called “the working poor” may be eligible for government subsidies. In addition, the federal government is offering states financial incentives to expand the Medicaid program to cover more of the working poor.

Finally, there is the issue of what is health insurance coverage? If we want to require people to buy it, we need to be able to say what is and what is not acceptable coverage, to avoid individuals and businesses buying something so minimal that it complies with the law but does not address the problem of access to health care. An individual buying a policy hat pays $100 daily for hospital care has not really bought insurance. So, the government through implementing regulations has stipulated what a minimum policy contains. This has raised issues of conscience for those who do not believe in one or more aspects of medical science as applied to health care.

The religious reservations are well-known in the United States. Among them are a preference for Christian Science practitioners among Christian Scientists, an avoidance of blood transfusions among Jehovah’s Witnesses, rejection of birth control measures among Catholics, as well as rejection of pharmaceutical and surgical interventions to prevent or abort a pregnancy among numerous denominations. The law has allowed a religious exemption for churches. The point of contention has been for practitioners who participate in commerce and do not wish to compromise their religious beliefs by providing the means for something they consider murder. From a public policy view, the problem is multiple:

  1. Recognizing that right by owners of businesses and organizations may deny access to some of their employees who feel equally strongly that obtaining those treatments is their right.
  2. Recognizing those rights by one group implies, under equal protection, recognizing such objections by all groups and individuals. That places the government in the powerful and unwelcome position of determining which religious beliefs are legitimate and entitled to protection, an intrusion into religion that most Americans would find offensive.
  3. Recognizing that right with respect to abortion, would open the possibility of recognizing objections to all forms of insurance. A business owner might claim religious exemption to providing any insurance, undermining the public purpose of the law.

In order to address these concerns, the law limits religious exemptions to religious institutions, such as places of worship. There are pending court cases that may change the way this challenge is addressed in order to comply with First Amendment considerations.

One theory of American government is that the states act as laboratories for the society and the nation, trying approaches, which, if successful, can be generalized. That has occurred here, with Massachusetts providing the laboratory. As the national experiment is just beginning, it is too early to tell whether the proponents or opponents of Obamacare have correctly analyzed its impact and future. Five years from now, it will be much clearer. I look forward to seeing that day and looking around to see what worked and what did not, what needs changing, what has been correctly changed, and what has not. I have often thought that politics is America’s most engaging indoor sport, and, at this moment, Obamacare is at center court.

Salt: Connecting the Dots

Some number of millenia ago our evolutionary forebears crawled out of the sea, carrying its salt flowing through their veins to ours. In the right amount, salt is not only good for us but essential to life.

That is not the same, however, as dumping salt on our food before tasting it or eating processed dinners, from the supermarket or from the nearest fast food franchise.

Most of us have long known that salt increases hypertension among salt-sensitive individuals.

Two sets of studies have come out, one widely publicized, the other well below the radar, that add concerns about excess salt consumption.

Researchers publishing in a recent issue of Nature have linked salt consumption to auto-immune disorders such as multiple sclerosis, psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, and rheumatoid arthritis. Unless you have a $200 annual subscription to Nature, you may wish to google “salt autoimmune” to read descriptions of the studies. Or, you may wish to simply click on these links to Medical News Today or The Huffington Post.

So, what are the dots to be connected? That’s where the second study comes in, the one with little publicity.

A presentation at the 2013 American Academy of Dermatology annual meeting in March found that individuals with psoriasis were more likely to have metabolic syndrome. They found that 30 percent of the psoriasis children had metabolic syndrome symptoms compared to the non-psoriasis group. There were not significant differences in Body-Mass Index (BMI), c-reactive protein, or endothelial cells

A 2012 study in South India found a higher incidence of metabolic syndrome among those with psoriasis. In this case:

Patients were diagnosed with MetS for having three or more South Asian Modified National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III criteria: abdominal obesity (waist circumference ≥90 cm for men, ≥80 cm for women); blood pressure, >130/85 mm Hg; fasting blood glucose, ≥100 mg/dL; hypertriglyceridemia, >150 mg/dL; or low HDL (<40 mg/dL for men, <50 mg/dL for women).

It’s the children–stupid!!

If poet William Wordsworth was correct that “The child is father of the man,” then we can expect some really fat men in the coming generation.

Based on data from high school students, the problem is, well, looming large.

Note that even where the trend is not statistically increasing, it is still increasing.

If lifetime habits are formed when we are young, then the target of our efforts should be clear.

Common wisdom is that the schools, from which these data come, are part of the problem and the solution. Because they are often under-funded, they accept money from food companies for placement of vending machines. There is widespread belief that snacks and sugary drinks in those machines are part of the problem of obesity. Some districts have put restrictions on what can be in those machines.

For example, here is a 2005 National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) summary

Whether those restrictions are sufficient to mitigate the harm is beyond the scope of this posting.

Then, there is the more basic question of whether the impact of vending machines is real or merely plausible. A study by Penn State researchers found no link between vending machines and obesity, contrary to the expectations of the researchers.

The scope of the problem and the accompanying political debate is well-described in the February 20, 2012 New York Times.

The challenge to our society, shown below, is clear even if the solution remains illusory.

us_obesity_trend_yrbs_91_11

The Safety of Our Children: Vaccinations

If there is one aspect of health we care most about, it is that of our children.

We are afraid to do the wrong thing, which might be doing something and might be doing nothing.

Vaccinations are the first major encounter our children have with the health care system.

By major I mean:

Under the recommended plan from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, children today are vaccinated against 14 infectious diseases, receiving up to 24 vaccines by their second birthday, and up to five in one office visit.

There has been controversy about the frequency of vaccinations, about the content of vaccines, and about the necessity of the vaccines at all in the absence of the diseases they protect against.

The last reported case of diphtheria in the US occurred in 2003.

The last reported case of polio in the US occurred in 1986.

I do not claim to know the incidence and severity of side effects and reaction to these and other vaccines.

Here is what I know:

  1. When a disease like smallpox was eradicated, the routine vaccination was halted.
  2. The diseases that we are vaccinated against have not been eradicated. We live in a small world: we travel to other countries, and others travel here. HIV/AIDS was brought here on a plane. We do not want to be like the Native Americans, wiped out by diseases from Europe because we were not vaccinated.
  3. The risk and incidence of reactions are minimal compared to the severity of an infectious outbreak.
  4. Science brought us the life-saving vaccines, not hunch or intuition.
  5. The Institute of Medicine of the National Academies has issued a report on childhood immunizations and found:
    1. the childhood immunization schedule is considered one of the most effective and safest public health interventions available to prevent serious disease and death. Furthermore, the committee’s review of the literature did not find high quality evidence supporting safety concerns about the immunization schedule.
    2. The committee’s efforts to identify priorities for recommended research studies did not reveal an evidence base suggesting that the childhood immunization schedule is linked to autoimmune diseases, asthma, hypersensitivity, seizures, child developmental disorders, learning disorders or developmental disorders, or attention deficit or disruptive behavior disorders.
    3. The committee found no significant evidence to imply that the recommended immunization schedule is not safe.

The bottom line: in all of our health care decisions we are playing the odds–life never affords us certainty. The odds favor vaccination according to schedule. Listen to your pediatrician–vaccinate your children.

What to do about fat kids?

Obese children tend to become obese adults.

Obese adults tend to get high blood pressure, diabetes, chronic back pain, heart attacks and strokes.

Some researchers in an article published in the August 13, 2012 edition of Pediatrics have a partial answer.

Competitive foods are those sold outside of the Federal meal program. The conclusion from the Full Report:

Laws that regulate competitive food nutrition content may
reduce adolescent BMI change if they are comprehensive, contain strong
language, and are enacted across grade levels. Pediatrics 2012;130:437–
444

What this means is that researchers have found something our state legislators and local school boards can do to slow the public health crisis of obesity among children.

But there is a problem—you knew that, right? Many school districts depend on the sales of snacks and sugary drinks to supplement the local school budget. Even if the wealthiest school districts could afford to remove the snack and drink machines, the poorer districts would face a Hobson’s choice: accept the machines and health risks or reject them at the expense of education.

Many states have been dealing with how to equitably share revenue among different school districts, allowing some redistribution of revenue in favor of the poorer districts without being confiscatory toward the wealthier districts. What is “equitable” is a highly charged political debate.

Even with the political caveat, it is reassuring to learn there may be things we can do, even without Federal intervention, to reverse the public health epidemic of obesity and its consequences.