레이블이 AARP Medicare Part D인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 AARP Medicare Part D인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 25일 월요일

About 'aarp health insurance'|Why I Support Universal Health Insurance; the Promised Addendum to Mythmakers: Compassion







About 'aarp health insurance'|Why I Support Universal Health Insurance; the Promised Addendum to Mythmakers: Compassion








On               Wednesday,               the               nonprofit,               nonpartisan               membership               organization               for               people               50               and               older               AARP               issued               a               statement               concerning               the               non-partisan               Congressional               Budget               Office               (CBO)'s               latest               report               concluding               that               if               U.S.

health               care               cost               trends               continue,               health               care               could               rise               to               a               staggering               49               percent               of               GDP--up               from               16               percent               at               present.

AARP's               position               is               that               health               care               is               not               a               political               issue               but               an               American               one,               and               the               American               people               need               to               come               together               to               address               the               problems               with               health               care               costs               or               else               no-one               will               remain               unscathed               by               the               runaway               train               of               rising               costs.
               The               latest               CBO               report               indicated               that               growth               in               health               care               costs               accounts               for               approximately               90               percent               of               the               projected               growth               in               federal               Medicare               and               Medicaid               spending               over               the               next               75               years.

The               aging               population               will               account               only               for               approximately               10               percent.
               "The               health               care               conversation               in               this               country               needs               a               radical               change...Talking               about               programs               while               ignoring               the               costs               that               drive               them               is               like               replacing               the               roof               while               the               house               is               burning.

Our               leaders               are               focused               on               federal               programs               when               they               should               be               talking               about               health               care               costs               --               costs               that               can               be               lowered               through               health               IT               initiatives,               comparative               effectiveness               research,               care               coordination,               and               speeding               generic               drugs               to               market,"               AARP               spokesperson               Drew               Nannis               said.
               Other               critics               of               the               nation's               health               care               system               have               also               said               that               the               mechanics               of               the               system               need               to               be               gutted               and               totally               replaced,               instead               of               constantly               oiled               more               by               the               federal               and               state               governments.
               One               recent               study,               funded               by               drug               company               giant               Pfizer,               concluded               that               one               of               the               costliest               factors               for               Americans               with               regards               to               health               care               is               the               fact               that               so               many               Americans               are               functionally               illiterate               when               it               comes               to               understanding               how               to               ask               the               right               questions               and               conduct               their               own               research               into               matters               of               their               own               health.

This               results               in               doctors               feeling               obligated               to               make               many               referrals               or               dole               out               expensive               prescriptions               or               medical               examination               procedures               that,               while               always               very               expensive,               are               very               often               unnecessary.

This               impacts               insurance               companies'               rates               for               the               worse.
               It               has               been               said               that               Americans               overmedicate               themselves               as               compared               to               people               in               any               other               developed               nation.
               Other               advocates               for               radical               reform               of               the               system               say               that               health               insurance               should               act               like               other               types               of               insurance,               and               be               used               to               cover               only               unexpected,               unpredictable,               or               catastrophic               health               events               while               having               high               deductibles,               rather               than               acting               as               subsidies               and               covering               nearly               everything.

Advocates               for               this               approach               say               that               this               would               lower               premiums               substantially,               freeing               up               a               great               amount               of               cash               for               Americans               to               put               into               an               interest-bearing               account               that               they               could               use               to               pay               for               routine               or               minor               health               care               costs               and               to               pay               the               deductible               if               they               experienced               an               insurable               event.
               Original               Newswire               Source:               
               http://prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/11-14-2007/0004705656&EDATE=






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      ...rise and employer-sponsored plans are declining, the new health care law promises help AARP's Public Policy Institute examines sources of coverage for the 50 to 64...
    3. hambaallahhani.blogspot.com/   05/05/2011
      ...health for your medical expenses whenever you need to go to select the individual aarp health insurance be relatively resilient-after all, the health insurance for travelling a doctor or hospital...
    4. shoppezzone.blogspot.com/   05/28/2011
      ...personal on both sides of the aarp colorado health insurance and vow to filibuster in order to do...well find out more about the california health insurance personal will allow the colorado health...
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      ... machine. When old farts like me buy United Healthcare health insurance through AARP, those wonderful folks at AARP get a piece of the action. That may be why...
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      ...2012. Access the Spanish version AARP's goal in developing... about their health care choices. ... against insurance cancellations and...
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      ...society , bureaucracy , health care reform , Uncategorized with tags AARP Secure Horizons , Aurora Health Care , Health Insurance , medicare tips . You can follow any responses to...
    8. 1autolatry.wordpress.com/   11/05/2009
      ... and grateful to learn that the AARP and the American Medical Association are both supporting the health insurance reform bill that will soon come up to vote...
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      ... about health care reform or health insurance “reform”. A recent AARP bulletin illustrates this...have a job that pays their health insurance can still be on your policy,” Borger...
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      ... for supplemental insurance with AARP, because I like to be able to go to ... a great model for what a national health insurance program ought to be! I think it's ...
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    Democrats               in               Congress               are               debating               about               what               the               next               best               step               is               concerning               health               care               reform.

    Most               people               in               the               United               States               would               agree               that               health               care               reform               is               needed               to               both               reel               in               costs,               as               well               as               to               help               provide               health               care               for               people               who               do               not               have               it.

    For               many               different               reasons,               partly               due               to               conservative               attacks               on               the               current               proposal               as               well               as               fear               about               choice               of               doctors,               the               current               health               care               reform               bill,               or               actually               bills,               have               become               unpopular               with               the               American               public.

    However,               Democrats               want               to               pass               a               bill               both               for               their               political               survival,               as               well               as               to               help               more               people               obtain               health               care               insurance               coverage               in               addition               to               reigning               in               unfair               insurance               company               practices.

    What               seemed               like               an               unnecessarily               drawn               out               process               that               would               quietly               in               January               or               early               February               as               the               House               and               Senate               versions               are               reconciled               has               been               torpedo               by               the               "Shot               the               heard               around               the               world"               which               erased               democrats               filibuster               proof               majority               in               the               Senate,               and               even               more               so               turned               the               election               into               a               de               facto               national               referendum               for               health               care.

    There               are               a               number               of               options               available:
                   The               House               Could               Pass               the               Senate's               Version               of               Health               Care               Reform
                   A               seemingly               simple               alternative               would               be               for               the               House               to               pass               the               Senate's               version               of               the               bill,               and               then               to               later               work               out               any               kinks               in               the               legislation               once               the               bulk               of               it               is               passed.

    This               makes               sense               as               passing               a               new               health               care               bill               in               the               Senate               would               be               more               difficult               now               that               Scott               Brown               has               been               elected               to               replace               Ted               Kennedy,               and               specifically               because               he               was               elected               in               part               based               on               a               promise               to               vote               against               health               care               legislation.
                   However,               CNN               has               reported               that               many               House               democrats               are               opposed               to               passing               the               Senate's               version               of               the               bill.

    The               Senate's               version               is               more               conservative               than               the               House's               version               of               the               bill,               and               does               not               sit               well               with               more               liberal               democrats.

    This               is               due               in               part               to               a               tax               on               so-called               "Cadillac               health               care               plans"               which               are               in               reality               popular               with               many               middle-class               democrats,               as               well               as               restrictions               on               abortions               that               may               actually               be               more               liberal               than               what               some               house               democrats               want.

    The               House               would               prefer               taxing               the               top               wage               earners               to               pay               for               health               care               reform.
                   Piecemeal               Passage               Possible
                   One               possibility               is               that               the               House               and               Senate               could               work               together               to               pass               a               smaller               series               of               pieces               of               legislation               which               are               health               care               reform,               but               of               course               not               as               sweeping               as               how               the               original               health               care               legislation               was               envisioned.

    These               smaller               measures,               presumably,               would               be               more               popular               with               democrats               and               some               republicans,               and               would               include               measures               such               as               ending               health               insurance               rejection               due               to               pre-existing               conditions,               as               well               as               closing               the               "dounut               hole"               in               paying               for               prescription               drugs.

    It               may               be               possible               to               pass               such               smaller               pieces               of               legislation               with               limited               republican               support               in               the               Senate,               such               as               with               the               support               of               a               moderate               republican               like               Olympia               Snowe               from               Maine.
                   Going               Nuclear?
                   The               so-called               nuclear               option               involves               using               the               legislative               process               of               reconciliation               to               pass               some               sort               of               health               care               legislation               by               reconciling               the               two               bills,               House               and               Senate               bills,               to               a               piece               of               legislation               that               can               pass               under               reconciliation               rules,               which               is               normally               used               to               pass               tax               cuts               as               only               items               related               in               a               specific               manner               to               the               budget               can               be               changed.

    I               am               no               expert               on               the               reconciliation               process,               but               it               does               require               only               a               simple               majority               in               the               Senate,               or               51               votes,               meaning               that               Scott               Brown's               41st               vote               couldn't               block               its               passage.

    Although               I               don't               think               that               this               is               the               option               that               the               democratic               leaders               of               Congress               will               take,               I               think               it               would               be               the               option               that               would               most               make               sense               politically.

    Instead               of               caving               to               Scott               Brown's               win               and               admitting,               in               essence,               that               the               health               care               legislation               was               flawed,               if               Senate               and               House               democrats               utilized               reconciliation               to               pass               something               then               voters               would               note               their               gutsy               move               in               the               face               of               pressure.

    While               health               care               reform               is               unpopular               now,               its               popularity               may               rise               after               its               passage               and               democrats               could               crow               during               the               2010               elections               how               they               stood               up               to               big               business               interests               for               the               little               guy.
                   Canary               in               the               Mine,               Health               Care               Reform               Dead               For               Now
                   Many               democrats               may               view               Scott               Brown's               win               as               the               canary               in               the               mine               which               signals               that               democrats               are               somehow               "off               track"               with               regards               to               health               care               reform.

    His               election               may               have               derailed               the               massive               and               far               reaching               health               care               reform               that               progressive               have               dreamed               about               for               generations.

    Because               of               his               victory,               health               care               reform               may               not               be               passed               this               year               and               instead               go               to               committee               indefinitely,               or               where               bills               go               to               die.
                   Sources:
                   http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/01/20/house.democrats.health.care/






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      ...the country where people can’t get health care and smaller parts where AIDS is on...She just didn’t think that I’d have any reason to know what manure...
    5. carolharvey.blogspot.com/   05/24/2005
      ...home state of Vermont, there's a vacancy for the United States Senate about to occur. Bernie... 98 percent of the time. RUSSERT: So you'd support him? “We may very well end up...
    6. quigleyblog.blogspot.com/   02/12/2007
      ... wanted to be part of the United Nations, then we would like to... The Acadian Alliance), I’d been writing about Jefferson...
    7. whattaboutbob.blogspot.com/   02/21/2013
      .... But I don't care. I know there are a lot...then don't pay. We're happy to part as friends and return...EVER not happy with our work, we'd simply like to part as ...
    8. jtoddring.blogspot.com/   02/22/2007
      ...more difficult to reverse than we may imagine. And it might be more of a nightmare than we'd care to imagine. In Canada, it is the Council of Canadians - the ...
    9. zengersmag.blogspot.com/   10/12/2010
      ... or has health complications, they... keep their child cared for.” Sometimes, she ...be held legally liable, as just part of a society-wide denial of...
    10. distributorcap.wordpress.com/   07/25/2009
      ... has been great D'Cap.. This I think is about the best...stock they own. That's why they don't want Health Care Reform.. They are afraid their gravy train...
    11. United Health Care Part D - Blog Homepage Results

      ...earn credits towards health-care in return for art ...Rajeev Varma’s “little show”, D’Arranged Marriage...portfolio (at least in the early part of her tenure, when her government...
      ...Bulletproof Faith (1) Car (1) D-Day (1) David Zinczenko...Bush (1) Glenn Beck (1) Health (2) Health Care Overhaul (1) ...1) Thomas S. Monson (1) United States Constitution...
      ...banker; also worked at Advisory Board, a health-care research and consultancy firm • Has... in Cairo. Earned his J.D. from the University of Texas at Austin before...



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