Medicare’s Birthday: Open Letter to the President and Leadership from Health Professionals, Lawyers and Advocates for Medicare for All
This Open Letter was published to honor Medicare’s 47th birthday. It comes on the heels of the Supreme Court upholding the Affordable Care Act and increasing threats to Medicaid and Medicare. The letter argues for the expansion of Medicare to all people in the United States and sees Medicare as the solution, not the problem.Open Letter to the President and Leadership from Health Professionals, Lawyers and Advocates for Medicare for AllJuly 30, 2012Dear Mr. President, Secretary Sebelius, Majority Leaders Reid and Cantor, Speaker Boehner and Minority Leaders McConnell and Pelosi,
This Open Letter was published to honor Medicare’s 47th birthday. It comes on the heels of the Supreme Court upholding the Affordable Care Act and increasing threats to Medicaid and Medicare. The letter argues for the expansion of Medicare to all people in the United States and sees Medicare as the solution, not the problem.
Open Letter to the President and Leadership from Health Professionals, Lawyers and Advocates for Medicare for All
July 30, 2012
Dear Mr. President, Secretary Sebelius, Majority Leaders Reid and Cantor, Speaker Boehner and Minority Leaders McConnell and Pelosi,
Drug firm to pay Maine $1.4M for overcharging MaineCare
Posted July 27, 2012, at 2:35 p.m.
AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine will receive $1.4 million as part of a national settlement with a drug wholesaler accused of inflating prices for prescription medications and overcharging state Medicaid programs.
Maine Attorney General William Schneider on Friday announced Maine’s share of the $151 million settlement reached with McKesson Corporation, one of the country’s largest drug wholesalers. The settlement is with Maine and 28 other states.
“The state paid artificially high prices due to the manipulation of the drug reimbursement system by this corporation,” Schneider said in a press release. “Through this settlement, MaineCare will receive restitution for those excessive payments.”
http://bangordailynews.com/2012/07/27/health/drug-firm-to-pay-maine-1-4m-for-overcharging-mainecare/print/
GOP Says Coverage For The Uninsured Is No Longer The Priority
GOP Says Coverage For The Uninsured Is No Longer The Priority
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/07/27/157439331/gop-says-coverage-for-the-uninsured-is-no-longer-the-priority
5:00 AM PDT, July 25, 2012
Doctor Shortage Likely to Worsen With Health Law
By ANNIE LOWREY and ROBERT PEAR
RIVERSIDE, Calif. — In the Inland Empire, an economically depressed region in Southern California, President Obama’s health care law is expected to extend insurance coverage to more than 300,000 people by 2014. But coverage will not necessarily translate into care: Local health experts doubt there will be enough doctors to meet the area’s needs. There are not enough now.
Other places around the country, including the Mississippi Delta, Detroit and suburban Phoenix, face similar problems. The Association of American Medical Colleges estimates that in 2015 the country will have 62,900 fewer doctors than needed. And that number will more than double by 2025, as the expansion of insurance coverage and the aging of baby boomers drive up demand for care. Even without the health care law, the shortfall of doctors in 2025 would still exceed 100,000.
Health experts, including many who support the law, say there is little that the government or the medical profession will be able to do to close the gap by 2014, when the law begins extending coverage to about 30 million Americans. It typically takes a decade to train a doctor.
“We have a shortage of every kind of doctor, except for plastic surgeons and dermatologists,” said Dr. G. Richard Olds, the dean of the new medical school at the University of California, Riverside, founded in part to address the region’s doctor shortage. “We’ll have a 5,000-physician shortage in 10 years, no matter what anybody does.”
Medicaid After the Supreme Court Decision
Last week there were two disturbing reports about Medicaid, a program of health insurance for the poor that is mostly managed by the states and jointly paid for by the federal and state governments. The Congressional Budget Office predicted that states with a large number of poor people would not expand their Medicaid programs as required by the health care reform law now that the Supreme Court had made expansion optional. And a Harvard study unrelated to the court decision made it clear that a failure to expand Medicaid would likely doom thousands of low-income people to death or poor health.
Revising earlier estimates to take account of the decision, the budget office said that making expanded assistance optional could leave three million more people uninsured in 2022, saving the federal government $84 billion through 2022 because it would not have to subsidize their coverage.
The analysts made no effort to predict which states would or would not expand Medicaid. Instead, they looked at various factors that might influence the states’ decisions and predicted that some would not respond to even the extremely generous matching money that the reform law provided.
New Mass. law allows drug coupons for prescription drugs
If Obama loses the election, here’s why
By Drew Westen,
With 100 days left in the presidential campaign, perhaps the two most vexing questions in American politics are: How could President Obama possibly lose? And, how could he possibly win?
Americans are scared, angry and struggling. They used to talk about job satisfaction; now they talk about just holding on to their jobs. No incumbent since FDR has ever won reelection with unemployment numbers remotely resembling today’s. What voters feel about their lives and dreams in the months leading up to an election tends to stick to the president when they enter the voting booth. And right now what’s sticking to Obama isn’t good.
But it sure helps to face a candidate as uncomfortable in his own skin, as likely to say by accident what he really means and as wrong for the times as Mitt Romney. In an era when even conservatives are populists, enraged about the favors granted the rich and well-connected, Romney is running as a CEO who thinks his taxes are too high. Voters just aren’t warming up to a guy who enjoys firing people and attempts to woo the people of Michigan by referring to his wife’s “couple of Cadillacs.” If Obama offers what well-paid elites call a “jobless recovery,” Romney offers the only thing worse: a promise to restore the policies that led to the joblessness that made a recovery necessary.
So, beyond the anemic economy, why do the latest polls show the former Massachusetts governor in a dead heat with the president? Because Obama’s administration made three crucial errors that enabled the Republican obstructionism that has tied his hands for the past two years, with GOP leaders shooting down any idea — even if it’s one of their own — that might have helped the president strengthen the economy. And those mistakes have made possible what was unimaginable in January 2009: that a private-equity baron lacking a sense of noblesse oblige, and preaching the gospel of deregulation and lower taxes for the rich, might actually win the presidency four years after those policies led to the collapse of the U.S. economy.
Worries grow as healthcare firms send jobs overseas
Some healthcare companies are starting to shift clinical services and decision-making on medical care overseas, primarily to India and the Philippines.
By Don Lee, Los Angeles Times5:00 AM PDT, July 25, 2012
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-healthcare-offshore-20120725,0,4219801,print.storyNew health-care incentives create happier Maine patientsPosted July 29, 2012, at 6:46 a.m. To save money, doctors and insurance companies across the nation are dramatically changing the way they do business. As a result, tens of thousands of Maine patients — Medicare, Medicaid and privately insured — are beginning to see a change in their relationship with their providers. At the heart of it: Health care groups are putting greater emphasis on preventive medicine and paying more attention to patient safety and satisfaction. And the healthier and happier those doctors keep their patients, the greater their financial reward. “We’re trying (to be) more proactive instead of reactive, health-focused rather than rescue-focused,” said Dr. Ned Claxton, medical director of Central Maine Healthcare‘s new accountable care organization and president of the medical staff. Doctors currently earn money by the patient and the service provided. A 15-minute office visit, for example, nets doctors a certain amount. The more patients a doctor sees, the more money the doctor gets, regardless of whether those patients get healthier or sicker, are happy or unhappy with their care. Health care reform’s Affordable Care Act requires Medicare this year to establish a shared-savings program with doctors to improve care and cut costs. Because healthy patients cost insurance less than sick ones, and preventive care costs less than crisis or chronic care, the idea was to give doctors an incentive to keep patients healthy by giving those doctors a piece of the savings. Insurance Companies Gaming the System – Don’t Be FooledHas your insurance company called you recently to ask you to sign up for a wellness or disease management program? Has that same company told you it’s a free service to policyholders and promised you that they do not share the information with the departments and people who administer your benefits and claims? You – like me and millions of other Americans – are being scammed. Follow the money, my friends, and do not believe for one minute that the same company that would deny medications, health treatments and care to you would suddenly have your best interests at heart. It’s the money. It’s always been the money. As soon as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) was passed, we were all told that finally the insurance companies would have to spend more of the premium dollars they collect on actual healthcare. Look it up here for the nitty-gritty. In short, The Kaiser Family Foundation writes, “The provision requires most insurance companies that cover individuals and small businesses to spend at least 80% of their premium dollars on health care (i.e. medical claims) and quality improvement, leaving no more than 20% for administration, marketing, and profit. Large group plans must spend at least 85 percent of premium dollars on health care. Insurers failing to meet these standards will have to pay rebates to consumers beginning later this year.” OPINION: the cost of care for Colorado's victims [2]One of the reasons Americans seem so willing to tolerate the fact that 50 million of us are uninsured and almost 30 million more of us are underinsured is that most of us who have coverage assume we are OK. That nothing truly catastrophic will happen to us, and that, even if it did, our insurance policies will pay our bills and keep us whole. Who would think that a decision to go see a movie on a Friday night could change our lives—and the lives of our families—forever? That we or a loved one, even with what we believed was decent coverage, might become a victim of violence that could leave us not only disabled for life but also potentially bankrupt and homeless? That random act of violence in Aurora, Colorado earlier this month could have happened anywhere in America, of course—or in any other country, for that matter—but among the world’s developed nations, we live in the only one where the families of some of the injured would have to face begging for money to pay the doctors and hospitals and keep the sheriff and his foreclosure papers at bay. Talk about American exceptionalism. This is one area where, sadly, we truly are unique. http://www.iwatchnews.org/print/10384
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