2013년 11월 29일 금요일

About 'united health one insurance'|...teacher is,” said one, adding, “One of my teachers tells me he does this for the health benefits.” This seems odd because...







About 'united health one insurance'|...teacher is,” said one, adding, “One of my teachers tells me he does this for the health benefits.” This seems odd because...








San               Francisco               --               The               Obama               administration               is               attempting               to               improve               health               care               in               America               with               the               health               insurance               reform               plan,               but               the               task               is               so               complicated               and               strewn               with               difficulties               and               unknowns               that               it               is               not               an               easy               sell               to               those               in               Congress               and               to               the               average               person.

I,               for               one,               am               in               favor               of               reform               because               there               are               too               many               uninsured               persons               in               America.

When               someone               goes               to               the               hospital               without               insurance,               it               is               the               American               taxpayers               who               pay               for               his               treatment.
               I               would               much               rather               it               be               the               case               that               every               person               in               America               has               some               form               of               health               insurance.

Obama's               plan               may               help               bring               that               to               fruition,               though               the               FAQ               section               on               this               plan               that               is               on               the               White               House               Web               site               needs               many               more               details               of               how               much               it               will               cost               and               how               it               will               be               paid               for.
               Here               are               how               my               representative               and               senators               stand               on               the               health               care               legislation:
               Nancy               Pelosi,               San               Francisco,               Speaker               of               the               House
               In               a               recent               editorial               published               by               USAToday.com,               Nancy               Pelosi,               representing               San               Francisco's               constituents,               argues               for               health               care               reform.

She               states               that               health               care               insurance               reform               will               allow               for               people               to               keep               their               plans               if               they               want               to               do               so,               or               to               switch               to               another               plan,               thus               offering               more               choices.

The               reform               will               also               lower               medical               costs,               she               says,               and               "never               again               will               medical               bills               drive               Americans               into               bankruptcy."
               I               agree               with               these               positions               whole-heartedly.

The               United               States               of               America               is               the               greatest               country               in               the               world               and               yet               millions               of               adults               and               children               have               no               health               insurance               whatsoever.

The               government               must               make               the               hard               choices               for               people               who               are               not               making               them,               to               ensure               that               people               don't               go               bankrupt               because               of               a               huge               medical               expense.
               Dianne               Feinstein,               United               States               Senator
               Senator               Feinstein               has               not               fully               backed               Obama's               Health               Care               Reform               plan,               according               to               nbcsandiego.com.

She               should               not               be               undecided               at               this               point.

She               needs               to               get               on               board               with               the               White               House               and               President               Obama               so               we               can               pass               this               Health               Insurance               Reform               and               get               people               affordable               medical               insurance.
               Dianne               Feinstein               was               quoted               on               sfgate.com               as               saying               that               subsidies               to               low-income               families               under               this               reform               would               count               as               additional               entitlements               and               "if               you               add               more               entitlements,               it's               a               problem"               because               the               federal               deficit               could               continue               even               higher.
               This               is               a               valid               concern               that               needs               to               be               addressed               by               the               Obama               administration               and               it               is               certainly               my               biggest               concern.

Free               health               insurance               is               never               free               and               is               always               paid               by               someone               or               some               government.

If               the               government               is               paying               for               it,               we               certainly               need               a               corresponding               tax               to               pay               for               it               or               major               cuts               elsewhere.
               Barbara               Boxer,               United               States               Senator
               Barbara               Boxer               seems               together               with               Nancy               Pelosi               and               President               Obama               in               supporting               health               care               reform.

Boxer               has               on               her               Web               site               a               letter               in               which               she               states               that               "46               million               Americans               have               no               health               insurance."
               I               believe               this               fact               because               I               know               a               number               of               individuals               who               do               not               have               health               insurance               because               it               is               not               provided               through               their               employer               and               they               cannot               afford               individual               coverage.

Senator               Boxer               is               on               the               right               side               of               people               who               want               more               choices               and               to               have               affordable               health               care.
               I               am               with               her               too.

It               is               time               for               a               change               in               America               and               for               people               to               have               more               choices               on               their               health               insurance.

We               only               hope               that               President               Obama               can               find               a               way               to               pay               for               all               of               this               without               further               burdening               the               federal               deficit.
               Sources
               Health               Insurance               Reform               FAQ,               whitehouse.gov
               "Un-American               attacks               can't               derail               health               care               debate,"               Nancy               Pelosi               and               Steny               Hoyer,               USAToday.com,               August               2008.
               "Dianne               Feinstein               dithers               on               healthcare               reform,"               Jackson               West,               nbcsandiego.com,               July               28,               2009.






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    About 'united health care provider list'|United Health Care and Oxford Health Plans...







    About 'united health care provider list'|United Health Care and Oxford Health Plans...








    In               doing               research               for               this               article,               I               came               across               various               opinions               regarding               the               use               of               magnetic               therapy.

    Magnetic               therapy               can               be               practically               a               cure-all,               possibly               beneficial,               shows               some               promise,               and               down               -               right               "it's               a               quack"               therapy.

    It               is               my               purpose               to               review               both               sides.

    Only               you               and               your               health               care               provider               can               decide               what               treatment               is               right               for               you.

    The               use               of               magnets               can               be               traced               all               the               way               back               to               the               Middle               Ages               when               they               were               used               to               find               metal               things               in               the               body,               like               when               a               person               was               shot               with               an               arrowhead.

    They               were               also               used               to               treat               gout,               arthritis,               and               baldness.

    The               modern               use               of               magnets               started               in               the               1970s               when               it               was               discovered               that               the               body               would               react               to               positive               and               negative               charges.

    Some               think               that               when               a               person               is               injured               or               develops               an               illness,               the               electromagnetic               pulses               that               the               body               normally               gives               off               are               disrupted.

    The               purpose               of               magnets               would               be               to               bring               these               pulses               back               to               normal.

    Some               also               believe               that               magnets               can               increase               blood               flow,               decrease               pain               over               a               localized               area,               and               realign               thought               patterns               for               an               overall               emotional               well               being.

    Usually               the               patient               has               either               a               magnet               taped               to               the               affected               area               of               the               body               or               wears               magnets               as               a               bracelet               or               necklace.

    Or               they               can               be               used               in               insoles               for               shoes.

    Generally,               magnets               are               considered               safe               except               for               in               patients               with               a               pace               maker               or               other               electronic               device.
                   Of               course,               any               website               selling               magnetic               devices               are               going               to               sing               praises               of               the               benefits               of               magnetic               therapy.

    A               web               search               of               magnetic               therapy               products               will               give               you               a               long               list               of               companies               that               sell               a               variety               of               magnetic               therapy               products.

    Some               even               boast               being               part               of               the               Better               Business               Bureau               Online               Reliability               Program.

    Again,               I               am               not               endorsing               these               products               or               a               particular               website               in               any               way.

    In               fact,               I               found               that               the               FDA's               warning               about               buying               medical               devices               on               line               worth               reading,               and               I               mention               it               later               in               this               article.
                   The               National               Institute               for               Health               has               an               article               on               its               website               dealing               with               magnets               for               pain.

    Listed               in               the               sources               at               the               end               is               the               link               to               the               article.

    The               NIH               says               that               there               are               mixed               results               as               to               the               effectiveness               of               magnets               treating               pain.

    More               research               is               needed.

    It               also               recommends               consulting               your               health               care               provider               regarding               any               alternative               therapy.
                   FDA               warns               about               buying               "medical               devices"               over               the               web               and               cites               magnets               as               an               example.

    It               gives               this               warning:               "Buying               online               has               advantages,               but               it               also               can               produce               pitfalls               for               some               consumers.

    Buying               on-line               offers               privacy,               convenience               and               potential               cost-savings,               but               personal               data               given               by               the               consumer               can               be               misused               by               unscrupulous               dealers.

    While               the               Internet               offers               many               quality               medical               devices               from               legitimate               sites,               it               also               offers               medical               devices               that               don't               work               and               some               that               may               even               harm               you               or               your               family.

    Some               Web               sites               sell               medical               devices               for               unapproved               uses,               or               they               sell               medical               devices               that               have               not               been               cleared               or               approved               by               FDA.

    Other               Web               sites               sell               prescription               medical               devices               without               asking               for               a               prescription.

    Some               foreign               Web               sites               sell               medical               devices               to               customers               in               the               United               States               where               the               medical               devices               have               not               been               cleared               or               approved               for               sale.

    Below               are               some               examples               of               problems               with               Internet               purchases...Magnets               are               advertised               to               cure               multiple               conditions               such               as               carpal               tunnel,               motion               sickness,               and               back               ache."               The               FDA               then               uses               the               old               adage,               "If               it               sounds               too               good               to               be               true,               it               probably               is."               It               also               recommends               finding               out               if               the               product               has               been               approved               by               the               FDA.

    The               FDA               encourages               consumers               to               search               its               device               databases               at               www.fda.gov/cdrh               to               see               if               a               particular               device               has               been               approved.

    Or               you               can               call               CDRH               at               (800)               638-2041.
                   Sources:
                   Article               on               cancer.org
                   FDA
                   NIH:               Magnets               for               Pain






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    About 'united healthcare online'|United, more.







    About 'united healthcare online'|United, more.








    In               recent               years,               there               has               been               a               strong               push               for               a               universal               healthcare               plan               in               the               United               States.

    Many               would               like               this               reformed               healthcare               system               to               emulate               the               European               national               health               plans.

    People               across               the               country               see               that               our               healthcare               system               is               in               crisis,               with               millions               of               people               who               are               uninsured               and               prices               that               are               skyrocketing.

    The               American               healthcare               crisis               is               actually               one               of               affordability               rather               than               access               to               healthcare.

    There               are               very               few               people               who               cannot               find               healthcare;               the               problem               is               that               many               people               cannot               afford               the               healthcare               that               is               available.

    This               is               true               even               though               laws               require               hospitals               to               treat               patients               regardless               of               their               ability               to               pay.
                   A               common               myth               is               that               universal               government               healthcare               would               be               free               or               cost               less               than               private               healthcare.

    This               belief               violates               several               economic               principles.

    First,               the               money               to               pay               for               health               professionals,               medicines,               and               facilities               has               to               come               from               somewhere.

    If               consumers               don't               pay               for               these               services               directly,               they               will               pay               indirectly               through               higher               taxes.

    Second,               as               the               perceived               price               decreases,               demand               will               increase.

    In               other               words,               when               people               believe               that               they               won't               have               to               pay               for               their               healthcare,               they               will               use               more               health               services.
                   As               demand               increases               to               exceed               the               available               supply               of               health               services,               the               government               will               have               to               take               action.

    The               government               will               have               to               limit               the               amount               of               services               to               keep               the               cost               of               the               healthcare               system               from               exploding.

    There               are               several               ways               to               do               this.

    First,               they               might               impose               rationing               and               limit               the               availability               of               services.

    A               second               option               would               be               increase               the               amount               that               patients               pay               for               their               healthcare.

    This               could               be               similar               to               the               health               insurance               premiums               and               co-payments               that               many               health               insurance               policies               contain               now.

    A               third               option               would               be               for               the               government               to               do               nothing               and               simply               allow               shortages               to               build               in               the               system.
                   A               third               problem               is               that               government               healthcare               will               likely               create               a               shortage               of               healthcare               professionals.

    The               government               will               undoubtedly               attempt               to               rein               in               costs               by               imposing               price               controls.

    It               has               already               followed               this               strategy               in               government               healthcare               programs               that               have               already               been               enacted               such               as               Medicare.

    Medical               training,               especially               for               doctors,               is               a               long               and               expensive               process.

    The               motivating               factor               for               many               doctors               is               the               financial               reward               at               the               end               of               the               process.

    When               the               government               removes               the               financial               incentive               for               becoming               a               doctor,               fewer               people               will               choose               to               become               doctors               and               shortages               will               result.

    This               is               especially               likely               due               the               increasing               need               for               doctors               in               the               United               States               and               the               Baby               Boom               generation               ages.
                   These               problems               can               be               seen               in               national               healthcare               plans               around               the               world.

    Even               highly               touted               plans               such               as               those               in               Britain               and               Canada               commonly               have               long               wait               times               for               care               that               is               easily               available               in               the               United               States.

    Last               year               it               was               revealed               that               government               bureaucrats               in               England               had               attempted               to               solve               the               problem               of               long               emergency               room               waits               by               keeping               thousands               of               patients,               some               critically               ill,               in               ambulances               for               as               long               as               five               hours               before               moving               them               to               the               emergency               room               waiting               list.

    This,               in               turn,               meant               that               the               ambulances               were               not               available               to               help               other               sick               or               injured               people.

    It               should               not               be               surprising               that               many               Europeans               and               Canadians               who               can               afford               it               travel               to               the               United               States               for               health               care               rather               than               waiting               in               line               for               "free"               care               at               home.
                   The               problems               are               not               just               in               other               countries.

    In               2006,               Massachusetts               passed               a               state               healthcare               plan.

    Former               Governor               Mitt               Romney               touted               the               legislation               in               his               bid               for               the               2008               Republican               presidential               nomination.

    More               recently,               the               state               has               begun               to               experience               many               of               the               same               problems               plaguing               nations               with               socialized               healthcare.
                   Recent               statistics               show               that               visits               to               emergency               rooms               in               Massachusetts               have               increased               since               the               health               reform               went               into               effect.

    The               percentage               of               uninsured               patients               in               ERs               has               not               changed               (in               spite               of               laws               making               health               insurance               mandatory),               while               the               percentage               of               more               affluent               patients,               who               in               the               past               got               care               at               a               doctor's               office,               has               increased.
                   Similarly,               the               dramatic               increase               in               the               numbers               of               people               seeking               care               has               made               it               difficult               for               many               patients               to               see               a               primary               care               doctor.

    This               is               compounded               by               the               fact               that               doctors               are               allotted               a               certain               amount               of               time               that               they               are               paid               for               with               each               patient.

    If               they               exceed               this               time,               they               are               not               compensated               for               the               extra               work.
                   The               Massachusetts               government               had               hoped               that               the               legislation               would               encourage               more               employers               to               provide               health               insurance               for               their               employees.

    Instead,               the               newly               insured               people               of               Massachusetts               are               primarily               involved               in               state               paid               or               subsidized               programs.

    16%               have               their               health               insurance               paid               by               the               state               through               Mass               Health,               while               41%               are               enrolled               in               the               subsidized               Commonwealth               Care.

    In               all,               about               three-fifths               of               Massachusetts               residents               receive               free               or               subsidized               health               insurance.

    Approximately               5%               of               the               people               of               Massachusetts               remain               uninsured.
                   The               high               number               of               people               receiving               government               assistance               for               their               health               insurance               has               led               to               rapidly               increasing               costs               for               the               state.

    The               cost               of               Massachusetts'               plan               has               increased               by               a               staggering               42%               since               2006.

    In               order               to               control               costs,               current               Governor               Deval               Patrick               is               considering               price               controls,               limits               coverage,               more               exclusions,               and               an               overall               spending               cap.
                   The               federal               government               already               faces               similar               problems               with               Medicare.

    Medicare               is               an               unfunded               liability               that               poses               huge               problems               for               our               budget               over               the               next               few               years.

    Medicare               will               soon               begin               paying               out               more               money               than               it               takes               in               and               will               be               bankrupt               by               2019               unless               changes               are               made               to               increase               Medicare               taxes,               cut               benefits,               or               some               combination               of               both.
                   Some               countries               in               Europe               may               go               a               step               further               by               limiting               the               treatment               available               for               the               elderly,               terminally               ill,               and               infants.

    The               amount               of               return               in               the               form               of               tax               revenue               from               these               patients               is               limited,               so               the               government               health               bureaucracy               doesn't               want               to               spend               resources               on               expensive               cures               and               treatments.

    In               Holland,               euthanasia               is               already               common,               both               for               the               elderly               and               for               infants               with               health               problems,               sometimes               without               parental               consent.
                   The               best               way               to               solve               the               healthcare               crisis               in               the               US               is               to               reintroduce               competition.

    Most               Americans               are               locked               into               employer               health               plans               with               specified               co-payments.

    Because               there               is               no               choice               of               coverage               and               no               price               difference               between               doctors,               there               is               no               incentive               to               shop               around               for               a               better               deal.

    Most               people               don't               even               know               how               much               their               doctor               visits               cost               beyond               the               co-payment               or               deductible.
                   Employer               paid               health               insurance               should               be               eliminated               in               favor               of               health               savings               accounts               (HSAs).

    Consumers               should               contribute               money               to               their               account               and               use               it               to               pay               for               care.

    If               money               is               not               spent,               it               should               stay               in               the               account,               earning               interest,               until               needed               or               until               the               consumer               meets               the               requirements               to               withdraw               it               for               other               purposes.

    This               would               encourage               people               to               shop               for               a               good               and               inexpensive               doctor,               and               also               discourage               frivolous               claims.
                   Similarly,               state               governments               should               resist               the               temptation               to               make               health               insurance               all               things               for               all               people.

    When               laws               mandate               coverage               for               things               that               not               all               people               want,               it               drives               the               costs               up               for               everyone.

    For               example,               not               all               people               want               or               need               coverage               pregnancy,               sex               changes,               chiropractors,               or               "recreational"               drugs               such               as               Viagra.

    People               should               be               allowed               to               buy               simple               and               cheap               major               medical               policies               for               no-frills               coverage.

    If               such               a               policy               is               not               available               in               all               states,               people               should               be               allowed               to               cross               state               lines               to               purchase               it.
                   Some               of               the               best               advances               in               affordable               coverage               in               recent               years               have               come               from               the               private               sector.

    For               example,               Wal-mart               introduced               $4               generic               prescriptions               and               was               followed               by               several               other               chains.

    Now               consumers               can               get               prescription               antibiotics               totally               free               at               Publix.

    Similarly,               some               stores               now               offer               on-site               clinics               staffed               by               nurses               for               minor               healthcare.
                   Universal               government               healthcare               has               been               tried               around               the               world               and               has               typically               not               worked               well.

    If               it               is               enacted               in               the               United               States,               we               can               expect               to               move               from               our               private               health               system               to               one               that               has               the               efficiency               of               the               DMV,               the               cost               of               the               Department               of               Defense,               and               the               bedside               manner               of               the               IRS.

    Is               this               the               change               that               most               Americans               are               looking               for?
                   Sources:
                   http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-515332/A-E-patients-left-ambulances-FIVE-hours-trusts-meet-government-targets.html
                   http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2009/04/24/as-insurance-coverage-increases-ers-get-busier/
                   http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=97620520
                   http://www.hschange.org/CONTENT/1021/
                   http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123811121310853037.html
                   http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120373015283387491.html
                   http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1576704/Dont-treat-the-old-and-unhealthy-say-doctors.html
                   http://www.discovery.org/a/2478               







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      ... marketed and sold a United Healthcare product and not even know it. AMA Selling Online Physician Portal to AT&T–The Amagine Project, There’s Money...
    3. ducknetweb.blogspot.com/   10/15/2013
      ...general contractor to oversee repairs to Healthcare.gov launched Oct 1 under the 2010 law...House to fix it. The website that runs online insurance exchanges for 36 states...
    4. mpetrelis.blogspot.com/   02/06/2008
      ... of the community with the arming of medical professionals and healthcare providers with appropriate and accurate data. My response was that it would...
    5. yahoobizz.blogspot.com/   08/17/2011
      ... the doctor's online, it appears that hardly... accepts United. I'd shop for a different hospital... by United Healthcare. This United Healthcare...
    6. runningontherhode.blogspot.com/   10/17/2011
      I ran the Amica/United Healthcare Half Marathon in Newport, RI on October 16...until afterwards to see how I felt. Online registration for Amica closed 2...
    7. hcrenewal.blogspot.com/   03/22/2010
      ...leadership, and no exception is made for healthcare IT. Preparatory testing at Morecambe Bay...' medical records go online without consent Back to the article: The BMA (British...
    8. republicanretardclub.blogspot.com/   03/15/2011
      References 1. source , 2. source , 3. audio , 4. audio , 5. source , 6. source , 7. source , 8. source , 9. audio , 10. video , 11. source , 12. source , 13. source , 14. source , 15. video , 16. source , 17. source
    9. tccta.typepad.com/main/   02/15/2012
      ... not to join. HealthSelect members can link to the online search tool for the United HealthCare Choice Plus network to find out if their doctor is in the network...
    10. hnfm.blogspot.com/   11/11/2009
      ... able to find the member online on United's website (which is actually... to at United Healthcare has been very nice...
    11. United Healthcare Online - Blog Homepage Results

      ... Robot Moonbattery National Review Online News With Views NewsBusters...Politics Red County REDSTATE Regular Folks United Right Bias Right Wing News Rush Limbaugh S. E...
      ...the same look a little later as we were talking about universal healthcare (or “socialised medicine” as it is sometimes pejoratively labelled...



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