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Healthcare Blog
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Boomer Health Care SummitHey Boomers. Health care or health insurance reform, whatever you want to name it is still with us. Below is Ms. Turner's most recent article on the upcoming Summit.Be well! Denny Cincinnati Solutions or Showmanship at the Summit? National Review Online: Critical Condition By Grace-Marie Turner February 8, 2010 The White House believes it has identified a new way to put Republicans on the spot on health reform — a big bipartisan summit that forces both parties to explain their ideas before C-SPAN cameras. The president reportedly plans to bring with him a copy of the merged House/Senate bill that was within days of being enacted before Scott Brown’s election slammed the brakes on their hugely unpopular legislation. During his interview before the Super Bowl, Mr. Obama challenged Republicans to come up with specific plans: "How do you guys want to lower costs? How do you guys intend to reform the insurance market so people with preexisting conditions, for example, can get health care? How do you want to make sure that the 30 million people who don't have health insurance can get it? What are your ideas, specifically?" The Republicans will bring their own legislation and ideas. But Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said his team will take a “step-by-step approach” that doesn’t try to solve every problem in one gigantic bill. Mr. McConnell signaled the Republican approach, saying “We know there are a number of issues with bipartisan support that we can start with when the [Democrats’] 2,700-page bill is put on the shelf.” But that’s not the president’s plan. He will use the forum to try to explain — One. More. Time. Very Slowly — that his overhaul approach is the only one that will work. The summit idea grew out of the president’s performance before the House GOP retreat in Baltimore ten days ago. Despite virtually no preparation time after the president’s surprise request that the event be televised, Republicans offered focused and informed questions, engaging in a dialogue over issues ranging from health reform to budget deficits to transparency in political decisions. During the session, Mr. Obama forecast what is likely to be his approach during the health summit, scheduled for February 25 at Blair House across the street from the White House. Acknowledging that Republicans actually do have ideas for health reform, the president told the Baltimore gathering that many them were incorporated into legislation written by the Democratic leadership, including: Allowing inter-state purchase of health insurance Catastrophic health insurance for young people High-risk pools for uninsured people with pre-existing conditions Small business health plans Incentives for wellness Allowing young adults to stay on their parents' policies Republicans might add to their list ideas incorporated in the platforms of both Senators McCain and Obama during the campaign, including agreement on the importance of: Targeted financial help for the uninsured Incentives for prevention and early treatment Coordination of care and disease management Greater use of information technology and electronic medical records New approaches to "best practices" in treatment There are serious differences about how to structure the underlying policy on all of these items. But these lists nonetheless could be a start for a bipartisan conversation. However, we likely are too far into the political season to expect a genuine exchange of ideas. Democrats believe their interlocking chain of mandates, taxes, and expansion of government control over virtually every aspect of health care is the only viable solution. And that is the basic disconnect that will make agreement so difficult. Republicans would never agree, nor should they, to plugging a few of their ideas into the monstrous bill the White House and congressional leaders have devised. This legislation cannot be redeemed. They know that. Starting over is the only genuine solution, but the president has taken that off the table. A White House statement Sunday said Obama is "adamant about passing comprehensive reform similar to the bills passed by the House and the Senate." That clearly shows the intent of the summit is about showmanship, not solutions. So health care will again dominate the airwaves for the rest of February with little to show for it except a battle over who can score the most political points. Beleaguered House Democrats are likely among those most discouraged by the latest announcement since they had hoped to change the conversation to jobs and the economy as they head home for recess next week. Nope. Health care will stay in the spotlight. For better or, most likely, for worse.
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Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Boomer Review of House Healthcare BillHow different things were just a few months ago when it appeared the so-called health care reform bills were going to pass. The frantic pace may be over for a time. But I assure you, the national debate will continue.It is important to remember why Boomers are saying health care reform is important. We are getting older and will be more dependent on medical care. SO, why can't we just slow down the dialogue and pursue a rational action plan that makes sense. Here are some suggestions which can be done without significant changes in the delivery and financing of health care: 1. Let's get the uninsured covered, if they choose to be, through tax credits. 2. Introduce choice by having insurance companies sell across state lines. 3. Decrease the amount of legislative burdens that impeded company health plans. 4. Let individuals who purchase health insurance on their own take the tax deduction. 5. Encourage the growth of consumer-based models such as Health Savings Accounts. 6. Let's not forget tort reform too! Easy to implement and lower administrative cost means lower taxes. And, we don't need huge changes in the health care system! Be well! Denny Cincinnati
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2:52 PM
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Thursday, January 21, 2010
Boomer Changes in ReformHey Boomers. Here is the latest on healthcare.Massachusetts: The new epicenter of the health reform debate The biggest news on health reform, of course, hasn't been what's going on in Washington, where negotiations to reconcile the House and Senate bills have quietly continued. It's what's been going on in Massachusetts. A month ago, no one believed it could happen. A week ago, it still seemed only the slightest possibility. But Tuesday night, Republican Scott Brown won the right to be the new senator from Massachusetts – and his election will have a big impact on health reform. Brown was elected despite the fact that Massachusetts is a reliable Democratic state (both chambers of the Legislature are Democrat-run, the congressional delegation is all Democrats and so are the state office-holders), despite the fact that he vowed to vote against health care reform (Sen. Kennedy, his popular predecessor, spent his lifetime trying to accomplish reforms like those Brown campaigned against), and despite the fact that just a little over a year ago, President Obama carried the state by 26 percentage points. Brown beat state Attorney General Martha Coakley 52 percent to 47 in a contest that has been at the top of the national news for the last few days. As Brown said in his victory speech, the campaign started quietly, but "Air Force One made an emergency trip to Logan Airport" on Sunday so the President could try to rescue Coakley's campaign. Former President Bill Clinton stumped for her for three days in the past week. As probably everyone in the Western world knows at this point, Brown's victory gives the Republicans their 41st Senate seat, which means the Democrats no longer have a filibuster-proof majority. That shifts the balance of power in the Capitol for lots of issues: bank reforms, cap and trade and the debate over how suspected terrorists should be tried and treated. But the immediate question is what it will do to health care reform, which has occupied Congress and the President since last summer. The House and Senate have been working on a final draft of the bill and had hoped to pass it in the next few weeks. Now that the Democrats have lost their critical 60th Senate vote, however, in a campaign that sometimes felt like a referendum on health reform, the big question is what happens to that health reform bill? And the answer is, nobody knows. For the past few days, the Capitol has been buzzing with talk about a Plan B for passing a reform bill, in case Brown should win. Some lawmakers have advocated that the chambers finish their negotiations quickly so members can vote before Sen. Brown is seated, or for scaling back the bill and passing it through the budget reconciliation process, which would only take 51 Senate votes. The most popular Plan B, however, has been to convince the House to pass the bill the Senate already passed – with no changes – and send it to the President to sign. That would obviate the need for the Senate to vote on the issue again. But that plan seems increasingly unlikely. First, House members, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, say they are adamantly opposed to some parts of the Senate bill. And now that a conservative Republican has defeated a Democrat in a blue state, some Democrats who supported the bill last time may have second thoughts about supporting it and other items on the Democratic agenda. For example, moments after Brown's win, Rep. Anthony Weiner, a liberal Democrat from New York, told CNN, "We need to internalize this…We've got to recognize we have an entirely different scenario…There's a limit to saying (the people) just don't get it – that if we just pass a bill they'll get it." CNN political commentator David Gergen, who has served in both Democratic and Republican administrations, said Tuesday night, "I think we're seeing the obituary written tonight for universal health care in the U.S. It's very unlikely to pass in its current form." He's looking further down the road than others seem willing to look. Speaker Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid were both maintaining that they will pass a reform bill. And as AHIP and Humana have said for several years, the U.S. health care system needs to be reformed. But this election does change the landscape, and it will soon be apparent how. Will the bill's content change? Will it be scaled back? Will the timetable for passing it be delayed? A week from now, the President will be making his State of the Union Address. Will he be talking about reform, or will he "pivot," as some in Washington are guessing, and make jobs and the economy his central theme? Where the negotiations stand The arguments over why Brown beat Coakley have already begun. Was Martha Coakley a terrible candidate? Did she lose because she took her victory for granted and started campaigning too late? Or were voters communicating dismay over what's going on in Washington – maybe even specifically, over what's going on with health care reform? What isn't debatable, however, is that Brown's victory will have a big impact on the future of health reform. And here's where the negotiations stand: Last week, talks between the House, Senate, the President and top administration officials were like a three-day marathon. From 10:30 a.m. until 6:40 p.m. last Wednesday, from Thursday morning until about 1 a.m. Friday, and then for most of Friday, Democratic leaders were at the White House trying to work out the differences in the House and Senate bills. The meetings were described as unusual (rarely does a president spend such big blocks of time working on issues with members of Congress), intense (no BlackBerrys or cell phones were allowed), and productive (in a joint statement on Wednesday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said they had made "significant progress in bridging the remaining gaps"). On Friday, the White House released this statement: "We've worked through the gamut of issues in great depth, but there are still not final agreements and no overall package. The next step in the process is to evaluate the costs and savings associated with the various proposals for each tenet of the legislation." Therefore, some parts of the bill were sent to the Congressional Budget Office for analysis. The issues that lawmakers and the administration have been grappling with include the details of how to pay for the bill, how much Medicaid should be expanded, how generous the subsidies to help individuals buy insurance should be, and whether there should be exchanges in every state or just one, national exchange. The details of policy provisions that have been tentatively agreed on have not been released, but some are known: Unions and employees of state and local governments won a five-year reprieve on the tax on "Cadillac" health plans. This creates a need for $60 billion more in revenue Pharmaceutical companies were asked to raise their financial contribution from $80 billion over 10 years to $90 billion. Cuts to Medicare Advantage were $118 billion in the Senate bill and $170 billion in the House bill. At this point in the negotiations, the cuts reportedly stand somewhere between those numbers Republicans have been left out of all these discussions. In addition, Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., who became notorious for negotiating a special Medicaid-payment deal for his home state as a condition of his vote for reform, requested that either the deal be granted to everyone, or removed from the legislation. He insisted it always "was intended to serve as a placeholder that would be removed during the conference negotiations and replaced with a mechanism applying to all state governments." Meanwhile, a CBS News poll released last week showed that the health reform debate is hurting the approval ratings of the President and members of Congress. Only 36 percent of Americans approve of the way President Obama is handling the issue (54 percent disapprove), and only 46 percent approve of the job he's doing overall (down from 56 percent in October). Only 1 in 5 Americans thinks the health reforms in Congress strike the right balance when it comes to expanding coverage, controlling costs and regulating insurance companies (some people think it does too much; others think it does too little). But the news for members of Congress is worse: 57 percent of Americans disapprove of the way Democrats in Congress have dealt with the issue of health reform (in fact, only 48 percent of Democrats approve of the way Democrats have dealt with it), and 61percent of Americans disapprove of the Republicans' approach (only 43 percent of Republicans approve of the Republican approach).
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8:32 AM
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Friday, January 15, 2010
Boomer Update on Health CareHello Boomers. It just gets more complicated all the time.Big Labor, Big Favors By Grace-Marie Turner The Cornhusker Kick: Just when we thought the health care legislation could not possibly get any worse, any more damaging, or any more disgusting in its vote-buying kickbacks and special favors, then along comes this! In marathon meetings at the White House, the president and congressional Democrats came up with a "big, fat wet kiss for labor unions" (New York Post) in exempting them from the tax on high cost health plans until 2018. The deal exempts them from one of the "revenue generating" parts of the Senate health overhaul bill that exposes expensive health plans to a 40% excise tax. The tax on plans costing more than $24,000 a year for families and $8,900 for individuals would be paid by insurance companies, who would simply pass it along in even higher premiums. And how is Congress going to make up the revenue? With another jobs-killing tax that would subject investment income to Medicare payroll taxes. This will hit small businesses and others that rely on investment income to build their businesses. Apart from the economic damage this would do, it is terrible policy to start thinking of Medicare taxes as yet another piggy bank to fund special political deals. It is relatively clear that President Obama's economic policy is strictly one dimensional: raise taxes everywhere and anywhere you possibly can to expand the size and scope of government. And the only people who will be exempt from these crushing taxes will be political friends who have cut special deals. This is not a democracy. This is banana republic politics. Unless you have political connections and lots of campaign cash, expect to get hit. It's clear that the winners are the powerful labor unions who've bought a place at the table with their huge campaign contributions and election spending. That bought them the deal that exempts union members from $60 billion in taxes on health benefits. But who are the losers? For starters, workers in states that have fewer labor unions, such as Nebraska. Is Sen. Ben Nelson going to be able to defend a deal that would tax health insurance for workers in his state, most of whom are not unionized, at a higher rate than the more highly-unionized workers in Pennsylvania? This might be called the "Cornhusker Kick." The union payback shows the same raw politics as a deal in the Senate bill that would force construction companies with five or fewer workers to provide expensive, government-mandated health insurance to their employees. (For other industries, the mandate doesn't kick in until a firm has 50 workers.) The unions had complained that exempting the small, non-union firms from the mandate put unionized companies at a competitive disadvantage. This is disgraceful. Political guru Charlie Cook writes today: "Honorable and intelligent people can disagree over the substance and details of what President Obama and congressional Democrats are trying to do on health care reform and climate change. But nearly a year after Obama's inauguration, judging by where the Democrats stand today, it's clear that they have made a colossal miscalculation." Massachusetts: And what impact is the Massachusetts special Senate election going to have on health reform? You know the world has changed when people around the country are looking to Massachusetts to stop expansion of a liberal social agenda. One member of Congress told me his constituents are stopping him on the street to ask what they can do to send a message to Massachusetts voters, saying they are all that stands between them and passage of a health reform bill that frightens them. Republican Scott Brown had the quote of the campaign during Monday night's Massachusetts Senate debate when moderator David Gergen asked him, "Are you willing … to say I'm going to be the person -- I'm going to sit in Teddy Kennedy's seat and I'm going to be the person that's going to block [health reform] for another 15 years?" Brown replied, "Well, with all due respect, it's not the Kennedys' seat and it's not the Democrats' seat, it's the people's seat." The public plan lives on, despite most claims that this central pillar of Big Labor's agenda won't be part of the final health overhaul bill. There is a reason they are silent on this issue. Their government-run health plan just has a new name. It's now called a national health insurance exchange. The federal government, rather than the states, would have the authority to set up the new health insurance purchasing exchange. This would be the vehicle to centralize health insurance regulation, with Washington dictating what benefits must be covered, what insurers can charge, and how health plans must operate. The House bill calls for the national exchange to be run by the Orwellian "Health Choices Administration," vesting vast new power for health insurance regulation with the federal government and giving states, consumers, and businesses little or no say over the health "choices" available to them through the exchanges. The national exchange would quickly become a vehicle for price controls and excessive regulation of insurance markets, which have driven up costs and driven out competition in many states. Giving the federal government power over health insurance through this new regulatory mechanism would create the foundation for a government-run public plan. Speaker Pelosi gave a preview of the power that she believes will be invested in the national exchange when she said at a recent news conference that once the legislation is passed, the insurance companies "will be crying out for a public option." The politics of intimidation and political favors will not win support for this plan. Stay tuned. This still is not over yet.
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2:21 PM
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Thursday, January 14, 2010
Boomer Health Care Federal UpdateGreetings Boomers. Congressional Democratic leaders met with the President last week while the rest of Congress remained back home, still on recess. The President pressed the Senate Majority Leader and the House Speaker to get health care reform done quickly in time for the State of the Union speech during the first week in February -- before the opposition can mount an effective grassroots campaign to scuttle the bill. To this end the Democratic leadership has agreed to bypass a formal conference, which would be fairly public, contentious and time-consuming. However, no deadline was promised, and there was some pushback from Speaker Nancy Pelosi that the House would not simply accept the Senate bill. The plan calls for the two chambers (Reid/Durbin, Dodd/Harkin and Baucus for the Senate, and Pelosi/Hoyer, Miller, Rangel and Waxman for the House) to work on a compromise, pass it first in the House and then in the Senate. Under this "ping-pong" process, the Senate will have but one vote in which 60 Senators will have to vote “Yes.” While it seems very unlikely that the public plan option (in the House bill) or the Medicare buy-in provision, already rejected by the Senate, will make the final cut, there are more than enough issues in conflict to keep negotiators busy for several weeks. They include: abortion; immigration; the House tax surcharge on the wealthy vs the Senate's Cadillac tax; the insurance company tax; changing McCarran-Ferguson (pushed by the House); and increasing subsidies to low-income Americans. The current betting is that Democrats will get a bill to the President for signing sometime in the coming weeks, but there is absolutely no margin for error.
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10:53 AM
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Friday, January 8, 2010
Boomer Update on Health CareHey Boomers. The beat goes on!!!Denny Cincinnati Reform will be an albatross around Democrats' necks Belleville News-Democrat Grace-Marie Turner January 7, 2010 Health reform is the Holy Grail for Democrats, but it may turn out instead to be their political death march. President Obama has told Democrats in Congress they must usher in "historic change" by courageously voting for reform, assuring them the voters will thank them later. But "later" may be too late for many members who feel they are being forced to walk the plank and vote for a bill that becomes more unpopular by the day. For starters, the bills cover only about half of the uninsured - missing by miles the Democrats' goal of universal coverage. The Senate bill would leave 23 million people without insurance, and the House bill, at least 18 million, while spending nearly $2.5 trillion in the first year the program is implemented. Next, people will feel the pain well before they see the gain. The bills start collecting new and higher taxes in 2010, but people won't start seeing any subsidies to help them buy insurance until 2014. Sending collection agents out four years before benefits begin is one of the budget gimmicks that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., used to claim his bill is paid for. But health insurers and medical suppliers who must pay the new taxes will quickly raise their prices, leading to higher health insurance costs. Because Obama repeatedly has claimed the legislation will lower health-care costs, small businesses and citizens expecting relief will feel especially betrayed. The Congressional Budget Office says the legislation will actually make the cost problem worse. It found that families purchasing health insurance in the individual market would actually see an increase in their premiums by $2,100 in the year 2016. That's over and above the increases they already would face. A family would pay $15,200 for health insurance in 2016 with reform, and $13,100 if Congress does nothing. Young people get hit the hardest with reform. Most of them don't have a clue that the federal government is about to slap them with a new mandate requiring them to buy expensive health insurance. And studies show the legislation would force them to pay premiums two or three times the amount they otherwise would be charged based upon their age and expected use of health services. And seniors already are outraged because of nearly $500 billion in cuts to Medicare and are on high alert about potential rationing. The Democrats didn't lose Congress in 1994 because they failed to enact the Clinton health reform bill, as members of Congress are being told. They lost because they were pushing a plan that was hugely unpopular with the voters. Just like today. The latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll shows that only 32 percent of the American people support ObamaCare. Democrats will face a torrential backlash if they vote for legislation that is so unpopular with their constituents. The only Democrats may able to save themselves are those who stand up and vocally oppose passage, becoming heroes to the majority of Americans who are desperate for somebody to put on the brakes. Democratic Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska had a chance to be that one vote in the Senate, but he sold out for a few million dollars in Medicaid money for his state. Now his approval ratings have dipped so low that he has been forced to respond with a costly statewide advertising campaign defending his deal-making even though he's not up for re-election until 2012. Republicans don't have the votes in either house of Congress to stop passage. Before Congress takes a final vote on compromise legislation, the only Democrats who may find health-care to be a political gain are those who stand up and say, "Stop!"
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Monday, November 30, 2009
Boomer's: Senate Begins AgainHello Fellow Boomer's. I trust you all had a fun Thanksgiving with your families. Today the Senate begins debate again on our future. Be aware and be informed, your future depends on it!Ten Reasons Public Won't Buy Senate Health Care Plan The Washington Examiner Grace-Marie Turner November 25, 2009 At a time of record deficits and a $12 trillion national debt, President Obama and the Democrats are pulling out all of the stops to pass a plan that dramatically expands government powers over health care. According to a Nov. 23 Rasmussen survey, only 38 percent of Americans polled now support the Democrats' health reform plans, and 56 percent oppose them. That's unlikely to change as people learn more about what's in the 2,074-page bill. Here are the top 10 reasons why: 1. Exploding costs: The actual 10-year cost of the legislation, once the spending begins, will be at least $2.5 trillion. Budget expert James Capretta estimates that the bill will lead to a $4.9 trillion spending increase over 20 years. 2. Losing your current coverage: At least five million people would lose their current employment-based coverage, and millions of seniors would lose their private Medicare Advantage coverage as the program is cut by $118 billion. 3. Job-killing taxes on employers: Employers will be faced with new penalties, taxes, and regulatory hassles. One example: Firms with more than 50 workers that don't offer insurance would have to pay a penalty of $750 for each full-time worker if any of their workers qualify for subsidized health insurance. 4. Budgetary gimmick -- tax now, spend later: The bill starts collecting new and higher taxes next year, but the coverage benefits don't start until 2014 or later. Sending collections agents out four years before benefits begin is one of the budget gimmicks that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., used so he can claim that the cost of his bill is under $900 billion, as the president has demanded. 5. Increasing future health care spending: Despite the president's promise to lower the cost curve, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says that the federal commitment to health spending "would be about $160 billion higher under the legislation than under current law." 6. Cost-shifting gimmick: Reid's bill on paper would slash Medicare payments to doctors by 23 percent after one year. This won't actually happen because Congress always blinks to restore the payments, adding another $210 billion to the actual cost of the bill. 7. Taxpayer-financed abortion: The public does not support using federal taxpayer dollars to finance abortions. Yet the Reid bill would require some plans to cover abortions, allow the newly created government insurance plan to cover abortions, and allow companies that receive federal funds to offer policies that include abortion coverage. 8. Twenty-four million uninsured -- still. The bill leaves 24 million people without insurance by 2019, not even close to the promised goal of universal coverage. This will be a serious problem for hospitals that still will be treating uninsured people, including illegal immigrants, but which will be facing payment cuts of $43 billion. 9. Scarce subsidies: Despite spending $338 billion on new subsidies through the health insurance exchange, just 19 million people will qualify for help with their costs -- even though everyone is required to have government-defined health insurance or pay a penalty. 10. Mandates cause higher premiums and more uninsured: Individuals will be required to purchase health insurance, and younger workers will be forced to pay higher premiums to subsidize older Americans. This will create a death spiral for health insurance, as young people opt to pay penalties rather than expensive premiums, and premiums soar higher and higher for those left in the insurance pool. This is one Christmas present the American people hope they don't receive.
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6:39 AM
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