Friday, August 30, 2013

Study: Price Shocks On Health Exchanges Appear Unlikely

More From Shots - Health News HealthCan Wife Insured Through Estranged Husband's Job Use Exchange?HealthMoney May Be Motivating Doctors To Do More C-SectionsHealthStudy: Price Shocks On Health Exchanges Appear UnlikelyHealthFeds Say 'Unbanked' Can Buy Insurance With Prepaid Debit Cards

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Saturday, August 24, 2013

Another Study Of Preemies Blasted Over Ethical Concerns

More From Shots - Health News HealthDoctors Fleeing Medicare? Not So Fast, Feds SayHealthTo Reduce Prejudice, Try Sharing Passions And CulturesHealthAnother Study Of Preemies Blasted Over Ethical ConcernsGoverningFor Strokes, Superfast Treatment Means Better Recovery

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Doctors Fleeing Medicare? Not So Fast, Feds Say

More From Shots - Health News HealthDoctors Fleeing Medicare? Not So Fast, Feds SayHealthTo Reduce Prejudice, Try Sharing Passions And CulturesHealthAnother Study Of Preemies Blasted Over Ethical ConcernsGoverningFor Strokes, Superfast Treatment Means Better Recovery

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Friday, August 16, 2013

Getting People Out Of Nursing Homes Turns Out To Be Complicated

More From Shots - Health News HealthAfter These Docs Saw The Farm, They Didn't Want The CityHealthStrange Bedfellows Among Groups Helping Insurance Buyers Health CareGetting People Out Of Nursing Homes Turns Out To Be ComplicatedHealthChronic Insomnia? Hitting The Treadmill Could Help ... Eventually

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Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Let’s Talk About Health Care and I Don’t Mean the ACA

Let’s talk about health care. I don’t mean debating the Affordable Care Act. I mean health care, as in: If everyone needs health care, guarantee that everybody gets it.

I know, when it comes to health care, it’s easy to get into a debate for or against Obamacare. But we nurses see the world through a different lens: our patients.

Share this video of nurses summing up why everyone in the U.S. needs & deserves healthcare:

Good health care is a fundamental resource that keeps America’s big engine running. Every day, as we do our best to care for our patients, nurses see people with chronic disease like asthma or diabetes who can’t afford insurance costs or medication. Maybe they’re absent from work, tired, and distracted from trying to manage their health on a shoestring. They run the risk of hospitalization. They struggle for a distant unreachable shore hoping something will help. They can’t get ahead because their health keeps dragging them down. 

And yet the answer isn’t on the horizon, the answer is in our pockets, in our hands. It’s our taxes. We pay them and we ought to benefit from them.

There’s one thing that every American does. Every working American (OK, except the Wall Street crowd) pays taxes. But what do we pay taxes for? Increasingly, we wonder where our money is going, how our money is serving our communities, and how our tax money is helping us and our families.

There are dozens of arguments about what our tax dollars should be doing. But what if we spent a portion of our tax dollars on the one thing that would position every American, young and old, on the road to success? That one thing is good health. You need it to go to school, get to your job, excel at what you do, and dream big dreams that will make our country great again.

We must do better and nurses have a solution. The United States ranks first in costs but 37th in health outcomes in the world. We do even worse for infant morality and life expectancy.
So nurses are proposing another way. We’re saying that our taxes should help pay for our healthcare. It works for seniors, it works for Congress members, and it will work for all of us.

This week, we launched an online campaign, asking voters to demand this from Congress. You can learn more about the online campaign here.


Ads appearing online this week.

We’re talking about something that already exists for some, right here in the United States of America, and what can easily exist for everyone. A tax-funded national healthcare system would negotiate prices for prescription drugs, medical devices and services, specialists and more, effectively lowering the cost of delivering care. Taxpayers don’t have to worry about paying for someone else’s care. You’ll be paying for your own care, your family’s care, without raising taxes at all.

Since the tax subsidies to buy insurance under the ACA mostly move money around to pay for private insurance for some that don’t have it, and which allows the insurers to take 20 cents off the dollar, it would be more efficient to uses taxes to pay for everybody’s healthcare directly, eliminating the middleman and the shell game.


International healthcare cost vs. quality chart.

We are reaching inside the box to think outside the box; we are charting a third way. It’s time to rediscover healthcare as care rather than insurance for the first time in a long time, and let the taxes we already pay deliver what every American needs.

Let’s Talk About Health Care and I Don’t Mean the ACA

Let’s talk about health care. I don’t mean debating the Affordable Care Act. I mean health care, as in: If everyone needs health care, guarantee that everybody gets it.

I know, when it comes to health care, it’s easy to get into a debate for or against Obamacare. But we nurses see the world through a different lens: our patients.

Share this video of nurses summing up why everyone in the U.S. needs & deserves healthcare:

Good health care is a fundamental resource that keeps America’s big engine running. Every day, as we do our best to care for our patients, nurses see people with chronic disease like asthma or diabetes who can’t afford insurance costs or medication. Maybe they’re absent from work, tired, and distracted from trying to manage their health on a shoestring. They run the risk of hospitalization. They struggle for a distant unreachable shore hoping something will help. They can’t get ahead because their health keeps dragging them down. 

And yet the answer isn’t on the horizon, the answer is in our pockets, in our hands. It’s our taxes. We pay them and we ought to benefit from them.

There’s one thing that every American does. Every working American (OK, except the Wall Street crowd) pays taxes. But what do we pay taxes for? Increasingly, we wonder where our money is going, how our money is serving our communities, and how our tax money is helping us and our families.

There are dozens of arguments about what our tax dollars should be doing. But what if we spent a portion of our tax dollars on the one thing that would position every American, young and old, on the road to success? That one thing is good health. You need it to go to school, get to your job, excel at what you do, and dream big dreams that will make our country great again.

We must do better and nurses have a solution. The United States ranks first in costs but 37th in health outcomes in the world. We do even worse for infant morality and life expectancy.
So nurses are proposing another way. We’re saying that our taxes should help pay for our healthcare. It works for seniors, it works for Congress members, and it will work for all of us.

This week, we launched an online campaign, asking voters to demand this from Congress. You can learn more about the online campaign here.


Ads appearing online this week.

We’re talking about something that already exists for some, right here in the United States of America, and what can easily exist for everyone. A tax-funded national healthcare system would negotiate prices for prescription drugs, medical devices and services, specialists and more, effectively lowering the cost of delivering care. Taxpayers don’t have to worry about paying for someone else’s care. You’ll be paying for your own care, your family’s care, without raising taxes at all.

Since the tax subsidies to buy insurance under the ACA mostly move money around to pay for private insurance for some that don’t have it, and which allows the insurers to take 20 cents off the dollar, it would be more efficient to uses taxes to pay for everybody’s healthcare directly, eliminating the middleman and the shell game.


International healthcare cost vs. quality chart.

We are reaching inside the box to think outside the box; we are charting a third way. It’s time to rediscover healthcare as care rather than insurance for the first time in a long time, and let the taxes we already pay deliver what every American needs.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Sen. Reid: Obamacare ‘Absolutely’ A Step Toward A Single-Payer System

When I speak to conservatives about health care policy, I�m often asked the question: �Do you think that Obamacare is secretly a step toward single-payer health care?� I always explain that, while progressives may want single-payer, I don�t think that Obamacare is deliberately designed to bring about that outcome. Well, yesterday on PBS� Nevada Week In Review, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) was asked whether his goal was to move Obamacare to a single-payer system. His answer? �Yes, yes. Absolutely, yes.�

In one sense, this isn�t shocking. Reid and many other Democrats, including President Obama, have often stated that their ideal health-care system is one in which the government abolishes the private insurance market. Video of the PBS discussion isn�t yet online, but here�s how Karoun Demirjian of the Las Vegas Sun described it:

Reid said he thinks the country has to �work our way past� insurance-based health care during a Friday night appearance on Vegas PBS� program �Nevada Week in Review.�

�What we�ve done with Obamacare is have a step in the right direction, but we�re far from having something that�s going to work forever,� Reid said.

When then asked by panelist Steve Sebelius whether he meant ultimately the country would have to have a health care system that abandoned insurance as the means of accessing it, Reid said: �Yes, yes. Absolutely, yes.�

Reid noted that he and other progressives fought hard for a �public option� in the exchanges as a Trojan horse for single-payer, but Democrats didn�t have 60 votes in the Senate to achieve it:

The idea of introducing a single-payer national health care system to the United States, or even just a public option, sent lawmakers into a tizzy back in 2009, when Reid was negotiating the health care bill.

�We had a real good run at the public option � don�t think we didn�t have a tremendous number of people who wanted a single-payer system,� Reid said on the PBS program, recalling how then-Sen. Joe Lieberman�s opposition to the idea of a public option made them abandon the notion and start from scratch.

Eventually, Reid decided the public option was unworkable.

�We had to get a majority of votes,� Reid said. �In fact, we had to get a little extra in the Senate, we have to get 60.�

Reid sees the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance as the primary obstacle to single-payer health care:

Reid cited the post-WWII auto industry labor negotiations that made employer-backed health insurance the norm, remarking that �we�ve never been able to work our way out of that� before predicting that Congress would someday end the insurance-based health care system.

It�s one of the key things to remember when you look at polls saying that Obamacare is unpopular. A small percentage of the people who oppose Obamacare�around 7-10 percent�oppose it because it doesn�t go far enough.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Will Obamacare Mean Fewer Jobs? Depends On Whom You Ask

More From Shots - Health News HealthWhat Outbreak? Students Tune Out Tweeted Health WarningsHealthWant To Be A Morning Person? Take A Few Tips From CampersHealthWhen Fleeing Zombies (Or Flu), Cooperation Saves LivesHealthPotential Treatment For Snakebites Leads To A Paralyzing Test

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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.

Please enable Javascript to view the comments powered by Disqus.