Naujienos

What is Rickets?

Publikavo: hectorgraves1959 January 23rd, 2010

Here's an interesting article I found about Rickets..

Rickets is a disorder that affects children, causing poor development of the bones in the skeleton. It is usually caused by an extreme and prolonged vitamin D deficiency.

The term rickets comes from the Old English word “wrickken”, meaning to twist or bend. Rickets was common during Victorian times, but nowadays the condition is rare. Rickets in adults is known as osteomalacia or soft bones.  The rest of the article can be found here.

Real Reform

Publikavo: hectorgraves1959 November 10th, 2009

Real reform

I know why insurance corporations are lobbying hard against any real health care reform in this country. The fundamental purpose of a health insurance company is to make a profit. Is it any wonder that they deny care and coverage, rescind coverage and charge high premiums? They don't want to see any major change, such as a single payer system, which would put them out of the picture.

What baffles me is why ordinary citizens aren't en masse demanding real reform. We don't seem to understand that we are pawns of the insurance companies in this profit-driven health care system. People worry that they won't have a choice in providers. Do we really have that choice now? How many of us have coverage that will only cover services provided by the insurance company's “preferred providers”? People worry that care will be rationed. Health care is already rationed based on job status, income level and even health status. How many of us have lost a job and therefore lost the insurance that went with that job. When we go searching for independent insurance coverage, we discover that there is nothing affordable. And if you have a “pre-existing condition” most insurance companies won't cover you, even if you can afford the premiums.

There is an answer to all of this: a single payer, not-for-profit system. For the first time ever, single payer laws will be debated and voted on by Congress. However, most of us have not heard about this because insurance companies have a lot of pull in Washington.

Under a single-payer system, everybody would be covered, regardless of income, job status, age or health status. You could go to any doctor you wanted without having to worry about co-payments, deductibles or premiums. All health care services are covered, including doctor visits, hospital stays, prescription drugs, long-term care, dental care, and mental health care.

The U.S. is the only advanced country in the world that does not have universal health care. The pay for the CEO of United Health Group in 2005 was $122.7 million. His salary that year could insure 34,000 people. That just makes me sick to my stomache. I would much rather have my money going towards providing access to health care for all people than going towards making huge profits for some CEO.

Insurance agents and the sluggish economy

Publikavo: hectorgraves1959 November 7th, 2009

Article by: Brian Barrier ~ Med South Health Plans

We all know that the economy has almost totally tanked. If you have money and are investing it, you probably think the economy is making a comeback. I hate to let you in on a little secret, but you better get ready for a serious plunge. Now, I'm not a negative person by any stretch of the imagination. But I do feel like I am responsible to let my fellow insurance agents know when something big is going to happen in the marketplace. Take your money and run!! The market is going to make another steep downturn soon and people that stay in the stockmarket are really going to suffer. The good news is that there has always been opportunity when this kind of thing happens. What I am suggesting to you is that you should create yourself an online sales center for insurance. It doesn't matter if you're selling health insurance, life insurance, annuities, med supp or any other kind of insurance. You can set yourself up now to really prosper over the next year or so. How? Well, let me just tell you. First of all you need to become appointed with insurance companies that offer online applications. If you take the time to learn internet selling now, then you can beat the rush of agents that will eventually be forced into this arena. By the time they get there, you'll be so far ahead of the game that you can always stay on top. At Med South Health and Life, we are currently implementing a system which allows agents to sell health insurance totally online. A real-time internet lead comes in, our computerized, automated phone dialer system calls the number instantly, and BAM! We get the customer before any of the other agents have a chance. You can also team up with companies that give you an affiliate link so you can put that on your own website and promote it. That's a great way to build a 24 hour cash machine! If you'd like to see an example, just go to www.healthinsurancemall.net. That's the site that we promote which allows consumers to compare plans from multiple carriers, get quotes and even apply for coverage online instantly! It's really very simple to do, you just need a little start-up cash to promote the site. If you are interested in getting a high commission contract with any of our carriers, go to www.medsouthagents.com and click the contact us page. If you would like to see other examples of sites you can go to www.affordablehealthinsurancequotes.us , www.brianbarrier.com , www.healthassurancenetwork.com or www.assurancenetwork.net. There are many ways for you to prosper during these tough times if you are willing to put in a little time setting up a few very simple websites and spend a little bit of money. Don't worry, if you can't figure it all out, feel free to contact me and I'll be glad to help. Don't wait until it's too late. Get your business in high gear today so you'll be prepared for tomorrow.

Dollars and cents of new health care legislation

Publikavo: hectorgraves1959 November 7th, 2009

An awesome article I found about the costs baked into the new health care legislation…

Dollars and cents of new health care legislation

Demand Dignity | Posted by: Anja Rudiger, November 6, 2009 at 2:30 PM

Patients not profit

While protesters have been occupying House Speaker Pelosi’s office, demanding a health care system that serves “Patients not Profit”, the House of Representatives is preparing to vote on the market-based health care bill introduced last week by Speaker Pelosi. It is not expected that the House leadership will allow a lengthy floor discussion, but the most recent news reports suggest that the promised vote on Rep. Anthony Weiner’s (D-NY) single payer amendment may be allowed. Meanwhile, Speaker Pelosi has presented the leadership’s additions to the bill in a so-called Manager’s Amendment, stating that this would strengthen provisions for “excluding insurers who put profits over patients from an affordable marketplace that will serve tens of millions of Americans.”

Does that mean the protesters demands have been met? Is this health care bill bringing us closer to realizing our human right to health care? Let’s recall that according to international legal standards, the human right to health requires that “health facilities, goods and services must be affordable for all. Payment for health-care services…has to be based on the principle of equity.”

The House bill aims to achieve affordability by subsidizing the purchase of an insurance policy for those earning between 150% and 400% of the federal poverty level, provided they don’t have employer-based insurance. In practice, this means someone with an income at the upper end of this scale would pay $5300 a year in premiums and up to $2000 a year in cost-sharing, amounting to around 17% of their income. At the bottom end of the scale, health care costs would be around 6-7% of a person’s income – which is still higher than a general income tax increase proposed by single payer health insurance bills.  Many immigrants would get no support at all, and anyone unable to afford such an insurance plan would be subject to a penalty payment, since everyone will be mandated to purchase insurance.

Is this affordable? Maybe for some, but probably not for others. Is it equitable? Giving lower-income people greater subsidies seems like a reasonable starting point, yet even if those subsidies were sufficient, and even if everyone who needed them was eligible, it is not clear that this money would actually buy access to health care, as opposed to access to coverage.

Each person’s subsidy would go directly to an insurance company, which would continue to control an individual’s access to care, covering certain treatments but not others, allowing the visit to one doctor but not another, or denying claims altogether. Different groups of people would get different coverage and therefore different access to care, depending on their ability to pay. People would not get health care based solely on their health needs, but based on their income or wealth, age, and immigration status.

Let’s take the example of those without income, or extremely low incomes up to 150% of the poverty level. The House bill would expand the public Medicaid program to cover these groups, which is certainly a welcome measure. But is it enough to ensure access to care? Medicaid has comprehensive coverage benefits, often better than private insurance plans, yet it can be difficult for people to find a doctor who accepts Medicaid patients, since providers can make much more money treating privately insured patients. Once again, access to coverage doesn’t necessarily mean access to care. So why does the House bill favor a Medicaid expansion? Here’s the New York Times’ analysis: “This change saves money. It is less expensive for the federal government to cover low-income people under Medicaid than to provide them with subsidies to buy private insurance.”

So if it’s cheaper to pay the entire bill for a person’s comprehensive Medicaid benefits than to pay a percentage of another person’s more skimpy private coverage, then why don’t we all get Medicaid? Or Medicare, for that matter, which has higher reimbursement rates to doctors but remains much more cost-effective than private plans?

This is where the proposed market-based reform plan unravels: it is less affordable, less equitable, and more expensive than public health insurance programs. And Democrats know it, even Speaker Pelosi knows it. That’s why the Manager’s Amendment includes a pathetic attempt at reviewing – not capping – premiums charged by insurers in the federally regulated marketplace, the Exchange. But insurers have already threatened to increase premiums if Congress passes a version of the Democrats’ bill – because they can!  There’s nothing in the current bills to prevent them from increasing premiums at will, and taxpayer’s subsidies would have struggle to keep up with that, as growing cost concerns in Massachusetts demonstrate. So what about Pelosi’s last ditch effort to prevent insurers from putting “profits over patients”? It should come as no surprise to her that corporations are legally required to do just that: to make money for their shareholders by prioritizing profits over providing access to care. Indeed, the only way for insurers to stay in business is to avoid paying for health care whenever they can.

It is this market mandate to limit access to care that is the target of the “Patients not Profit” civil disobedience campaign, which has led to over a hundred arrests at sit-ins in front of insurance companies’ offices. The protesters find it unacceptable that reform efforts continue to treat health care as a commodity, not a right, and that this will result in, according to The LA Times, a bonanza for the insurance industry. No half-hearted regulatory mechanisms can address this. In fact, the only regulation that could trump the profit mandate and remove arbitrary restrictions to care would be public control of prices, coverage benefits and eligibility, and this would spell the end of for-profit and even not-for-profit market-based insurers as we know them.

Most reformers who are now trying to push this health reform effort over the finish line are well aware that leaving the market in control of our access to health care will not take us closer to realizing the human right to health care. In a recent interview, Drew Altman, President of the influential Kaiser Family Foundation, reflected on the United States’ obligation to guarantee everyone’s access to health care and concluded that this “is fundamentally about redistributing wealth in our country; that, ultimately, it means, as some of us who have to have more, have to pay, you know, a little bit more, so that others who have less can have health care.”

Such an equitable pooling of resources, which would enable us to establish a universal and unified health insurance program, requires a sense of social solidarity from all of us, a commitment to take care of everyone rather than jostling for the best position in an inherently unequal market that is artificially sustained by subsidies. This is what real democracy should be about.

A democratic society should protect everyone’s rights and dignity by meeting their fundamental needs. We can do this by “building institutions by people for the benefit of people” whose function it is to finance and administer education, health care, fire services, due process, etc. Such institutions cannot be for-profit corporations, which serve only private interests; rather, they must be publicly mandated to serve the common good. Public services such as schools, fire departments, and courts already strive to do this, and in all other industrialized democracies, health care too is financed and administered as a public good, just as Amnesty International USA has called for, in order to enable everyone to be as healthy as they can be.

In a healthy democracy, the protection of people’s rights should not depend on their income – the rich don’t get to vote twice, they can’t pay fire fighters to save their house but not their neighbor’s, and they can’t buy a visit to a doctor while others suffer from untreated illnesses. Or can they?

In today’s democracy, access to health care can be bought, and the proposed reform measures are not going to change that. This is in violation of basic human rights, according to which our fundamental needs must be met regardless of income and wealth.

But let’s suppose we were ready to agree on our responsibility to care about each other, the community we live in, and society as a whole. If we were ready to help meet each others’ needs and protect each other’s rights, we could express this solidarity through financing health care collectively. If we’re ready to do that, we could ask Speaker Pelosi and our representatives to drop the plan that forces us to buy an insurance product whose benefits and price we can’t control.  Instead, let’s focus in on an option that allow us to share contributions and benefits in a national health program that delivers health care not as a commodity, but as a public good.

Flash Points in Health Bill…

Publikavo: hectorgraves1959 November 3rd, 2009

Here is an fascinating article I found related to the current debate about the new Health Bill.

By JANET ADAMY

WASHINGTON — House Democrats are wrestling with how their health-care bill will deal with abortion and immigration issues as they prepare to bring the bill to the floor as soon as Friday.

Democratic leaders in the House warned members that debate on the floor may stretch through the weekend and into next week so the House can vote on the bill before the Nov. 11 Veterans Day holiday. After critics attacked an earlier draft of the health bill during the August recess, Democrats are wary of letting it languish during a break.

Burris

United Pressphoto International

Sen. Roland Burris, Illinois Democrat, prepares to speak Monday about the proposed health-care overhaul at Stroger Hospital in Chicago.

House leaders unveiled their revised 1,990-page bill last week after months of negotiations. The $1.055 trillion measure would expand health insurance to 36 million Americans and create a new government health-insurance plan to compete with private insurers, among other things.

But Democrats are still trying to reach a final agreement on how the bill addresses funding for abortions and insurance coverage for immigrants.

Check out the whole article here.

 

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