Archive for October 31st, 2008

Battleground Blog: Day Eight on the RNs’ Road to Single Payer

Friday, October 31st, 2008

By Donna Smith

PORTLAND, Maine — She's a nurse's daughter and mother of a state legislator.  Chellie Pingree is running for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives from Maine's 1st Congressional District.  Today the nurses of the Maine State Nurses Association, the National Nurses Organizing Committee and the California Nurses Association brought their healthcare report card bus to the town square for a rally with Chellie.

Chellie talked about HR676 and single payer healthcare with those assembled and expressed her desire to get going on her work to help fix this broken system.  The bus, the nurses and Chellie attracted print, radio and television press from the area just as Chellie prepares for her last weekend of campaigning before the Nov 4 election.

Tomorrow, I'll feature a wrap up of some of the less serious moments this week as we prepare for our final four days on the road.  We'll leave Maine for New Jersey and then arrive in Washington, DC, on Sunday.  Energy out in the communities we have visited is high surrounding this election, and we are thrilled to be visiting the communities where our endorsed candidates — our 2008 healthcare heroes — are running fantastic campaigns and standing firm on single payer.

Go to Source

Loveta Baker - Weaverville, NC - 11/03/2008

Friday, October 31st, 2008

"But, alas, Great-West is paying just under one-third of my total costs, using 'average contracted rate' as the reason. Health insurance shouldn't be this complicated – these companies should have forms that are easier to decipher. And they should live up to what they promise in their glossy promotional literature that has you believing they're 'there for you.'"

"Right now I feel like I'm in the movie SiCKO - I am continuing to make my insurer explain, and pushing for accountability with the help of a consumer group."

—————————

Sponsored by the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee

Eighty-two percent of Americans think the U.S. healthcare system should be fundamentally changed or completely rebuilt (Commonwealth Fund, Aug. 7, 2008). America's nurses know that only single-payer, improved and expanded Medicare for all will fix our broken system and the tragedy of our devastated families. HR 676, by U.S. Rep John Conyers, is the most comprehensive, cost effective way to achieve guaranteed healthcare for all.

For more information, or to contact this patient: Liz Jacobs, RN 510/273-2232.

Go to Source

Obama Must Do Better on Health Care Reform

Friday, October 31st, 2008

In his stump speech, during the presidential debates, highlighted in his 30 minute commercial, Senator Barack Obama has made clear that, were he elected president, health care reform will be near the top of his priorities. It’s viewed as a critical component in fixing the nation’s faltering economy, ranking alongside energy independence and a middle class tax cut at the top of his domestic agenda.

Senator Obama’s commitment to the issue is more than ideological, although he does see health care coverage as a right of all Americans. It is also highly personal. Senator Obama described the roots of his committment to health care reform in Sarasota, Florida yesterday this way: “And as somebody who watched his own mother lying on a hospital bed at the end of her life because they had cancer. The insurance companies were saying this was a pre-existing condition, maybe we don’t have to pay for your treatment, I know what it’s like to see a loved one suffer not just because they’re sick but because of a broken health care system.”

This combination of ideology, politics and the personal will assure that health care reform would be taken up early in an Obama Administration. Given his passion for the issue, the state of the economy and the real need to address serious problems in the current health care system, the odds are extremely high a comprehensive reform package will emerge sometime in his first term. Whether these reforms will be similar to what Senator Obama describes on the campaign trail, however, is, fortunately, both uncertain and unlikely.

One reason is because Senator Obama’s health care reform plan is seriously flawed. To cite just one example, a core attribute of his proposal is to require carriers to except all applicants for coverage without regard to their medical condition. As he put it in Sarasota, “… when I am president, we will end discrimination by insurance companies to the sick and those who need care the most.” This is a noble purpose, but if done wrong, it can lead to a health care reform surcharge that would increase the number of uninsured in the country while increasing costs in the system. The “wrong” way is require carriers to sell coverage without requiring consumers to purchase it. This, in essence, is how non-employer sponsored coverage works in New York and New Jersey. Average premiums in those states are more than twice what they are in California

The need for matching mandates, was integral to Senator Hillary Clinton’s health care reform plan. She perceived it more as a means to universal coverage, but also acknowledged that “adverse selection” is a real, proven phenomena. Imagine the premiums auto insurance companies would need to charge if drivers could wait until after an accident to buy automobile insurance. That is adverse selection and it is exactly what Senator Obama is proposing.

Another reason Senator Obama’s health care reform proposalis unlikely to survive the legislative process intact is it will need to compete with a host of other plans. Senator Ron Wyden (a Democrat) and Senator Bob Bennett (a Republican) have brought together a bipartisan coalition of Senators behind the “Healthy Americans Act.” Then there’s the proposal by Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, Director of the Clinical Bioethics Department at the National Institute of Health, who proposes a voucher system financed by a Value Added Taxand shares some elements of the Wyden-Bennett proposal. Senator Ed Kennedy is talking to Senators and policy mavens from across the political spectrum to develop a reform package he hopes to introduce in January. Republicans, too, have a host of ideas for reforming the nation’s health care system. Some might even look similar to the health care reform package advocated by Senator John McCain during this presidential campaign.

In short, there will be no dirth of ideas when Washington begins to address health care reform in 2009. Hopefully a coherent, workable plan will arise from this stew of policies and concepts. Senator Obama speaks of being open to other approaches. As he put it when speaking at a Families USA forum in January 2007, ”… affordable, universal health care for every single American must not be a question of whether, it must be a question of how. We have the ideas, we have the resources, and we will have universal health care in this country by the end of the next president’s first term.”

As president, Senator Obama would do well to remember these words. There will be pressure to pass something and pass something quickly. The “First 100 Days” nonsense will be pushed forward as his only window for pushing through comprehensive reform. This is silly. It’s far more important to get health care reform done right than according to an arbitrary timetable.

Instead of rushing reform, President Obama should demand that all the “hows” be on the table. He should require participants to leave their egos and pride of authorship at the door. He should demand an honest appraisal and accounting of both what’s working and what’s not working in the current system. He should set forth the principles he expects to achieve in the process. Then and only then should the hard work of building a new, better system, one that will provide “affordable, universal health care for every single American” begin.

Posted in Health Care Reform, Healthcare Reform, Politics, Presidential Election   Tagged: Barack Obama, Bob Bennett, Ezekiel Emanuel, First 100 Days, Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Ron Wyden   

Go to Source

Battleground Blog: Four States and Clean Plates on the RNs Road to Single Payer

Friday, October 31st, 2008

 

By Donna Smith

PORTLAND, Maine — Today we've been through Connecticutt, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine.  And as you might imagine, at that pace, we aren't exactly wasting time on the ground.  Every stop, every step is one taken to reach toward our objective:  educating our fellow citizens about healthcare reform and about HR676, single payer, guaranteed healthcare for all.

Seems like we end up reaching lots of people in diners and coffee shops where they don't really seem to mind too much if a nurse walks up to offer some information and then engages in conversation about the problems related to healthcare that everyone has in within their families or circles of friends.

Today we joined with nurses from five states: Pennsylvania, Ohio, Massachusetts, New York and California.  The RNs share common frustrations about what they face every day in being advocates for their patients, and they share the goal of making sure the system is fixed before thousands more patients die.

Everybody in the diner needs healthcare: cooks, wait staff, owners, customers.  All are sure to find that if they give these nurses a moment, they'll be much better informed about the best way to clean up the mess in this nation's for-profit healthcare system.

We shared lunch with other labor folks also working to spread the word during this election season.  Though some citizens seem a bit campaign-fatigued in some ways — especially in the battleground states — most are still more than willing to take a peek at the RNs report cards on healthcare reform and learn a bit more.

Generally, citizens are energized and anxious to get on with the election and then continue their work on the issues they find most important.  But in recent days, along with some challenging interactions with a very few folks who have closed minds and hearts, nurses have been able to break through all the noise with their message. 

Tomorrow, Bangor, Maine… as we embrace nurses in Maine and reach out to folks still wondering what to think about all the women in red scrubs getting off that big, shrink-wrapped bus, and the why they care enough to travel so far. 

Go to Source

Get A Auto Car Insurance Quote

Friday, October 31st, 2008

Get a Auto Car Insurance Quote - Compare Prices Online

Author:
Bryan Burbank

Article:
Finding Auto Car Insurance online can be a little overwhelming
because there are so many companies to choose from. If you own a
car then you need to have some type of car insurance. There are
many types you can choose from such as basic liability auto
insurance which will cover you n the event you get into an
accident. Then you could go to full coverage which will cover
just about anything that can happen to your car. Full coverage
car insurance is usually required when purchasing or leasing a
new car, this is so the lender is covered in case anything
happens to the car.

Learn how to find Discount Auto Car Insurance

It is always best to make sure that when searching online that
you get multiple quotes so that you can know if you are getting
a good rate. If you just look at one rate from a company that
advertises heavily then you will have nothing to compare it to
and you will not know if you are getting the rate for you.

Get some Advice about Types of Insurance

There are other discounts that are available to you when
searching for a car insurance quote such as a good driver
discount. A Good Driver discount is determined by the number of
tickets or accidents you have had in a set period of time. Also
if you have multiple cars there is a discount that will help you
get cheaper coverage for that as well.

Always remember to check out many places to get the best quote
possible so that you have the best success finding discount auto
insurance.

About the author:
Bryan Burbank is an expert in the field of Discount Insurance.
http://finddiscountinsurance.com

No Tags
Go to Source


Links: BERNINAONLINE.COM, BESTMUTT.COM, BESTMUTTS.COM, CHRISRIDDLE.BIZ, CLUBPIMPMYRIDE.COM, CLUBROCKBAND.COM, CLUBWII.COM, CULTROCKBAND.COM, ESURANCECRAP.COM, FREEDESIGNS.COM, GEICOCRAP.COM, GUITARHEROTUBE.COM, HOMEEMBROIDERY.COM, HOTTIEMAX.COM, INSURANCECRAP.COM, LIVEWIIORDIE.COM, LIVEWIIORDII.COM, MYBERNINA.COM, MYJANOME.COM, PIMPMYRIDECLUB.COM, STEPLFE.COM, STEPLIF.COM, STEPLIFE.COM, STEPLIFE.ORG, STEPLIVING.COM, STPLIFE.COM, YACKSOUP.COM, YAKSOUP.COM