Health Care reform

HEALTH CARE: A CASUALTY OF CLASS WARFARE

As the Great Recession rolls on after three years, without signs of relief on the horizon, a growing army of many millions of Americans is finding it impossible to gain access to necessary health care that is affordable. Meanwhile, class warfare is gaining intensity with a widening gulf between the left and right over the major issues of the day, including the future of U.S. health care. As political gridlock continues, the battlefield is littered with many preventable deaths, many lives wounded by the ravages of untreated or under-treated disease, and growing stress in affected families.

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‘MORAL HAZARD’ IN HEALTH CARE: DUPLICITY ON STEROIDS

Under the theory of moral hazard, it is postulated that insured people overuse health care services and that patients themselves are a leading cause of health care inflation. If they would just have more “skin in the game” through enough cost-sharing (co-payments, deductibles and other restrictions), it is assumed that costs could be reined in.

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REBUILDING PRIMARY CARE: A MULTIFACETED CHALLENGE

As the last three posts have shown, the primary care infrastructure of the U.S. health care system is crumbling, overrun by specialization, sub-specialization and market forces. As a result, access to primary care is not available to a growing part of our population, costs go up as value, quality and outcomes of care go down, and any accountability within the market-based system remains out of reach. The “reform” legislation of 2009 cannot be expected to alleviate these fundamental problems, “building” as they do on our present flawed system of financing and delivering health care. Since all incremental efforts to reverse these trends have failed, we need more fundamental approaches.

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Rebutting Right-Wing Market Propaganda

Yesterday’s blog post by John Goodman and Thomas Saving of the National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) is the latest in an avalanche of unfounded assertions and distortions that have characterized the writings from this center for many years. The Dallas-based NCPA, established in 1983, describes itself as a “nonpartisan public policy research organization, with the goal to develop and promote private alternatives to government regulation and control, solving problems by relying on the strength of the competitive, entrepreneurial private sector” (its website). This latest post puts forward, without context and with cherry-picked references, carefully selected statements that might seem to some to support their case—that deregulated markets will solve all of our health care problems. It would take a very long paper, or a number of papers, to respond to the many unfounded claims in their latest post.

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The Decline Of Primary Care: The Silent Crisis Undermining U.S. Health Care

Amidst all the crises confronting our country today—ranging from the deficit, rising unemployment and underemployment, mistrust of legislators and the government—there is another major crisis: the continued deterioration of primary care that threatens to break up the very foundation of U.S. health care. Underreported and widely misunderstood, the continued decline of primary care results in uncontrollable inflation of health care costs, decreased access to necessary care, increasing fragmentation and depersonalization of care, and unacceptable quality and outcomes of care. As health care costs spiral out of sight and consume an ever-increasing part of the country’s GDP, this trend, unless reversed, can destabilize and eventually bankrupt our health care system, and perhaps even our country.

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What Does the Tax Cut Deal Mean for Medicare, Social Security and Health Care Reform? Part 1

When President Obama struck a deal with conservatives on tax cuts, his opponents set the stage for 2012. With this legislation, the conservative agenda of the Bush administration once again becomes national policy. The goal: to redistribute wealth upward--even if that means letting the deficit balloon. By: Bealth Beat Blog

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Hijacked – Stolen health care reform V: Overall assessment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (PPACA)

Our last four posts have examined the PPACA from the perspectives of the four main goals of health care reform — cost containment, affordability, improved access and quality of care. Here we draw these goals together in asking whether this legislation delivers enough to be worth the $1 trillion investment over the next 10 years, and whether it will really work.

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HIJACKED – STOLEN HEALTH CARE REFORM IV: WILL THE QUALITY OF CARE IMPROVE?

In our last three posts, we examined how the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (PPACA) stacks up against the goals of reform for cost containment, affordability and access to care. Here we consider what its likely impact will be on the quality of care, the fourth major goal of the reform effort.

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HIJACKED: STOLEN HEALTH REFORM III: HOW MUCH WILL ACCESS TO CARE BE EXPANDED?

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (PPACA) is being touted by its proponents as moving the country to near-universal coverage and a great step ahead in U.S. health care. But what does this really mean? Are the many barriers to care almost a thing of the past?

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HIJACKED - STOLEN HEALTH CARE REFORM II: WHY WILL HEALTH CARE BECOME MUCH LESS AFFORDABLE?

In our last post, we looked at some of the uncontrolled drivers of rapidly rising health care costs despite all the assurances of our politicians supporting the new health care law, the Patient Protection and Affordability Care Act of 2010 (PPACA).

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