Archive for August, 2010
Health Care News
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Editor’s Note: On the right, please watch our exclusive interview with Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels, and then below, please read an original guest blog to The Foundry from the Governor himself.
We’ve been through a global recession. Now we’re fighting through a stalled recovery. Revenues are the lowest they’ve been in half a century. Their finances a wreck, many states have effectively sunk into bankruptcy.
Indiana is still afloat. In fact, we’ve fared better than most. We continue to meet our obligations without raising taxes, and the reserves we carefully built and protected will get us through the downturn.
But as if we did not already have enough on our plates, the passage and implementation of Obamacare presents us with a whole new set of challenges and a costly to-do list.
Tags: consumer-driven health care, Gov. Mitch Daniels, health savings accounts, Healthy Indiana Plan, Medicaid, ObamaCare
Health Care News
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It’s not just the majority of American voters who are itching from the rash of regulations, taxes and government bureaucracy that has stemmed from Obamacare. Small physician groups aren’t ecstatic with the White House’s latest effort to cajole them into swallowing some bitter pills regarding their day-to-day operations.
This week, several Obama administration officials, including a former member of the National Economic Council, published an article in the Annals of Internal Medicine that urged doctors to “embrace rather than resist change” coming from the new health reform law, which passed in March. These changes include the likely demise of many small physician practices as part of “vertical organization” approaches that would promote more hospitals and large-group practices.
“Physicians who embrace these changes and opportunities are likely to deliver the greatest benefits to their patients, the health system, and themselves,” according to the article, which was written by Nancy-Ann DeParle, Dr. Ezekiel Emmanuel and Dr. Robert Kocher. (more…)
Tags: Accountable Care Organization, health reform law, ObamaCare, physician groups, small-practice offices, vertical organization
Health Care News
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Health care isn’t something most students worry about. Government stats show about 80 percent of college students are covered under a parents’ plan. For them, Obamacare may mean they can keep the insurance they already have for a few years beyond college, but it won’t affect the coverage they carry during school.
But what about kids without parental coverage? The new law’s requirement that insurance cover children up to age 26 won’t make any difference for them.
Currently, college students without coverage can enroll in low-cost student health plans offered through universities. These plans may include limits to keep costs down, but are often designed around to complement university health services to provide comprehensive coverage. Affordability is further achieved by rating student health plans on a campus-wide basis rather than according to the whole individual market. (more…)
Tags: college students, ObamaCare, Side Effects, student health plans, waivers
Health Care News
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A new messaging strategy, based on public polling results from top Democratic pollsters, suggests that congressional lawmakers should wave the white flag when discussing Obamacare in their election campaigns. The PowerPoint presentation, released in a conference call organized by Families USA, encouraged officials to “keep claims small and credible: don’t overpromise or ‘spin’ what the law delivers.”
In other words, abandon ship on claims that lawmakers made for months during the health reform debate—that the legislation would in any way reduce the nation’s deficit or lower health care costs (in fact, this was a recommendation in the presentation’s “not-to-do” list). (more…)
Tags: health care costs, higher deficits, ObamaCare, pollsters, public disapproval, repeal
Health Care News
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Nothing is more important to Larry Patterson than his family. His four kids, who range from a 2-year-old to a college graduate, shape his outlook on life. They’re one of the primary reasons he’s concerned about the devastating consequences of Obamacare.
Patterson has good reason to be worried. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act diminishes family choice of coverage, limits parental involvement and strikes a blow for family values in health care.
Even with many of the new provisions years from implementation, Patterson is already bracing for the harsh realities of life under Obamacare.
Tags: government regulation, limited choice, ObamaCare, parental rights, tax credits
Health Care News
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Obamacare creates a host of new federal requirements billed as consumer protections. But enacting these policies falls not on the feds, but on the states.
Some of these provisions were among the more popular components of Obamacare: guaranteed issue for children; letting individuals remain on their parents’ health plan up to age 26; requiring insurers to cover federally-defined preventive services, etc.
The goals behind these mandates are worthy. But they could be achieved in better ways. The approach taken here is virtually guaranteed to accelerate insurance costs. Ironically, Obamacare also requires states to review “unreasonable” rate increases.
What authors of the health care takeover failed to consider was whether states actually have the authority to enforce these standards. Robert Pear and Kevin Sack report in a recent New York Times article: (more…)
Tags: federal requirements, guaranteed issue, health insurance regulations, ObamaCare, Side Effects
Heritage Research
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The health care system needs reform, but not the types of changes enacted under the new health care law. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act moves the health care system in the wrong direction. This highly unpopular law would assert federal control over health care benefits and financing, erect a complex one-size-fits-all health system, and centralize America’s health care decisions in Washington. Instead, Congress should transform the health care system into one that empowers individuals and families, not Washington, to control more of their health care decisions. Click here to read a Heritage Foundation report on Health Care Solutions for America.
Tags: health care, health care reform, Obama Health Care Plan, ObamaCare, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
Heritage Research
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Over the past six years, Congress has twice passed and two Presidents have signed into law major legislation affecting Medicare. President Obama signed “Obamacare” into law, which appeared to improve Medicare’s finances—if one assumes that the difficult programmatic changes Obamacare requires take effect. Heritage expert JD Foster, explains in a recent Heritage paper how Medicare’s Chief Actuary felt compelled to release a detailed statement appended to the Trustees’ Report calling the assumptions “implausible” and “unreasonable.” Click here to read the analysis of the 2010 Medicare Trustees’ Report and the Chief Actuary’s addtional statement.
Tags: 2010 Medicare Trustees' Report, Medicaid, Medicare, Medicare's Chief Actuary
Heritage Research
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In Utah, state policymakers have taken a different approach in health care reform by giving businesses and their workers the option of “defined contribution” health benefits—where participating workers choose coverage from a wide variety of plans offered by competing insurers through Utah’s health insurance exchange. In a recent Heritage paper, Gregg Girvan explains how Utah’s state leaders are innovators who are doing precisely what they should be doing. Click here to read how Utah policymakers are using their authority to resist concentrated power in Washington, and working to provide more and better choices for their citizens.
Tags: defined benefits, defined contribution, health care, health care reform, Utah
Heritage Research
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In 2006, the Dutch government implemented a universal insurance mandate. Many American policy makers are looking to the Dutch experiment as a model to fix America’s complex and costly health care system. Given the narrow, partisan enactment of Obamacare, America appears to be on a similar path. In a recent paper, Heritage experts Ryan Lynch and Eline Altenburg-van den Broek explain why patients in the Nehterlands do not have a significant choice among the health insurance companies nor can they access sufficient information about the health system and different options. Click here to read about why this system would not benefit patients in America, either.
Tags: Dutch-Style Health Care, health care, individual mandates, Obama Health Care Plan, ObamaCare, transparency





