Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Colin Powell pitches single-payer health care in U.S.

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell has waded into the health care debate with a broad endorsement of the kind of universal health plan found in Europe, Canada and South Korea.

�I am not an expert in health care, or Obamacare, or the Affordable Care Act, or however you choose to describe it, but I do know this: I have benefited from that kind of universal health care in my 55 years of public life,� Powell said, according to the Puget Sound Business Journal, last week at an annual �survivors celebration breakfast� in Seattle for those who, like Powell, have battled prostate cancer. �And I don�t see why we can�t do what Europe is doing, what Canada is doing, what Korea is doing, what all these other places are doing.�

Europe, Canada and Korea all have a �single-payer� system, in which the government pays for the costs of health care.

Some Democrats who strongly advocated for, and failed to get, a single-payer system in the 2010 Affordable Care Act, still believe the current law doesn�t go far enough to reform the US health system.

A retired four-star general and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Powell told the audience about a woman named Anne, who as his firewood supplier, faced a healthcare scare of her own. Anne asked Powell to help pay for her healthcare bills, as her insurance didn�t cover an MRI she needed as a prerequisite to being treated for a growth in her brain. In addition, Powell�s wife Alma recently suffered from three aneurysms and an artery blockage. �After these two events, of Alma and Anne, I�ve been thinking, why is it like this?� said Powell.

�We are a wealthy enough country with the capacity to make sure that every one of our fellow citizens has access to quality health care,� Powell. �(Let�s show) the rest of the world what our democratic system is all about and how we take care of all of our citizens.�

Powell, who has taken heat from Republicans for twice endorsing President Obama�s election and reelection bids, said he hopes universal healthcare can one day become a reality in the U.S. �I think universal health care is one of the things we should really be focused on, and I hope that will happen,� said Powell. �Whether it�s Obamacare, or son of Obamacare, I don�t care. As long as we get it done.�

Single Payer Is Getting a Second Life as Obamacare Frustration Peaks

From the Daily Beast –

Could anger at the Obamacare rollout make Americans more receptive to a kind of Medicare-for-all system? That�s what activists are hoping�and they�re plotting a state-by-state fight.

As the rollout of Obamacare clunks forward, activists who opposed the law from the beginning say it is time to seize the moment, to tear down the current health-care edifice and start anew, especially now as frustration with the law�s implementation is reaching a peak.

These are not Tea Party activists but advocates for a single-payer health-care system who say some of the problems with the launch of the Affordable Care Act�in addition to built-in problems with the law itself�have made the American public more receptive than ever to a Medicare-for-all kind of coverage system.

On Monday, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) introduced the American Health Security Act, which would require each state to set up a single-payer health-care system and would undo the exchanges that have plagued Obamacare. Meanwhile, various state-led efforts are under way that advocates hope will sweep the country statehouse by statehouse, as soon as lawmakers see the advantage of a single-payer system. In Vermont, for example, lawmakers have set aside the financing and are already preparing to adopt a single-payer system when the federal government permits it, which according to provisions of the Affordable Care Act will be in 2015. In Massachusetts, Don Berwick, a former top Obama administration health official, is basing his campaign for governor on bringing a single-payer system to the commonwealth. And advocates in New York, Maryland, Oregon, and around the country say they see new energy around their cause.

�As the president fully understands, the rollout has been a disaster, the website has been a disaster,� said Sanders in an interview moments after his bill was introduced in the Senate. �But the truth is, even if all of those problems were corrected tomorrow and if the Affordable Care Act did all that it was supposed to do, it would be only a modest step forward to dealing with the dysfunction of the American health-care system. When you have a lot of complications, it is an opportunity for insurance companies and drug companies and medical equipment suppliers to make billions and billions of profits rather than to see our money go into health care and making people well.�

Democrats conceded that Republican efforts to sabotage Obamacare with endless lawsuits and by declining to set up state-run exchanges have damaged the law�s popularity, but they say the confusion will lead the public inevitably to conclude that a simple single-payer system, one that avoids malfunctioning websites and complicated gold/silver/bronze options, is preferable. Advocates pointed enthusiastically to a tweet last month from John Podesta, the former Clinton White House chief of staff who is joining President Obama to help with health care��Just applied online for Medicare. Took 5 minutes. Single payer anyone?��calling it proof that wild-eyed radicals are not the only ones supporting single payer. The notion is gradually becoming more mainstream among the Democratic establishment, advocates said.

�I think the thing that is most interesting about government is that populism gets its biggest support not from Democrats but from what Republicans do,� said former Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell, who stressed that he did not count himself among the populist members of the Democratic Party. �They torpedo the Affordable Care Act, and I believe we will now have single payer in this country within the next 15 years.�

Opponents to single payer certainly have reasons to believe the momentum is on their side. Further meddling with the American health-care system, after not just the botched rollout of the Affordable Care Act but also the grueling five-year fight to get there, seems unlikely. But proponents of single payer pointed to polls that show a majority of Americans want some version of Medicare for all. It is up to Democratic pols to show leadership on the issue and risk defying the powerful health-care industry, advocates said.

�It is not possible to put together a good program unless you antagonize the powers that be,� said Dr. David Himmelstein, one of the leaders of Physicians for a National Health Program. The White House, he added, �largely played an inside-the-Beltway game in passing Obamacare. They refused to rally the American people for something truly radical which every poll shows that the American people really want.�

Sanders joked that he expected to have his bill passed by chambers of Congress and ready for President Obama�s signature by the time he returns from Nelson Mandela�s funeral in South Africa, but few proponents see much hope of gaining traction for single-payer health care in a Congress that has struggled to pass a routine budget.

Instead they are turning to a legislature-by-legislature fight in statehouses across the country. Advocates in New York and California said they were counting on labor unions� opposition to the Affordable Care Act�some labor leaders have feared that their members may pay higher premiums under the law and have pushed for exemptions. In Vermont, a single-payer bill passed in 2011, and Dr. Deb Richter, the president of Vermont Health Care for All, said that if anything, the passage of Obamcare slowed the group�s work there.

�We had all the momentum going on the single-payer side, and it was really slowed by the Affordable Care Act,� she said. A state measure similar to Obamacare faltered, she added, because it lacked the appropriate enforcement mechanisms. Now, with the law set to take effect in 2015, advocates are working to calm fears among Vermonters who have been scared off by talk of �socialized medicine.�

�We have all of the right ingredients, but there is a lot of room for mischief. You can confuse people, freak them about rationing and all of that stuff,� said Richter. She said she thought Obamacare�s failure to deal with the spiraling cost of health care would lead more and more people to see the logic of single payer.

�I think that eventually most states will recognize this,� she said. �We keep talking about how the health-care system is unsustainable. We haven�t reached that point yet, but when health care starts eating up 25 percent of GDP and you have hospitals failing, they will look for guaranteed financing, and the only way you get there is through a single-payer system. It is not a matter of if but of when.�

Enrollment Jumps At HealthCare.gov, Though Totals Still Lag

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Despite Big Market In Florida, Obamacare Is A Hard Sell

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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

To Fight Meningitis Outbreak, Princeton Tries European Vaccine

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Monday, December 9, 2013

To Curb Costs, New California Health Plans Trim Care Choices

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Saturday, December 7, 2013

Canceled In California: People Eye Health Plans Off Exchange

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Friday, December 6, 2013

Medical Journal Goes To The Dogs

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Thursday, December 5, 2013

Second Meningitis Outbreak Erupts In Southern California

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Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Mercy Killers – Video Interview with Michael Milligan

Arts Happening Presents: Mercy Killers

Arts Happening Presents: Mercy Killers from Northside Town Hall on Vimeo.

Mercy Killers is a one-man play by Michael Milligan. Joe loves apple pie, Rush Limbaugh, the 4th of July and his wife, Jane. He is blue-collar, corn-fed, made in the USA and proud, but when his uninsured wife is diagnosed with cancer, his patriotic feelings and passion for the ethos of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are turned upside down.

mercykillerstheplay.com

Video by Lehman Film Productions � lehmannfilms.com

Performed at Engine Co. 212, future home of the Northside Town Hall � northsidetownhall.org

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

'This Law Is Working,' Obama Says Of Health Care

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Nonprofits Challenge Missouri Licensing Law For Insurance Guides

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ACLU Sues, Claiming Catholic Hospitals Put Women At Risk

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