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Building blocks ...
Monday, April 30, 2007
Even though President George Bush only wants to provide health coverage to the poorest families, many states are planning to extend coverage to an increasingly middle-income population, according to an Associated Press story today. Under current law, only children in families up to 200% of poverty ($41,300 for a family of four) could qualify for the program. But 18 states, including California, allow children to qualify if the family income is higher than 200%. ( In California, children in families at 250% of the poverty level could qualify, though many proposals in the Legislature -- including Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's -- would increase that to 300% of poverty - $51,510 for a family of four).New York state just expanded its program to include children in families earning up to $82,600 a year -- or four times the poverty level. This irritates the Bush administration, which opined that if everyone followed NY's lead, then 71% of children in the country would be covered through public programs. Now, that doesn't seem like such a bad thing. Labels: Bush, Federal, InTheNews, OtherStates, SCHIPHealthyFamilies
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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10:48 AM
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For our mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers
Friday, April 27, 2007
There's a common perception out there that seniors are "taken care of'' when it comes to health care. But many adults between the ages of 55 and 64 are increasingly filing for bankruptcy as a result -- partially -- of higher health care costs, according to this LA Times article. when you think about it, though, it's no surprise. Medicare benefits don't begin until 65. By the time you're 55, you've got a good history of pre-existing conditions, making it more expensive to cover you. And employers are looking for younger, cheaper workers -- because you cost too much in more ways than one. More reason for us to get on the ball and do something this year. Labels: InTheNews, MedicalDebt, Medicare
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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11:22 AM
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Conan (the Barbarian)
Thursday, April 26, 2007
From Conan O'Brien last night: "Wal-Mart has begun opening 400 health clinics in their stores. Wal-Mart says the clinics are important because 50% of the people they will treat there won't have health insurance. Those people are called Wal-Mart employees."Future "Tonight Show" host O'Brien is broadcasting from San Francisco next week. Bets on what California politicians might visit the show? Maybe talk about health reform? Labels: Employers, Funny, InTheNews
posted by Anthony Wright |
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1:32 AM
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How to control costs, and more...
Some laughter at an unexpected part of the conversation at the hearing yesterday... Senator Perata was detailing the various measures in his bill intended to control costs. For example, he stated that "we are in the freaking stone age in terms of medical records," and said that we "are killing people" by not using modern electronic technology to deal with medical records. Beyond his own bill, he went on a short rant about prescription drug advertising, and the large amount of money spent on the television commercials for "the little blue pill," and the impact it has on health costs in general. He was very skeptical that as a patient he should be asking his doctor about any medication beyond aspirin. "What the heck do I know?" he inquired, wondering why he should be pestering his doctor about drugs, rather than the other way around. He said if one looks at the sports show, all the advertisements are for "beer, cars, and pills--and not in that order." With a bemused smile, we commented on all TV commercials "and all those smiling men." Not finished, he even interjected "you don't see the women smiling, only the men." And then the conversation went back to health reform. On a more serious note, one way to deal with the issue of prescription drug advertising is at the federal level, in a bill by California Congressman Henry Waxman, as described in this blog post by Steve Blackledge of CALPIRG. Not so seriously, he managed to invoke a comparison to Steve Martin in The Jerk. Labels: CostContainment, Drugs, Federal, Funny, Legislation, OtherBlogs, Perata, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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1:20 AM
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The other shoe drops...
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATEThursday, April 26th, 2007 SEN. PERATA'S HEALTH REFORM LEGISLATION CLEARS HEALTH COMMITTEE * Senate Leader Don Perata’s “pragmatic’’ reform bill clears committee * Senators urge more work to guarantee affordability * ROUNDUP: Other bills in Senate Health Commitee
New on the Health Access WeBlog: Additional leg reports; "Near-universal?"; 500th post coming!A day after his Assembly counterpart passed his health reform legislation in Assembly Health Committee, Senate Leader Don Perata presented his health reform legislation, SB48, for the first time Wednesday in Senate Health. As expected, the bill passed on a party line vote, with Chair of the Senate Health Committee Sheila Kuehl and other Democrats voting to move the measure. No Republicans voted to move the bill forward, and they did not ask questions, even though the Senate President Pro Tem explicitly stated that "we must have Republicans actively engaged in the discussion. Saying this issue need full debate and should be a "full contact, participant sport," Perata urged lawmakers of both parties to keep working with him on the bill: “While we differ on approach, we all agree something must be done.” Bluntly saying the bill is "not finished," he also stated that by the time the bill goes to Appropriations in a couple of weeks, the bill will be more fleshed out with specific numbers that can be openly debated, to weigh the trade-offs. “SHARED RESPONSIBILITY’’ IS THEME AMONG REFORM PROPOSALSLike Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez’s AB8, Governor Schwarzenegger’s proposal, and Senator Kuehl's SB840, Perata’s plan relies rhetorically on the notion of “shared responsibility.’’ SB8 would: • Require every Californian earning more than 400% poverty to have health insurance, or lose personal tax deductions • Expand coverage to *all* children up to 300% of federal poverty; • Require employers to spend a percentage of payroll on health care for both full- and part-time workers and their families, or pay an equivalent amount into a state fund that could help fund health care for workers. • Create a state-run insurance “connector’’ that would negotiate rates and create coverage standards for employers to buy into. • Require insurers to sell at least one approve plan to any applicant, regardless of health status. • Combine small group and mid-size group insurance markets. • Require health plans to spend at least 85 cents for every premium dollar on health care. Unlike the Nunez and Schwarzenegger proposals, expansions and the “connector’’ purchasing pool would primarily cover workers and their families. “SB48 is a huge leap to extending coverage to the uninsured, but it does not cover everyone,’’ admitted Perata. “It is shy of universal coverage, but it is a plan that is pragmatic and affordable.” DISCUSSION ON AFFORDABILITY AND QUALITYDemocratic senators Mark Ridley-Thomas, Darryl Steinberg, Gil Cedillo, and Kuehl, along with advocates weighed in with concerns about whether the plan would actually be “pragmatic’’ for Californians if they could not afford health coverage, yet were forced to buy it. “This is a very good attempt to cover working people. But our concern is that single people at 400% would have to buy coverage on the market if they are making over $39,000 a year,’’ said Kuehl. She cited that after she is termed out in 2008, she may have this experience herself, perhaps being self-employed or otherwise without employer-based coverage and ineligible for a public program, and just finding it unaffordable to get coverage. Ridley-Thomas also was concerned that Californians who were not working – for instance, retired or between jobs – would not be able to get insurance through the “connector’’ pool that was negotiated by the state. Perata said he would continue working on the issue of affordability – and also ensuring that plans met some kind of minimum standards. STAKEHOLDER TESTIMONYAs with the Nunez bill, groups either gingerly supported or opposed the measure, or even were, as Perata dubbed them, "tweeners." Supporters, including those seeking amendments, included the 100% Campaign, PICO California, the California Association of Public Hospitals, and AARP, which called health reform a "top priority." The California chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians said any coverage expansion would help, since the uninsured account for 20% of emergency room visits, and since they don't often get reimbursed, those costs are borne by those with private insurance. While supporting, the Califormia Medical Association and the association of county health executives urged a Medi-Cal rate increase. Kaiser Permanente was supportive but wanted the "guaranteed issue" requirements to be tied to only the population impacted by the individual mandate--not everybody. Blue Shield argued that the employer fee should not be allowed to be adjusted by regulation. Some groups that were following the debate did not take position on the Perata bill at the committee hearing. Some groups testified even though not formally stating a support or oppose issue. Health Access California, the California Labor Federation, and SEIU stated their support of several elements but could not support the bill as a whole because of the individual mandate provisions. Health Access appreciated amendments that sought to protect lower-wage Californians and to include consideration for consumers' ability to pay, but such amendments were not applied broadly. The California Labor Federation echoed the concerns about the practical impact of the individual mandate, as well as the message it sends about shifting responsibility away from the collective and onto the individual. Other groups were opposed, including the California Chamber of Commerce, which said it was concerned about the employer mandate and affordability of coverage for businesses. Other business opponents included the California Manufacturers and Technology Association, the California Restaurant Association. The California Association of Health Underwriters raised concerns from the employer mandate, as well as issues arising from non-compliance. The California Nurses Association also opposed the continued use of insurance companies. A Christian Science organization sought a religious exemption from the individual mandate. WHY THIS BILL? WHY NOW? This past week, Capitol watchers have seen a flurry of activity on health reform – nearly six months after Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared 2007 to be the “Year of Health Reform.’’ “The stars and the planets may be aligning in a way to allow us to get something substantial done to improve health access and cost.’’ Perata said. "We have a historic opportunity and a responsibility to get it right." In addition to Tuesday’s passage of AB8, last week, Sen. Sheila Kuehl’s single payer legislation, SB840, cleared her committee. “You know what I think the perfect bill is,’’ said Kuehl, referring to her SB840. “I don’t think this is the perfect, but it’s got some reality base. I see it happening. I see the job of this committee to try and getting it stronger.’’ "I think of your bill and the Speaker's bill as attempting to move us…(toward) extended coverage for some people in California, and attempting to move it in a way that does no harm,'' she said. She appreciated Perata's willingness to work on further expanding coverage and making sure that coverage is affordable. Kuehl said that once all is said and done, Californians shouldn't be saying, "Why did they do this to me?'' Kuehl continued, "We may find them saying, 'Why didn't they do more for me?,' which is a different question.'' Perata agreed to work with the committee on these issues and reminded lawmakers to be practical about their approach. “Everyone here has one thing in common – they have health insurance. There is a danger of this becoming an academic exercise,’’ said Perata. But there are people without coverage, he said. “That’s the reason SB48 is here – and I’m still supporting SB840,’’ “Why this year? Why this bill? I know the perfect, the better,’’ said Sen. Perata referring to SB840. “But if we can’t do something for someone now, then shame on us.” OTHER BILLSAlso in committee on Wednesday: * SB32 (Steinberg) would expand Healthy Families to children in families up to 300% of poverty. An identical bill, AB1 (Laird) passed Tuesday. PASSED * SB365 (McClintock) would have allowed out-of-state insurers to sell plans in California without abiding by California’s mandates and regulations. FAILED * SB893 (Cox) would divert First Five tobacco tax dollars to pay to provide health coverage for low-income children. FAILED For more information, contact the author of this report, Hanh Kim Quach, policy coordinator, Health Access California, hquach@health-access.org. Labels: Affordability, ExpandingCoverage, Kuehl, Legislation, Perata, Sacramento, Updates, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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1:16 AM
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We're rollin' on reform....
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
It's been a busy week in health reform. Today, the last of three health reform bills – SB48 (Perata) – was heard and passed out of Senate Health Committee. The bill – jointly authored by Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata and Sen. Sheila Kuehl – attacks health reform in the "shared responsibility'' fashion that the Governor and AB8 by Assembly Speaker Nunez do. Kuehl, however, has her own single-payer proposal SB840, which passed last week. Perata's bill has a little of this and a little of that: - Requiring employers to contribute to employee health plans or pay a fee.
- Reining in the insurance company practice of discriminating against people with "pre-existing" conditions.
- Expanding public programs, such as Medi-Cal and Healthy Families.
- And requiring that every Californian earning more than $41,000 (individual) to have health insurance – whether you're offered it on the job or not.
(Read the full text of the bill here.) What was interesting about the debate, to me, was the sense that despite concerns about specific issues, all parties acknowledge that this was the year to get something done. Sen. Sheila Kuehl, a strong advocate for consumers and considered a rock star in health policy circles for her persistence in getting a single-payer system in California, said she is often asked why she is co-authoring SB48. "I think of your bill and the Speaker's bill as attempting to move us…(toward) extended coverage for some people in California, and attempting to move it in a way that does no harm,'' she said. "It's a good attempt to cover working people.'' But, Kuehl admonished, she would be extremely sensitive to any proposals that leave Californians worse off than they are now. She appreciated Perata's willingness to work on further expanding coverage and making sure that coverage is affordable, saying that once all is said and done, Californian's shouldn't be saying, "Why did they do this to me?'' While they may be saying, "Why didn't they do more for me,'' Kuehl said, that's a different question. Sen. Perata agreed with Kuehl. "Why this year? Why this bill? I know the better [bill],'' said Sen. Perata referring to SB840, which would be vetoed – again – by Gov. Schwarzenegger if it landed on his desk. "But if we can't do something for someone now, then shame on us." Labels: ExpandingCoverage, Kuehl, Legislation, Perata, YearOfReform
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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6:19 PM
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Steps forward...
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATEWednesday, April 25, 2007 SUPER TUESDAY: ASSEMBLY HEALTH COMMITTEE CONSIDERS 37 BILLS; PASSES SPEAKER'S HEALTH REFORM BILL * Speaker’s bill (AB8) on health reform expands coverage, set rules on insurers, etc. * Other bills: Health plans would need to follow stricter rules before rescinding coverage * Roundup of other bills of interest to health advocates New on the Health Access Weblog: Blog Update, Gov's Proposal, Medicaid Grades
With one week left before bills need to be out of policy committees, the Assembly Health Committee was a flurry of activity on Tuesday. Of highest interest to many health advocates was AB8 (Nunez), getting its first legislative hearing this year. While AB8 was heard for the first time Tuesday, it’s not on the only health reform proposal on the table. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger started the year by unveiling his proposal and a declaration that 2007 would be the “Year of Health Reform.’’ Last week, the Senate Health Committee passed SB840 (Kuehl), which would create a universal single-payer health system in California, which has been vetted for the last five years. Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata will have to present his health reform measure today at 1:30 in the Senate Health Committee. AB8 (Nunez)AB8 passed on a 10-5 votes (unofficial tally). Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez started by saying "there is no greater state interest or urgency this year than strengthening our fragile health care system." He characterized the bill as a "very broad approach to reforming our broken health care system." He admitted that his bill “is not the finished product’’ but said it was thoughtful and sound and urged fellow lawmakers to work with him on improving the measure. “This year we have a rare opportunity. A chance to act. I don’t think that we can miss this opportunity,’’ Nunez said. “This system is going to fall on us if we don’t fix it.’’ Speaker Nunez had several Assembly Democrats present on different parts of the bill. * Assemblywoman Karen Bass talked about expanding and simplifying public programs: * Increasing eligibility for public programs such as Healthy Families and Medi-Cal, for children, as well as many parents; * Creating a premium assistance program for low-income families; * Streamlining enrollment in these programs, including elimination of the asset test in Medi-Cal; * Assemblyman Hector De La Torre described the insurance market reforms, including new rules for government and insurers: * Imposing rules on health insurers so that relatively minor ailments are no longer grounds for denying coverage; * Extending protections in the small group market to the mid-size insurers; * Requiring insurers to dedicate at least 85 cents on every premium dollar toward patient care, rather than administration and profit; * Assemblyman Ed Hernandez talked personally, from his experience as a optometrist dealing with patients who had diabetes, about the focus on prevention. This includes the creation of uniform benefit standards that include preventative care and disease management. * Assemblyman Kevin de Leon presented on cost containment issues, such as: * The use of Section 125 plans to allow health premiums to be paid for with pre-tax dollars; * The creation of the state purchasing pool to bargain rates, as well the creation of uniform benefit plans to allow for better price comparison by health purchasers; * Promoting health information technology; * The savings yielded by covering the uninsured, reducing the estimated 10% cost shift. * Speaker Nunez finished on the financial aspects, including the drawing down of new federal funds, and issues of employer and employee responsibility. That includes the option for businesses to contribute money toward coverage or pay a fee. (The exact level of the fee was unspecified, as the modeling of the proposal is continuing). Read full text of the bill here.Assemblyman Nakanishi, Republican vice-chair of the committee, started off the discussion by saying that while they agreed with the concern, the Republicans were "vehemently against the approach" of the bill. Assemblyman Bob Huff, R-Diamond Bar, said he did not believe Nunez was approaching the problem correctly and “stifling choice.’’He said the health care system “is not broken. People come here from countries with socialized medicine for cutting edge treatments.’’ The problem, he said, “”It’s not an equally distributed health care system.’’ Huff said he believed that Nunez’ attempts to fix the system would “kill the baby while trying to save it.’’ Rather, Huff is supportive of the Assembly Republican assortment of health care legislation that focuses on “increased choice’’ that allows for “incentive- and market-based’’ reforms. Assemblywoman Audra Strickland, R-Thousand Oaks, took issue with the part of Nunez’ proposal that would eliminate the Medi-Cal asset test. “We are opening our doors to the world…offering “Cadillac Coverage” to anyone who sets foot here,’’ she said. She also said she believed that taking away insurers’ ability to discriminate against people who had illnesses – major or minor – was a losing proposition, “increasingi premiums and deductibles’’ in other states. Nunez clarified that his bill would create a high-risk pool for consumers who had more serious illnesses, but that his bill simply prevented insurance companies from denying policies for ailments such as bunions or ear infections. “I believe the healthcare insurance industry has got to step up to the table,’’ he said. Assemblyman Ted Gaines, R-Roseville, said he resisted the mandates in the bill, and would argue to even remove the mandates in the current law. “Maybe you don’t need ‘bells and whistles’ on a catastrophic health policy,’’ he said. A handful of groups, such as the 100% Campaign of Children Now, Children's Defense Fund, and Children's Partnership, as well as the NAACP and PICO California, supported the measure outright. Many expressed general support but had suggested amendments including the California Labor Federation, California Medical Association, Health Access California, Consumers Union, SEIU, Teamsters, AARP, AFSCME, California Association of Public Hospitals, California Federation of Teachers, CALPIRG, Congress of California Seniors, Jericho, said they would support the measure if amended. Also in the same position of seeking amendments was the California Association of Health Underwriters, Kaiser Permanente and Blue Shield, the latter saying that the bill "does not go easy on health plans," and while they have concerns, they recognize they need to be part of the "shared responsibility." See Health Access California’s position letter on AB8 here.Business%20groups%20and%20the%20California%20Nurses%20Association%20opposed%20the%20measure. HEALTH%20PLANS%20WOULD%20BE%20BANNED%20FROM%20RESCINDING%20POLICIES%20WHEN%20CONSUMERS%20USE%20COVERAGE%20  %20 In%20a%20victory%20for%20consumers%20Tuesday,%20the%20Health%20Committee%20also%20passed%20AB1324%20(De%20La%20Torre),%20which%20re-states%20and%20re-emphasizes%20Californiaâ??s%20law%20prohibiting%20health%20insurers%20for%20canceling%20coverage%20consumers%20if%20they%20turn%20out%20to%20be%20sick.%20 The%20bill%20comes%20about%20after%20several%20high%20profile%20cases%20in%20which%20Blue%20Cross%20Ca.%20rescinded%20coverage%20â??%20retroactively%20â??%20from%20policyholders%20after%20expensive%20claims%20were%20made.%20Consumers%20were%20left%20with%20hundreds%20of%20thousands%20of%20dollars%20in%20bills%20after%20Blue%20Cross%20refused%20to%20pay%20the%20bills%20incurred%20during%20the%20time%20patients%20believed%20they%20were%20insured.  %20Blue%20Cross%20alleges%20that%20the%20patients%20knowingly%20lied%20about%20their%20health%20status%20on%20their%20applications%20for%20coverage,%20triggering%20the%20cancellation.%20 Since%20then,%20policyholders%20filed%20hundreds%20of%20lawsuits%20against%20Blue%20Cross.%20Physicians%20and%20hospitals%20have%20also%20joined%20with%20consumers. %20 Insurers%20opposed%20AB1324,%20but%20attacked%20it%20on%20unrelated,%20red%20herring%20issues. For%20instance,%20the%20California%20Association%20of%20Health%20Plans,%20said%20they%20were%20concerned%20insurers%20would%20have%20to%20continue%20to%20cover%20patients%20even%20if%20premium%20payments%20had%20not%20been%20made%20for%20the%20patient.%20 Assemblywoman%20Strickland%20jumped%20on%20that%20notion%20as%20well. De%20La%20Torre%20reiterated%20several%20times%20that%20the%20bill%20would%20not%20force%20health%20plans%20to%20pay%20for%20consumers%20that%20werenâ??t%20paying%20their%20premiums.%20It%20only%20addressed%20the%20narrow%20issue%20of%20health%20plans%20canceling%20coverage%20when%20it%20turned%20out%20consumers%20needed%20coverage. ROUNDUP%20OF%20BILLS%20COMMITTEE%20VOTED%20ON%20TUESDAYâ?¢Â   %20 AB1%20(Laird)%20PASSED.%20Would%20allow%20children%20in%20families%20up%20to%20300%%20of%20poverty%20to%20enroll%20in%20Healthy%20Families.%20This%20bill%20is%20similar%20to%20AB772%20(Chan),%20which%20was%20vetoed%20by%20Gov.%20Schwarzenegger%20in%202005. %20(Health%20Access%20position:%20Support)%20â?¢Â   %20 AB1468%20(Garrick)%20FAILED.%20Would%20require%20hospitals%20to%20collect%20and%20report%20information%20on%20how%20much%20care%20they%20provide%20to%20uninsured%20patients%20â??%20particularly%20undocumented%20immigrants%20â??%20and%20how%20much%20of%20that%20care%20is%20uncompensated. %20(Health%20Access%20position:%20Oppose)%20â?¢Â   %20 AB1312%20(Emmerson)%20SUPPORT. %20Would%20increase%20Medi-Cal%20reimbursement%20rates%20to%20near%20Medicare%20levels. %20(Health%20Access%20position:%20Support)%20â?¢Â   %20AB1572%20(DeVore)%20FAILED.%20Would%20require%20conversion%20foundations%20that%20administer%20grants%20to%20spend%2090%20percent%20of%20those%20dollars%20providing%20direct%20medical%20services. %20(Health%20Access%20position:%20Oppose)â?¢Â   %20AB1072%20(Gaines)%20PASSED.%20Would%20create%20the%20California%20Health%20Insurance%20Exchange%20within%20MRMIB%20that%20would%20â??" face="Arial">here Opponents included the business groups largely opposed to the employer mandate, with the Chamber of Commerce and others citing their concern about health costs rising higher than the rate of inflation. The California Restaurant Association testified that there was "much to applaud" in the measure, but was concerned about the mandate on "labor intensive, low-margin businesses." Other opponents included the National Federation of Independent Businesses, California Manufacturers Association, and the Automotive Business Association. The California Nurses Association also opposed, saying "health insurance isn't health care," suggesting amendments to only expand coverage to children, as a "bridge" to SB840. Nunez responded to the various questions by Republican Assemblymembers, arguing that his proposal "expands access to health care, improves quality of health care... and provides the opportunity to put a hold on the cost of health care." HEALTH PLANS WOULD BE BANNED FROM RESCINDING POLICIES WHEN CONSUMERS USE COVERAGEIn a victory for consumers Tuesday, the Health Committee also passed AB1324 (De La Torre), which re-states and re-emphasizes California’s law prohibiting health insurers for canceling coverage consumers if they turn out to be sick. The bill comes about after several high profile cases in which several insurers such as Blue Cross of California rescinded coverage – retroactively – from policyholders after expensive claims were made. Consumers were left with hundreds of thousands of dollars in bills after the insurer refused to pay the bills incurred during the time patients believed they were insured. Blue Cross alleges that the patients knowingly lied about their health status on their applications for coverage, triggering the cancellation. Since then, policyholders filed hundreds of lawsuits against Blue Cross. Physicians and hospitals have also joined with consumers. Insurers opposed AB1324, but attacked it on unrelated issues regarding the bill's overall scope. For instance, the California Association of Health Plans, said they were concerned insurers would have to continue to cover patients even if premium payments had not been made for the patient. De La Torre reiterated several times that the bill would not force health plans to pay for consumers that weren’t paying their premiums. It only addressed the narrow issue of health plans canceling coverage when it turned out consumers needed coverage. ROUNDUP OF BILLS COMMITTEE VOTED ON TUESDAY * AB1 (Laird) PASSED. Would allow children in families up to 300% of poverty to enroll in Healthy Families. This bill is similar to AB772 (Chan), which was vetoed by Gov. Schwarzenegger in 2005. (Health Access position: Support)
Several bills that were part of the Assembly Republican health package were considered as well: * AB1468 (Garrick) FAILED. Would require hospitals to collect and report information on how much care they provide to uninsured patients – particularly undocumented immigrants – and how much of that care is uncompensated. (Health Access position: Oppose) * AB1312 (Emmerson) SUPPORT. Would increase Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to near Medicare levels. (Health Access position: Support) * AB1572 (DeVore) FAILED. Would require conversion foundations that administer grants to spend 90 percent of those dollars providing direct medical services. * AB1072 (Gaines) PASSED. Would create the California Health Insurance Exchange within MRMIB that would “facilitate” the purchase of health insurance. Labels: ExpandingCoverage, Insurers, Legislation, Nunez, Sacramento, Updates, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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1:37 AM
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Legislation? What legislation?
Monday, April 23, 2007
Bill Bradley at New West Notes puts forward his own prognosis for health care reform this year. He's off on some things (like the exact content of the legislative proposals), but gets the history with SB2(Burton) right. One thing I'll disagree with him on is the significance of the Governor not having an authored bill: Health underwriter Alan Katz comments in his blog that it doesn't matter if the Governor doesn't have a bill: by virtue of pen and veto stamp, he is able to influence the process. But at the same time, he can only sign the bills the Legislature place on his desk. It's up to us to get the legislature to put a bills that provides benefits, not burdens, to health care consumers. Some have cited models from last year: global warming, minimum wage, prescription drugs. As we start in the next two days with committee hearings on the proposals by Speaker Nunez and Senate President Pro Tem Perata, that's the type of process we might be looking at. Labels: Legislation, OtherBlogs, Sacramento, Schwarzenegger, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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9:54 PM
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Grading on a curve
Saturday, April 21, 2007
Public Citizen put out a report last week ranking each state's Medicaid programs, based on the question, if you were poor and/or sick, how well could you get the care that you need? Especially after fighting all the proposals to cut Medi-Cal during the last budget crisis, there should be some pride in California's ranking of 14, although it's sobering how restrictive Medicaid can be in other states. California did better than others: California didn't top the list in any category, but is better is eligibility and benefits than many states, and near the bottom of the pack in paying providers, which has an impact on these 6.8 million children, seniors and people with disabilities being able to access a provider. It does show that California can do more, and the report recognizes the health reform conversation we are having now. The report does provide a useful reminder about how important and foundational the Medicaid program is for all of us. Page 61 focuses specifically on California. Labels: MediCal, OtherStates, Research, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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11:14 AM
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Blue Cross in more hot water
Friday, April 20, 2007
Lisa Girion at the LA Times writes that doctors and hospitals are now joining the patient lawsuit against Blue Cross when the giant health insurer retroactively rescinded patient's policies after they received treatments and refused to pay out claims. Assemblyman Hector De La Torre is hoping to curb the practice with his AB1324. Labels: BlueCross, InTheNews, Legislation, Sacramento
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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12:21 PM
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The season has started...
Thursday, April 19, 2007
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATEWednesday, April 19, 2007 SB840(KUEHL) PASSES BEFORE PACKED HOUSE · Overflow crowds show support as SB840 passes Senate Health Committee · Update on week's health legislative activity; preview of next week New on the Health Access WeBlog: Medicare Drug Negotiations; Hospital Fair Pricing; Prague Spring and ERISA; Schwarzenegger in San Diego; It's Our Healthcare; Wonks, Hacks and Flacks; The Connector and The Terminator; Blue Cross' Bad Behavior; Book Club
Sen. Sheila Kuehl, standing before her own Senate Health Committee, presented (for a fifth year in a row) her legislation that would establish a universal single-payer health system in California . Since 2003, Kuehl has carried this legislation. And since 2003, a growing legion of supporters makes the pilgrimage to the fourth floor Capitol hearing rooms to advocate for this universal system. “Californians have been left helplessly stranded,’’ said Kuehl in her opening statements, detailing how health care costs have steadily risen, while quality and access has steadily declined. She cited a study, published this week by the online medical journal Open Medicine, which concluded that Canada’s single-payer health care system “produces health benefits similar or perhaps superior, to those of the US health system, but at a much lower cost.’’ SB840 passed on a party line vote, 6-5. Democratic Senator Gloria Negrete-McLeod, D-Chino, was not present when the vote was taken. Kuehl said she continues to author the measure because she believes that the legislative system works. Since introducing her bill, it has gone through many changes – and gotten better, in her view. On why she keeps pushing the proposal in the legislative process, she said: “It’s better than backroom deals. It’s better than the ballot – where it’s a ‘take it or leave it’ situation,’’ she said. “This bill has been vetted and vetted." DEBATE Since Kuehl first introduced her single-payer measure, the debate has shifted significantly, and steadily picked up more supporters. A full description of the atmosphere of the hearing is at the California Notes blog. Opponents continued to argue against the bill, but their comments – compared with past years – were more tempered, perhaps in deference to the Kuehl's new position as chair of the Senate Health Committee. The lobbyist for the Association of California Life and Health Insurance Companies, went to great lengths on Wednesday to “respectfully’’ oppose Kuehl’s measure, saying “We don’t agree that government would be the best’’ at running a health care system. The Chamber said it disagreed, in principle, with the annihilation of the health insurance industry, (“We don’t support the banning of an industry because they’re not living up to your standards.”), and said it would be difficult to get Californians to agree to higher taxes to fund the system (even, as supporters argue, that those increased taxes would be lower than what we currently in premiums.) Sen. Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, asked the Chamber of Commerce representative whether business “had a position on the declining quality of health care, and increasing premiums.’’ The Chamber representative conceded that business was, in fact, struggling with the health care system. But then noted that the problem is partially due to the fact that California’s current health care “system’’ is actually a “cadre of systems” (public and private) that have been forced to work together without much consistency. The Chamber representative, however, questioned whether SB840, which would supplant the existing “systems’’ with a new and different one would succeed. THE MARCH CONTINUES
Sen. Sam Aanestad, R-Grass Valley , asked Kuehl why she continued to introduce her bill when it appeared as if Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger would veto it – as he did in 2006. Kuehl’s response: “I’m not sure I do expect a different result this year. But I do expect a different result eventually.’’ About 50 groups announced their support for SB840 at the hearing; 84 organizations have submitted letters of support. Meanwhile, 15 organizations – including business and insurers and providers – opposed the measure. WEEK IN REVIEW
As the deadline for bills to pass policy committees loom, other bills of note that were up this week included: * AB2 (Dymally) - Reforms and restructures the Managed Risk Medical Insurance Program for the medically uninsurable who are denied care by health plans because of "pre-existing conditions.'' Passed. * AB1554 (Jones) - Would regulate health coverage rates by requiring state approval before premiums, deductibles or other out-of-pocket costs are changed. Passed. * SB350 (Runner) - Makes technical changes to last year's landmark AB774 (Chan) which bans hospital overcharging, enabling patients who are uninsured or underinsured to pay the same rates as public programs or insurance companies. Passed. * SB1014 (Kuehl) Establishes a financing mechanism and tax for SB840, the single payer system. Passed. Also this week, the Senate Budget Subcommittee on Health also heard from health plans about the need to increase their reimbursement rates for their Medi-Cal enrollees. Health plans said the state's low reimbursement rates made it difficult for them to adequately pay providers to care for Medi-Cal recipients. The committee left the item open until after the governor releases his May Revision. NEXT WEEK
Stay tuned next week as the health reform debate continues. · AB8 (Nunez) – The Speaker’s health reform proposal will be in Assembly Health Committee on April 24th · AB1 (Laird) – to provide universal children’s coverage will be in Assembly Health Committee on April 24th. · SB48 (Perata/Kuehl) – Senate Leader Perata’s health reform proposal will be in the Senate Health Committee on April 25th. · SB32 (Steinberg) – to provide universal children’s coverage will be in Senate Health Committee on April 25th. Labels: Kuehl, Legislation, Sacramento, SB840, Updates
posted by Anthony Wright |
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9:51 PM
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Fair is fair. Not charity.
California enacted landmark legislation this year that would allow uninsured -- and underinsured -- hospital patients negotiate fair rates from hospitals. As many are well aware, if you're uninsured and end up in the emergency room, you're often charged many times what insurance companies pay for the same procedures. Patients have reported visits that cost thousands of dollars per minute. Others have gone into bankruptcy as a result of needing health care at a time they were not insured. As a result of these unfair and aggressive billing practices by hospitals, the Legislature passed (and governor signed) AB774 (Chan) last year, which would allow uninsured and underinsured patients to pay the same rates at Medicare. Sen. George Runner, R-Antelope Valley, this year, is authoring a bill to clarify that law. Health Access is working with Sen. Runner's office to ensure that this effort is a technical clean-up. We appreciated his public commitment at Senate Health Committee yesterday to not move the bill unless it is something that stakeholders like us agree to. We want to ensure the hard-won consumer protections stay strong and that patients are not overcharged and thrown into financial turmoil because they had the misfortune to get sick. But one clarification of our own: in yesterday's hearing, Runner repeatedly referred to the practice of "fair hospital pricing'' as "charity care.'' The law that Senator Runner is attempting to amend is not about "charity care.'' It shouldn't be considered "charity'' if you are simply paying the same price as public programs and big insurer. Labels: Hospitals, Legislation, MedicalDebt, Sacramento
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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2:59 PM
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This is our political system on drugs...
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Here in Sacramento, SB840(Kuehl) passed out of Senate Health Committee this evening, along a party line vote with six "aye" votes. (State Senator Negrete-McLeod was not present during the vote.) But the issue of "single-payer" health coverage was invoked in Washington, DC, as well. In a blow to seniors, the federal budget, and common sense, several U.S. Senators blocked a attempt to pass a bill to allow the federal government to use its purchasing power under Medicare to negotiate for prescription drugs. While most Democrats (including California's Boxer and Feinstein) and even six Republicans voted for the measure, totalling 55 votes, it was not enough to get the supermajority 60 votes needed to actually get it passed. I was curious about the argument quoted in the New York Times write-up: Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, denounced the bill as “a step down the road to a single-payer government-run health care system.”Democrats said they were merely trying to untie the hands of the secretary of health and human services so he could negotiate on behalf of 43 million Medicare beneficiaries.“The Department of Veterans Affairs is able to negotiate for lower-priced drugs,” said the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada. “H.M.O.’s can negotiate. Wal-Mart can negotiate. Why in the world shouldn’t Medicare be able to do that?”A 2003 law prohibits Medicare from negotiating or setting drug prices or establishing a uniform list of covered drugs, or formulary.More than a handful of Republican Senators don't think they are endorsing single-payer health care when simply supporting the common-sense notion of the Medicare program using its purchasing power. The notion of a "bulk discount" is market-oriented, after all. But it seem Senator Cornyn's argument only makes sense if he thinks the bill will actually be effective--that it will actually provide medicines at lower prices for seniors and Medicare. If it worked, it would spur other reforms... but that wouldn't be a bad thing. Labels: Drugs, Federal, InTheNews, Medicare, SB840
posted by Anthony Wright |
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9:32 PM
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The dreamers, the lawyers, and me...
I am disappointed that the LA Times/Political Muscle's Bob Salladay didn't challenge the San Diego Union-Tribune's Chris Reed when repeating his assertions that health reform at the state level is not legal. I'm not a lawyer, but given all the activity at the state level across the country, it doesn't seem many agree with him. His entire argument is based on a split ruling by the most conservative appeal circuit in the nation, about a specific law in Maryland that is structured differently than the proposals in California, which is in a different circuit anyway. It's true that Maryland decided earlier this week not to appeal the court decision against their infamous "Wal-Mart law" to require the large retailer to spend at least 8% on health benefits. Reed compares the court decision--and I am not kidding or embellishing--to the Soviet tanks rolling into Prague as a final act against state health reform efforts. We could get into the details of the federal ERISA law, but let's quote the actual decisions:* The lower trial court: "Of course, I am expressing no opinion on whether legislative approaches taken by other States to the problems of health care delivery and its attendant costs would be preempted by ERISA. For example, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has recently enacted legislation that addresses health care issues comprehensively and in a manner that arguably has only incidental effects upon ERISA plans. In light of what is generally perceived as a national health care crisis, it would seem that to the extent ERISA allows, it is strongly in the public interest to permit states to perform their traditional role of serving as laboratories for experiment in controlling the costs and increasing the quality of health care for all citizens." (From footnote 15) * Characterizing and quoting the appeals court, the Center for Policy Alternatives writes: "The majority (2-1) opinion was written by a very conservative Reagan and Bush Sr.-appointed judge and was based on the assertion that "the Fair Share Act leaves employers no reasonable choices except to change how they structure their employee benefit plans…", an assertion that is simply false (as the dissenting judge pointed out). * From the the dissenting appeals judge's statement: "Maryland is being buffeted by escalating Medicaid costs. The [Maryland] Act is a permissible response to the problem. Because a covered employer has the option to comply with the Act by paying an assessment — a means that is not connected to an ERISA plan — I would hold that the Act is not preempted." It's about choices: The basis of the decision by the appeal court was that while there was technically an "option" for employers, it wasn’t "meaningful." Their ruling was based on the notion that no employer would choose to pay the 8% assessment to the state, for which they or their workers get no benefit, rather than directly provide coverage to their workers. In San Francisco, and to various extents in Massachusetts and Vermont, and what is being debated in various states including California by our Governor and legislative leaders, the employers who pay the fee get the benefit of a workforce with access to health care, a workforce that is healthy, more productive, and has less turnover and training costs. For example, the "pay or play" models give employers "reasonable" and "meaningful" choices to benefit their workers, and thus themselves. Employers have options to comply with these local proposals without impacting their national ERISA health plans. On Reed's challenge: Reed make a big deal that he can't find a ERISA lawyer to endorse Schwarzenegger's health plan. But lawyers are notorious about not giving a straight answer: most wouldn't endorse an Arbor Day resolution without five caveats. But to say that you can't do state health reforms? I can find several through Google. Reed may be admitting he didn't read the court decision: I quoted above the dissenting judge who is undoubtedly a lawyer, who seemed OK with Maryland's law, even with its structure. Reed himself cites Pat Butler and other authors of various papers. And he mentioned that several states (Illinois, Pennsylvania, etc) have come out with their own proposals since the court decisions, and they all have their own legislators and lawyers in support. California dreaming: Finally, Reed compares health reformers to the Dreamers during the Prague Spring, a time of creativity, liberalization, and openness before the Iron Curtain fell over Czechoslovakia. But in the end, didn't the Iron Curtain fall? Didn't a playwright become president? Didn't the Dreamers ultimately win? Labels: Employers, Federal, OtherBlogs, OtherStates, Research, SanFrancisco, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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6:49 PM
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Big Action Day
In another inspiring day at the Capitol, hundreds of supporters packed hallways and overflowed hearing rooms -- for the second time this year -- in support of Sen. Sheila Kuehl's SB840, which would create a single-payer health system in California. This is the fifth year that Kuehl has introduced the measure and support has snowballed. In addition to the standing-room only crowd, who needed to be told not to cheer in the hearing room, more than four dozen supporters lined up to annouce their support for the bill to lawmakers. This strong showing nearly drowned out the seven sheepish opposing voices coming from business, health insurers and medical providers. Last year, for the first time, Kuehl's SB840 passed both houses of the Legislature and landed on the governor's desk. It was the first time a single-payer measure has ever made it that far in California. Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill. Asked whether she believed the governor would "realistically'' sign the bill this year in light of last year's veto. "I'm not sure I do expect a different result this year. But I do expect a different result eventually,'' Kuehl said.
Eventually is too long for some Californians to wait. Urge your lawmakers to support health reform now! Labels: ExpandingCoverage, Kuehl, Sacramento, SB840, YearOfReform
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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2:24 PM
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Patients spotlight affordability
Here's a section of the press "pool report" by Keith Darce, San Diego Union Tribune, covering the Governor's visit to the emergency department of Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego. You can link to the article he wrote, but this is the background he wrote for use for other reporters: The emergency department was crowded with doctors, nurses and other hospital workers. About 40 patients were in the department, most of them hidden from sight behind drawn privacy curtains. Schwarzenegger met with three patients, all of whom have health insurance. The governor was quickly ushered to the bedside of Evelyn Hare, 81, of San Diego, who had arrived an hour and a half earlier after suffering side effects from medication."Good to see you," Schwarzenegger said. "How are you feeling?" "I'm feeling much better," Hare replied. "I wish I could live to 81. You look really great," the Governor said.... Next, Schwarzenegger visited Ivy Harris, who lives in southeastern San Diego. She was making her second visit to the emergency department since Friday due to complications from a March 20 surgery to remove intestinal blockage. "The hospital is taking good care of me," Harris told the Governor. She questioned Schwarzenegger about how his health care insurance reform plan might affect unmarried women such as herself, and she noted that her out-of-pocket costs for health care have increased substantially in recent years....
Just a reminder that real people are concerned about rising out-of-pocket costs like co-pays and deductibles, and health care reform needs to address the issue, not just the affordability of the premium. Labels: Affordability, Schwarzenegger, Underinsurance, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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10:28 AM
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Our Voice, Our Healthcare...
Yesterday, Health Access California joined with the California Labor Federation and many other organizations in events around the state for a formal launch of the Its Our Healthcare! campaign, and particularly, the effort to raise the voice of consumers, workers, and families, and get us to tell the health care stories we all have. The event at Capitol Park in Sacramento had signs all around, with people's pictures and stories posted, including uninsured, insured, underinsured... but all who have issues with the health care system and want major reform. More information from these events is at the campaign website (where we will also be posting on that blog), at: http://www.itsourhealthcare.org/UPDATE: The Bayne of Blog covered the rally yesterday, complete with pictures: http://bayneofblog.blogspot.com/Labels: OtherBlogs, Sacramento, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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12:18 AM
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Wonks, Flacks, and Hacks
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
One last comment on the TPMCafe Book Club on the new Jonathan Cohn book Sick. The discussion was useful in moving beyond the debate among progressives about what specific proposal to support, and focusing on the hard work at hand. In the last four years in California, we've shown that we can successfully advocate for different proposals at the same time, from setting standards for on-the-job benefits to expanding children's coverage to creating a universal single-payer systemmm, and each effort can build momentum for one another. There's more focus on health care this year because of all these efforts complementing each other. One correction: Robin Podolsky wants it clarified that she wrote that she copped to being a "flak," not a "hack," as I mistakenly wrote. She was originally objecting to the term "wonk." I'll claim all three descriptions for myself... That reminds me that I never linked to the newest version of Health Wonk Review, at the Health Affairs blog, which is chock full 'o interesting posts and analyses, about the national health policy debate. There's a reading list on lessons learned from the Clinton-era efforts; comments on the Democratic presidential candidate's plans, Massachusetts, single-payer, and other ideas, issues raised about transparency, and even a April Fool's post... Labels: Kuehl, OtherBlogs, OtherStates, SB840, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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4:42 PM
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The Connector vs. The Terminator
To inform our debate about "individual responsibility" in California, let's be clear that the only state in the nation to even try an individual mandate has last week allowed for broad "affordability" exemptions, for 20% of the uninsured. These folks are likely not offered public subsidies or affordable employer-based coverage, yet were facing the penalty of enforcement. Under the Massachusetts plan, staying uninsured was the least worst option for these uninsured folks: the other option is to be forced to buy a coverage product that they don't have the money for, and given the deductibles and cost-sharing, may not be of particular use or value to them. Under the exemption, it's not great that they stay uninsured, but at least it meets the "first, do no harm" policy test. I post this schedule not to endorse these standards, but to show that even proponents of the individual mandate need to recognize its problems. The Governor's proposal does not have any exemptions or considerations in this regard. From " The Connector" in Massachusetts: An example of what monthly premiums are deemed affordable, based on income under the recommended schedule, is set forth below. As an example, a single individual earning under $15,315 who is not eligible for Commonwealth Care because he or she is eligible for employer-sponsored insurance would not be penalized for passing up the employer-sponsored insurance offer unless it were free. At the other end of the income scale, a single individual earning between $40,001 and $50,000 would not be penalized for passing up the offer if the monthly premium were more than $300.Singles ---------------------- Couples -------------------- Families w/Children$0 - $15,315 ($0) ----------- $0 - $20,535 ($0) ----------$0 - $25,755 ($0) $15,316 - $20,420 ($35) ---- $20,536 - $27,380 ($70) --- $25,756 – $34,340 ($70) $20,421 – $25,525 ($70) ---- $27,381 - $34,225 ($140) -- $34,341 - $42,925 ($140) $25,526 – $30,630 ($105) -- $34,225 - $41,070 ($210) -- $42,926 - $51,510 ($210) $30,631 - $35k ($150) ------ $41,071 - $50k ($270) ----- $51,511 - $70k ($320) $35,001 - $40k ($200) ----- $50,001 - $60k ($360) ----- $70,001 - $90k ($500) $40,001 - $50k ($300) ----- $60,001 - $80k ($500) ----- $90,001 - $110k ($720) Labels: Affordability, IndividualMandate, OtherStates, Schwarzenegger, Uninsured
posted by Anthony Wright |
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3:46 PM
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What can you do for health care?
Monday, April 16, 2007
HEALTH ACCESS ALERT Monday, April 16, 2007
ACTIONS ON HEALTH CARE THIS WEEK: RALLIES, HEARINGS, CALLS * "It’s Our Healthcare!" Rally: Tuesday, April 17th * Senate Health Committee considers SB840 (Kuehl): Wednesday, April 18th * Call Congress on drug negotiation; SCHIP and covering legal immigrant children * Health reform and children’s coverage measures up next week
The last two weeks of April promise to be eventful for health care activists in Sacramento, with many activities and committee hearings.
HEALTH REFORM RALLY TUESDAY APRIL 17
Tomorrow, a broad range of consumer, community, consumer, and labor groups will convene on the east side of the Capitol to kick off a major effort to engage Californians to tell their health care stories. These stores will help to remind decision makers at the Capitol that the reason that the health system needs to be reformed is to protect consumers.
The rally on Tuesday, sponsored by the It’s Our Healthcare! Campaign and the California Labor Federation, will feature Californians who have had a hard time getting health care they need when they need it, or ended up with mountains of medical debt when they sought medical help for their ailments. Photos and the stories of victims of the health care system will be featured in Capitol Park .
Who: More than 200 members of community organizations, unions, and senior groups statewide What: Rally for Health Care. Launch of statewide story collection efforts. When: 12noon, Tuesday, April 17th Where: East lawn (between 12th and N streets) facing the east side of the Capitol.
SB840 (KUEHL) IN COMMITTEE ON WEDNESDAY
Sen. Sheila Kuehl will present her universal, single-payer legislation before her own Senate Health Committee on Wednesday, April 18th.
This is the fifth year in a row that Kuehl has authored a version of this bill. Last year, it made it to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s desk – for the first time in history – but was vetoed. Kuehl hopes to continue to refine the bill and advance it through the legislative process, as an important part of the health reform bill this year.
When: 1:30 p.m. Where: State Capitol, Room 4203 Listen on the Web: http://www.senate.ca.gov/htbin/testbin/noframe_raudio/
CONGRESS TO VOTE ON MEDICARE DRUG NEGOTIATION
Back in Washington, DC, the U.S. Senate is expected to consider the Medicare Prescription Drug Price Negotiation Act soon. Currently, the government is prohibited from using the bargaining power of 43 million Americans in Medicare to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies for lower drug prices. Earlier this year, the House of Representatives passed a bill to give the government the option to do just that.
National consumer groups have set up a TOLL-FREE HOTLINE FOR TODAY to urge our Senators to vote YES on this important legislative. The number is 1-800-828-0498.
HEALTH CARE FOR (LEGAL) IMMIGRANT CHILDREN, TOO!
The U.S. Congress is also deliberating the extension and reauthorization of the State Child Health Insurance Program, also known as Healthy Families in California.
One potential change as part of this debate would significantly help California draw down federal dollars for children's coverage. California currently provides coverage for some qualified children who are here legally but have not been here for five years--but the state does not get federal matching funds for this, as we get for other programs. The Legal Immigrant Children’s Health Improvement Act (ICHIA) (S. 764, H.R. 1308) would allow and reimburse states to enroll these children in those programs. If this law passed, it would go a long way toward helping to cover all children nationally, and help California get its fair share of federal financing. It would also create a more solid foundation for the state’s efforts this year to provide universal health care to all Californians.A letter to Congress from governors is currently being circulated, but Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has not yet signed on. If our governor signs on, other Republican governor may also join in support. In late February of this year, Governor Schwarzenegger sent a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt where he reiterated his top healthcare priority -- universal coverage in California. He needs further deliver this message by signing onto the governor's letter being circulated. The deadline is Friday. We need you to contact the Governor's office TODAY and voice your group's support for this letter. Call Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger Phone: 916-445-2841Fax: 916-445-4633 The California Partnership has a script for calling.
HEALTH BILLS UP NEXT WEEK
Back in Sacramento, here's some key bills up next week: *AB8 (Nunez): It was previously reported that the Assembly Speaker’s health reform legislation would be heard April 17th. That hearing has been postponed to April 24th in the Assembly Health Committee. * AB1 (Laird/Dymally) which would ensure all children up to 300 percent poverty are covered by either Medi-Cal or Healthy Families will be in Assembly Health Committee April 24th. * SB48 (Perata): Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata’s health reform measure will be up April 25th in Senate Health Committee. * SB32 (Steinberg) which would ensure all children up to 300 percent poverty are covered by either Medi-Cal or Healthy Families will be in Senate Health Committee April 25th.
Labels: Drugs, Legislation, Sacramento, SB840, SCHIPHealthyFamilies, Updates, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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5:41 PM
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If you are easily moved to tears...
If you are easily moved to tears, then do not click here.It's the Pulitzer Prize winning series of photographs in the Sacramento Bee detailing a woman's journey with her dying young son's cancer. Labels: InTheNews
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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5:09 PM
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Champion of profits. But what about patients?
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Fortune Magazine just released its Top 500 companies this weekend. It's no surprise that seven health insurers cracked that list. In all, 13 health insurance companies made the Top 1000. UnitedHealth Group made the biggest leap (from 37 to 21), largely due to its acquisition of PacifiCare. Wellpoint -- the parent company of Blue Cross California -- is the other health insurer in the top 50 -- bumping up three places from 38 to 35. In 2006, Wellpoint made nearly $57 billion. Profits rose by 26 percent. With these fortunes, it's no wonder that Wellpoint subsidiary Blue Cross California is leading an aggressive fight against California's health reform efforts -- as detailed in Mike Zapler's San Jose Mercury News article this weekend. Labels: Insurers, InTheNews
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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11:08 PM
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Health Care for children
There is this misconception that health care is readily available to anyone -- that any person who is sick can see a doctor at any time. Not so. We advocates know that without health coverage, the neediest among us end up paying the highest prices for health care, or going without. Congress is now trying to change this situation for legal immigrant children and pregnant woman. Currently, low-income immigrant children, who are here legally, cannot enroll in Medi-Cal or Healthy Families until they have been here for five years. The Legal Immigrant Children’s Health Improvement Act (ICHIA) (S. 764, H.R. 1308) would allow states to enroll these children in those programs. California already covers legal immigrant children and pregnant mothers. However, we don't get paid for it. If this law passed, it would go a long way toward helping pay for these services and create a more solid foundation for the state’s efforts this year to provide universal health care to all Californians. A letter to Congress from governors is currently being circulated, but Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has not yet signed on. If our governor signs on, many Republican governors have also signaled they’d join in the fight. We need you to contact the Governor's office TODAY and voice your group's support for this letter. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger Phone: 916-445-2841 Fax: 916-445-4633 California Partnership has a script (www.california-partnership.org) for calling. Labels: Federal, OtherStates, SCHIPHealthyFamilies
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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3:10 PM
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Participating in the Book Club from afar....
Friday, April 13, 2007
Earlier this year, I joked that the Sacramento Bee's Crossroads blog turned into a debate mostly among the right and the far-right. Now it's devolved further into just me debating columnist Daniel Weintraub. I'll leave it to others to decide if that is an improvement or not. For something completely different, see what happens when thoughtful progressives talk amongst themselves on health care policy at the TPM Cafe Book Club, where they are continuing discussions around the new Jonathan Cohn book Sick. Robin Podolsky gives this blog a shout-out, but argues a point from my earlier post, saying she's a hack, not a wonk. To bolster her hack credentials, she provides a great analogy of how high-deductible plans are like a Las Vegas buffet. But then she also comes up with a line like, "high-deductible plans disincentivize preventive care," which, while true, is undoubtedly wonkish. But maybe the poet in her wins out, arguing we should not just "advocate the altruism of ‘beautiful souls’ but to address our economic and social interdependence." Yet another Californian joined the debate, as well: Peter Harbage, of Harbage Consulting and the New America Foundation, and many other hats as well. He argues there is "no wrong place to start." I tend to agree, although I actually do think there are steps forward to, and step backwards away from, the goal of quality, affordable health care for all. Knowing him, I think he would agree. Beyond those of all the Californians, to whom I am partial, of course, my favorite post has been that of Nathan Newman, of the Progressive States Network. He provides an accurate reporting of what is happening and a framework for how it fits into a larger picture: In a national conversation, it is important to remind folks that the action is in the states, like California, and that passage of reforms, minor and major (and the bigger the better) creates the demand and framework for a national solution. Success breeds success. California passed a global warming bill last year. Some thought it was great, others a modest first step. Either way, there's more environmental bills this year than ever before, and now this is the talk of the nation, not just California. Labels: ExpandingCoverage, Federal, OtherBlogs, YearOfReform
posted by Anthony Wright |
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9:45 PM
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Spring training is over...
Thursday, April 12, 2007
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATEThursday, April 12th, 2007 HEALTH REFORM DEBATE REVS UP TO HIGH GEAR* Legislative Process Starts for Nunez, Perata, and Kuehl bills * Assembly & Senate Health Committees To Consider Reforms in Next Two Weeks New on Health Access WeBlog: Leg Update; Massachusetts Connector Decisions; Chatbox; Sick the Book; Individual Mandate Enforcement; HSAs Impact on Women; Al Franken;With legislators back from spring break this week, the health care reform debate is about to go into full bloom. Legislators have until the end of the month to pass their bills out of the first policy committee. So the last two weeks in April will see the major health care reform bills up in front of either the Assembly or Senate Health Committees. This includes bills by the legislative leaders, Speaker Fabian Nunez and Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata. Both these bills are being significantly amended and fleshed out in preparation for committee review. The Committees will also hear the single-payer bill of Senator Sheila Kuehl, chair of the Senate Health Committee, and the proposal to cover all children, by Assemblymembers Laird and Dymally and Senator Steinberg. On the afternoon of Wednesday, April 18th, the Senate Health Committee is scheduled to hear SB 840 (Kuehl). On the afternoon of Tuesday, April 24th, the Assembly Health Committee is expected to hear AB 8 (Nunez). [Note New Date]On the afternoon of Wednesday, April 25th, the Senate Health Committee is likely to hear SB 48 (Perata). Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s health plan is not in bill form, although his office is continuing to provide details of a plan that he would be willing to sign. The Nunez and/or Perata bills are positioned to be the legislative vehicles that make it to the Governor’s desk: Since the Governor has the power to sign or veto bills, it is expected that legislators will negotiate with the Governor's office over the shape of these proposals moving forward. The three leaders’ proposals have common elements, beyond some rhetorical themes like “shared responsibility:” expanding public programs to cover all children under three times the poverty level, establishing some basic standard for employer’s contribution to health care, and some reforms to the individual insurance market. But beyond these similarities, the discussion in committee and beyond on these proposals will revolve around several key issues: * Employers: What should be the minimum standard for employers to contribute toward their workers’ heatlh care? Should this include all employers? For all their workers? * Individuals: What burden should the individual have to get coverage? Should they be required to buy coverage, even if there is no “shared” responsibility from a employers or public program? * Insurers: What are the basic rules for offering insurance plans? What oversight should there be on rates, cost-sharing, and benefits? How do we ensure access to coverage for people who have so-called "pre-existing conditions"? * Affordability: Ultimately, what is affordable for consumer to pay for premiums? What out-of-pocket costs are affordable to make an insurance product useful (or not) for consumers? * Financing: How do we raise the money to pay for expanded coverage for public programs and/or subsidies for low-income families? Health Access will put forward analyses of these bills in the next several days. In addition to the legislative process, the Governor’s office has undertaken their own process, meeting with selected “stakeholders” to further elaborate on the details of the Governor's proposal with regard to coverage and cost containment. HEALTH ADVOCATES ROUNDTABLE TOMORROW: Some of the consumer group stakeholders will report at the next meeting of the Health Advocates RoundTable, this FRIDAY, APRIL 13th, from 10:00am-12:00noon in Sacramento. Other agenda items will include a discussion on the bills by legislative leadership, and updates from the various coalitions and campaigns, including Its Our Healthcare, Having Our Say, the 100% Campaign, and OneCare Now. To RSVP and for the location, contact Hanh Kim Quach at hquach@health-access.org, or 916-497-0923 x206. Labels: Updates
posted by Anthony Wright |
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5:05 PM
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After today, the deluge
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
After a burst of health-related activity in January and February, the 2007 session has been relatively quiet -- until now. This week, advocates saw debate on several bills, including two of note: - AB1635 (Strickland) would have allowed Medi-Cal recipients to voluntarily enroll in high-deductible plans, and use HSA-like "Health Opportunity Accounts.'' Health Access California opposed the measure as did Western Center on Law and Poverty. The bill died on Tuesday.
- SB623 (Wiggins) would relieve seniors who are eligible for both Medi-Cal and Medicare to have co-pays for their prescription drugs paid for by Medi-Cal. Last year, when Medicare Part D went into effect, one million of the state's lowest income seniors (earning about $800 a month) were made worse off when they were shifted into the federal program, and required to pay copays on their multiple prescriptions. Under Medi-Cal, they did not have to pay. An effort to ensure these seniors could continue to get their medications without paying last year failed. Wiggins bill passed Senate Health on Wednesday.
The next two weeks, health committees in the Assembly and Senate will be bursting with activity. Health reform proposals by Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez are expected to be heard on Tuesday, April 17. Sen. Sheila Kuehl's single payer measure, SB840, will be up the next day. Senate President Don Perata's health reform bill will be up the following Wednesday April 25. And universal children's coverage bills will be up the 24th and 25th also. Labels: Drugs, Kuehl, Legislation, MediCal, Medicare, Nunez, Perata, Sacramento, YearOfReform
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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11:56 PM
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Fine for insurers, fines for individuals
OToday, there's a story in the Los Angeles Times by Jordan Rau that talks about what the Governor's office is thinking with regard to enforcing their "individual mandate," including trying to find people though data matching and using fines and other collections techniques. Let's be clear: there's lots of problems with the "individual mandate," starting with the premise that there's lots of folks who don't want health coverage, before you ever get to the sticky issues of enforcement. (It's also the subject of renewed crosstalk at Daniel Weintraub's Sacramento Bee health care blog.) The enforcement issues go from deeply troubling to downright scary when the Governor's plan never acknowledges that there's some people who won't be able to afford coverage. As much as the Governor and his health team have said they are willing to consider ideas and that everything is up for negotiation, there has been no evolution of his health plan yet, despite the feedback received and the lessons learned. And that makes the enforcement discussion that much more disturbing. For example, we are learning a lot from Massachusetts, at the one-year mark of passage of its reform law, and we should be mindful of lessons of what to do and what not to do. They will vote tomorrow on a range of decisions about "affordability," which should inform our own work here in California. While taking no position on the stances they have taken, our advocacy colleagues at Health Care for All Massachusetts have some early information at their blog. Labels: Affordability, IndividualMandate, InTheNews, OtherBlogs, OtherStates
posted by Anthony Wright |
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10:18 PM
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After the diagnosis, what's the treatment?
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
 Interesting and on-point discussion this week at Josh Marshall's Talking Points Memo blog, or more specifically, the "TPMCafe Book Club," featuring several Californians. There's an ongoing discussion on health care reform led off by Jonathan Cohn, timed with release of his new book, "Sick: The Untold Story of America's Health Care Crisis---and the People Who Pay the Price." http://bookclub.tpmcafe.com/The online discussion features key notables debating Jonathan Cohn, including Jacob Hacker, Roger Hickey, Maggie Mahar, Joseph Paduda, Ezra Klein, and some Californians: Matthew Holt (San Francisco-based author of The Health Care Blog), Robin Podolsky (press secretary for state Sen. Sheila Kuehl), and Don McCanne (of Physicians for a National Health Plan and the California Physicians Alliance, and sometime participant at Health Access California board meetings). Like good policy wonks, they skip over the bulk of the book that details the problems and the history of how our health system evolved, and start focusing on the politics of various solutions. It's a familiar conversation.
posted by Anthony Wright |
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5:53 PM
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In spite of the best efforts....
Monday, April 09, 2007
The New York Times this weekend ran the first of a series on the nation's top killer diseases. The focus on Sunday was on heart disease.The article helped to explain why half a million people die each year from heart attacks, in spite of the knowledge that is available to treat and prevent the condition from getting worse. The article explains how the disease continues to be the top killer: - Only a small fraction of the nation’s acute care hospitals offer a
treatment, angioplasty, that can open blocked arteries. Yet many other hospitals are reluctant to divert patients there because heart attack patients are so lucrative. - If patients get proper treatment within an hour of when their attack began,
most, if not all, of the heart damage can be prevented. Only 10 percent get to a hospital that soon. - Half the people who need to be treated to prevent heart attacks are not
treated and half who are treated are treated inadequately. Patients go home with the wrong drugs or the wrong doses or misimpressions about the importance of aking their medications.
Labels: InTheNews
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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10:39 AM
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Men are from Mars...
Friday, April 06, 2007
An AP story today that appeared in the business section of the Sacramento Bee spotlights a study indicating how high-deductible plans negatively impact women more than men, since they are more likely to get regular medical care, such as for diabetes or hypertension. More context for the health reform debate this year...
posted by Anthony Wright |
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4:24 PM
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How the other half lives
Thursday, April 05, 2007
The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) today has a very interesting story about how company executives have their COBRA paid for when they leave a company. "...losing a job doesn't mean losing health-care for many corporate executives: Their former employers are on the hook for the coverage, sometimes for years to follow.''
According to Ron Pollock, executive director of the national health advocacy organization Families USA, only 20 percent of us normal folk actually pay for COBRA when we leave a job. Here are some of the executives whose health care subsidies were exposed: - Blockbuster Inc. (the video rental chain) would have to pay $27,202 in medical and dental coverage for 36 months if it fires its executive vice president for strategic planning and business development.
- Charles Schwab Corp. would pay its founder's healthcare costs (a pricetag of $32,561 for 36 months) if he is fired without just cause.
- Insurer, Safeco, is paying $15,000 in COBRA costs for its former chief operating officer
It's this same tier of executives (who have a health care parachute) that cries bloody murder when anyone suggests giving their rank and file workers a fraction of the deal they get. Absolutely insulting. (If you don't have a WSJ subscription, I'd be happy to email you the story if you shoot me a message at hquach@health-access.org) Labels: InTheNews
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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10:40 AM
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Thank God I'll never be a movie star
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
 Against my better judgement, I'm RELUCTANTLY directing you all to Blue Shield's website where the company's "chatbox" toured the state and collected people insurance horror stories. I wrote about the chatbox in this post. I do so reluctantly, because, my story is embarassingly on there for all to see. My boss, Anthony, never told me that public humiliation was a hazard of this job. But there are LOTS of other far more interesting stories on the site. - One man's insurance company refused to pay for surgery to fix the pain he felt when he walked. "Because I could walk, even though I was in great pain, they said it wasn't necessary."
- Another man's insurance refused to pay for his hernia operation because he didn't have prior authorization. "Why in the hell would anyone have a hernia operation for fun."
- One woman's insurance refused to pay for necessary prescription drugs prescribed by a doctor. They still have the insurance, but pay for the drugs out of pocket. "We pay more in health care costs, for our insurance and our co-pays than we do for our mortgage."
Ironically, Blue Shield's story collection efforts all come together as good evidence for health advocates as we fight for:
- Employer mandate or mandatory employer contribution
- Improved standards and rules on insurers
- Streamlined administration
- Limited out-of-pocket costs
The comments really do a good job at illustrating what a huge hassle it is to deal with insurance companies, how much time and life they suck out of you, and and even question whether insurance is really worth it. Who knows, maybe Blue Shield will help convince everyone that we SHOULD have a single-payer system and be rid of insurance companies altogether! In the meantime, we certainly hope Blue Shield earnestly wants to hear from "real people'' because they really want to fix things, not just attract more traffic to their website.
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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2:20 PM
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From unlikely sources...
 This op-ed this week in The Los Angeles Times reaffirmed an earlier post of ours about the positive quality rankings of the Veterans Administration, undermining the notion that actual "government-run health care" institutions can provide excellent care. As Mark Schmitt at The American Prospect notes, this point has been made before, but the author is of note: Betsy McCaughey, who made a name for herself by putting the first dent in the Clinton health care plan with an infamous New Republic article, which wierdly led to her becoming the running mate for NY Governor Pataki. Beyond the implications of her current op-ed, it's remarkable to think about a time when a critical article about a health care reform proposal was a big deal. Now, there's an expectation that a plan will be attacked. The good news is we are still having the conversation about reform... and some unlikely sources may have a different takes than in previous battles.
posted by Anthony Wright |
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12:56 AM
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Book of the Month Club!
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
 I posted previously that some of my colleagues swooned (a few literally) over the author of The Great Risk Shift, Jacob Hacker. I haven't read the book, but he's a good reporter and column writer who knows the issues, so I look forward to it. For in or around Berkeley, he's slated to talk at Cody's Books on April 19th. The article's primary focus is Californian Steve Burd, CEO of Safeway. For Sacramento watchers, he made news during the announcement of Governor Schwarzenegger's health plan when he stated that the Governor's employer requirement was too low--something I agreed with him a few seats later. Unlike some other articles, Cohn doesn't embellish Burd's role or his message around preventative care: he clearly reports Burd's role in a bitter Southern California labor dispute about health care, and Burd's overall philosophy about reducing benefits and increasing cost-sharing. Cohn mentioned how Burd largely sat out the Clinton health care debate; Cohn doesn't mention that Burd sat out the SB2/Prop 72 debate about employer coverage here in California--just as he was engaged in bargaining down benefits. Now he's engaging in the public policy discourse, but the real test is coming up: those grocery workers contract are up again this year, and we'll see Safeway's commitment to health care to their own workers, much less universal care.
posted by Anthony Wright |
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8:16 PM
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Late Night Health Policy
Monday, April 02, 2007
Apparently, entertainers who get into politics have a tendency to be interested in "universal health care." Satirist Al Franken--and candidate for the U.S. Senate--was on David Letterman's show last week, and that was the first policy goal he mentioned, in the midst of a running commentary about whether he could funny, while "trying to do serious things for people." So Letterman asked "what are issues that made you want to run?" Franken reponded, "We gotta get to universal health care. We just have to. This doesn't mean single-payer, where the government pays for everything; we can get to it different ways in different states." He has previously said he supported a universal single payer system; his joke last night was that he understood people's distrust in government, given the leadership of the last several years. Letterman, who often gives a surprisingly good political interview, didn't want to let the topic go, and asked, "In terms of the world picture. where does the United States rank among nations that provide health care?" Franken: "According to the World Health Organziation study, we rank number 37 in health care, even though we spend more than anybody per person. We spend 16% of our GDP, no other nation spends 11% We are 37th as a health care system, right between Costa Rica and Slovenia. And Slovenia, I think, is making its move." Labels: Funny
posted by Anthony Wright |
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10:01 PM
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Children's Crusade
The New York Times yesterday reported that the Bush administration said it would "strenuously resist" plans to expand the State Children's Health Insurance Program, which funds California's Healthy Families. They annoyingly "expressed concern about a sharp increase in the proportion of children covered by public programs in the last decade.'' WWWWeeellllll...... If businesses wouldn't keep dropping family coverage or making it harder for workers to cover their families, then maybe fewer children would need to be enrolled in public programs. During the economic downturn, from 2000 to 2002, the number of businesses covering children dropped by 2.5 percent. In the same period, state and federal government saw a 2.9 percent increase in children enrolling in public programs. In spite of this administration -- and their friends in the business community, these programs have continued to grow. Now, Bush is unwisely trying to restrict growth in these programs by reauthorizing the bare minimum ($30 billion over five years) for SCHIP, and making fewer children eligible. Meanwhile he's doing nothing to encourage more coverage on the other end. Advocates, on the other hand, say we need about $85 billion over the next five years to do a good job. Surely, we can find $17 billion A YEAR for children's coverage if we've been able to find $413 billion for war the past five years. According to this fun calculator, we could have covered about 250 million kids by now. It'll be interesting to see where the presidential candidates fall on this as we debate the issue over the next few months. Labels: Bush, Federal, InTheNews, SCHIPHealthyFamilies
posted by Hanh Kim Quach |
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5:36 PM
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