Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Laid Off And Looking For Health Insurance? Beware Of COBRA

More From Shots - Health News Health CareUninsured Numbers Drop A Bit On The Eve Of Health Law DebutHealthHealthful Living May Lengthen Telomeres And LifespansHealth15-Plus Drinks A Night: Teenagers Binge At Dangerous HeightsHealthLaid Off And Looking For Health Insurance? Beware Of COBRA

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Monday, September 16, 2013

Getting Personal With Your Health Insurance Exchange Questions

More From Shots - Health News HealthTeens Curb Sodas And TV, But More Work Needed In Obesity FightHealthCalling Obesity A Disease May Make It Easier To Get HelpHealthGetting Personal With Your Health Insurance Exchange QuestionsGoverningDeadly Amoeba Found For First Time In Municipal Water Supply

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Saturday, September 14, 2013

Connecticut Takes Obamacare To The People

More From Shots - Health News HealthSynthetic Marijuana Prompts Colorado Health InvestigationHealthAfter Disasters, DNA Science Is Helpful, But Often Too PriceyHealthMajority Of Millennial Kids In U.S. Generous To CharitiesHealthTreating Kids' Cancer With Science And A Pocket Full Of Hope

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Thursday, September 12, 2013

Why Painting Tumors Could Make Brain Surgeons Better

More From Shots - Health News HealthHow A 'Breakfast at Tiffany's' Video Improved Asthma TreatmentHealthFlorida Officials Swat At Mosquitoes With Dengue FeverHealthConnecticut Takes Obamacare To The PeopleHealthBig Measles Outbreaks Worry Federal Health Officials

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Why Painting Tumors Could Make Brain Surgeons Better

More From Shots - Health News HealthHow A 'Breakfast at Tiffany's' Video Improved Asthma TreatmentHealthBig Measles Outbreaks Worry Federal Health OfficialsHealthWhy Painting Tumors Could Make Brain Surgeons BetterHealth CareProposed Alaska Road Pits Villagers Against Environmentalists

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Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use, and will be moderated prior to posting. NPR reserves the right to use the comments we receive, in whole or in part, and to use the commenter's name and location, in any medium. See also the Terms of Use, Privacy Policy and Community FAQ.

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Wednesday, September 11, 2013

600,000 Member NYSUT Reaffirms Single Payer Support

From Unions For Single Payer –

The New York State United Teachers (NYSUT) has reaffirmed support for single payer health care. The reaffirmation, which was submitted by Retiree Council 12, calls specifically for support for HR 676, Congressman John Conyers’ Expanded and Improved Medicare for All legislation.

NYSUT is made up of more than 600,000 who work in, or are retired from, New York’s schools, colleges, and healthcare facilities. NYSUT is a union of classroom teachers, college and university faculty and professional staff, school bus drivers, custodians, secretaries, cafeteria workers, teacher assistants and aides, nurses and healthcare technicians.

NYSUT is a federation of more than 1,200 local unions. It is affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the National Education Association (NEA), and the AFL-CIO.

The NYSUT reaffirmation is available in full here at the link in #607.

Health law’s ailments can be cured by single-payer system

All the shortcomings of the healthcare restructuring result from the decision to leave it in the hands of private insurers.

With the Oct. 1 rollout of a major facet of the Affordable Care Act on the horizon, you’ll be hearing a lot about the glitches, loopholes and shortcomings of this most important restructuring of America’s healthcare system in our lifetimes. Here are a couple of things to keep in mind:

First, the vast majority of these issues result from one crucial compromise made in the drafting of the 2010 law, ostensibly to ease its passage through Congress. That was to leave the system in the hands of private health insurance companies.

Second, there’s an obvious way to correct this flaw: The country should progress on to a single-payer system.

The idea that the ACA is a logical precursor to single-payer, in which the government would be the source of all medical reimbursement, has been gaining traction as key thresholds for healthcare reform approach. The biggest milestone is the Oct. 1 launch of open enrollment for the health insurance exchanges that will offer individual insurance starting Jan. 1.

Last month, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid made that point in a Nevada news broadcast, calling the ACA “a step in the right direction” but adding that the U.S. would have to “work our way past” private insurance-based healthcare. “We’re far from having something that’s going to work forever,” he said.

“There isn’t a popular groundswell yet” for a single-payer plan “because most people haven’t seen the ACA at work in detail yet,” says David Himmelstein, a professor of public health at the City University of New York and co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, the leading advocacy group for single-payer healthcare. But he anticipates that discontent will start in October “and accelerate through the winter.”

Among the law’s shortcomings, he says, are the lack of effective provisions to control healthcare costs and insurance premiums. Premium regulation remains in the hands of the states, and many don’t have strong regulatory oversight of health insurance. In California, health insurance premiums are exempt from prior approval by the insurance commissioner, unlike home and auto insurance. (An initiative to remove the exemption will appear on the November 2014 ballot.)

That’s not to say that the ACA won’t make health insurance more affordable and accessible to millions of Americans now excluded from the market. Published exchange premiums in 18 states have generally come in below expectations, and the federal subsidies available to most buyers will make them cheaper still.

In some cases the premiums may be higher than those of plans on the market now. But because of exclusions for preexisting conditions — which will no longer be legal — they’re actually unavailable at any price to people who will have no trouble qualifying for the exchange plans.

The ACA’s critics observe that a plurality of Americans still view the ACA unfavorably (43%, according to an opinion poll released in June by the Kaiser Family Foundation). They rarely acknowledge, however, that nearly 1 in 5 of those critics think the law doesn’t go far enough — that is, further toward single-payer.

In its earliest incarnation, the Affordable Care Act included a prototype government single-payer provision — the “public option,” a government-sponsored plan to compete with commercial insurers in the exchanges. The public option was deleted at the insurance industry’s insistence.

But the U.S. does offer a healthcare program that resembles single-payer. It’s Medicare, the broadly popular health plan that covers all Americans over 65. Medicare’s administrative costs are only about 2%, and its size gives it the clout to extract large discounts from doctors and hospitals. That’s why one oft-proposed version of single-payer is “Medicare for all” — simply expand its coverage beyond the 65-plus.

Canada’s single-payer system is another model. It’s popular and efficient and costs about one-third of America’s system to administer. Don’t believe the myths purveyed about Canada’s healthcare by the U.S. insurance industry’s minions.

As health economist Aaron Carroll has documented, Canadian patients and doctors are satisfied with the program. As for the contention that it “rations” care, he points out that care in the U.S. is rationed by cost: one-third of adult Americans surveyed by the Commonwealth Fund in 2010 said they had put off important treatment because of the cost. In Canada, the figure was 15%.

There’s little question that taking private insurers out of the American healthcare system would save hundreds of billions of dollars a year. Dozens of studies of federal and state single-payer proposals have found that single-payer plans could provide universal coverage — not even the ACA does that — and still save money.

Estimates of the administrative costs of commercial health insurers exceed 10%. That doesn’t include the costs to doctors and hospitals of maintaining billing staffs to deal with insurers and keep all their rules and peculiarities straight, or the time lost to individuals and their employers of navigating this unnecessarily byzantine system.

Add those, and the overall administrative costs embedded in the U.S. healthcare system come to 31% of all spending, according to a 2003 article co-written by Himmelstein for the New England Journal of Medicine. Administrative and clerical workers accounted for nearly 44% of all employees in doctors’ offices, they calculated.

What do Americans receive in return for all this overhead? Practically nothing. The insurance industry says its role is to hold down costs by negotiating for preferential fees from doctors and hospitals and trolling for abuses, but the truth is they’re totally ineffective at cost control.

Just last year I reported on an admission by Aetna and United Healthcare, two of our biggest insurers, that they had been snookered to the tune of $60 million by one chain of small surgical clinics in Northern California. That happened because the insurers didn’t hire enough staff to give the claims from those clinics decent scrutiny — in other words, their administrative costs, high as they were, didn’t buy adequate oversight.

The result, to cite just one example, was that United paid the chain more than $97,000 for a kidney stone operation that it usually covers for $6,851.

“Private insurance is a parasite in the system,” says Arnold S. Relman, the former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine and an advocate of healthcare reform. “It adds nothing of value commensurate with its cost.”

Relman believes that fixing the healthcare system will require more than single-payer. The delivery of care needs to be reorganized by promoting the formation of more “accountable care organizations” — medium- and large-scale group practices with hospital affiliates whose physicians would be salaried to discourage the overuse fostered by the fee-for-service system.

What’s really needed is political will. It would help if big companies, which grouse incessantly about the rising costs of covering their employees, would throw their weight behind a system that would relieve them of that burden.

The forces of opposition won’t lie down; the insurance industry won’t give up its central role in the healthcare system without a costly and bruising fight, as it showed in Congress and in numerous states, including California, where single-payer plans were on the table.

“It’s going to be a slow and painful process,” Relman says. “But sooner or later we’ll have to turn to single-payer. It’s the only logical solution.”

600,000 Member NYSUT Reaffirms Single Payer Support

From Unions For Single Payer –

The New York State United Teachers (NYSUT) has reaffirmed support for single payer health care. The reaffirmation, which was submitted by Retiree Council 12, calls specifically for support for HR 676, Congressman John Conyers’ Expanded and Improved Medicare for All legislation.

NYSUT is made up of more than 600,000 who work in, or are retired from, New York’s schools, colleges, and healthcare facilities. NYSUT is a union of classroom teachers, college and university faculty and professional staff, school bus drivers, custodians, secretaries, cafeteria workers, teacher assistants and aides, nurses and healthcare technicians.

NYSUT is a federation of more than 1,200 local unions. It is affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the National Education Association (NEA), and the AFL-CIO.

The NYSUT reaffirmation is available in full here at the link in #607.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Stopping the TPP is Essential to Work for a Universal Health System

The Obama administration has been negotiating an agreement called the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) for the past three years that is now heading into the final stages and could be signed into law as early as October. If it is not stopped, this new agreement has the potential to prohibit single payer health insurance, even at the state level, or any new public insurance, could cement the privatization of Medicare, could prevent many of the mechanisms that are commonly used to control health care costs and would raise the prices of medications and pharmaceutical devices.

The TPP is being negotiated as a trade agreement, but in fact, it is much more than that. Of the 29 chapters, only five are traditional trade chapters. The others contain many policies that corporations have tried to advance through Congress and through World Trade Organization (WTO) talks without success. These include patent and property protections, financial deregulation, greater legal standing for investors and corporations, the end of �Buy America� and weakening of what are called state-owned enterprises (SOEs). This is why the TPP is being called �NAFTA on steroids.�

The bottom line for the TPP is to advance the neoliberal economic agenda with which we are becoming more familiar; this means de-funding public programs, privatizing public resources by making them available to corporations and treating every entity, be it education or health care, as a commercial enterprise. For those of us who advocate for universal health care systems and public health programs, the TPP would be a disaster.

What we know about the specific provisions in the TPP come from chapters that have been leaked and from industry reports. There has been a virtual media blackout on the TPP. Unlike past trade agreements which were available for public viewing on the US Trade Representative (USTR) website, the text of the TPP is classified. Members of Congress are only allowed to see portions of the text upon request, and then must do so on a �read and retain� basis without aids of any sort for note-taking. They are not allowed to speak publicly about what they have read. However, the more than 600 corporate advisors who are working with the Office of the USTR have access to the text on their computers in live time as it is negotiated.

The reason for the secrecy was revealed after the former USTR, Ron Kirk, left his position to work for a Washington lobbying firm. In essence Kirk said that if the people knew what was in the TPP, they wouldn�t be able to get it signed. This is due in large part to the public opposition to the WTO and free trade agreements.

The TPP, and its sister the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (aka TAFTA), are backdoors to advance the WTO agenda. Since the Doha Round of WTO talks which began after the �Battle of Seattle,� the WTO has essentially stalled. And since the passage of NAFTA, 14 free trade agreements have been stopped by public protest. The new approach being used for the TPP is to gather a group of small nations including Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore, Chile and Peru and, with the assistance of allied nations including Australia and New Zealand, bully them into accepting harmful provisions. A unique feature of the TPP is that it contains a �docking provision� which allows other nations to join the TPP after it has been negotiated as long as they agree to its terms.

Together, the TPP and TAFTA will redefine the terms of the global economy in ways that give corporations greater power than sovereign nations. Corporations will be able to sue nations in a trade tribunal that operates outside of national judicial systems if environmental, labor and consumer protection laws interfere with expected profits. The trade tribunal will be staffed by corporate lawyers on leave from their jobs to serve as judges. For many poorer nations, this will lead to weakening of these laws rather than paying tens of millions of dollars in compensation to transnational corporations.

The effect of the TPP on health care in the US and around the world could potentially undermine decades of work by single payer and public health advocates. We know from text leaked in June, 2011 that the TPP will grant twenty year patents for pharmaceuticals and medical devices that can be renewed if a new indication is found or the mechanism of delivery is altered. This is a process called �Evergreening� and it is designed to prevent generics and protect profits. The TPP will also give greater legal standing to health corporations to challenge reimbursements from health systems and to include the cost of marketing into what is considered a �fair market value.�

The TPP will undermine public health efforts by raising health care costs for public health systems and also by preventing public health education efforts, such as ant-tobacco campaigns, if they are viewed as conflicting with corporate profits. This aspect of the TPP even has Mayor Bloomberg concerned.

It is also possible that the TPP could prevent the establishment or expansion of public insurances. On one hand, public insurances could be viewed as state-owned enterprises and could be prohibited from having any market advantages that are not also offered to private insurances such as subsidies, access to capital or tax preferences. On the other hand, a single payer health insurance in particular could be prohibited altogether because it would create a monopoly that would exclude private insurances. This is explained in detail in an article published by Nick Skala in 2009.

And finally, the TPP, if it is similar to the WTO provisions, could prevent Medicare from returning to a fully public system, regulation of specialty hospitals, limitations on for-profit disease management products and requirements that health insurers spend a particular amount of premiums on health services (regulation of the medical loss ratio). It would open the door to greater privatization of health care which is already resulting in great inequalities in access to health care services and health outcomes.

The time to stop the TPP is now. President Obama recently made a formal request to Congress to grant him Fast Track, also called Trade Promotion Authority, and a vote is expected in late September or early October in both the House and Senate. Fast Track, which was previously used by President Clinton to pass the WTO and NAFTA, gives the President the authority to negotiate and sign trade agreements before the agreement goes to Congress who would then only have the ability to vote yes or no on it. It would prevent hearings in Congress on the text of the agreement and amendments. Under the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, it is Congress that has the responsibility to oversee commerce and trade, not the president.

The first step to stop the Trans-Pacific Partnership and to achieve transparency and a democratic process in Congress is to stop Fast Track. Constituents are meeting with their members of Congress now while they are on break in their home districts to ask for a commitment to vote �no� on Fast Track. Some are planning events for September 17, Constitution Day, to thank members who commit to a no vote or to �spank� members who won�t commit by exposing their corporate connections. On September 21 and 22, there will be a �Stop the TPP Action Camp� in Washington, DC with ongoing actions starting September 23 and continuing through the vote. Volunteers are needed to participate in visibility actions on September 23 and 24 and then to join the �Fair Trade Brigade� daily in Congress to remind members that trade should put people and the planet before profits.

Personally, as an activist for single payer health insurance, I feel that I must devote my time and attention to stopping the TPP. It is something that can be stopped, as the past 14 trade agreements have been. It is a cause that unites all of us who advocate for economic and social justice. And, when we work together and win, it will be a blow against the further consolidation of global corporate power. Stopping the TPP is essential to our ultimate goal of a universal health care system based on single payer health insurance.