Posts Tagged health-care

John Stossel on Health Care

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For those who don’t know, I’m a big fan of John Stossel’s work.  His book is excellent and he brings one of the few libertarian voices to investigative reporting in advocacy journalism.  The best part is he hasn’t always carried such views but his own investigations “converted” him to freedom and liberty! If you want more on him, check here.

I saw this clip a while ago but apparently never posted the actual video (there’s a link somewhere). I figure now is as good a time as ever…

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Public Option is “good” for YOU…

Political Cartoons of Michael Ramirez
Editorial Cartoonist for Investor’s Business Daily

Get a unique perspective on today’s issues with the political cartoons of IBD’s Pulitzer Prize Winner, Michael Ramirez.

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The Trojan “Donkey” of Health Care Reform

As the healthcare debate pushes on, I tire of the madness so a little humor always livens the spirit…
Thanks again ‘Mikey’:

Trojan 'Donkey' of Health Care

Political Cartoons of Michael Ramirez
Editorial Cartoonist for Investor’s Business Daily

Get a unique perspective on today’s issues with the political cartoons of IBD’s Pulitzer Prize Winner, Michael Ramirez.

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Real Solutions for better health care by Whole Foods CEO?

He may not be the first you’d think to offer “capitalist” free-market solutions to health care but Whole Foods CEO and co-founder John Mackey is offering some capitalist solutions to our nations health care problems.  The fact that the White House is only willing to look at government controlled solutions is what is frustrating.  Instead of weighing out the options, addressing the desires of the country and population, they ignore all in an all out blind effort to ramrod government policy down our throats.  I definitely recognize that if you are going to oppose one issue, you better be ready to offer an alternative solution and John does a pretty good job in his recent commentary for the Wall Street Journal here.  It is especially interesting when he is receiving a fair amount of backlash from Whole Foods’ liberal customer segment.  News flash! He might agree with you on dietary choices and wellness but it is allowed to differ in opinion on public policy! John Stossel addresses this commentary and the opposition to it in a recent blog post here.  Stossel said the following about this:

The hostility of some of his customers is breathtaking. Disagree with his opinion if you will, but Mackey is making a good-faith effort to offer his views on health care reform. Because they don’t conform to liberals’ fantasies for  some iteration of a government-dominated plan, they want him to shut up? They seem to think they own the man’s opinions.

Mackey first identifies that we do need health care reform but when government has restricted the free market from working in health care to such an extent, blaming the market for the problems is fantasy.

While we clearly need health-care reform, the last thing our country needs is a massive new health-care entitlement that will create hundreds of billions of dollars of new unfunded deficits and move us much closer to a government takeover of our health-care system. Instead, we should be trying to achieve reforms by moving in the opposite direction—toward less government control and more individual empowerment.

He offers the following solutions to help replace the proposed reforms with capitalist freedoms:

• Remove the legal obstacles that slow the creation of high-deductible health insurance plans and health savings accounts (HSAs)… This creates incentives to spend the first $2,500 more carefully. Our plan’s costs are much lower than typical health insurance, while providing a very high degree of worker satisfaction.

• Equalize the tax laws so that employer-provided health insurance and individually owned health insurance have the same tax benefits. Now employer health insurance benefits are fully tax deductible, but individual health insurance is not. This is unfair.

• Repeal all state laws which prevent insurance companies from competing across state lines. We should all have the legal right to purchase health insurance from any insurance company in any state and we should be able use that insurance wherever we live. Health insurance should be portable.

• Repeal government mandates regarding what insurance companies must cover. These mandates have increased the cost of health insurance by billions of dollars. What is insured and what is not insured should be determined by individual customer preferences and not through special-interest lobbying.

• Enact tort reform to end the ruinous lawsuits that force doctors to pay insurance costs of hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. These costs are passed back to us through much higher prices for health care.

• Make costs transparent so that consumers understand what health-care treatments cost. How many people know the total cost of their last doctor’s visit and how that total breaks down? What other goods or services do we buy without knowing how much they will cost us?

• Enact Medicare reform. We need to face up to the actuarial fact that Medicare is heading towards bankruptcy and enact reforms that create greater patient empowerment, choice and responsibility.

• Finally, revise tax forms to make it easier for individuals to make a voluntary, tax-deductible donation to help the millions of people who have no insurance and aren’t covered by Medicare, Medicaid or the State Children’s Health Insurance Program.

These are just a few possibilities and allow people to more fully control their own destiny and life.  It is interesting that so many have decided that equality in health care is so essential. As Mackey asks, more important than food and shelter?

Health-care reform is very important. Whatever reforms are enacted it is essential that they be financially responsible, and that we have the freedom to choose doctors and the health-care services that best suit our own unique set of lifestyle choices. We are all responsible for our own lives and our own health. We should take that responsibility very seriously and use our freedom to make wise lifestyle choices that will protect our health. Doing so will enrich our lives and will help create a vibrant and sustainable American society.

Although I may not agree with Mr Mackey on other things, I applaud this effort…

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Health Care rationing already exists, in part…

The ultimate repercussions of state-run health care and the inability to individually choose one’s fate are coming to light, and even already exist as the state-run portions of our current system show their true colors.  I read comments by people stating “I have relatives in Canada and they prefer their system to the US system. “  Which raises a few questions for me.  What do they love about it?  What do they know about our system? They may like the out-of-pocket direct cost in their system (especially if they are naive to the actual costs through taxation) but may be even more ignorant to what they are giving up because they are unfamiliar.  I might even say that we need health care reform but my reform would come by eliminating government involvement in health care altogether!

Our problems come from much more than “greedy” companies who simply work with in market constraints that are skewed by government involvement.  A simple example: You may have seen commercials for companies such as “the Scooter Store” or others attempting to sell durable medical equipment like power chairs and such.  Many of these companies charge substantial amounts for their chairs, upwards of $10,000! Even at $5,000 there is substantial profit.  One might say “look how they gouge for medical equipment, those greedy capitalists!” until they realize these absorbent prices and massive profits didn’t exist until medicare came to save the day.  If medicare wasn’t paying these outrageous bills, no one could afford the products and the companies would either go out of business or be forced to lower their prices to be more competitive due to natural market forces.  Even if they went out of business, another company would see the void and fill it with affordable solutions.  The problem isn’t in the market but the welfare state that supports it! So we don’t have an open market anyway, what we are hoping is that it does not worsen.  Check out this video regarding what I’m talking about by John Stossel.

The beauty is that those claiming their “relatives” like the Canadian system or that of the UK, statistics speak to me the opposite. Not that they don’t like it but that it is not nearly as effective.  I mean, if you like death than you like crappy health care systems! A recent editorial in Investors Business Daily gives some great insight:

Big numbers are already a fact of life in the United Kingdom, where the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence ruled against the use of two drugs, Lapatinib and Sutent, that prolong the life of those with certain forms of breast and stomach cancer. It’s no surprise, then, to discover that while breast cancer in America has a 25% mortality rate, in Britain it’s almost double at 46%. Prostate cancer is fatal to 19% of American men who get it. In Britain, it kills 57% of those it strikes.

The health care bureaucracy is just as ugly in North America. Sally Pipes, a Canadian who heads the Pacific Research Institute, wrote in these pages on July 2 that in 2008, “the average Canadian waited 17.3 weeks from the time his general practitioner referred him to a specialist until he actually received treatment.”

Even the courts are recognizing the system’s in trouble. Canadian Supreme Court Justice Marie Deschamps wrote in her 2005 majority opinion in Chaoulli v. Quebec: “The evidence in this case shows that delays in the public health care system are widespread, and that, in some cases, patients die as a result of waiting lines for public health care.”

Even their own supreme court noted the problem.  It gets worse, however, when you think about treatment at any cost to save a life.  How do they decide when to spend money and when not to? Since you aren’t paying, you can’t make that choice.  This can be seen in what is described as “death panels” by some (supporters of gov care don’t like that term of course).

Last year, the 64-year-old received news that her cancer, which had been in remission, had returned. Her only hope was a life-extending drug that her doctor prescribed for her.

The problem was that the drug cost $4,000 a month. The state-run Oregon Health Plan said no, that it was not cost-effective. Oregon’s equivalent of a “death panel” sent her a letter saying it would cover drugs for a physician-assisted death. Those drugs would cost only $50 or so. Oregon could afford that.

“It was horrible,” Wagner told ABCNews.com. “I got a letter in the mail that basically said if you want to take the pills, we will help you get that from the doctor and we will stand there and watch you die.

“But we won’t give you the medication to live.”

The $4,000 could be better spent on someone else.

Even the President’s own advisors will admit the same possibilities exist and are justifiable:

Death panels are already here it seems, just as they have been for some time in Britain and Canada. The concept behind deciding who lives and who dies and how finite resources should be allocated was described by key Obama health care adviser Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, brother to White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.

In his paper, “Principles for Allocation of Scarce Medical Interventions,” he expounds on what he calls “The Complete Lives System” for allocating treatments and resources.

“When the worse-off can benefit only slightly while better-off people could benefit greatly,” he says, “allocating to the better-off is often justifiable.”

Ode to the outcomes of gov run health care… Check out this video by John Stossel regarding his experience in these other countries.

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Who is “manufacturing” support?!?! ObamaCare really IS opposed by some

I recently read an editorial from Investors Business Daily here.  It starts by stating:

Free Speech: The White House and Congress claim the anti-ObamaCare uprising is artificially organized. But the violent — even racist — union counterattacks, urged on by Democrats, are the real Rent-a-Mobs.

I can’t believe they actually think these uprising are artificial!  It sounds much more like reactions out of fear… especially when they claim “its all just racism because they don’t like their black president…” HA! Yeah, use the bogey counter, that’s it… this is a simple case of fearful reaction to an uncontrollable situation.  Even if they are “manufactured”, whatever that means, people still have to willfully choose to participate. Besides, the level of manufacturing doesn’t come anywhere near that achieved by left-wingers such as Acorn or the Union rallies of the past.  The right is not the rallying type as we’ve seen over history so when they do, it makes you wonder.  As for racism comments, they come with somewhat hypocritical actions:

The White House-ordered push-back has extended even to racist violence. Thugs at Rep. Russ Carnahan’s St. Louis town hall meeting last week beat and knocked down a black man, Kenneth Gladney. One called him the N-word, according to Gladney — all because he was distributing “Don’t Tread On Me” flags.

As for “proof” of manufactured rallies versus the actions of the White House and it’s supporters:

Indeed, it is the opposition to this opposition that is aggressively and meticulously organized.  White House deputy chief of staff Jim Messina last week gave the order to “push back twice as hard.”

And the national field director of the union-backed Health Care for America Now (HCAN) on Aug. 4 apparently sent out a four-page, single-spaced, 2,500-word-plus “how to bully” memo.

The document, featured on the Talking Points Memo Web site, says “it’s important that you take away right-wingers’ opportunities to talk with reporters.” It tells operatives to “confiscate signs or leaflets” of those opposing ObamaCare. It adds: “Make sure that you assign marshals to take care of moving the crowd.”

Human Events recently exposed a memo from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi stating that congressional Democratic leaders and the White House are “working in close coordination with” HCAN and other union-backed groups in organizing a pro-ObamaCare PR blitz this month…

There’s no evidence behind the wild claims of Pelosi and other ObamaCare proponents that the grass-roots protests against them are artificially manufactured.

But there is well-documented proof of the coordinated planning that has led to violent White House/Pelosi-backed thuggery.

Keep up the good work, white house crew.  I wonder if you remember what the office is for?  or what “representative” actually means? Again, check out the article here.

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Who’s protests are “Manufactured”?

I just laugh when I hear the rhetoric of “manufactured” protests. Especially when I see pictures like the following, posted in a recent article in Investor’s Business Daily:
Health Care Opposition

The picture is of rival protestors regarding ObamaCare.  Now lets see… The whitehouse and ObamaCare supportors claim that Opposing protests are manufactured and “fake”.  Interesting to note signs that each side is carrying in this protest.  Which side appears “manufactured”?  I see hand written, self-produced signs from the opposition while the supporters appear to have professionally printed signs.  I’m willing to bet they didn’t individually have them printed and fork out the money for that!  interesting…

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Canadian health-care anyone? Mr Krugman?

Politicians love to use examples of other countries who have had “success” with various programs.  The worst was probably the Soviet Experiment that, according to CIA statistics, was phenomenally successful, and yet the Berlin wall collapsed and communism was found wanting yet again.  Statistical measures turned out to be quite inaccurate and misinformed.  This is happening today in health care as people always say how much Canadians love their health care system and yet you can speak to many who say just the opposite.  Paul Krugman made the fatal mistake of actually asking a small group on national TV, check it out:

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Health Care, a Government Concern?

I posted about a private company’s solution to affordable health care a while back, here. But is it even necessary? How many Americans really can’t afford health care? Reason.tv recently posted a story sharing the reality. Check it:

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The Entrepreneur’s Answer to Health Care

I recently read an article in the July/August issue of “Fast Company” regarding the new concepts and direction that a division of Walgreen’s is taking in health care.  Hal Rosenbluth and Peter Miller head up a newer division of Walgreen’s called Walgreens Health And Wellness.  They are on a mission to put full scale health clinics in nearly every Walgreen’s around the country.  These clinics will offer health-care at affordable prices (even for cash customers, no insurance!). How can they do this you ask? They have developed a business model that takes care of an obvious marketplace need, as the definition of entrepreneurship tells them to!

With all the hubbub around health care, it appears they have little, if any, competition for the time being. Besides being economical, it is also convenient as Walgreen’s works towards its “corner store” appeal and locale.  Many Americans have a Walgreen’s within a few miles and now a health clinic, pharmacy, and more all in one place.  The clinics goals are not only to be profitable as a stand alone business unit but will also bring in additional revenue on prescriptions as patients will conveniently fill their prescriptions as they are received.  Prescriptions already makeup a huge percentage of Walgreen’s revenue and this appears to only enhance that even further.

And the beauty of all this? I don’t have to pay for it by being robbed through taxes!! No government bureaucracy to waste money and likely run a second-class establishment with ridiculous wait times and mis-diagnosese.

If the government would chill on the health care gig and give it a few years of development, likely we would see competition crop up for Walgreen’s (say Walmart or others?) and begin seeing improved facilities and services with even lower prices as they compete for our business.  Again, Entrepreneurship is the answer!

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