9' * V» I • • • « December 8,1999 Page A3 (£hv Iporthuib (IHwruer Health/Education Portiani) flOberruer Oregon awarded grant to better coordinate Medicare, Medicaid CONTRIBUTED STORY for T he P ortland O bserver Oregon has received a $300,000 grant to pursue better ways to manage the federal governm ent’s two multi- billion-dollar medical programs - Medicare and Medicaid - to improve care and control costs. The focus will be on about 40,000 Oregonians who are eligible for both programs, accounting for about 15 percent ofbeneficiaries but about 30 percent o f costs. The program s, managed by the Federal Health Care Financing Administration, do not coordinate well with each other. Oregon has received the 18-month grant from the New Jersey-based R o b ert W ood Jo h n so n (R W J) Foundation to support planning, data collection and analysis. Oregon is one o f 12 RWJ project sites looking at integrating Medicare and Medicaid. The RWJ Foundation is the nation’s la rg e st p h ila n th ro p y d e v o te d exclusively to health and health care. “We will use this grant to develop m o d e ls o f m o re in te g ra te d , coordinated medical and long-term care to maintain and improve the health o f Oregonians who are elderly and disabled,” said Roger Auerbach, Senior and Disabled Services (SDSD) a d m in is tra to r in the O reg o n D epartm ent o f Human Services. SDSD and the DHS Office ofMedical Assistance programs are managing the project. As society ages, Auerbach said, Medicaid and Medicare costs are having more impact on state and federal budgets. “We have to deliver the most appropriate medical and long-term care to people in the most efficient manner possible to make our resources meet this increasing need,” he said. Medicare is the federal health-care program for people ages 65 and older and people with long-term disabilities, and is financed solely by the federal government; Medicaid, a program for low-income people, derives nearly a th ird o f its bu d g et from state governments. A u erb ach said co o rd in atio n is im portant because if an elderly M ed icare b e n e fic ia ry becom es impoverished, he or she will probably d ep en d on the state-supported Medicaid program that pays for long­ term care. (Medicare pays forneither long-term care nor for drug costs; Medicaid pays for both.) Auerbach said better coordinating Medicaid and Medicare can balance complex medical and long-term care needs such as prescriptions, physical therapy, personal care, nutrition and h o u sin g . “ T his can m ake the difference between someone staying in the community or going to a nursing home,” he said. Rhodes rewards two Oregon scholars A ssociated P ress As thousands o f families and educators waited to hear who the next Rhodes Scholars would be, Jo Cannon o f West Linn heard the good news _ twice. First, her son, Ben, a 1999 graduate o f Washington University in St. Louis, called to say that he had been awarded one o f the 32 coveted scholarships. Then the staff at Reed College, where Jo Cannon works for the Committee on Fellowships and Awards, called to say that Reed’s nominee, Derek Lyons of Portland, also had been selected. “Waiting for that phone call was just torture, but when it came, 1 felt calm,” Jo Cannon said. “I was just so happy.” Ben Cannon and Lyons were chosen from 935 applicants endorsed by 323 universities, the secretary o f the Rhodes Scholarship Trust announced. They will join an international group of95 who will receive two to three years o f study at Oxford University in England, including all university fees and a stipend, a total value o f about $25,000 a year. The two survived a rigorous, three- stage selection process that began with college endorsements earlier this year, followed by a state selection committee that narrowed the field on W ednesday. On Saturday, the final selection was made by eight district committees following personal interviews with a panel o f former scholars. In Minneapolis, Cannon and other applicants played Trivial Pursuit in a waiting room for hours before winners were announced. In San Francisco, Lyons paced in a similar waiting room. He said the process was tun, “very-scary, heart- pounding, clammy-hands kindoffun.” When the winners were announced, “I tried really hard not to pass out,” said Lyons, 21. "It was an incredible for T he P ortland O bserver Oregon Health Plan members smoke at a rate alm ost double that o f O re g o n ia n s as a w hole - so encouraging them to quit is especially important Now, an initiative to encourage doctor and dentists to advised O regon Health Plan members to quit smoking appears to be paying o ff a new survey fin d s th at O reg o n d o cto rs are encouraging Oregon Health Plan members to quit more often than doctors nationally or regionally. “We ’ re seeing our own version ofthe Great American Smoke-out in doctors ’ offices all across the state,” said Hersh Crawford, State Medicaid director in O regon D ep artm en t o f H um an Services. “ Our goal is to make the smoking conversation as much a part o f visit to the doctor’s office as having your temperature taken or your blood pressure checked.” Crawford said the survey found that 70 percent above those nationally or in the Pacific states. For some o f Oregon’s 17 managed care plans, the rate was as high as 82 percent, he said. Smoking-cessation programs have been an Oregon Health Plan-covered benefit since May 1998. The health plan enrolls about 360,00Oregonians. Forty-two percent o f health plan members smoke compared with 22 percent o f all Oregonians age 16 and older. “We know from research that people are more likely to adopt healthy behaviors if a physician recommends it,” Crawford said. He said health plans contact with the state health plan are encouraging both doctors and dentists to recommend smoking- cessation programs to patients who smoke. "Because smoking is the nation’s leading preventable cause of disease. The Joyce Washington Memorial Scholarship Fund Presents Les Schwab/Blazer Alumni vs. The Portland Observer's Cory Cougar’s Charity Basketball Game January 23, 2000 at 4 p.m. Join the celebration and see the Portland Observer family and friends take on the Portland Trailblazer’s Alumni Team. This benefit will create scholarship funds for those less fortunate and will create a monument to what Joyce Washington stood for...equal opportunity and an education for everyone. Self Enhancement Center Inc. 3920 N. Kerby Avenue, Portland, OR O regon H ealth Plan sm okers likely to be advised to quit CONTRIBUTED STORY honor just to be interviewed, but I didn’t even hear the names o f the other two candidates.” Lyons is a senior majoring in chemistry at Reed. He grew up in Pullman, W ash., and took classes at Washington State University while still in high school under W ashington’s “running start” program. He graduated as his class valedictorian but chose Reed College over Yale and Stanford because Reed staff responded to his e-mail inquiries quickly and warmly. He intends to study computer science at Oxford, specifically artificial intelligence and artificial life. Cannon, 23, is a 1994 graduate o f West Linn H igh. He plans to pursue a degree in politics, philosophy and economics at Oxford. He is considering a career in journalism, law or high school teaching. “ I want to make a difference in my community, and one ofthe most important ways you could do that is teaching,” he said. $3 Advance $4 Door Call Mark Washington for tickets or special group rates at 288-0033 disability anddeath,’’Crawford said." This is the most important thing we can do to improve Oregonians ’ health while also controlling health-care costs.” This practice by physicians has added benefits because doctors who advise Oregon Health Plan members to quit are presumably also advising other patients to do so as well, Crawford said. Crawford said the next steps would be to find out whether patients follow their physician’s quit-smoking advice and, if they do, whether they are successful in quitting. Oregon Health Plan members and o th e r O reg o n ian s m ay o b tain information about smoking-cessation programs by talking with their health­ care provider, managed care plan or by calling three state-run Quit Line toll free at (877) 270-STOP (Spanish: *77-2-NOFUMEorTTYU: 877-777- 6534) Get Your Tickets While They Last At These Locations: Johntae’s Imported Tobacco & Accessories 2535C NE. Alberta 331-1422 Mrs. C ’s Wigs 707 NE Fremont 281-6515 A Tisket A Tasket 1305 NE Fremont 7344.7344 Simply Cellular 3939 NE MLK Blvd. Suite 109 280-8000 FRESH oŒÿ WHY CHOOSE N A T U R E ’ S? ¿0-0&. a t tAe, di^eAesice. W ORD o n t h e FREE-RANGE GROWN CONFINED GROWING CONDITIONS VEGETARIAN DIET TYPICALLY FED A N IM A L FATS, BY-PRODUCTS & ANTIBIOTICS NEVER FED ANTIBIOTICS GROWN, PROCESSED & DISTRIBUTED BY ONE FAMILY &OUZ. 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