Showing posts with label health insurance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health insurance. Show all posts

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Some Exercise Their Right To Opt Out Of Health Insurance


AP Story


NEW YORK — Call it a health care gamble: the decision by some people to opt out of health insurance, paying cash for routine care while playing the odds that an accident or catastrophic illness won't plunge them into financial ruin.

President Barack Obama's goal of requiring everyone to carry health insurance has drawn a great deal of skepticism from this group. Many pay far less for health care than they would on premiums, and doubt that insurance would even cover them if they needed it.

It's unknown how many of the nearly 50 million uninsured in the United States voluntarily go without coverage. Researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation, which studies the uninsured, said most are young, generally healthy adults who are self-employed or in relatively low-wage jobs that do not offer insurance coverage and don't pay enough for workers to afford individual policies.

"Income is key and most of the uninsured have low incomes," foundation researcher Karyn Schwartz said. "If you look at your budget and think you can't afford it or can afford it if you eat only ramen noodles, you may choose not to get it."

All the health care plans that have emerged from the Democratic-controlled Congress would require everyone to have insurance, the way drivers in nearly every state must purchase auto insurance. Proponents say that by bringing everyone into the system, medical risk is spread over a broader population, bringing costs down.

Those who opt out voluntarily might have to pay a penalty. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., who drafted the Senate Finance Committee's plan, set the penalty at $3,800 for a family but cut it to $1,900 amid complaints that the original level was too high.

Republicans have called the insurance mandate a new tax on the middle class. Obama disputes that, saying that whatever plan emerges from Congress must offer subsidies to lower-income people that will make coverage affordable.

In exchange for the requirement that everyone buys coverage, Obama wants a guarantee from insurers that they no longer will deny coverage based on an individual's health or drop coverage when a person gets sick. The insurance industry has signaled it will accept that trade-off, but needs to convince skeptical consumers that it actually means it.

Doubts about what insurers will cover — coupled with the high cost of premiums — have driven some to opt out and take their chances.

Krista Neher, who's starting her own social media and marketing venture, is one.

The 30-year-old from Cincinnati recently left Procter & Gamble Co., where she was covered by the company's health care plan. After researching the costs of an individual policy, she decided to remain uninsured.

"I want to have health coverage, I think it's important. It bothers me that I could be hit by a car," Neher said. "But I have really low confidence that any insurance company would even cover me in that case, even after I paid all the high premiums. It just seems like a lose-lose situation."

Many people who go without coverage have found that health care providers often will cut the price of a procedure if they know they'll be paid in cash rather than through insurance.

Jason Jepson, a self-employed communications consultant based in Southern California, decided against buying an individual policy he said would have cost twice as much as his $1,250 monthly rent. He pays out of pocket for all medical treatment, saving money even after being treated for a broken ankle and severe strep throat.

"If you pay with cash, they do give you a discount — it's the big secret of not having insurance," Jepson, 35, said.

But Jepson said his lack of insurance has meant lifestyle adjustments, such as driving less and staying off freeways to avoid accidents. He says he supports Obama's requirement that everyone carry insurance if it can be made affordable.

"I would pay for it. I'm just not sure it will really cover everything," Jepson said.

To ease fears of an unexpected medical crisis, registered nurse Mary Pitman of Vero Beach, Fla., refuses health insurance and takes the extra cash in her paycheck. Pitman, 54, puts $3,000 per year into a pretax flexible spending account for routine care and another $300 per month in an emergency fund in the event of a major illness.

"I have more control over my money this way, and there's a tax advantage," she said.

As skeptical as many are about insurers, some are equally doubtful about government's ability to do a better job managing health care.

Laura Silverthorn of Tampa, Fla., left a nursing job to start her own business designing and selling temporary tattoos. She and her toddler son have gone without health coverage for nearly two years.

While Silverthorn, 36, said she wishes she could afford insurance — "Just one accident and you're done," as she put it — she's also grown disillusioned with government-run programs after working part time reviewing medical charts for Medicaid.

"I don't know if I want the government running health care when I see how they run Medicaid — there is so much fraud," she said.

The only test case for Obama's plan to bring everyone into the health insurance system is Massachusetts. In 2006, it enacted a program to cover all state residents. Those who opt out must pay a $912 annual tax penalty.

Michael Widmer, president of the nonpartisan Massachusetts Taxpayer Foundation, which researched the effectiveness of the state's health insurance mandate, said most people chose to buy insurance rather than pay the penalty — even those who are "young, healthy and immortal."

"Most are saying, 'If I'm going to have to pay this much in any case, I should be covered,'" he said.

While about 65,000 people in Massachusetts were allowed for financial reasons to opt out of the mandate last year, the state now has the lowest rate of uninsured residents in the country — 4.1 percent, according to the latest census data.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Health care by the numbers

$2.2 trillion: How much was spent on health care in the U.S. in 2007 ($7,421 per person.)

$4.27 trillion: How much the U.S. is projected to spend on health care in 2017.

$56 billion: The total amount of uncompensated care provided for the uninsured in 2008. (60 percent provided by hospitals.)

86.7 million: The number of people in the U.S. who lived without health insurance for part or all of 2007-08.

1.5 million: How many U.S. families lose their homes to foreclosure per year because of medical bills they can't afford.

14,000: The number of people in the U.S. estimated to be losing their health coverage every day due to recent turmoil in the job market.

$12,680: The average cost of family health coverage through employer-based plans in 2008.

$1,525: The cost of health care built into the price of every General Motors car.

120 percent: How much the employee's share of health coverage through company plans has risen since 2000. (Workers' average out-of-pocket medical costs have risen 115 percent since 2000.)

45: The number of U.S. states in which insurance companies are allowed to spend less than 75 cents of every dollar paid in premiums on their customers' medical care.

25 percent: How many more adults without health insurance are likely to die prematurely than those who are insured.

4.3: America spends 4.3 times more on health care than it does on national defense.

2.5: The uninsured often pay 2.5 times more for their medical care than the insured do, because they don't get the reduced rates insurance companies negotiate for their customers.

Sources: Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Families USA, Illinois PIRG, U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, National Coalition on Health Care, Center for American Progress Action Fund.
Weather

This list of statistics were taken from a larger article regarding the rising number of uninsured in America. Read the entire article here.

Monday, May 25, 2009

At Least One Doctor Pushes Back Against Insurance Companies
Story from San Francisco Chronicle


Dr. Bradley Carpentier, a pain management specialist,
founded the group Stop Practicing Medicine

Monterey physician Bradley Carpentier found himself spending so much time fighting with health insurers to get approvals for the treatments he prescribed for his patients that he decided to wage his own lobbying effort.

Carpentier formed a new political action committee - Stop Practicing Medicine - to target the long-standing practice of insurers hiring doctors to review physician decisions, even though the insurer-hired doctors had never seen or talked to the patient whose care they were scrutinizing.

Insurers defend the practice, saying such doctors often serve as a second set of eyes to ensure patients are receiving the most appropriate and effective treatments. But Carpentier, along with patients and other doctors who support his position, says insurers are denying and delaying care.

"We need to let the doctor take care of the patient," said Carpentier, who specializes in pain management. "Pretty much, doctors ultimately do what they want, but it just depends on fighting a lot to get that done. What we've found is fewer patients have access to care in general because we have limited resources. We're being kept so busy fighting and advocating for patients."

Health insurers and doctors have long battled over care decisions, with insurers serving as gatekeepers to set guidelines and control health costs and physicians bristling at being second-guessed and overruled. The tension reached fever pitch in the 1990s when managed care was at its height, prompting a consumer backlash that led to reforms and less restrictive forms of coverage.

Raising awareness

But Carpentier said he's seeing an increase in pushback from health plans, prompting him to refuse most insurers and, instead, treat his patients and submit reimbursement forms on their behalf. He formed Stop Practicing Medicine, he said, to raise awareness of insurance interference as lawmakers and the Obama administration begin efforts to overhaul the health care system. The organization began recruiting patient and physician members last month.

"The prospect of health reform in this particular time in history is what led me to speak out," he said, adding he is calling for restrictions of the practice but not the abolition of health insurers. "I think there is absolute change in the air and we want it to be for the better."

In poll results released last month of 389 California doctors, 87 percent described limits and restrictions that insurance companies place on doctors as a major problem.

The survey, conducted by a Seattle research firm for the California Medical Association, found 84 percent felt pressured to change the way they treat a patient because of a restriction from an insurance company and 86 percent admitted selecting a course of treatment they might not otherwise have chosen because of the pressure.

But insurer groups contend the interests of physicians and health plans are more closely aligned than ever, and that the two groups are working together on many issues such as rewarding physicians for quality rather than just quantity of care.

"It's in everybody's best interest to make sure the patient is getting the right health care treatment in the right place and in the right time," said Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for America's Health Insurance Plans, a national trade group. He cited studies that have shown patients often don't receive the best care supported by scientific evidence.

Protections in place

California's independent medical review system allows a panel of physicians to resolve disputes between patients, doctors and insurers, said Charles Bacchi, interim president and chief executive officer of the California Association of Health Plans.

"We just believe the most important thing is that the patient is receiving the right care," he said. "And we think there are protections there for consumers already."

Dr. Michael Leong of Los Gatos, who works with Carpentier and at Stanford University, said pain management specialists are particularly vulnerable to insurance hurdles because pain is less quantifiable that other maladies and often requires highly individualized therapies or newer, more expensive drugs.

Leong said he recently saw a patient whose neck pain had flared up, but he was unable to give her an injection she receives several times a year. That's because the insurance company requires him to submit the same paperwork and go through the same authorization process each time, he said.

"I know it will get covered in two or three weeks, but that's another two or three weeks of pain," he said.

Noel Ortiz of Twain Harte (Tuolumne County), one of Leong's patients, said she regularly had to battle her insurer until she was able to manage her pain without drugs after undergoing treatment through a clinical trial. She said she has been on the hook for as much as $15,000 in medical costs while she fought for reimbursement.

The 50-year-old Ortiz, who suffered from lower back pain from years of teaching horseback riding and training horses, said she still doesn't rest easy. "I do keep an account for fear it will happen again," she said.

Learn more

For more information about Stop Practicing Medicine, visit www.drcpainmd.com/giving.cfm

Americans Spend Millions On Caregiving
Many are forced out of their jobs and homes because of the strain to provide for their loved ones

Story from OC Register

Jodee Kalmen drew the caregiving card four years ago.

She was 50 when her husband, Peter, then 57, was diagnosed with frontal lobe dementia. His ever-worsening symptoms had already cost him his job.

She was a stay-at-home mom with two sons but became a school bus driver. They lived off her small salary, his Social Security Disability, the equity in their home.

Today, she is one of 44 million Americans responsible for caregiving a spouse or parent. The backbone of the nation's long-term care system, they represent $375 billion annual value in the care they provide.

But in these hard economic times, a new survey shows caregivers are facing escalating financial and emotional hardships that are rarely, if ever, addressed in national debates about funding health care.

There are statistics, data and websites offering help, but the truth is caregiving is where childcare was years ago, says Sherri Snelling, senior director of Cypress-based Evercare.

Few employers offer benefits. Many adult children are losing their jobs, forcing them to move in or move home parents who were in care institutions. Most caregivers are not prepared for the expense and the emotional drain.

In the next two weeks, we'll look at the data and the solutions, the questions and the few answers.

The Kalmens thought their future was secure.

"My husband and I did everything we were told to do; buy a home, save money for retirement and open college funds for our boys," Jodee Kalmen says. "What they did not tell us was that dementia was going to enter our lives and devour our financial future.

"Besides watching my husband slowly die, I have had to live on pins and needles riding the uncertainty of the economy."

After 21 years in her home, Kalman says she is down to her last financial resource — her husband's IRA, which has been decimated by the declining stock market. She's already refinanced the home three times.

She has no health insurance because she lost her job.

"I am scared," she says.

She's not alone.

A survey conducted by Evercare by UnitedHealthcare and the National Alliance for Caregiving concludes 43 percent of caregivers have taken a pay cut or have been forced to work fewer hours as a result of the recession.

Some have taken on additional job or are able to work more hours, but almost 50 percent told surveyors they have exhausted their savings and 43 percent have had to borrow money to continue caregiving.

"These people are a significant part of our society, yet their economic impact is often unmeasured and, frankly, they are discounted in the view of the public," says Dr. Alan Sokolow, chief medical officer for United Health Care.

The concern is a potential cutback in individual caregiving, he says. Many have said they are cutting back or might be forced to cut back hours spent caregiving because of employment-related demands.

"There needs to be continuing awareness of the importance of providing assistance for caregivers," Sokolow says.

But the facts are these:

•With 30 years added to the average lifespan in the 20th century, most boomers can expect to spend some years as a caregiver for parent or spouse.

•The increasing number of childless women and others without family ties brings new challenges to financing caregiving.

•Caregiving only recently became an employee benefit for some workers; few caregivers are able to access these benefits today.

•64 percent of caregivers are struggling to pay their own bills.

•63 percent have stopped saving for their own retirement or future caregiving.

•36 percent say they have found that government agencies or nonprofit groups are less able to provide services or outside help.

Next: Where caregivers can look for help today, and in the future.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

BC Raises Costs Of Individual Health Plans in Michigan
Story from the Detroit News

As more Michigan residents flock to Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan to buy their own health coverage, the state's largest insurer is replacing several types of individual policies with plans that will cost up to $600 a year more -- and come with higher co-payments and other out-of-pocket costs.

The new insurance plans -- with monthly premiums ranging from $51 to $292 per a person -- are on sale now and take effect Wednesday.

On March 27, Blue Cross stopped enrolling new consumers in several older plans, including Value Blue, a catastrophic coverage policy, and its no-deductible Individual Care Blue. The changes don't affect Blue Cross members enrolled in those plans. Instead, the new rates will apply to newly unemployed residents seeking to replace workplace coverage by buying their own insurance from Blue Cross. The new plans also differ from those for which Blue Cross is seeking state permission to raise rates and would not be affected if that request is approved.

With the rollout of these new plans, Blue Cross has introduced a lengthy application that includes optional health questions and ties insurance agents' commissions to the medical condition of new enrollees.

The changes are so drastic that some insurance agents say Blue Cross is deliberately making its money-losing individual policies less attractive to slow sales. Blue Cross contends that it's simply keeping up with market trends, as well as the rates and plan offerings of its private-sector competitors.

As the state's insurer of last resort -- a responsibility tied to its tax-exempt status -- Blue Cross must cover all Michigan residents, regardless of their medical history. But that arrangement, Blue Cross officials say, leaves them with the state's sickest and costliest members. Last year, Blue Cross lost $133.2 million on individual insurance policies, dragging its bottom line to a $144.9 million loss for 2008.

Insurance agents say the new rates will make it harder to sell the plans. New members aren't going to want to pay more in premiums for higher out-of-pocket costs, especially if there are better deals offered by other insurers.

"It's not good for the consumer," said Patrick Pennefather, president of the Michigan Association of Health Underwriters, which represents health insurance agents and buyers for employer groups. The new plans, he added, are going to slow down sales for Blue Cross, a move that could help stem the rising tide of losses on individual policies.

Some agents are likely to stop selling Blue Cross' individual policies altogether because the commission structure lowers incentives for enrolling sickly customers into its individual plans, Pennefather added.

Blue Cross's new incentive structure offers a 15 percent commission to agents who sign up healthy members and only 2 percent for signing new enrollees with severe medical problems. A 2 percent commission could translate into only a couple of dollars a month on some policies, say insurance agents, and is much lower than the 8 percent commissions previously offered by Blue Cross on all policies, regardless of the applicant's health status.

Blue Cross said the tiered commissions better match incentives offered by their rivals in the individual insurance market.

"It may drive a lot of agents out of the individual insurance business. In fact, many have said they plan to get out of it," Pennefather said, noting that agents can make 20 percent with other private insurers.

Some Blue Cross critics, including Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox, have questioned why Blue Cross is collecting health information, since that is at odds with the company's mission as the state's insurer of last resort. Cox's office has said it's investigating whether the changes are lawful.

Answering the questions about health status, however, is voluntary and won't affect consumer eligibility or rates, but will help applicants qualify for lower co-payments, Blue Cross officials said.

Blue Cross also points out that it still pays at least some portion of the commission to agents for all applicants. Most other insurers pay no commission if they end up rejecting the applicant, said Helen Stojic, a Blue Cross spokeswoman.

As for the new plan prices and coverage, Stojic said Blue Cross hopes to better reflect the marketplace, where deductibles and higher out-of-pocket maximums are common.

The insurer also contends its rates are still better than most plans for people with serious medical conditions.

"Our plans are aligned more closely with those in the market, with one important difference: We still don't medically underwrite and we are still the insurer of last resort," Stojic said.

Unlike rate hikes for existing customers, state regulators don't require Blue Cross to seek public input before introducing new plans or closing new enrollment in existing policies.

Blue Cross is seeking rate hikes on its existing individual policies that cover about 400,000 members. It's asking for an average rate hike on three types of policies: a 56 percent increase on individual plans, 42 percent on group conversion coverage (which extends benefits from a former employer) and 31 percent for Medigap plans.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

The Medicare D shell game

One example of the labyrinth that is Medicare. Like it or not, we are all going to have to pay attention to the devilish details - on an annual basis.

It's a pain for seniors to pick from the myriad drug insurance programs, but it pays to do it - every year.

Kim Andrews had just helped a woman save a couple of hundred dollars on her new Medicare drug plan.

"I asked her about her husband," said Andrews, the Delaware County coordinator for Apprise, the Pennsylvania health insurance counseling service. The woman said " 'Oh, my husband loves his plan. He won't change.' "

"Well, I checked his drugs anyway, and it turns out his plan was no longer going to cover two of his drugs," Andrews said. "I found him another plan that would save him $2,771. That's huge. People are just unaware, it seems."

Read entire 3-page report at the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Local Doctors' Actions Reflect Nationwide Trend

by T.M. Shultz at the Daily Courier
Saturday, April 26, 2008


What primary care doctors are doing in the Prescott area reflects what primary care doctors are doing across the country.

They are:

• Retiring.

• Changing careers.

• Not taking new patients.

• Converting to cash-only practices.

• Refusing to accept new Medicare patients or dumping them when they reach a certain age or, in at least one case, opting out of the Medicare payment system altogether.

• Limiting the insurance they'll take to one or two major companies. In Prescott, it's typically Blue Cross Blue Shield and the Arizona Foundation for Medical Care, which is a provider network for Yavapai Regional Medical Center's employees.

Read Entire Article

In Delaware - Blue Cross must Pay Fines for Late Claims

Judge upholds $100,000 ruling by Del. insurance commissioner

The News Journal, April 26, 2008

A Superior Court judge has upheld a $100,000 fine against Blue Cross Blue Shield of Delaware, which the state insurance commissioner assessed last year after finding the company failed to process thousands of medical claims within a state-mandated time period.

The decision by Judge Peggy Ableman affirms a September ruling by Insurance Commissioner Matt Denn, which found that in the first six months of 2006, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Delaware, the state’s largest health insurer, failed to process 10,467 health insurance claims within the required 30 days.

Read Entire Article

Blue Cross spends big to promote legislation

BY PATRICIA ANSTETT • FREE PRESS MEDICAL WRITER • March 3, 2008

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan has spent $1.1 million since Jan. 1 on TV ads in seven major Michigan cities to promote a legislative agenda that would allow the nonprofit to set its own rates for individuals buying health insurance policies.

The money bought more than 2,600 TV spots, airing as often as 10 times a night, usually in prime time, including pricier buys during "American Idol," "CSI Miami" and the late-night Jay Leno and David Letterman shows.

By comparison, Put Michigan People First, one of three coalitions of commercial insurers, HMOs and others opposed to the legislation, has spent $65,000 on radio and print ads, according to Mike Nowlin, a Lansing public relations specialist who serves as the coalition's spokesman.

Read Entire Article


Michigan Attorney General Pursues Investigation of Blue Cross

Michigan Attorney General Michael Cox sent a fax on Thursday night to Dan Loepp, president and CEO of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, asking Loepp to explain by June 2 whether the company violated state laws by purchasing a for-profit insurance company for one of its subsidiaries.

Crain’s reported Thursday that Cox was looking into allegations made Wednesday at the Michigan Senate Health Policy Committee that the Blues may have violated state laws in acquiring several out-of-state insurance companies.

In the letter to Loepp, Cox asked nine questions related to the Nov. 20, 2007, purchase of CWI Holdings Inc., the parent company of CompWest Insurance Co. in San Francisco.

Read Entire Article

Governor Schwarznegger joins opponents of Blue Cross Blue Shield rescission practices.

Blue Cross of California, BC Life, HealthNet, and other large California health care coverage providers have been accused of improperly dropping (rescinding) thousands of health insurance customers using an illegal practice called "post claims underwriting". They do little or no investigation when they issue the policy, but if you run up big bills they scour your medical records to find reasons to rescind your coverage based on alleged "misrepresentations" in a confusing and complicated application. The charge is that they loan you an umbrella and want it back as soon as it starts raining!

Now California's Governor has joined proponents of regulatory action and class action lawsuits in condemning this practice. According to the Sacramento Bee, Schwartznegger said it is "outrageous that innocent patients have to live in fear of losing their health care coverage. I look forward to working with my partners in the Legislature to ensure this egregious practice is stopped."

Read Entire Article

Hospital, Blue Cross Talks Stall

By ROBERTA FUGATE

from the New Jersey Herald


NEWTON — Newton Memorial Hospital patients insured by Horizon Blue Cross/Blue Shield received notice late last week that the hospital intends to terminate its contract with Horizon.

"It is the bigger picture that brings us to this point with Horizon. It is the environment of hospitals in the state," said Newton Memorial's Sean O'Rourke, chief operating officer. "Everybody in New Jersey is dealing with it."

The decision came about after several attempts were made by the hospital to negotiate a contract that would provide what it considers more appropriate payment rates for its services.

"This is not new," O'Rourke said, "We have talked with more than 20 insurance companies over the last 18 months. Getting to this point helps both parties focus on the task at hand."

The letter, signed by President and Chief Executive Officer Thomas Senker, stated, "Although this letter will alert Horizon of our intentions, Newton Memorial will continue to negotiate in good faith for rate adjustments to sustain high quality care and accessibility to modern and efficient health care facilities for you and your family."

Horizon Blue Cross/Blue Shield executives did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Under the terms of the current contract, the hospital is in-network with Horizon. The hospital said it will continue to negotiate rate adjustments so that it can sustain care and accessibility to health care facilities for its patients.

The contract states that those who subscribe to Horizon still will be able to utilize their in-network benefits at Newton Memorial Hospital for 90 days, until July 22. After that, Horizon members can continue to go to Newton Memorial Hospital to receive out-of-network services. The reimbursements will depend on individual health plans.

Patients who have HMO coverage will remain in-network for four months after the termination of the contract, until Nov. 22.

BCBS Round-Up

Let's get caught up on some of this weeks Blue Cross / Blue Shield stories.

Senate panel chief may trim Blues bills provisions
By Jay Greene

The Senate Health Policy Committee is expected Wednesday to vote on four controversial bills that seek to reduce premium rates and expand access in the individual health insurance market and give a for-profit workers' compensation insurance subsidiary of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan the right to enter other insurance lines.

But in response to testimony the past two weeks, Sen. Tom George, R-Kalamazoo, who chairs the committee, said last week that he may drastically reduce the number of provisions in the proposed legislative package.

While Blue Cross opposes eliminating major portions of the proposed legislation approved last October in the House, George said he is inclined to push for the following:

Read Entire Article

Monday, April 28, 2008

AMA Committed to Enforcement of BCBS Settlement

The American Medical Association (AMA) announced that it will begin enforcement of the national Blue Cross and Blue Shield (BCBS) settlement as a signatory medical society to the agreement. The AMA joins 27 other participating medical societies that are able to provide direct assistance to physicians when a BCBS plan or subsidiary has failed to comply with the national BCBS settlement.

The AMA's participation in enforcement of the BCBS settlement was initiated yesterday when a Miami federal court finalized the settlement of a nationwide physician class action lawsuit brought against Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association and more than 30 affiliated plans and subsidiaries.

Read Entire Article

Doctors Agree: We Need Single-Payer Health Insurance

It's the only system that offers affordable quality care

We have all heard it before. The health care system in the United States is broken. We have all heard it, but when is someone going to do something about it?

Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) is a group of 15,000 physicians who believe that there is a solution and it is currently working for Americans — if they are over 65. It is, of course, Medicare, part of the 60 percent of our current health care system that is paid for and administered by the government.

We believe a single-payer system (Medicare for everyone) would be less costly, more efficient and provide all Americans with the health care they need without an increase in overall dollars spent (an amount that is increasing at a rate of 7 percent per year). This would include the 47 million who are currently uninsured and the estimated 50.3 million who are "underinsured" (spending 10 percent or more of their pretax income on health care).

Read Entire Article

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Universal Coverage Law Creates Doctor Shortage

Sunday, March 23, 2008

More on BC/BS of Michigan and House Bills 5282-5285

In a recent blog post, Jeff Emanuel discusses Michigan House Bills 5282-5285, pertaining to changes in insurance laws being pushed by Blue Cross / Blue Shield of Michigan. His introduction reads:

“In late 2007, after a single perfunctory committee meeting, the Michigan House of Representatives passed a series of four bills which, if approved by the Senate and signed into law by Gov. Jennifer Granholm, will have a very negative effect on the health insurance market in the state.”

. . . and later in his article he writes:

Health care giant Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) has long enjoyed tax-exempt status in Michigan, as the result of a 1938 deal BCBS made with the state to be the “insurer of last resort” for otherwise uninsurable consumers. This means, for tax purposes, that the carrier was treated as a non-profit corporation, while actually operating as a for-profit business.”

To read Jeff’s entire article, go to his blog-entry page.

Besides being a self-described “combat journalist,” Mr. Emanuel is a Research Fellow for Health Care Policy at the Heartland Institute (a free-market public policy organization) - and - the Managing Editor of Health Care News.