Archive for the ‘Health Care’ Category

Health Care Reform Weekly Easytoinsureme Health Insurance Quotes

Saturday, August 27th, 2011

Health Care Reform Weekly Easytoinsureme Health Insurance Quotes

The sudden halt to health care reform’s steady march forward came as a shock to many who saw an upset win by Republican Senator-elect Scott Brown in Massachusetts as all but impossible. But if many took delight in the election outcome’s impact on health reform legislation, Aetna Chairman Ronald A. Williams made it clear in a New York Times story last week that the country still needs meaningful health care reform – reform that addresses access as well as affordability. Everyone benefits by health reform that gets at the factors driving soaring health care costs and the loss of coverage for so many Americans. While Congress thinks carefully about its next steps, Aetna will continue to support meaningful health care reform and continue to offer responsible solutions to legislative leaders.

Federal

The election of Republican Scott Brown as the new senator from Massachusetts has derailed the Congressional health care reform train, less because Brown denies Democrats the 60th filibuster-proof vote, though that is certainly a major result, and more because it collapsed the Democratic political house of cards by highlighting the power of independent voters and the frustrated anti-incumbent mood of the electorate. Whether Democrats can regroup from this wake-up call will consume their leadership from now until the November off-year elections. How Democrats handle, and how Republicans respond to, health care reform in the short term and other key priorities – such as jobs, the economy, energy and security – over the rest of the session will underscore all Congressional decisions from now until the first Tuesday in November. In short, the 2010 elections started in earnest with Brown’s victory.

Gop Claims Health Care Plan Is Merely Camouflage

Friday, August 19th, 2011

Gop Claims Health Care Plan Is Merely Camouflage

The White House issued proposals Monday for health care reform that have won kudos from several Democratic lawmakers, a sure sign, say Republicans, of how little GOP input is in the plan.

Republicans have agreed to show up at the White House Thursday for a summit on health care, but are heading there with a dim view of the outcome.

“It’s disappointing that Democrats in Washington either aren’t listening, or are completely ignoring what Americans across the country have been saying,” U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in a written statement.

“House Republicans welcome any good faith effort to start over on health care reform but the bill President Obama unveiled today is just more of the same government-run insurance, mandates and taxes the American people have overwhelmingly rejected,” added Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind.

The White House, however, insists that the bill is more than just camouflage, but rather represents compromise.

“Senator McCain in the campaign had a proposal to add — to add those dependents on to your parents’ health care up to a certain age to allow for what is a gap in the uninsured based on when someone leaves the dependency of their parents and gets a job that provides health care,” said White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, noting that provision has been included in the president’s proposals.

GOP’s Challenge to Health Care Reform

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

Imagine for a moment a sudden outbreak of smallpox (weaponized smallpox, if your taste runs to Jack Bauer-style scenarios). Airborne, highly contagious, deadly, it has the capability of spreading across the country and beyond in weeks, if not contained with a program of vaccination-vaccination not for a few, but for everybody, as soon as possible. Easy To Insure ME has the answers

If Congress passed emergency authorization for the program, would you want a judge to block it? What if some citizens preferred not to be vaccinated? What if they promised Scout’s honor not to get smallpox, or if they did, not to give it anyone else?

Would you want the judge to halt the program on the grounds that not getting vaccinated was “inactivity,” and thus beyond Congress’s power over “to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian Tribes?” Those who refused vaccination might act as reservoirs of the disease, and thus affect commerce. What if the judge conceded that point, but said Congress still couldn’t reach them because they weren’t voluntarily in the stream of commerce?

What if the judge blocked the program because Congress relied on private medical personnel to administer the vaccine? Congress could have created a program by which thousands of full-time federal employees would give the inoculations-that would be constitutional–but using non-employees made the program unconstitutional. Would that make sense?

Health Care Bill Would Bring Higher State Medicaid Costs

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011

Health Care Bill Would Bring Higher State Medicaid Costs

The health bill passed by the House of Representatives Sunday would cost Nevada taxpayers an extra 3 million from 2014-2019, to provide health care to the needy.

According to early state estimates, the bill would make an additional 70,000 residents eligible for Medicaid. The state would be mandated to cover another 8,000 individuals who are now eligible but have not applied to be covered by the state health insurance program for the poor.

About 209,000 Nevadans are currently covered by Medicaid.

Including state and federal money, “the total cost of reform is .3 billion,” said Mike Willden, director of the state Department of Health and Human Resources.

Willden went through the numbers for the Nevada Vision Stakeholder Group, formed to develop a plan for the future, looking ahead as much as 20 years.

Meanwhile, Gov. Jim Gibbons railed against the costs of the bill in a written statement Monday: “The bill disguises its true cost by shoving Medicaid expansions down to the state level and shuffling Congressional Budget Office estimates into later years so it appears to save federal tax dollars. It is an insult to those who truly care about meaningful health care reform.”

Health Care Challenge Could Prevail

Friday, July 8th, 2011

Health Care Challenge Could Prevail

When 21 states and several private groups initiated lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the Obama health care law earlier this year, critics denounced the suits as frivolous political grandstanding. But it is increasingly clear that the plaintiffs have a serious case with a real chance of victory. Easy To Insure ME has the answers

The suits focus primarily on challenges to the new law’s “individual mandate,” which requires most American citizens to purchase a government-approved health insurance plan by 2014 or pay a fine. One of the cases was filed by 20 state governments and the National Federation of Independent Business in a federal court in Florida. Another was initiated by the Commonwealth of Virginia in a federal court in this state, and a third by the Thomas More Law Center in Michigan.

The judges considering the Florida and Virginia cases have both issued rulings rejecting the federal government’s motions to dismiss the suits and indicating that the mandate can’t be upheld based on current Supreme Court precedent. By contrast, Michigan district Judge George Caram Steeh wrote a decision concluding that the mandate is constitutional. But even he agreed that the case raises an “issue of first impression.”

Universal Health Care; The Canadian Experience – Part 3

Saturday, May 21st, 2011

Universal Health Care; The Canadian Experience – Part 3

Here’s To Your Wealth!  Comparative Costs of Private and Public Health Systems
Part 3 of a 3-Part Series

Everything comes with a cost and health care is no exception.  But which type of health care model costs the most – the universal public type or the for-profit private system?  The answer depends on the source and perhaps what political stripes that source wears.

While President Obama’s camp continues to promote the public option and what they say will be a lower overall cost to consumers, many conservative politicians and talk show hosts have, of course, campaigned hard to make the opposite seem true.  Their take is that industrialized nations with universal public health care pay far more per capita for sub-standard services compared to their US counterpart.

It’s easy to accept without question, this latter position as fact, particularly if you buy-into another popular view that suggests everything and anything the government administers suffers from waste, inefficiency, ineffectiveness and bloated costs.  Let’s face it, you don’t have to look very far to find examples of poor public governance.  (Does anyone remember stories about a certain stars-and-stripes military outfit paying 0 for hammers and hundreds more for toilets?)

Health Care Costs is Rising – What you Need to Know

Saturday, April 23rd, 2011

Health Care Costs is Rising – What you Need to Know

Americans pay more than one and a half trillion dollars for medical care each year and costs related to all manner of health care, such as prescription drugs, continue to skyrocket. While some of reasons behind this booming bill are understandable, Americans caught in a cash crunch might be surprised to find out some of the lesser-known causes of high health care costs.

The words health care might invoke images of doctors, nurses and hospitals, but the reality is that the medical field is a business and a ruthless one at that. Individual practitioners, researchers and participants may have wonderful intentions and a true desire to help people, but the structure of the American health care system ensures profit is the number one issue of importance.

Here are some facts that may help explain the high costs of American health care:

Pharmaceutical research and development companies spend roughly billion each year on R&D, and about the same amount on advertising and self-promotional marketing activities.

There is sure to be a grin on your face once you get to read this article on health insurance. This is because you are sure to realize that all this matter is so obvious, you wonder how come you never got to know about it!

Health Care Reform! Now what?

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Health Care Reform! Now what?

Who is Mike Shaw?

Hello and Welcome,

My name is Mike Shaw I am an Insurance Professional with over 30 years of first hand experience of marketing Medical Insurance in the USA, and marketing “Private Medical Insurance” as it is known in the UK. I believe my back ground as a small business owner and a regular patient of the “One payer” delivery system in the UK positions me to offer you a totally different perspective on the effects of the new legislation.

My experience includes 15 years in the Southern California market, marketing predominantly Group Medical Insurance to “small business” employing 2 to 50 employees. However in the UK my focus was on “Blue Chip” household names such as Coca Cola, Bristol Myer Squib, Air France and Solomon Brothers were listed amongst my hundreds of clients.

So why, you may wonder  would Major Company’s who are already mandated to pay significant subscriptions via high taxes to fund “The National Health Service” (the NHS as it is known in the UK?)why would they want or need to purchase additional private Insurance to cover their employees?

When we approached prospective clients with our privatized insurance products the business owners sighted many reasons as to why there was an urgent need for an alternative delivery system to supplement the inefficient and out dated “socialized system”

Our clients were looking for a solution to the challenges of attracting and retaining high quality employees in competitive markets. Consequently it was never a difficult decision for the decision maker to purchase privatized products.

Socialized Health Care Scott Sipprelle on Socialized health care

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

Socialized Health Care Scott Sipprelle on Socialized health care

Socialized Health Care The “Obama Health Care Reform Summary” by Scott Sipprelle for Congress.

Socialized Health Care from the standpoint of District 12 Congressional Race for Congress candidate Scott Sipprelle’s mind. An excerpt from the hard hitting Interview brought to you by Dr. Joe Clemente & Dr. Joe Cauda on 9-25-10.

Seeking to oust Rush Holt’s claim to the congressional seat of NJ’s Congressional District 12, Scott Sipprelle shared his views via extended video Interview regarding topics such as Universal Health Care Reform and a Health Care system overburdened by current immigration health laws.

Go here for the full interview Full 22 Minute Scott Sipprelle Interview

Days heading to the election NJ Congressional District 12 Candidate Sipprelle tackled and answered questions regarding Socialized HealthCare, Universal Health Care Reform and a Health Care System plagued and overburdened by immigration Health Laws. Watch as he bares all his Views and Values and Philosophy specific to Medicare Payments and Medicare payment cuts to physicians.

How To Take Responsibility For Care

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

“Doctors are the same as lawyers; the only difference is that lawyers merely rob you, whereas doctors rob you and kill you too.” – Anton Chekhov, Russian playwright

The World Health Organization reports that the United States has the 37th best health care system in the world. America’s health care system is fraught with problems and its patient satisfaction is rated among the worst in the world. Even though America’s health care system is envied by the world, it ranks at the bottom of many health care indicators. In the developed world, the United States is at the bottom of the list for infant mortality and life expectancy.

Alexa