Archive for the ‘Health Care’ Category

Public Opinion Redux

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

The most recent Bloomberg Poll has some interesting results on the fate of health care reform.

Here is the relevant question:

Turning to the health care law passed earlier this year, what is your opinion of the bill — should it be repealed or not?

It should be repealed: 47%
It should not be repealed: 42%
Not sure: 11%

It looks like this ought to be discouraging for proponents of reform. Until voters are polled on what’s in the health care law.

A 54% majority don’t want to bring back the lifetime caps on expenditures. A 75% majority do not want to repeal protections for pre-existing conditions. 60% want to preserve the insurance exchanges for the unemployed. 67% want to keep the elements of the law that allow kids up to age 26 to remain on their parents’ policies. 73% want to fill the Medicare donut hole.

Republicans seem to think that their calls to repeal the Affordable Care Act will be popular. Good luck with that.

But it would be nice if the public had a clue about what was in the bill.

Of course, if you get your news from the mainstream media you are likely to be confused about basic facts.

What the Health Care Plan Does Immediately

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

There has been (and still is) a lot of nonsense said about the recently passed health care bill. So it is worth clearing up misconceptions. Nancy-Ann Perle summarizes the immediate benefits:

  • This year, children with pre-existing conditions can no longer be denied health insurance coverage. Once the new health insurance exchanges begin in the coming years, pre-existing condition discrimination will become a thing of the past for everyone.
  • This year, health care plans will allow young people to remain on their parents’ insurance policy up until their 26th birthday.
  • This year, insurance companies will be banned from dropping people from coverage when they get sick, and they will be banned from implementing lifetime caps on coverage. This year, restrictive annual limits on coverage will be banned for certain plans. Under health insurance reform, Americans will be ensured access to the care they need.
  • This year, adults who are uninsured because of pre-existing conditions will have access to affordable insurance through a temporary subsidized high-risk pool.
  • In the next fiscal year, the bill increases funding for community health centers, so they can treat nearly double the number of patients over the next five years.
  • This year, this bill creates a new, independent appeals process that ensures consumers in new private plans have access to an effective process to appeal decisions made by their insurer.
  • This year, discrimination based on salary will be outlawed. New group health plans will be prohibited from establishing any eligibility rules for health care coverage that discriminate in favor of higher-wage employees.
  • Starting January 1, 2011, insurers in the individual and small group market will be required to spend 80 percent of their premium dollars on medical services. Insurers in the large group market will be required to spend 85 percent of their premium dollars on medical services. Any insurers who don’t meet those thresholds will be required to provide rebates to their policyholders.
  • Starting in 2011, this bill helps states require insurance companies to submit justification for requested premium increases. Any company with excessive or unjustified premium increases may not be able to participate in the new health insurance exchanges.
  • This year, small businesses that choose to offer coverage will begin to receive tax credits of up to 35 percent of premiums to help make employee coverage more affordable.
  • This year, new private plans will be required to provide free preventive care: no co-payments and no deductibles for preventive services. And beginning January 1, 2011, Medicare will do the same.
  • This year, this bill will provide help for early retirees by creating a temporary re-insurance program to help offset the costs of expensive premiums for employers and retirees age 55-64.
  • This year, this bill starts to close the Medicare Part D ‘donut hole’ by providing a $250 rebate to Medicare beneficiaries who hit the gap in prescription drug coverage. And beginning in 2011, the bill institutes a 50% discount on prescription drugs in the ‘donut hole.’

Authoritarians at Heart

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Michael Steele, Chairman of the Republican National Committee said “Today, America witnessed the first vote for the end of representative government. Congressional Democrats said no to the will of the American people and voted yes to President Obama’s $2.5 trillion government run health care system.”

And Mitt Romney, who desperately wants to be President said : “America has just witnessed an unconscionable abuse of power. President Obama has betrayed his oath to the nation.”

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), declared that passage of health care reform would be “Armageddon.”

From Republican rhetoric, you might draw the conclusion the Uncle Joe Stalin had come back from the grave to take control of the U.S. government.

Fortunately, reality doesn’t conform to Republican rhetoric.

From a USA/Gallup Poll:

Americans’ emotional responses to the bill’s passage are more positive than negative — with 50% enthusiastic or pleased versus 42% angry or disappointed — and are similar to their general reactions.

Somehow, according to Republican logic, when the government does something that majorities support, duly voted on by representatives of the people, and that will help millions it is “tyranny” and “abuse of power”.

What they really believe, because they are authoritarians at heart, is that anyone who disagrees with them doesn’t count. They don’t define the “will of the people” in terms of elections, representative government, or public opinion.

“Will of the people” refers only to the special, anointed ones who hold conservative “principles.”