February 9, 2012

Goldstar Museum holding Memorial Day open house

Vintage military equipment at Iowa Goldstar Museum. The Iowa Gold Start Military Museum is hosting an open house today for Memorial Day and as part of the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the creation of Camp Dodge.

Retired Colonel Russ Bierl, the director of the Gold Star Museum says those who visit the open house will see a showcase some of the many things they have for display, including current and past military equipment.

There will also be reinactors from World War One and World War Two. They set up the open house in the new Freedom Building Armory, as work is currently underway to renovate and expand the museum building. He says it will be an 18,000 square foot addition that will allow them to show off large equipment, such as the Cobra helicopter, the M-1-5-1 jeep and a personnel carrier, that they have not been able to display in the past.

The state took over the land near Johnston for Camp Dodge on April 12th of 1909, and the open house is one of several events to celebrate the centennial of the facility. The Gold Star museum was established there in 1985 and is the only federally-recognized repository for military artifacts in the state of Iowa.

Bierl says museum is a state facility and it is free to visit the museum. They museum is normally open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday. For those who want a real "taste" of life in the military, there’s a free breakfast today. He says it starts at 5 a.m. with S-O-S "Stuff on a Shingle" breakfast that’ll be served until 9 a.m. The museum open house is free and all you need is a photo I-D to show at the gate of Camp Dodge to get in. The open house runs through four o’clock today.

Propane prices drop

Those who filled up the propane tank on their camper or barbecue grill for the summer have been finding it takes less money than it did last year. Department of Natural Resources energy analyst, Tommi Makila, says the drop in propane prices has been slow in coming.

He says wholesale prices dropped last fall, but many dealers had already locked in their prices prior to the summer. Makila says the old contracts have expired and we’re seeing the result.

Makila says the prices have been going down. The D.N.R. survey found propane selling for $1.33, down 82 cents from the same time last year.

 

Hospice industry decries Medicare cuts

The president of a group representing the nation’s hospice care industry says one of Iowa’s two senators is supporting a bid to rescind a rule that cuts federal payments to hospices.

Don Schumacher, president of the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, says last year the Bush Administration enacted a rule which cut payments to hospices for treatment of elderly patients who’re on Medicare.

"We’re trying to make consumers aware all around the country that hospice care, which is one of the most successful choices for care at the end of life, is experiencing some potential difficulty in that as the Bush Administration left office last year they instituted a regulation that’s cutting hospice reimbursement by $2.2 billion," Schmacher says.

Specifically, Medicaid payments for hospice care were cut by just over four-and-a-half percent.

"We did an economic survey of our members over the last couple of months and it shows that even without this rate cut the economic picture right now has hospice programs struggling ’cause of the tremendous costs and the reimbursement really, essentially being on the low end as it is," Schmacher says, "and this is an additional cut to us which will cost us dramatically."

Congress reversed the reduction in Medicaid payment rates for hospice care for this year, but Schmacher’s group is now lobbying congress to keep hospice care rates the same for the next two years. Iowa Senator Tom Harkin has signed onto a letter, urging the Obama Administration to make the move. Hospice groups are asking Iowa’s other senator, Chuck Grassley, to join the effort to keep hospice care payments for Medicare patients the same for the next two years.

"It’s quite a bit of change for programs to lose," Schmacher says.

According to Schmacher, it makes economic sense for Medicare patients to choose hospice care.

"A study came out of Duke University two years ago and it shows that for every patient admitted to hospice, we save the Medicare system about $2200 to $2500 when compared with patients of similar disease and life trajectory," Schmacher says. "…Everybody who goes through hospice, for the most part, feels as though they received the opportunity to say good-bye in the most appropriate way possible."

The Hospice and Palliative Care Association of Iowa represents 74 hospice agencies providing end-of-life care at 103 different facilities in Iowa. Schumacher leads the national group which represents about 80 percent of the hospices in the United States.