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Obamacare: Cooked Books You Can Believe In

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Wouldn’t it be nice if you could use a $100 bill to buy groceries and then deposit that same Benjamin in the bank to help pay your monthly credit card statement? Regular Americans would call this either magic or fraud. Washington Democrats call this “health care reform.”

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The Big Lie of Health Care Reform

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The Big Lie: Without health care insurance, there is no access to health care.

Health care insurance coverage is but one method of paying for health care products and services. Doctors and hospitals are quite open to accepting cash, checks, or credit cards for their services rendered and have no problem with getting paid directly — meaning they get their money right away, don’t have to fill out and file mounds of bureaucratic paperwork with insurance companies, don’t have to worry about what treatments are approved and reimbursable by the insurance companies, etc.

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Obama’s physician cousin angrily denounces health care reform

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Obamacare proponents would have us believe that we will add 30 million patients to the system without adding providers, we will see no decline in the quality of care for the millions of Americans currently happy with the system, and -if you act now!- we will save money in the process. But why stop there? Why not promise it will no longer rain on weekends and every day will be a great hair day?

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Emperor Obama and the Kamikaze House Democrats

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Emperor Barack contributes further inspiration to Democrats, reluctantly adjusting rising sun hachimakis on clammy foreheads.
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Lessons of a $618,616 Death

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Two years after her husband’s death, Amanda Bennett’s cover story examines the costs of keeping one man alive

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Current health care reforms don’t address the real issues

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By Dr. Charles Gregorius | Posted: Saturday, February 27, 2010 11:55 pm | (39) Comments

While just about everyone involved in health/medical care agrees that our system is too costly and we are not always getting the best of care for what we spend, the efforts to rein in these costs and reform the system are all wrong. The efforts are all directed at price controls from the top down and do not address the causes of the rapid rise in costs.

First, we must clarify whose costs we are talking about: the costs to those who are paying the bills (patients and insurers) or the costs to those who are providing the care (facilities, doctors, therapists, etc.). The costs incurred in providing care are passed on to those receiving the care. This is no different than any other product or service we buy. If the costs of rubber and steel go up for Ford, the prices of Ford cars go up to pay for it. The same applies in any product or service industry. You either meet your costs and make a profit or you go out of business.

Government’s approach to health care financing is nothing more than top down price controls. Pay the facilities and providers less and let them figure out how to reduce their costs of staying in business. This backward push can go only so far though improved efficiencies before the services themselves are reduced, restricted or become unavailable.

This is seen as medical offices restrict the percentage of Medicare and Medicaid patients they will accept because those payers commonly pay less than it costs to provide the service.

If we are to get a handle on health care costs in this country, we must address the prime drivers of health care costs:

  • 1) a rapidly growing and aging population that expects availability of the newest and best in medical care;
  • 2) technological advances that make more effective care possible for older and sicker patients as well as new treatments we have never had before;
  • 3) an entitlement culture that is slowly but surely stripping us of our sense of personal responsibility;
  • 4) a legal system that feeds and encourages No. 3.
  • Several employers in Nebraska have shown us how to reduce health care costs. These employers have instituted wellness programs that create incentives for employees to take control of their lives and to take responsibility for their own health. The results have been a healthier workforce and lower total costs for the employers and the workers. Reductions in costs have ranged from 24 percent to 33 percent, as reported in the Omaha World-Herald and Lincoln Journal Star. It has not required any new government spending, taxation, federal programs or bureaucracies.

    Nor does it allow the power-hungry in Washington to take over more control of our lives.
    Such changes certainly are not the whole answer. Insurance practices will need reform or increased regulation. And the issue of caring for those disadvantaged and in no position to provide for their own care will need help. This country has always done that and always will.

    But even within the Medicaid ranks, incentives need to be introduced. States that have instituted minimal ($1-$2) co-pays for emergency room visits have seen a reduction in inappropriate use of emergency departments. It is ludicrous to go to an emergency room to get a prescription for an over-the-counter drug such as aspirin so it can be obtained for free.

    All health care will be paid for through out-of-pocket expenses, taxes and charity. The only money the government has it takes from us as taxes, prints or borrows. The payers are always and ultimately the people.

    Those who seek and receive the care and then pay the bills should be the ones who determine what care is received and how it will be paid for. More personal responsibility and self-determination will go a lot farther than more government intervention in solving this country’s health care problem. The more we depend on government, the more freedom we give up.

    Charles Gregorius, M.D., is an anesthesiologist who practices at BryanLGH Medical Center.

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    Hoosiers and Health Savings Accounts

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    Most important, we are seeing significant changes in behavior, and consequently lower total costs. In 2009, for example, state workers with the HSA visited emergency rooms and physicians 67% less frequently than co-workers with traditional health care. They were much more likely to use generic drugs than those enrolled in the conventional plan, resulting in an average lower cost per prescription of $18. They were admitted to hospitals less than half as frequently as their colleagues. Differences in health status between the groups account for part of this disparity, but consumer decision-making is, we’ve found, also a major factor.

    Overall, participants in our new plan ran up only $65 in cost for every $100 incurred by their associates under the old coverage. Are HSA participants denying themselves needed care in order to save money? The answer, as far as the state of Indiana and Mercer Consulting can find, is no. There is no evidence HSA members are more likely to defer needed care or common-sense preventive measures such as routine physicals or mammograms.

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    Buying Insurance in Fantasyland

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    “We agree philosophically that we want to end the prohibition on preexisting conditions.” – President Barack Obama, White House Health Care Summit, February 25, 2010

    Which of the following scenarios seems the most ludicrous?

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    What Didn’t Get Said at the Healthcare Summit

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    Only 6 percent of the population actually buys their own insurance. (And for this, we are painting the insurance companies as the villains of this melodrama?) Fourteen percent of the population is on Medicare, 14 percent on Medicaid. The other 66 percent do not have insurance but health benefits¸, which is not the same thing. Nine percent gets its benefits from government employment, 4 percent from the military and the remaining 43 percent get their benefits from private employment. The last 15 percent (there is some overlap) has no coverage at all.
    President Obama kept talking about how it is these “large pools” in big companies that make insurance cheap, but that is not true. Large pools are only part of the equation. Equally important is that these employees are getting their benefits tax-free.

    ……….

    So Obama’s premise is wrong. We’re not going to be able to “get everybody into the pool” because doing that would mean breaking up the system of employment-based health benefits that is protected by ERISA. That 43 percent of the market is staying put. The only thing that could crack this wall of protection would be if benefits were highly taxed and the federal “insurance exchanges” were made so attractive that people were willing to give up their employment-based benefits in exchange. Those are the things that Obama has sworn won’t happen.

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    Reagan on Socialism

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    The Perils of Progress

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    The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

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    My heart, My choice! says Canadian Premier

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    In an interview with The Canadian Press, Williams said he went to Miami to have a “minimally invasive” surgery for an ailment first detected nearly a year ago, based on the advice of his doctors.
    “This was my heart, my choice and my health,” Williams said late Monday from his condominium in Sarasota, Fla.
    “I did not sign away my right to get the best possible health care for myself when I entered politics.”

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    Prescription for Healthcare Reform

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      There is no need to rush a bill through legislation to satisfy a political promise. Achieving effective healthcare reform is a complicated task and should be done slowly and carefully. There is only one chance to do this correct.
      There is no problem with healthcare. It is the best care in the world. The quality of US healthcare and patient outcomes is being unfairly criticized in order to change the system. The real problem is with affordable access to health insurance, rising costs and an out of control tort system.
      There are numerous targeted solutions to address these problems that are being ignored by Congress and the White House. Access to health insurance is a chronic problem for 15-20 million US citizens, not 50 million. This can be addressed immediately with insurance vouchers and tax credits utilizing existing private insurers.
      Cost of healthcare insurance is high and needs to be made more affordable. This can be accomplished by promoting competition. First, by repealing the antitrust exemption that favors insurance companies (McCarron- Fergusson Act) and by relaxing restrictions on internet sales of healthcare insurance across state lines.
      Eliminate “pre-existing” condition penalty by establishing and expanding high risk pools across the nation and allow private insurers to compete for this business.
      Allow people to purchase their own insurance and receive the same tax benefit as employers do now. This will uncouple insurance from the workplace and make it “portable”.
      Encourage Health Savings Accounts to make people better consumers of healthcare resources and re-connect with the actual cost of services. Doctors and hospitals could publish fees/rankings so patients could shop. Eliminate antitrust regulations, Stark rules and many other government burdens on doctors which inflate the cost of healthcare.
      Medical Liability Reform. Specialty boards to evaluate the merit of cases before they go to trial. Caps on awards, “loser pays” for frivolous lawsuits, and a jury made up of physician peers and judges are reasonable suggestions.
      We reject any additional “government” controlled or sponsored health insurance program (Public Option, Co-ops, Insurance Exchange, Triggers, Mandates). Medicare/Medicaid/SCHIP/VA are dysfunctional and bankrupt.
      We reject any non-elected government oversight board responsible for making clinical decisions and determining “quality” of care and coverage.
      The AMA does NOT represent the majority of “practicing” US physicians. Only 17% of US physicians belong to the AMA and most of these members are administrators, practice in academic medicine, retired or residents and students. Therefore, the AMA’s endorsement of this legislation is meaningless and irrelevant.
      Our first priority is the health and well being of our patients and we will fight to preserve patients’ freedom of choice and control of their personal healthcare decisions.

    http://www.docs4patientcare.org/

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    Time for a New Look for Doctors

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    It was assumed that the American Medical Association (AMA) provided the platform for doctors to air their views. It came as a shock to most people when it was revealed that this was not the case, and in fact, only 17% of all doctors were members. To compound the problem, the AMA betrayed the very people that it was ostensibly meant to represent. This was to protect its $100M medical coding franchise that the federal government grants the AMA as the basis by which doctors and hospitals get by paid insurance companies and the federal government — a major incentive for the group to endorse state-run medicine.

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    Bill would rein in prescription costs – Example of Redistribution of Wealth

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    A state lawmaker is pushing to keep Nebraskans with life-threatening or debilitating diseases from having to choose between paying for expensive medicine and feeding their families.

    Pat Bourne, a vice president for Blue Cross and Blue Shield, said: “As written, it will dramatically and unfairly shift costs to other policyholders.”

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    Statement by Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH) on the Proposed Feb. 25 Health Care Summit

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    Washington, Feb 13 – House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH) today issued the following statement regarding the health care summit being planned by congressional Democrats and the White House for February 25:

    “A productive bipartisan discussion should begin with a clean sheet of paper. We now know that instead of starting the ‘bipartisan’ health care ‘summit’ on Feb. 25 with a clean sheet of paper, the president and his party intend to arrive with a new bill written behind closed doors exclusively by Democrats — a backroom deal that will transform one-sixth of our nation’s economy and affect every family and small business in America. They will then engage a largely handpicked audience in a televised ‘dialogue’ according to a script they have largely pre-determined. They will do this as a precursor to embarking on a legislative course that Democratic congressional aides acknowledge has also been pre-determined — a partisan course that relies on parliamentary tricks to circumvent the will of the American people and engineer a pre-determined outcome. It doesn’t sound much like bipartisanship to me.”

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    Ben Nelson Boo’ed in Omaha Restaurant

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    WASHINGTON — When Sen. Ben Nelson stopped for a bite at Dante Pizzeria Napoletana in west Omaha recently, the Nebraska Democrat apparently got a jumbo slice of public opinion.

    Posted by: The truth shall… on 01/15/10 @ 11:07 am:
    I was also in Dante’s Pizza last Friday with a friend. I witnessed the heckling first hand. Yes, there was a lady who was the loudest, but there were some other negative comments and boos flying. If Mr. Nelson, who was standing next to my table, and about 5 feet from the table where the lady was screaming to “get him to get the hell out” didn’t hear the comment, he is either deaf or lying. His head sure spun around like he heard something. The whole restaurant heard it. After Nelson left we chatted with the manager and the bartenders. Everyone was talking about it.

    So who is corroborating Ben’s story? None other than James Martin Davis. Definitely two dudes I wouldn’t want to play in Liar’s Poker.

    I would also like to donate an abacus to Sen Nelson and his spin doctor Mr. Thompson. Ben and Jake say that 9 out of 10 support him? Turn the abacus upside down boys. I heard 6 negative comments in the restaurant, and that was in about 5 seconds.

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    C-SPAN CEO: WHITE HOUSE HAS ALLOWED ONLY ‘ONE HOUR’ OF HEALTH CARE COVERAGE

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