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Posts Tagged ‘Health Care’

September 10th, 2009

President Obama’s Healthcare Address Greeted By Hoots, Hollers and Hisses

diane
(nj.com)

(nj.com)

After a summer of vocal opposition to his health plan, President Obama displayed his strength as a political leader in a 47 minute speech presenting a case for overhauling the healthcare system. It was live political theater at its best, including the continuous sound of cheers and applause, a letter from Ted Kennedy after his death and even an unruly heckler who shouted “you lie,” impolitely putting himself front stage center

Dr. Charles Boustany

Dr. Charles Boustany

Republicans felt the speech came up short and was out of step with the changes Americans wanted. Representative Charles Boustany Jr. of Louisiana agreed that health care needed an overhaul, but felt the president needed to come up with a fresh plan.

“It is clear the American people want health care reform. But they want their elected leaders to get it right. Most Americans wanted to hear the president…. tell Congress that it’s time to start over on a common-sense bipartisan plan focused on lowering the cost of health care while improving quality.”

According to Vitals.com, Dr. Boustany received his medical degree at Louisiana State University and completed his residency in Thoracic Surgery at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester.

Obama said the changes would cost about $900 billion over the decade that is more likely to exceed $1 trillion.

Some of the highlights of the speech:

* Insurance policies couldn’t be canceled because of sickness or denied for pre-existing conditions. For those who can’t get insurance, because of a pre-existing condition, the government would provide low cost coverage to protect them against ruin.

* Government subsidies would be available to make premiums affordable. Every American would be required to carry coverage, “the same way drivers carry auto insurance.”

* A fee, or tax, on health insurance companies would be imposed for their most expensive policies.

* A provision for the federal government to sell insurance in competition with private industry.

* A mechanism to control and reduce the growth of Medicare.

* A new initiative to create pilot projects to help curb medical malpractice suits, a cause important to Republicans and physicians.

A CNN poll interviewed a random sample of 427 adults who watched the speech. 18% identified themselves as Republican, 45% as Democrats and 37% as Independents.

When asked about their overall reaction to the speech 56% were very positive.  70% felt that Obama’s policies would move the country in the right direction. When asked how they felt about the President’s plan to reform health care, 67% were in favor of his plan. But when asked how likely it was that Congress would pass the proposals, only 20% felt is was very likely.

This general feeling was reinforced as Republicans arrived ready to fight. The president was heckled when he dismissed the notion of death panels that denied coverage to the elderly. “It is a lie, plain and simple,” Obama stated.

Their raucous disapproval spilled over when Senator Ben Cardin shouted, “You lie” when Obama asserted that nothing in his plan would provide coverage to illegal immigrants. The senator proved to be wrong, the bill would require illegal immigrants to buy coverage.

Facing his tough bipartisan audience, President Obama drew much needed laughter as he stated:

“There remain some significant details to be ironed out.”

Catch the Full National Healthcare Address here:

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September 7th, 2009

Public Healthcare and Major League Baseball

Margarita

Dr. Thomas Lee

Dr. Thomas Lee

Dr. Thomas Lee had a wonderful editorial trying to contrast baseball to public health care option.

Dr. Thomas Lee says the better way of understanding the appropriate role of government and regulation in health care is to take a closer look at a completely different industry — such as, say, baseball. To many, baseball represents an American ideal for free-market opportunity. Player and team performance can be measured objectively and comprehensively with a wide array of statistics such as RBI, HR, ERA, and OBP. And the best players advance to the major leagues and garner the highest salaries. Regulation and centralized intervention play a minimal role in major league baseball. Or do they?

A closer look reveals that something as simple as baseball has more than 220 pages of rules and regulations. The 2009 Official MLB Rulebook has 17 pages alone devoted to the objectives of the game.

In that rulebook, it’s stated that “the infield shall be a 90-foot square.” The bat “shall be a smooth, round stick not more than 2 3/4 inches in diameter at the thickest part and not more than 42 inches in length.” And the ball “shall be a sphere formed by yarn wound around a small core of cork, rubber or similar material, covered with two stripes of white horsehide or cowhide, tightly stitched together. It shall weigh not less than five nor more than 5 1/4 ounces avoirdupois and measure not less than nine nor more than 9 1/4 inches in circumference.” Avoirdupois? And we thought health care IT standards harmonization was obscure?

The point is that all competitive markets have some form of central regulation and control. Whether you call them rules, laws or regulations, they allow competitive markets to work better. And a central body needs to define those rules, whether they be a baseball commissioner or Congress.

If you accept the baseball analogy, then it’s easy to concede that government (or some central body) should have a significant role in shaping how health care is “played.” This is true of almost all industries big or small and should apply to health care as well. The bigger question then is: What role should that be?

For those in the Obama administration, it appears that the government should not only provide the regulatory framework for how health care is financed and delivered in this country. But it should also offer a health insurance option that competes with private insurers. And to carry the metaphor into the health IT market, should government offer a competing electronic health record?

 

The analog in baseball would be for Major League Baseball — the corporate entity that oversees the game — to field a team that competed with other MLB teams. And that this MLB-owned team could play by a different set of rules (didn’t need to support its expenses, could have losses subsidized by taxpayers, etc).

One can imagine that such a team could hire the best players, charge less for tickets and potentially win the most games while running huge deficits. Even if the MLB-owned team was forced to play by the same financial rules, it would nevertheless send a strong message to others that it doesn’t believe that the other MLB teams were playing to their potential, and that it could do better. 

Granted, it’s fair to say that many employers, patients and physicians are not happy with their current private insurance options. But is creating a public insurance option really the best solution? If baseball were played with a 50-pound lead ball, would adding an MLB-owned team to the mix solve the underlying problem? Of course not. The fundamental rules for playing the game need to be changed, not the number or types of teams.

Which Game Are We Playing?

Unfortunately, the “game” of health care today is much more complicated than baseball. And certainly more important. Birth, health, illness and death are more profoundly intertwined with our humanity than bases, bats or balls. But it’s possible that the simple principles that make baseball such a successful, competitive sport could apply to the health care industry as well.

Such principles could include:

  • Design the playground, not the players. As tempting as it might be to say that health care should be delivered in a certain way by specific types of people or organizations, that stifles any form of creativity and is only likely to drive labor costs up. Defining the landscape with simple constraints and fair play in mind will foster better competition in the long run.
  • Foster a single competitive arena with uniform standards of competition. It rarely does a sport any good if there are two separate leagues playing with slightly different rules and teams. No victory is ever complete. And competition is never as vigorous. This certainly could be no truer than in the health insurance market where it’s more cost-advantageous to have everyone sharing from a single, large risk insurance pool. Risk-adjusted payments could level the playing field to avoid cherry-picking.
  • Empower, don’t patronize, the consumer. If consumers are spending their own money directly, they are much more likely to seek value-based outputs. Yes, health care quality is more difficult to understand and not everything should be a consumable. But providing consumers with the right incentives will allow them to find and select better solutions in the long run.
  • All teams should play by the same rules. This should go without saying, but it sometimes can get lost that the government may not need to play by the same rules as the private sector. If that happens, then the concept of true competition is lost.

 

There are plenty of other principles that could likely be applied but the key point is the health care industry, unintentionally or not, has been designed in a fundamentally flawed way. We’ve been playing in a health care system with 50-pound lead balls, balsa bats and free admission. And blaming or competing against the team owners or players will not solve the primary problem. The rulebook simply needs to be rewritten.

(Article source: ihealthbeat.org)

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August 25th, 2009

Dr. Mwata Dyson Talks About Health Care for African Americans

Irving
Dr. Mwata Dyson

Dr. Mwata Dyson

Dr. Mwata Dyson is a sought after medical expert working with a broad range of medical and surgical specialties including neurosurgery, cardiothoracic surgery, obstetrics/gynecology, pediatrics, pain management and many more. He is committed to educating his patients on preventative healthcare measures, nutrition and overall healthy lifestyles and passionate about empowering his patients on all levels of health and wellness. He has been a member of the Phoenix Suns medical staff and practices anesthesiology in private practice. He is currently studying health policy at Columbia. Dr. Dyson has appeared on an array of media outlets including iVillage in the Loop, a regular on ABC Phoenix, Presna Hispana and more.

Dr. Dyson put out this powerful YouTube Media  in which he says, “I love the energy and passion, but we can’t count on private entities and we can’t soley rely on the goverment. We all need to rely on ourselves in the long term.”

Doctor Mwata Dyson made recent headlines with a video he recently produced about Propofol and Michael Jackson Death.

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June 22nd, 2009

Dr. David Scheiner - Obama’s Doctor Disagrees with His Health Plans

Margarita
Dr. David Scheiner

Dr. David Scheiner

Barack Obama’s personal physician, Dr. David Scheiner, a Chicago based internist, passes Obama on his ‘excellent health’, but fails him in the way he’s building Health Care System for the country.

After 22 years of faithful doctor-patient relationship, Dr. Scheiner is still a huge Obama supporter.  However, being a doctor in an urban low income community mixed with famous clients such as the president himself, the doctor has seen and heard it all.  He worries that Obama is not seeing the harsh issues of those in need.

“I’m not sure he really understands what we face in primary care,” Scheiner says.

Scheiner is also concerned with Obama’s team of health advisers making the most important decisions on behalf of over 300 million people in United States.

“I have a suspicion they pick people from the top echelon of medicine, people who write about it but haven’t been struggling in it.  He doesn’t see all the pain, it’s so tragic out here,” he says. “Obama’s wonderful, but on this one I’m not sure if he’s getting the right input.”

DOES YOUR DOCTOR AGREE WITH OBAMA’S HEALTH PLAN?

via American Prospect

via American Prospect

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